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She has authored or edited seven books and written scholarly publications that are listed among the highest rated in terms of scholarly impact. [ 6 ] Hans serves as a co-editor for the Journal of Empirical Legal Studies [ 7 ] and was the president of the Law and Society Association for a two-year term beginning in June 2015. [ 8 ]
Before joining the Cornell faculty in 2008, Dorf was a professor at Columbia University School of Law and, before that, at Rutgers University School of Law in Camden, New Jersey. He graduated from Harvard College and Harvard Law School. While at Harvard as an undergraduate, he was the American Parliamentary Debate Association national champion ...
Lynn Andrea Stout (September 14, 1957 – April 16, 2018) was an American corporate law scholar. She was a Distinguished Professor of Corporate & Business Law at the Cornell Law School and, before that, the Paul Hastings Professor of Corporate and Securities Law at UCLA Law School.
The Oyez Project is an unofficial online multimedia archive website for the Supreme Court of the United States.It was initiated by the Illinois Institute of Technology's Chicago-Kent College of Law and now also sponsored by Cornell Law School Legal Information Institute and Justia.
Barry Mark Eisler (born 1964) is an American novelist.He is the author of three thriller series, the first featuring anti-hero John Rain, a half-Japanese, half-American former soldier turned freelance assassin, a second featuring black ops soldier Ben Treven, and his most recent centered on Seattle detective Livia Lone.
The Legal Information Institute (LII) is a non-profit public service of Cornell Law School that provides no-cost access to current American and international legal research sources online. Founded in 1992 by Peter Martin and Tom Bruce, [2] [3] LII was the first law site developed on the internet. [4]
Cornell University Library, Division of Rare Books and Manuscript Collections, "Guide to the Samuel Simon Leibowitz Papers, 1939–1976. Cornell Law Library, Scottsboro Trials Collection. "Jurist Before the Bar, Time, November 15, 1963. Quentin Reynolds, Courtroom: The Story of Samuel S. Leibowitz (New York: Farrar, Straus & Co., 1950).
His scholarship has appeared in law reviews such as the Yale Law Journal [9] Columbia Law Review [10] and Cornell Law Review. [11] He has authored, co-authored or edited five books on property including Property Outlaws, [12] examining the role of disobedience in the development of property law, and An Introduction to Property Theory. [13]