Tulsa Law Review

Tulsa Law Review

律师事务所

Tulsa,Oklahoma 507 位关注者

Tulsa Law Review is the flagship law journal of the University of Tulsa College of Law.

关于我们

Tulsa Law Review is the flagship law journal of the University of Tulsa College of Law. Run completely by law students, Tulsa Law Review publishes three issues per year containing innovative and thought-provoking scholarly articles from legal scholars nationwide. Tulsa Law Review also publishes four articles from TU law students each year. Not confined to one field of law or practice area, Tulsa Law Review publishes scholarship from subjects as varied as health law, oil and gas law, and constitutional law. Tulsa Law Review represents the best in legal writing and scholarship from practitioners, legal scholars, and TU law students.

网站
https://digitalcommons.law.utulsa.edu/tlr/
所属行业
律师事务所
规模
11-50 人
总部
Tulsa,Oklahoma
类型
教育机构
创立
1964

地点

Tulsa Law Review员工

动态

  • 查看Tulsa Law Review的公司主页,图片

    507 位关注者

    The Tulsa Law Review is excited to announce the publication of Volume 59, Issues 2 & 3. We are beyond honored to recognize the authors whose works we know will drive legal scholarship and discourse for years to come, and we are grateful to the entire 2023-24 Board and editors who made this publication possible. Read the latest issues here: https://lnkd.in/g_8ywzpq Articles: “From Briefs to Bytes: How Generative AI Is Transforming Legal Writing and Practice,” by Joe Regalia “Rebooting the Supreme Court,” by Benjamin Priester “Music of the Law: A Wigmorian Playlist for a Modern Era,” by Joseph Hummel “The Automation Paradox,” by Mbilike M. Mwafulirwa “Entertaining and Embracing Professional Identity Development in the 1L Legal Writing Curriculum,” by Charles Oldfield “Saints, Satanists, and Religious Public Charter Schools,” by Allen Rostron Comments: “Hi, Is This Item Still Available? Social Media as a Marketplace for Human Skeletal Remains,” by Cameron Skinner, M.Sc., J.D. “Cut the Cap: Proposing Further Change to Oklahoma’s Repair and Deduct Statute,” by Jacy Holbrook “Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Authentic Development: Fulfilling Stare Decisis through the Principles of St. John Henry Newman,” by Chad Thurman “Women, the Law, and Sexual Assault: Why the Model Penal Code’s Ordinary Resolution Standard Furthers Victims Blaming,” by Hillary Hurst

    Tulsa Law Review | Vol 59 | No. 2

    Tulsa Law Review | Vol 59 | No. 2

    digitalcommons.law.utulsa.edu

  • 查看Tulsa Law Review的公司主页,图片

    507 位关注者

    Please join us in congratulating the newest members of the Tulsa Law Review! This year's Associate Editors stood out from a highly-competitive field of candidates; they bring a wealth of knowledge and experience to the Review, and we are so excited to have them on staff. Congratulations to the newest members of our team!

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  • 查看Tulsa Law Review的公司主页,图片

    507 位关注者

    Tulsa Law Review is excited to announce the following student works have been selected for publication in the forthcoming issues of our 60th Volume. Please join us in congratulating these students on their accomplishment! Karly Fisher: Mugshots in Oklahoma: Stigmatizing Native American Individuals and Communities Cassidy Monroe: Physicians Need Absolutes: Why Health Care Fraud Should Not Be Subjective Under the False Claims Act Stephanie Smith: Labor of Love, or Profit?: How the Parental Rights Argument Threatens to Upend Child Labor Regulation in America Colten Kidd: Distressed and Not OK: How and Why Oklahoma's Physical Manifestation Requirement for Recovery of Emotional Harm Should be Eliminated Blake Chrismer: In Defense of Appropriation Art: An Analysis of Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc. v. Goldsmith Jordan Wallace: A Precedential Grand Slam

  • 查看Tulsa Law Review的公司主页,图片

    507 位关注者

    Please join us in congratulating the new leaders of the Tulsa Law Review! This year's Associate Editors were highly-competitive candidates with a wealth of knowledge, skill, and experience. Next year's leadership is more than capable and dedicated to continuing the Law Review's tradition of excellence. Run completely by law students, the Tulsa Law Review represents the very best in legal research and writing. Congratulations to the new leadership!

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  • 查看Tulsa Law Review的公司主页,图片

    507 位关注者

    TU and the Tulsa Community join?Tulsa Law Review, The Office of the Provost, and The University of Tulsa College of Law to attend our symposium, Contemporary Cannabis: Wading through a Post-Prohibition Era. Please Register to attend at : https://lnkd.in/gWuTz9AU Professor Robert Mikos, LaRoche Family Chair in Law at Vanderbilt University Law School, is the keynote speaker over the lunch hour. Professor Mikos is author of the preeminent legal text “Marijuana Law, Policy, and Authority” (Wolters Kluwer, 2017), and is nationally renowned for his scholarship in federalism and cannabis law. This symposium will also present a morning panel focused on the relationship between cannabis law and business enterprises, and an afternoon panel focused on evidentiary issues related to cannabis law. The morning panel, moderated by Mr. Jeffrey Trevillion of Crowe & Dunlevy, will include the scholarship of Professor Ryan Stoa (Southern University Law Center), Professor Eli Wald (Sturm College of Law – University of Denver), Executive Director Adria Berry (Oklahoma Medical Marijuana Authority), and Mr. Shane Pennington (Porter Wright Morris & Arthur LLP). The afternoon panel, moderated by TU Law Professor Gwen Savitz, will consist of scholarship from Professor Alex Kreit (Salmon P. Chase College of Law – Northern Kentucky University), Representative Ron Bryce, M.D. (Kansas House of Representatives), Mr. Sabah Khalaf (The Khalaf Law Firm) and Ms. Kaimbri White (Climb Collective). We look forward to hosting all who are interested on March 1, 2024 in the Great Hall! For questions, please contact Chad Thurman at?[email protected]?or?Cameron?Skinner at?[email protected].

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  • 查看Tulsa Law Review的公司主页,图片

    507 位关注者

    The Tulsa Law Review is honored to announce the publication of our Winter Issue, Volume 59, Issue 1.? This issue covers a wide variety of legal research, including immigration, Magna Carta, artificial intelligence in the context of criminal trials, energy sovereignty for Native American nations, Dormant Commerce Clause jurisprudence, and professional plaintiffs in corporate derivative actions. This issue also features commentary by our very own Callie Lay and McKenzie Corley. Run completely by law students, the Tulsa Law Review represents the very best in legal research and writing. Publication of this issue would not have been possible without each and every Executive Board member, Editorial Board member, Staff Editor, and Associate Editor.? The Law Review would also like to give special thanks to Professor Gwendolyn Savitz and Megan Donald for their contributions to the TLR team this semester.?

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