Welcome to your place in the Canadian
blawg world, Jordan.
The entire affair has led to far more attention than
the blawg world ever gets, with some particularly breathless coverage in Nebraska's local media market.
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 human.
And if you're interested in learning more about the origins of
World Human Rights Day, check out this post at
Blawg Review's home site.
We very much enjoyed the opportunity to investigate the relationship between women and the
world of law blogs, and thank the eponymous Ed at
Blawg Review for support and encouragement, as well as some great links.
David Jacobson of External Insights, an Australia - based, solo business lawyer, hosts this week's link - packed
Blawg Review 66, with a bunch of work - life balance links, professional firm management and IP and tech news from around the
world.
This
blawg includes information about and links to Oregon legal research resources, in addition to comments about cases, statutes, and interesting events in the
world of legal research and law libraries.
For this week's
Blawg Review, Hull taps into that catalog, offering an international review that makes the
World Cup seem provincial.
This
blawg is hosted by U.S. News &
World Report.
The Cross-Border Biotech Blog had a very
blawg - y week this week with three posts on legal issues affecting the biotech
world, thanks in part to my lovely and talented legal writer / spouse / editor / CMO Audrey Fried - Grushcow.
The Editor of the
Blawg Review reminded me of this gem from five years ago — when I hosted the
Blawg Review on my blog to celebrate
World Book and Copyright Day:
Here in my part of the
world, tomorrow marks the Red Sox home opener, but in the legal blogosphere, baseball season officially starts today with
Blawg Review # 103 or, as its author, Jonathan D. Frieden, calls it, the BaseBlawg Review.
At this time in history, in the midst of a global war on terrorism, when the usually disparate
worlds of military and civilian justice seem to overlap in the application of the law, this promises to be a very interesting issue of
Blawg Review.»
HealthBlawg blogger (and my fellow Bay Stater) David Harlow hosts
Blawg Review # 154 today, which, not so coincidentally, is
World Health Day.
I'm complimented that, while I'm no lawyer, I've been asked to write
Blawg Review # 27 for the legal blogging
world's weekly carnival of blawggers.
The
World Health Organization has declared today's theme to be the endangerment of human health by climate change, so Harlow follows suit, beginning his review of the week's
blawgs with posts that address climate - change law and policy.
The
blawg also features a monthly award called the «Worst Cruise Line in the
World.»
Labour relations are highly relevant for this edition of
Blawg Review, since law professors at the University of California are considering a walk - out despite having the «best public education in the
world.»
If you are interested in what's going on in the legal blog
world, I encourage you to follow the
Blawg Review.
-- to which the aforementioned «Editor,» cloaked in anonymity and wielding the awful power held by anonymous «bloggers» the
world over, responded: «Well, why don't you post a pre-
Blawg Review
Blawg Review on April Fool's Day, when no one will expect it?
Dennis Kennedy, doing some spinning, wrote «Interestingly, I noticed in the post that legal blogs are apparently being called «
blawgs» around the
world.»
Last week's superb
Blawg Review # 147 by the
world's foremost authority on North American badger law left me rather intimidated.
There was nothing my father enjoyed more than debating the philosophies, merits, and impacts of laws around the
world — sharing opinions and celebrating the discourse you helped create here at
Blawg Review.
The China
Blawg focuses on business, legal, tax, intellectual property and other China issues as it affects businesses and businessmen in the
world's most populous nation.