The Nebraska Law Review

2014 Nebraska Law Review Write-On Competition

pbdonahue

This post contains materials for the 2014 University of Nebraska College of Law annual write-on competition.

This competition is open to UNL Law students who have completed their 1L year or are a transfer student, and have two (2) or more remaining (non-summer) semesters left. Further instructions are available in the attached materials.

If you have any questions, please contact Sarah Hindman, Research Editor, at sarahnhindman@gmail.com.

Best of luck!

Regulators, Mount Up

mrick101

Ben Trachtenberg[0]

Improving Law School “Transparency”

mrick101

Jeffrey Evans Stake[0]

The Evaporating Trust in American Legal Education

mrick101

Kyle P. McEntee [0]

I once overheard a non-lawyer tell a popular lawyer joke. How can you tell that an attorney is about to lie? Without missing a beat the jokester quipped. The attorney’s lips begin to move. The group found it funny, while I began to wonder what happened to my sense of humor. I smirked, sure, but more than anything the familiar joke diverted my attention from comedy to comity.

Response Series: Ben Trachtenberg’s “Law School Marketing and Legal Ethics”

mrick101

Issue 91 of the Nebraska Law Review features an article by Professor Ben Trachtenberg of the University of Missouri School of Law which details a recent and controversial topic within legal education: the release of misleading employment statistics by law school administrators. In Law School Marketing and Legal Ethics,[1] Professor Trachtenberg advocates a novel approach to combating this deceitful practice through the use of professional liability under Model Rule 8.4(c).

LB 36: A Shot in the Arm for Lethal Injection

rgerlach

LB 36: A Shot In The Arm For Lethal Injection

Response IT’S ALL ACADEMIC: A Response to “Enforcement of Law Schools’ Non-Academic Honor Codes: A Necessary Step Towards Professionalism?” by Nicola A. Boothe-Perry

rgerlach

 

Response:

IT’S ALL ACADEMIC:

A Response to “Enforcement of Law Schools’ Non-Academic Honor Codes: A Necessary Step Towards Professionalism?” by Nicola A. Boothe-Perry

 

Jonah J. Horwitz [0]

Copyright © 2012.  Jonah J. Horwitz.  All rights reserved.

 

 

White Papers

rgerlach

In addition to commentaries, the Bulletin will also publish “white papers.” These papers come from a number of student sources; they could be seminar papers, class papers, or case notes that have not yet been selected for publication. The Bulletin‘s goal in publishing these materials is to provide practitioners with the background research that was done for the paper. The Bulletin hopes to create a depository of research that was done for different purposes.