๐ฃ Texas Law Review is accepting proposals for our 2026 Symposium!
Got a timely legal topic that deserves the spotlight? Help shape the conversation and co-host one of the yearโs best academic events.
๐๏ธ Deadline: April 18
๐ More info: https://t.co/5U3kIjiCfK
#LawTwitter
Learn more about Judge Wood's incredible legal career by watching this video created for our Centennial Series: TLR Legal Heroes https://t.co/Pn7WD3KpdM
One of my favorite things at Saturdayโs @TexasLRev was the (long overdue) chance to meet Mrs. Custis Wright โ widow of the late @UTexasLaw Professor Charles Alan Wright, whose chair in Federal Courts is the honor of my career to hold.
#HookEm
"The breakthrough in Salibโs article is the qualitative insight: a new understanding of the potential use of statistics in class actions." - @omribenshahar responds to @petersalib's proposal for AI class actions in the latest from TLRO Vol. 100 https://t.co/ATXDaMNthA
As we enter year three of the COVID-19 pandemic, TLR Research Editor & 3L Emma Culotta urges states to consider distributive justice in their standard of care.
https://t.co/HZFp2BO8Z7
Can the winds of change be reliable rather than wild and free? In his note, TLR 3L Brad Bowen suggests a new approach to Texas's energy generation.
https://t.co/ngUxffrpYy
TLR 3L Kallen Dimitroff confronts the national rise of #OrganizedRetailCrime in her latest for TLRO Vol. 100.
The Note charts a course for retailers to bring conversion claims against e-commerce giants like @amazon & @eBay.
https://t.co/GkIxsAwI95
Read the latest student note from TLRO Vol.100! 3L Matthew Digan examines how anti-abduction legislation falls short of the Constitution and in protecting children. https://t.co/tLLrmm00FR
Before becoming a professor at @UofOklahomaLaw, @GGKrishnamoomoo was a TLR member in search of snacks and career solace.
Read his reflections on that time in TLRO Vol. 100: https://t.co/yGdzjkOzD4
No one is happy with the current test for the scope of the Seventh Amendment civil jury trial right. Professor Samuel Bray's "Equity, Law, and the Seventh Amendment," out now with @TexasLRev, suggests a new way forward: https://t.co/sS8600giUm
Computer science might finally show us what we all have in common. Read Prof. @petersalib's proposal for using AI to certify class actions https://t.co/45RDuJYlq4