Citations:blawgosphere

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English citations of blawgosphere

Noun: "(Internet) the totality of blawgs (law blogs); the community of blawgers"[edit]

2005 2008 2009 2011 2012 2013 2018 2021
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  • 2005, "Between Lawyers Roundtable: The Future of Legal Blogging", Law Practice Magazine, July/August 2005:
    Right now large firms are underrepresented in the "blawgosphere."
  • 2008, Justin Krypel, "A New Frontier or Merely a New Medium - An Analysis of the Ethics of Blawgs", Michigan Telecommunications and Technology Law Review, Volume 14, Issue 2, page 479:
    The blawgosphere is a world powered by reputation, and blawgers read each other's material.
  • 2009, Judy M. Cornett, "The Ethics of Blawging: A Genre Analysis", Loyola University Chicago Law Journal, Volume 41, Issue 1, Fall 2009, page 236:
    Additionally, the proliferation of multiple or delegated authorship in the blawgosphere suggests that those blawgs may be moving away from the generic element of personal commentary and towards a more formal, public type of discourse akin to a legal information column or advertising.
  • 2009, Brian A. Craddock, "2009: A Blawg Odyssey: Exploring How the Legal Community Is Using Blogs and How Blogs are Changing the Legal Community", Mercer Law Review, Volume 60, Issue 4, page 1359:
    While the number of judge-authored blawgs is less than the number of blawgs published by other members of the legal community, such as attorneys or law professors, they do have a presence in the blawgosphere that cannot be denied.
  • 2011, Caroline Morris, Getting a PhD in Law, page 140:
    It is well-regarded within the blawgosphere and in the wider academic community—as evidenced by the advertisements by academic publishers on the site.
  • 2012, Elizabeth Chambliss, "Two Questions for Law Schools about the Future Boundaries of the Legal Profession", The Journal of the Legal Profession, Volume 36, page 331:
    Blaming the law schools is by far the dominant angle within the blawgosphere and the popular press, and includes cheap shots among competitors as well as more systematic and fair-minded analysis.
  • 2012, Gary Munneke, "Race to the Finish Line: Legal Education, Jobs and the Stuff Dreams Are Made Of", NYSBA Journal, February 2012, page 11:
    For much of 2011, the legal press and blawgosphere produced a non-stop litany of negative stories about the dismal job market for lawyers and the failings of legal education in the United States.
  • 2013, Douglas L. Keene & Rita R. Handrich, "Values, Priorities, and Decision-Making: Intergenerational Law Offices, Intergenerational Juries", The Jury Expert: The Art and Science of Litigation Advocacy, Volume 25, Issue 1, January/February 2013, page 1:
    The legal blawgosphere has been filled with anecdotal tales of what is termed “generational conflict” for years now.
  • 2018, Jane C. Murphy & Solangel Maldonado, "Reproducing Gender and Race Inequality in the Blawgosphere", Harvard Journal of Law & Gender, Volume 39, Issue 2:
    In the same way that the U.S. Supreme Court has recognized that “classroom discussion is livelier, more spirited, and simply more enlightening and interesting”107 when law schools admit a diverse student body, the blawgosphere is richer when all voices are represented.
  • 2021, Dara E. Purvis, "Legal Education as Hegemonic Masculinity", Villanova Law Review, Volume 65, Issue 5, page 1145:
    Women are underrepresented throughout legal academia from the ranks of professors down to the “blawgosphere” of law professor blogging.