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 | Law Blawgs |
 | Academic |
 | Yale law professor has a blog called Balkanization |
 | the fourth member of the "Volokh Conspiracy" blog, she's now a law professor at George Mason. A graduate of U. of Chicago Law School, after which she clerked for the Honorable Frank Easterbrook. Practiced insurance law at Wiley, Rein & Fielding. |
 | at Lewis & Clark Law School in Portland has a blog called Jack Bog's Blog. Music, Politics and an appreciation of Tony Pierce. |
 | Law Professor at Duke and is a champion of cyber-rights. His site has a bunch of great articles on cyberlaw. |
 | Law professor at the Indiana U. School of Law, with a blog aptly called "Cooped Up" |
 | he lectures about law and technology at Rutgers Univ. School of Law |
 | he is at the University of Bonn, Germany. His site is called "disLEXia" and is about "lies, laws, legal research, crime and the Internet" |
 | Her Blog is Called "Shout - Opinions on Everything." She works at the Stanford Law School Center for Internet and Society. |
 | Loyola Law School in Los Angeles professor with blog called Election Law. |
 | assistant general counsel at Baylor with blog that focuses on legal issues in representing universities |
 | Prof at Smith School of Business at Univ. of Maryland; interested in China and securities issues |
 | Univ of Pittsburg Law School |
 | His book "The Future of Ideas" is one of the most influential books I have read in the past 10 years. He teaches at Stanford. He is already the foremost thinker on the subject of the law's role in shaping the development of the Internet. |
 | blog site called "Is that Legal?" |
 | Australian law professor based in Darwin, Northern Territory with a site called "The Parish Pump" - which are the philosophical and legal musings of...a sometimes academic...." |
 | If you need ask who Glenn Reynolds is then you aren't a regular member of the blog community. I like Reynolds not so much for his Instapundit blog (which I do enjoy greatly) but because he's interested in two things that I enjoy: scuba diving and playing rock guitar. Also, he is the only living person who knows the true identity of the Unablogger. |
 | Univ of San Diego School of Law with blog called Legal Theory |
 | Prof at John Marshall School of Law with site called Law Blog |
 | professor at Univ of Wisconsin Law School |
 | Tillers on Evidence |
 | U.C.L.A. law professor, who writes prolifically about the law and politics. Very smart, and very balanced. His site "the Volokh Conspiracy" is actually written by him, his brother Sasha, and other interesting and intelligent people. |
 | Regent Univ School of Law; he has a blog called Ninomania, which extols the virtues of Justice Scalia |
 | Lecturer at the University of Sydney in Australia; interested in technology and intellectual property law. |
 | At Harvard, and totally on top of copyright issues. Her site rocks! |
 | Professor at the University of Iowa College of Law with a blog about law, politics, sports, TV shows and movies. |
 | Court Admin. |
 | The Clerk of Court for the West Virginia Supreme Court, Rory is interested in how courts can use technology to better serve the public. |
 | Rory maintains the official blog for the W.Va. Supreme Court, through which opinions are released, and to which people can subscribe to as an XML feed. |
 | Critique |
 | These sites are good sites for discussion of legal issues; some are true "weblogs" and some are traditional websites. |
 | frequent legal, political and social commentary from a fellow named Dave. |
 | a fantastic blog about the "politics of criminal law." Left leaning, as the name implies. RSS feed available. |
 | a non-practicing lawyer who doesn't want to say much about his identity |
 | Ernest Miller and others post about law & technology issues; this is a Yale Law School |
 | focusing on developments in Academia, including new law journals |
 | Law professor Lawrence Solum's excellent blog |
 | focus on law and publishing from the author's perspective |
 | a wonderful site run by Walter Olsen that chronicles the ridiculous lawsuits that are at the heart of our inefficient and overburdened legal system. |
 | the diary of a 20-something male Manhattan attorney with time on his hands |
 | not a blog, but a very interesting policy think-tank |
 | a conservative organization; this is not really a blog. |
 | review of pending cases by Ted |
 | an EFF site, which which discusses the entertainment industry's efforts to tag digital media with "flags" that constrain its ability to circulate. Has an RSS feed. |
 | a defense oriented reform site that criticizes the high cost of meritless lawsuits. |
 | two anonymous authors provide counsel to young lawyers |
 | Humor |
 | Site run by Sean Carter, who started the Supreme Court fantasy league in which contestants handicap real cases and compete for real monetary prizes |
 | Someone once said that "there are no funny lawyers, only funny people who made the wrong career choice." Madeleine is funny and so she doesn't practice anymore. |
 | International |
 | Australia |
 | legal news |
 | commentary about legal publishing |
 | China |
 | European Law |
 | EULaw is about European law but is based in Austria |
 | German Law |
 | is apparently run by Rainer Langenhan who with his wife wrote a book (now in 4th edition) on the Internet for German lawyers |
 | based in Vienna, Austria, focused on German law and International law, and copyright. The name of the blog, translated, means "all about the law." |
 | by Margaret Mark's, a non-practising English solicitor and freelance translator living in Germany and I have a German-English legal translation |
 | lawyer in Germany |
 | Ireland |
 | Japan |
 | Korea |
 | Brendon Carr is an American Lawyer in Seoul, Korea. His site has an XML feed. |
 | Geoffery Privateau's site which focuses on building transparent legal structures around the world, which is to say legal systems free from corruption |
 | Judiciary |
 | A California state appellate court judge, who writes a monthly column that is usually humorous, |
 | Judicial Law Clerks |
 | anonymous federal law clerk |
 | written by a federal judicial clerk whose tagline is "random musings of a Southern Federalis" |
 | a federal law clerk's blog |
 | Legal KM |
 | Buzz sells Activewords. Just ask anyone who has met him. |
 | One of my best blog-buddies. Rick is a lawyer but was too smart (and too interested in efficiency) to practice so he got involved in selling software that helps lawyers do their job better. He is one of the people who have helped me the most in getting my site to look as good as it does. You know how some people go to a trainer because it helps them "push harder" in their workout? Well, Rick is like my "tech-trainer." |
 | prolific author, respected lawyer, and leading visionary of the impact of technology on the practice of law |
 | in the IT department of a big law firm |
 | Joy works with Chris Smith (see below), and has some great observations about knowledge management in law firms, and organizations generally. |
 | Chris is the head of Knowledge Management at a large (unnamed) New York law firm. He apparently likes to sail, and seems interested in photography. I like his site because it's window into the observations of a non-lawyer techie who has to interact with lawyers. That can't be easy. |
 | Legal Organizations |
 | the Federalist Society at Harvard Law School's blog |
 | Legal Marketing |
 | Legal News |
 | Legal Journalism |
 | Gathers all the leading law blog headlines in one place |
 | Chad Williamson's Legal News Aggregator & semi-portal |
 | law for nerds at heart |
 | General Legal news from John |
 | not a lawyer, but a writer interested in law, technology and Cyberspace issues |
 | site written by a non-lawyer about lawyerly concerns |
 | Larry Stanton's blog about using Macs in the law office |
 | Law Students |
 | a third year law student in Washington DC |
 | 3L at Ohio State University writes blog called ZipSix |
 | 2L at UCLA |
 | Second year at U. of Kansas in Lawrence, Kansas. |
 | Third year student at UNC Law School. Recently accepted for membership on the law review. |
 | Third year law student at Oklahoma City University. |
 | 2L at BYU |
 | Missouri law student |
 | a 2L at Georgetown, whose account of the wait to see the Eldred copyright argument is a classic |
 | a third year law student |
 | first name is Elizabeth |
 | Bay area law student |
 | written by a Lewis & Clark law student named Jennifer |
 | At Harvard, and a member of the law review. His site is pretty serious into legal commentary. |
 | recent grad (?) of Notre Dame with a blog called LawMuse |
 | a Harvard law school student |
 | written by a Lewis & Clark law student named William |
 | Site: Shameless Self Promotion. A second year law student at Brooklyn Law School. Also a musician and former researcher for a publishing company company. Undergrad major in International Relations and Russian studies. |
 | 4L at Loyola Law School in New Orleans with great site called Naked Ownership, which is a play on words involving a Civil Law Property concept. |
 | third year student at Howard University School of Law; lives in Washington D.C. and is interested in Intellectual Property law. |
 | 2L at Georgetown interested in IP law and technology in general. Site is called Method2Madness |
 | a member of the multi-author blog called "The Volokh Conspiracy" (sounds like a Ludlum novel, doesn't it?). A law student at Harvard, and member of the law review. |
 | anonymous law student at a Boston-area law school. Her site is called Who Stole the Tarts, which is a reference to Alice in Wonderland. Her explanation of why it is so named deserves perusal, as does her entire site. |
 | 3L at Harvard Law |
 | a Tulane student |
 | a third year law student, and a fan of Sex in the City. |
 | Law + Technology Discussion |
 | by Jerry Lawson |
 | by Glenn Garnes |
 | by Glenn Garnes |
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