This edition of Researching Law introduces a new article from Stephen Daniels, which explores curricular innovation and institutional change in American law schools.
Tom Ginsburg explores the importance of the constitutional amendment rule, analyzing how differences in amendment cultures and the difficulty of change.
This article, featuring John Donohue, examines right-to-carry laws on crime rates, concluding that there is little evidence of a significant reduction in crime.
This edition outlines the presented findings from Wave 3 of the After the JD study at the ABF Fellow’s CLE Seminar in 2014.
This article with ABF’s Stephen Daniels explores curricular innovation and institutional change in American law schools.
This edition of Researching Law details the context, research methods, and conclusions presented in Traci Burch’s 2013 book, “Trading Democracy for Justice.”
This article by Bryant Garth offers a sociolegal perspective on the latest crisis in legal education and the legal profession.
This study, pulling data from ABF’s After the JD Project, analyzed the prevalence of buyers’ remorse for lawyers with outstanding educational debt.
This edition examines ABF Research Professor Tom Ginsburg’s work analyzing new constitutions from countries that formed after WWII.
Ronit Dinovitzer and John Hagan explore the impact of hierarchical structures on gender dissimilarity in American legal labor markets in this article.
Tera Agyepong addresses the particular lack of information about African American girls’ experiences in the early juvenile justice system in this article.