Sam Wang summarizes and reflects on this weekend’s great Stanford symposium (which was much more interesting than both the nearby Super Bowl and this year’s commercials).
What’s there to do in the Silicon Valley on Super Bowl weekend? Hmm…
You might want to attend this fantastic symposium Feb. 5-6 at the Stanford Law Review. What a great lineup of speakers! I’m looking forward to it and… Continue reading
From Josh Douglas:
Election Law Professors,
Happy New Year (and happy presidential election year)!
If you will be at the AALS meeting in New York City this week, I encourage you to attend the Section on Election Law’s session on… Continue reading
This is a great volume just published. The full journal is not on the Journal’s website, but here are the article titles, along with links to read them at HeinOnline (with a subscription). Everyone should have this on their shelves.… Continue reading
Kevin Stack has posted this draft on SSRN (Journal of Legal Education). Here is the abstract:
This essay — part of a special journal issue on Legislation and Regulation and Regulatory State courses as core elements of the law school… Continue reading
The 2015 supplement (152 pages) to Lowenstein, Hasen, and Tokaji, Election Law Cases and Materials, is going to the printer today. Instructors using the book can write to crutan (at) cap-press.com to get a pdf of the book for planning… Continue reading
The 2015 supplement to Lowenstein, Hasen, and Tokaji is shipping in time for fall classes, and will now include edited versions of the Evenwel one person, one vote case in the district court and the Supreme Court’s recent opinion in … Continue reading
Frank Askin has written this article for the Clinical Law Review. Here is the abstract:
Every General Election Day, students from the Rutgers Law School Constitutional Rights Clinic, under faculty supervision, represent voters who need orders to vote. These are… Continue reading