In this interview, Associate Professor of Law and McKnight Presidential Fellow at the University of Minnesota, Francis X. Shen, discusses his forthcoming article on aging federal judges and how he believes regular, confidential cognitive assessment can help empower judges to know if and when they should consider retirement.
In this interview, Mitchell Crusto, the Henry F. Bonura Jr. Distinguished Professor of Law at Loyola University New Orleans College of Law, discusses why he believes amnesty for past pot offenders is a constitutional right.
In this interview, Marvin L. Astrada, professor of law at NYU, discusses the nexus between security law and public policy, and the details of his recent article on the far-reaching consequences of the securitization of immigration in America.
As gene editing experiments migrate from laboratories to human clinical trials, there are many legal questions and concerns being raised. In this interview Paul Enríquez, JD/PhD, discusses his recent article on the topic, Editing Humanity: On the Precise Manipulation of DNA in Human Embryos.
If you ask any legal scholar for one area of article selection that they think all law reviews could improve, there's a good chance that it will involve communication in some way. Here are three things authors want law reviews to communicate better based on the findings of a Scholastica survey.
How do legal scholars feel about law reviews' article selection processes? We reached out to authors submitting to law reviews using Scholastica to find out.
Houston Law Review's editor in chief shares how they are using Scholastica publishing tools and services to make their content more discoverable online and empower readers to explore the law review from all digital devices.
We've created a new Scholastica Twitter account for all things law review—scholasticaLR. Follow the new account and get the latest law review opening and submission season resource updates!
The University of Michigan's Law School and Mcity project have come together to launch The Michigan Journal of Law and Mobility, to facilitate research at the intersection of mobility and the law. In this interview the journal's managing editor, Ian Williams, shares the details of the publication and the University of Michigan's involvement in the future of mobility law.
Last month, Harvard University Law School's Library Innovation Lab announced the launch of the Caselaw Access Project, an initiative to digitize a collection of 360 years worth of United States court cases. In this interview, Kelly Fitzpatrick, Research Associate at Harvard's Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society, discusses the project.