The Harvard Law Review is offered in a digital NOOKBook edition for ereaders and apps, featuring active Contents, linked notes and cross-references, legible tables, and proper ebook formatting.
The Harvard Law Review is offered in a digital NOOKBook edition for ereaders and apps, featuring active Contents, linked notes and cross-references, legible tables, and proper ebook formatting.
Featured articles and essays in this issue are from recognized scholars in law and legal theory, including a Symposium on private law. The issue also includes the article "Regulation for the Sake of Appearance," by Adam Samaha. The Symposium contents are:
THE NEW PRIVATE LAW
• "Introduction: Pragmatism and Private Law,"
by John C.P. Goldberg
• "The Obligatory Structure of Copyright Law: Unbundling the Wrong of Copying,"
by Shyamkrishna Balganesh
• "Property as the Law of Things,"
by Henry E. Smith
• "Duties, Liabilities, and Damages,"
by Stephen A. Smith
• "Palsgraf, Punitive Damages, and Preemption,"
by Benjamin C. Zipursky
The issue includes two student Notes:
• "The Perils of Fragmentation and Reckless Innovation"
• "Independence, Congressional Weakness, and the Importance of Appointment: The Impact of Combining Budgetary Autonomy with Removal Protection"
In addition, student contributions on Recent Cases and Legislation explore the law relating to tasers as excessive force, free speech rights of teachers, employment discrimination disparate impact, separation of powers in dealing with Guantánamo transfers, and excessive sentencing using an uncharged murder. Finally, there are six Book Notes of Recent Publications.
The Harvard Law Review is a student-run organization whose primary purpose is to publish a journal of legal scholarship. The Review comes out monthly from November through June and has roughly 2000 pages per volume. The organization is formally independent of the Harvard Law School. Student editors make all editorial and organizational decisions.
This current issue of the Review is May 2012, the seventh issue of academic year 2011-2012 (Volume 125). Prior issues of this volume and Volume 124 are also available as NOOKbooks. "Property as the Law of Things,"
by Henry E. Smith
Authors are leading scholars in the field, with additional contributions of Notes and Casenotes by students. The issue is edited by students of the Harvard Law School.
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