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Tuesday, July 27, 2010
Colin Miller: Things You Oughta Know If You Teach Evidence
The following is a list of resources which you might want to consult if you teach Evidence:
·EvidenceProf Blog is
a blog maintained by Colin
Miller of The John Marshall Law School.
Co-bloggers are Joelle
Moreno of the Florida International
University College of Law, Myrna
Raeder of the Southwestern Law School,
and “blogger emeritus” David Leonard,
formerly of Loyola Law School Los Angeles.
The blog contains entries regarding recent precedent, scholarship, and laws
relating to evidence. You can keep up with new posts by following the blog’s Twitter feed.
·The Federal Evidence Review is a monthly
electronic legal journal that highlights recent federal evidence cases and
developments for subscribers. You can subscribe by clicking here (subscriptions are $295).
The Review also maintains the free Federal
Evidence Blog, which highlights recent cases and issues involving the
Federal Rules of Evidence and other topical evidence matters.
·The Confrontation Blog is a
blog maintained by Richard
D. Friedman of the University
of Michigan Law School. The blog is devoted to reporting and commenting on
developments related to Crawford v.
Washington, 541 U.S. 36 (2004), and the Confrontation Clause.
·Tillers on Evidence and Inference
is a blog maintained by Peter
Tillers of the Benjamin
N. Cardozo School of Law. The blog covers news and developments relating to
evidence, legal theory, and legal education.
·The Evidence listserv
is maintained by Roger
Park of the University
of California Hastings College of the Law. On the listserv, Evidence
professors discuss current issues relating to evidence law. To subscribe, send
an e-mail message to listproc@chicagokent.kentlaw.edu.
The message should have no subject line. In the body of the message, include:
“subscribe evid-fac-l [your first name] [your last name]”. Make sure there is a
single space between each word, and do not include the brackets.
·Snitching Blog is a blog maintained by Alexandra Natapoff
of Loyola Law School Los Angeles. The blog is
a comprehensive resource on criminal informants: legal developments,
legislation, news stories, cultural reactions, commentary and more….
·the gabel wire is a blog maintained by Jessica Gabel of the Georgia State University College of Law. The
blog has a tab
for all posts relating to Scientific
Evidence.
·The Teaching
Materials Network is a contact list of law professors offering to share
their teaching materials with peers teaching a class for the first time. The
Network is maintained by Susan
D. Rozelle of the Stetson University
College of Law. Several evidence professors have offered to share their
materials on the Network.
·SSRN has an Evidence
& Evidentiary Procedure eJournal. Its current Editor is Chris Sanchirico of
the University of Pennsylvania Law School.
The eJournal’s scope encompasses the traditional concerns of Evidence
scholarship, including hearsay evidence, character evidence, expert witnesses,
and privileges. You can subscribe by going to SSRN’s
page of Journal Offerings,
scrolling down to Evidence
& Evidentiary Procedure eJournal, and clicking on the “Subscribe” tab.
·The International Commentary on Evidence is
a peer-reviewed journal on evidence law and theory. Its Editor-in-Chief is Craig Callen
of the Michigan State University College of
Law. You can subscribe by filling out this form
(subscriptions are $175).
·The AALS has an Evidence
Section. Its current Chair is Edward
K. Cheng of the Vanderbilt
University Law School.
·The Legal
Scholarship Blog is a blog that posts Law-Related Calls for Papers,
Conferences, and Workshops. The blog has a tab for Evidence.
Posted by Dan Markel on July 27, 2010 at 09:21 PM in Teaching Law, Things You Oughta Know if You Teach X | Permalink
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Comments
See also the Double Helix Law blog. This blog "examines developments in the law of evidence and forensic genetics." It also "comments on threats -- perceived and real -- to privacy and civil liberties posed by developments such as law-enforcement DNA databases."
Posted by: David Kaye | Jul 28, 2010 10:36:26 AM
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