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Wednesday, July 02, 2008
America's Leading Law Review
Slate and Law Professors
Has anyone else noticed the enormous amount of writing done
by law professors for Slate? Even forgetting features like the annual Supreme Court wrap-up gabfest. I think it’s safe to say that it has become
This, of course, is not evidence of a trend – Slate has published writing by law professors for a number of years. But even so it is striking. And it raises a number of questions.
First, why is Slate so interested in articles by law
professors?
My guess is that this is driven by cost pressures on magazines. The collapse of the advertising market, the rise of blogs and the general fragmentation of available media has put a great deal of pressure on opinion magazines – they are losing money hand over first. Although it isn’t encumbered by print costs like some of its money-losing competitors, Slate needs to produce lots of content for not that much money. I have no idea what Slate pays law professors to write for it, but my guess is not that much, if anything. Given that we have, you know, jobs with salaries, the value of writing of writing for a popular publication probably does not come in the fee by the word – it comes from getting ideas out into a more popular forum than law reviews. The cost probably doesn’t exceed the cost of getting a 23-year-old intern to write things, and so it makes sense for Slate. (That is, if articles by law professors are better than those by 23-year-old interns, which I’m just going to hope is usually true.)
Second, why so many law professors and not as much from the rest of the academy? Part of it must spring from the fact that Slate is, for the most part, a public affairs magazine and the law is obviously a big part of that. But that doesn’t do enough work – it covers politics without much writing by political scientists, wars without much coverage by experts in military history or international relations, health care without much writing by medical school professors or health economists and so on. Any thoughts?
Posted by David Schleicher on July 2, 2008 at 02:51 PM | Permalink
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Comments
Don't forget Tim Wu!
Posted by: James Grimmelmann | Jul 2, 2008 3:25:52 PM
Slate's founding editor was Michael Kinsley, who graduated from Harvard Law School. I suspect an institutional prejudice towards law profs started with him.
Posted by: Bart Motes | Jul 2, 2008 3:27:24 PM
I would add to Slate's recent business model the salience of law concerns in the online consciousness, given current events these past seven years. Patriot Act extension, FISA rewrite, voter ID, redistricting, HAVA, Geneva conventions; these and similar topics have driven public discourse at Slate as well as internetwide. There were a few Scotus nominations that seemed to synchronize with the enhanced dialog. I would add a few more specialized outlets besides Slate. Now, if SSRN would build a frontpage, easily it could rival Slate's more accessibly homogenized content.
Posted by: JohnLopresti | Jul 2, 2008 4:34:20 PM
I would speculate that part of the answer to the second question is on the supply side. For whatever reason, us lawprofs love to blog; the rest of the academy considerably less so. While the web is filled with lawyer and law professor blogs (hence "blawgs"), there are much fewer by, say, medical school professors. Since a Slate article is oftentimes similar to a blog post, Slate can probably find ready contributors from the legal academy than other disciplines.
Posted by: TJ | Jul 2, 2008 5:57:50 PM
Lawprofs are also far more willing to say provocative things (in many instances, with little in the way of data to back them up) than are social scientists. That sells copy.
(Or, gets page hits. Whatever.)
Posted by: C. Zorn | Jul 3, 2008 12:48:32 AM
To echo C.Zorn, it's easy and quick to throw your most provocative thoughts to a crowd and the to argue them. Slate's Convictions forum is particularly noteworthy for threads that start with some variation of "I haven't fully vetted this idea, but...." Top that off with an area of acedemia that is particularly proud of its debating skills and you have the perfect forum for random arguments on whatever comes to mind--when it comes to mind.
Law reviews, on the other hand, take far more time to publish an article. It needs to be fully written, vetted by a bunch of students, cite-checked by other students, marked up by a third set of students, and then published. There's no instant gratification, there's no quick back and forth with colleagues, and everything needs to be cited extensively.
Where would you rather post?
Posted by: JS | Jul 3, 2008 10:51:44 AM
One more reason why Slate might be unusually interested in fairly high-level discussions of the law: The publisher of Slate is Cliff Sloan, a lawyer and former clerk for Justice Stevens who recently announced his departure from Slate to become a partner at Skadden.
Posted by: Orin Kerr | Jul 3, 2008 11:09:54 AM
I've been writing for slate for about 5 years, and they are always saying that one of the goals of the magazine is to import ideas from academia.
Law professors are some of few academics, though there are definitely some others, who can translate from academia to the public, at least to a degree.
Posted by: Tim Wu | Jul 3, 2008 1:06:47 PM
Very interesting post; here are a few little additions:
1) Don't forget Seton Hall prof David Feige, who's done a terrific job writing and blogging there.
2) As for "health care without much writing by medical school professors or health economists"--I actually think they've done a very good job having some of these types write on these issues, or having normal reporters doing excellent summaries of candidates' health care plans. I I know i've seen some great stuff on public health in the magazine by docs and/or public health scholars; it's somewhere in this search:
http://www.slate.com/default.aspx?id=3944&qt=drugs+and+developing+world with this brilliant work by Darshak Sanghavi being my favorite piece:
http://www.slate.com/id/2170555/
But I think you're generally right. And I think Slate is to be commended for publishing so many law profs. My sense is that much of the rest of the academy rewards specialization more than the law does--and that law profs' efforts to synthesize insights from other fields are a comparative advantage in "public intellectual"-dom. I have a vague sense that Martha Nussbaum has written something consonant with this idea....but I'll have to try to dig that up. In the meantime, I think Dr. Sanghavi's synthesis of medical and economic perspectives is exemplary.
Posted by: Frank | Jul 3, 2008 5:24:27 PM
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