President's pages.

AuthorWeiner, David

Ever since the members of Volume 53 became responsible for filling the pages that follow, it has been our collective goal to compile a Volume that reflects the entire diversity of contemporary legal scholarship. With the boundaries of what is properly considered "legal scholarship" in a constant state of expansion, this has not been a simple task. In addition to the countless submissions on legal doctrine, legal philosophy, and legal theory, the Law Review also receives articles on law and every social science imaginable. Our task is made even more complicated by the increasing sophistication of the techniques applied by legal scholars. In short, to successfully complete a Volume that represents the widest range of cutting edge and first rate legal scholarship requires both a great deal of time and effort.

Issue 1 begins with Professor Jonathan Molot's article, The Judicial Perspective in the Administrative State: Reconciling Modern Doctrines of Deference with the Judiciary's Structural Role. This is a comprehensive review of issues central to modern administrative law. In addition, Professor Saul Levmore has contributed a thought-provoking article, Voting with Intensity, that elucidates a theory of vote-buying. Issue 1 also features two book reviews, by Judge Richard Posner and Professor Anne Coughlin, of the recently published book Literary Criticisms of Law by Stanford Law School...

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