I have long complained that many student notes are completely useless for practitioners. ACS tries to harness some of my angst (and the angst of people I know) by creating a program to link up students that want to write notes with practitioners that want exploration, and professors willing to give credit. ACSblog says:
ACS ResearchLink creates a valuable online resource for the legal community by collecting legal research topics submitted by practitioners for law students to explore in faculty-supervised writing projects for academic credit. Practitioners will receive a copy of the resulting student papers, which ACS will post in a searchable online library. Follow these links to search or browse currently available research topics.
And students, it is far better for you, potential employers, and the world, that you write a useful note then you try (and usually fail) to kiss up to a professor by writing some abstract crap that people only pretend to understand. Professors, you know and I know that most of your students won't become professors. Wouldn't you rather have them write notes that are cited as the authority by people that actually practice in this area? And practitioners, this is an opportunity to bring some intellectual coherence to your field and be thanked in a footnote.
And come on, isn’t this better than inanely sucking up to each other at cocktail parties?
And if that don’t beat all, the WSJ writes the most stupid article of the millennium, which is supposed to inform everyone that the “internet” has spawned a kind of slang. Strangely enough, “l33t” slang is actually not used to communicate between hackers, but is more of an elaborate in joke amongst “dorks.”
University of Michigan’s Original Intent Bonanza!
The saintly folks at the University of Michigan have scanned and uploaded a dumptruck of legal works to the web as part of their Making of America (MOA) project.
This is truly a-freakin’-mazing!
Now, you can read and download treatises that the framers of the constitution and the 14th amendment were reading without actually leaving your office! No more will you have to breath the poisonous air of the environment or go to the library and risk having to be around law students. There are many, many books online. Some, like the ones about slavery and subjugation of women, are of little use to lawyers in most states. Others are quite relevant to issues before the courts now. So, for your convenience, I picked a few that might be of use.
Posted by S. COTUS on October 03, 2006 at 02:35 PM in Appellate Advocacy - Books & Articles, Appellate Advocacy - Tips, Legal Commentary | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)