« What's Your Advice to 1Ls on Exam Writing Technique? | Main | Changes at the Solicitor General’s Office »
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
Your Chance to Speak to New Legal Scholars
At the end of June, the AALS sponsors a conference for law professors just entering the profession. The program includes panels on teaching strategies, learning theory, law school politics, and other essentials for newcomers. There's also a panel on scholarship, a sort of "how to" session. I will be one of the panelists.
My able co-panelists--Angela Davis and Cheryl Hanna--will talk about the actual writing process and the distribution of the written work after it is complete. I will be talking about "getting your ideas." Put another way, this panel requires someone to talk about the current landscape of legal scholarship, and to suggest to newcomers how they might try to enter and change that landscape.
I've got some ideas for a taxonomy of legal scholarship that could be useful for new law profs. But I would like to hear ideas from others. So here's the deal: send me your ideas for how to break down the subject matter and methodologies of legal scholarship into categories that will be useful for new law professors. If I decide to use your suggestions, I will of course publicly attribute the idea to you.
Tell me: what should new law profs hear about the legal scholarship landscape?
Posted by Ronald Wright on May 14, 2008 at 08:33 PM in Legal Theory | Permalink
TrackBack
TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8341c6a7953ef00e5522600d58833
Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Your Chance to Speak to New Legal Scholars:
Comments
The comments to this entry are closed.