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The Yale Law Journal (YLJ) is a student-run law review affiliated with the Yale Law School. Published continuously since 1891, it is the most widely known of the eight law reviews published by students at Yale Law School.
The Yale Journal on Regulation (JREG) is a biannual student-edited law review covering regulatory and administrative law published at Yale Law School.The journal publishes articles, essays, notes, and commentaries that cover a wide range of topics in regulatory, corporate, administrative, international, and comparative law.
He has an M.Phil in History of International Relations from the University of Cambridge (1984), which he obtained while on a Mellon Fellowship. [1] Froomkin received his J.D. from Yale Law School in 1987, where he served as Articles Editor of both The Yale Law Journal and The Yale Journal of International Law. [1]
It was established in 1987 to provide a forum for "women's experiences as they have been structured, affected, controlled, discussed, and ignored by the law." The journal publishes articles, inter alia , on reproductive freedom, the concerns of women of color, judicial prosecution of prostitutes, criticism of judicial deference to the military ...
At Yale, he was the essays editor of The Yale Law Journal. He graduated with a J.D in 2006. [1] After law school, Morley worked as an associate in the corporate and securities practice group at Covington & Burling. He then returned to Yale to be the executive director of the Yale Law School Center for the Study of Corporate Law, a post he held ...
In the same article, Posner gives an excerpt of the entire citation style guide included (as an appendix) in the short manual he gives his own law clerks (whom he describes as "very smart"); the appendix is about 2–3 pages long, and he says the entire manual is about 1% as long as the Bluebook.
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Wesley Newcomb Hohfeld, circa 1916. Wesley Newcomb Hohfeld (August 9, 1879 – October 21, 1918) [1] was an American jurist.He was the author of the seminal Fundamental Legal Conceptions as Applied in Judicial Reasoning and Other Legal Essays (1919).