Winter 2022 Issue of the Journal of Appellate Practice and Proccess
It is definitely winter in Tucson. I mean, it was a frigid 78 degrees here on Sunday. That means that the Winter 2022 issue of The Journal of Appellate Practice and Process (Volume 22, Issue 1) is now available. This issue features the following articles:
- Foreword: Semper Anticus, by Tessa L. Dysart
- In Memoriam: Ruth Bader Ginsburg, by Hon. Nancy Gertner
- Obsessive Over the Possessive at the Supreme Court of the United States: Exploring SCOTUS’/SCOTUS’s Use of Possessive Apostrophes, by Ryan C. Black and Timothy R. Johnson
- Filming the Police as Citizen-Journalists—A Tale of Two Heroes: What They Did, Why They Could Do It, and the Consequences for the Racial Divide in This Country, by Hon. Kermit V. Lipez
- It’s 3 A.M.: Do You Know What Your Staff Just Posted? Social Media Ethics Pitfalls for Appellate Lawyers and Judges, by Hon. John G. Browning
- Closed Courtrooms: Sixth Amendment and Public Trial Right Implications, by Luke Cass
- Incentivizing Ineffective-Assistance-of-Counsel Claims Raised on Direct Appeal: Why Appellate Courts Should Remand “Colorable” Claims for Evidentiary Hearings, by Brent E. Newton
- Judicial Decision-Making on the D.C. Circuit: A Law Clerk’s Perspective, by Mark L. Hanin
- Book Review: Seventh Edition of ALWD Guide to Legal Citation, by Hon. Pierre H. Bergeron
- Book Review: “I Can [Read] Clearly Now” Legal Writing: A Judge’s Perspective on the Science and Rhetoric of the Written Word, by Tessa L. Dysart
For questions about The Journal or to submit an article, please feel free to email me.