Such nomination posts shall be calculated as votes for Blawg Review of the Year only if the nominating blogger advises the Editor of
Blawg Review by email of a link to such nominations.
Sheesh, I try to create some juice for this month's canadianized version of
Blawg Review by commending your post and I not only get a back - handed compliment from Erik, but I instigate a pissing match with you.
Of course there have been some notable
Blawg Reviews by bloggers such as Dr. Jillian T. Weiss # 135, Stephanie West - Allen with Julie Fleming - Brown # 114, Mirriam Seddiq # 301, Lucy Reed # 290, and SiouxsieLaw's inspirational carnival of goth for # 310.
Smith's Blawg Review # 123 is styled as an appellate decision that sets a great precedent for future
Blawg Reviews by covering a wide range of subjects, from the Nixon Peabody theme song debacle to judges who write and cite law blogs.
Not exact matches
Blawg Review # 138 commemorates World Human Rights Day, by devoting part of the review to human rights issues, and part to the types of matters, like ceremonies, traditions and habits that make us
Review # 138 commemorates World Human Rights Day,
by devoting part of the
review to human rights issues, and part to the types of matters, like ceremonies, traditions and habits that make us
review to human rights issues, and part to the types of matters, like ceremonies, traditions and habits that make us human.
After beginning
by remembering our nation's war dead, Albainy - Jenei goes on to conduct the job at hand,
reviewing the week's notable
blawg posts.
Blawg Review # 160 takes the form of a diary entry by hostess Ruthie's Law, who shares a behind - the - scenes look at preparing a blawg re
Blawg Review # 160 takes the form of a diary entry by hostess Ruthie's Law, who shares a behind - the - scenes look at preparing a blawg r
Review # 160 takes the form of a diary entry
by hostess Ruthie's Law, who shares a behind - the - scenes look at preparing a
blawg re
blawg reviewreview.
Befitting the day,
Blawg Review # 84 is hosted
by Jen Burke at her blog, Transcending Gender.
«You have to not only love, but stand in awe at the wit and energy behind
Blawg Review # 15, hosted this week
by fellow management employment lawyer, George Lenard at George's Employment
Blawg,» writes Mike Fox.
It's time for
Blawg Review # 118, hosted
by Blawgletter, the business trial law blog with a sense of humor.
Now,
by way of Abbie Mulvihill at the blog AbsTracked, I learn that another legal blogger, Scott Vine of Information Overlord, has started a sort of anti-meme to the
Blawg Review meme, listing his top 10, but changing the parameter to a list defined as «who do I read that I think may have been overlooked
by those that I read that have been meme'd??»
Several law blogs that have hosted
Blawg Review over the past five years are now permanently archived
by the Library of Congress.
Stem client John Hochfelder is the host of this week's
blawg review, which comes with an interesting personal touch — the
review is both dedicated to, and the theme guided
by, the life of his late father.
The
Blawg Review is a «blog carnival,» which, for the uninitiated, is essentially a collection of links to recent blog posts organized around a common theme
by the blogger hosting the carnival (which today, is yours truly).
April is National Poetry Month and what better way to celebrate than a poetry - themed
Blawg Review # 155, hosted
by Greg May at The California Blog of Appeal.
Blawg Review # 159 is up at The Whistleblower Law Blog, sponsored
by the law firm of LaBovick and LaBovick.
Blawg Review # 185 is up now, hosted
by Duncan Bucknell's IP Think Tank Blog.
Give yourself a merry little Christmas break today and read
Blawg Review # 37
by The Wired GC.
Last but
by far not least, if this
blawg review left your appetite unsatisfied, check out this week's Blawg Review # 214, hosted by Charon QC, who reminds us that on this day in 1812, President James Madison asked Congress to declare war on the United Kin
blawg review left your appetite unsatisfied, check out this week's Blawg Review # 214, hosted by Charon QC, who reminds us that on this day in 1812, President James Madison asked Congress to declare war on the United Ki
review left your appetite unsatisfied, check out this week's
Blawg Review # 214, hosted by Charon QC, who reminds us that on this day in 1812, President James Madison asked Congress to declare war on the United Kin
Blawg Review # 214, hosted by Charon QC, who reminds us that on this day in 1812, President James Madison asked Congress to declare war on the United Ki
Review # 214, hosted
by Charon QC, who reminds us that on this day in 1812, President James Madison asked Congress to declare war on the United Kingdom.
And if links like these aren't enough incentive to draw you to
Blawg Review # 159, perhaps you'll be enticed
by the opportunity to reacquaint yourself with some of your favorite nursery rhymes which are interspersed throughout.
Hosted
by Corporate
Blawg UK this time,
Blawg Review # 116 is all in rhyme.
This week's
Blawg Review is written
by Mark W. Bennett, a Houston criminal defense lawyer and author of the blog Defending People.
Blawg Review I / P Updates MyShingle.com Jottings
by an Employer's Lawyer Crime & Federalism Silicon Valley Media Blog Insurance Scrawl The Common Scold Robert Ambrogi's LawSites Law Department Management Excited Utterances Prism Legal InhouseBlog The Wired GC
Today,
Blawg Review remembers 9/11 with a collection of posts, including this particularly moving remembrance
by my co-blogger, Robert Ambrogi.
That would explain why
Blawg Review # 82 is hosted
by Edward Still at the blog Votelaw.
If you enjoyed this taste of «northern flavour» (sic), you'll be pleased to know that the next three
Blawg Reviews are also hosted
by Canadians:
(And yes, for those who looked at it, I was touched
by the ending to John Hochfelder's
Blawg Review, but only because I could imagine the reality of the actions and emotions he was conveying through his and Vandross's lovely and soulful words.)
This week brings a larger than life
Blawg Review # 201, hosted
by Dallas - based Susman Godfrey litigator Barry Barnett.
That was Matt Barr's reaction to the big legal news last week, as he writes in today's
Blawg Review # 99, hosted
by the group blog Begging to Differ.
Blawg Review # 92 is up and running here, hosted
by Legal Andrew, a blog with tips on increasing productivity.
And, no fooling, that's all just a big lead up to the actual
Blawg Review # 102, hosted
by Wallace at his alter ego, Declarations and Exclusions blog.
and a specialApril Fools» Day
Blawg Review prequel, fittingly sponsored
by a Fool in the Forest, George Wallace.
Today's September 11 - themed
Blawg Review # 74 is hosted
by The Institute for Global Security Law and Policy, at the Case Western Reserve University School of Law.
Blawg Review # 125 is out, hosted at LexBlog
by none other than the blogger - who - covers - all - blogs, Kevin O'Keefe.
This week's Issue 50 of
Blawg Review is out, hosted
by The Dark Goddess of Replevin.
And this week, we're treated to an equally thorough overview
by Tim Stanley of Justia, who hosts
Blawg Review # 112.
In recognition of Autism Awareness Day today,
Blawg Review # 113 is hosted at Special Education Law Blog
by Chicagoan Charles Fox, a lawyer who practices special - education law and who is the father of a child with cerebral palsy.
Blawg Review # 108 is out, hosted
by Arnie Herz at Legal Sanity.
«It has come to the attention of your anonymous Editor that some lawyers, law students, and law professors would like to be contributors to
Blawg Review, but are worried about losing clients, getting hard - marked, or jeopardizing tenure... To enable everyone to be a contributor to
Blawg Review, without fear or favor, there is now a convenient submission form created
by blogcarnival.com for
Blawg Review, so you don't have to use your regular email, if you like the new form.
Week in and week out, a string of legal bloggers take on the thankless task of editing
Blawg Review, the weekly carnival of law bloggers that reflects the best buzz of the legal blogosphere as seen
by each successive editor.
In the tradition of mummering, every blogger visited in
Blawg Review # 89 will be permitted to ask no more than three questions in a single private email to the editor as to his identity — each question requiring a simple «yes or no» answer — but may not ask a direct question as to a name or other pseudonym used
by the editor, such as, «Are you so - and - so?»
It's best to make your submissions through the official
Blawg Review channels rather than
by direct email to me.
A couple of days ago,
Blawg Review's mystery Editor started this meme that identified the 10 blogs that in Editor's view are «simply the best» — and asked those chosen to spread the good fortune
by naming their own top «meme chose's.»
The IP.Com team celebrates the 70th anniversary of the ballpoint pen
by penning
Blawg Review # 179.
You can submit your nomination
by going to the «Submission Guidelines» page at
Blawg Review and following the directions there.
Moreover, as I wrote here before,
Blawg Review continues to serve as an oasis of equality in an otherwise stratified profession, a place where the most experienced or well - known law bloggers serve as hosts right alongside newbies and a place where any interesting blog post can gain wide exposure
by virtue of inclusion in
Blawg Review.
Others among the several blogs honored here are Above the Law as Best New Law Blog, Overlawyered for Best
Blawg Theme, Likelihood of Confusion for Best Law Blog Name, Antitrust
Review and PHOSITA sharing the award for Best Group Blog, TalkLeft for Best Politicio Blog
by Lawyers, Althouse for Best Personal Blog
by a legally oriented female blogger, SHLEP: the Self - Help Law ExPress for Best Law Blog in the Public Interest, Online Guide to Mediation for Best Law Blog
by a legal mediator, and Denise Howell as
Blawg Diva for her blogging at Bag and Baggage, Between Lawyers and Lawgarithms.
(This week's edition of
Blawg Review, as it happens,
by May It Please The Court's J. Craig Williams, referenced Tartan Day's Canadian connections).
For those not familiar,
Blawg Review is a weekly collection of the best of the legal blogosphere, assembled each week
by a different law blogger.
A second
Blawg Review link that caught my eye was this post
by Jordan Furlong at Law 21, asking whether law firms are gaming the system that magazines and other ratings services use to identify «best places to work.»