Oh say Scan we See

More on the YES WE SCAN campaign of Carl Malamud:

Carl Malamud has just tweeted about  his Scribd collection of online materials (articles, public.resource.org materials, and much more), as well as a link to his 8 books via google.  There was also a tweet about his timeline of published materials, too.

But most importantly, he provides a link for downloading that cool poster!

Tsinghua China Law Review

Tsinghua Law School, the MIT of China, has a new English language law journal: Tsinghua China Law Review. The first issue is due later this year.

tap tip to Carlton Willey, the editor -in-chief.

From the official announcment:

The Tsinghua China Law Review is a new law journal at the Tsinghua University

School of Law in Beijing, China. The TCLR is an English‐language academic journal

aimed at a global audience, publishing articles on legal topics relating to China. The

TCLR Board of Editors is a collaborative effort between foreign students in the

Tsinghua LLM Program in Chinese Law and Chinese students at the Tsinghua School

of Law. The journal will follow a U.S. law journal format. It will be published biannually

and distributed to subscribers in the U.S., China, and throughout the world.

 

Call for Submissions

The TCLR is currently seeking high‐quality scholarly articles for its upcoming issue.

Articles should be original works of legal analysis on topics relating to Chinese law

or other legal issues that pertain to China. Citations are required for all points of

law, assertions of fact, or references to other works. Citations should be in footnotes

and formatted in accordance with the Bluebook (http://www.legalbluebook.com).

Articles may be submitted by email, in Word format, to TsinghuaCLR@gmail.com or

in hard copy, along with a CD‐ROM electronic copy, to the Tsinghua School of Law.

Kindly email the preceding address for postal information. The current Call for

Submissions is open until April 3, 2009. Submitted articles will be considered on

a rolling basis.

 

A Note on the Language of Publication

The main body of articles should be written in English. However, Chinese‐language

legal terminology, citations, or references to laws or other original sources may be

provided in Chinese, and will be translated by the TCLR editorial staff. In addition,

for articles that regularly reference Chinese‐language laws or other materials, the

TCLR editorial staff will translate the materials to English so that they may be

included as appendices to the article for publication.

Website: The TCLR website will be hosted by the Eastlaw service, and is currently under construction.  Once complete, from the site one can view abstracts of published articles, submit articles, subscribe to the journal, and receive information about symposia events, etc.  If you would like to subscribe to our listserv to receive periodic email updates (only critical emails, perhaps one per month), kindly send an email to TsinghuaCLR@gmail.com with the phrase “[Subscribe TCLR listserv]” in the subject line. 

Why Every Law Student Should Be a Gunner

The latest issue of the Arizona State Law Journal (Volume 40, Issue 4, Winter 2008) just crossed my desk and the Essay by Robert M. Lloyd “Why Every Law Student Should Be a Gunner” caught my eye.  Professor Lloyd lists six reasons why students should speak up in class, and I couldn’t agree with him more.  As someone who, on occasion, has been asked to be a reference for a student seeking a clerkship I can personally attest to his Reason VI.

Here are his six reasons:

I. Reason One: Volunteering in Class Will Make You a Pariah Among Your Classmates (and you should read the article to see why this is a good thing!).

II. Reason Two: You’ll Learn the Material Better

III. Reason Three: You’ll Help Your Classmates Learn

IV. Reason Four: It’s Fun (fun for you, and fun for we who teach!)

V. Reason Five: It’s Good Practice for What You’ll Be Doing as a Lawyer

VI. Reason Six: It Will Get You a Job