@dr_cdeutsch You should tell him this at his upcoming webinar on how to use Claude Code for Academic Writing and Research after using "JUNE25" to get 25 percent off the attendance fee.
@kurtlash1@PJSobkowski This response seems less than constructive. Also, the use of the term "subtweet" implies that Pat should have @-ed Thomas Jefferson.
@emilysbremer It's varied. Started in July last year because of some high profile journals opening early and while I got quick initial hits, expediting got me nowhere. I'm planning on first week of August this time around.
My article, “The Federal Courts Jurisprudence of Justice Clarence Thomas” now live in the Catholic University Law Review. Building on @RichardMRe, I analyze dozens of Justice Thomas’s opinions, suggesting three themes make up his thinking in this area. https://t.co/hNqPK8xPek
I would really love to write (and read!) shorter articles (10K words or less) that just identify a problem, make an argument, flesh out implications, and address objections. This would mean omitting detailed background and cites to every tangentially relevant article.
A modest proposal: If you submit a manuscript with a made-up citation—not a bungled or misspelled reference—you receive a 5-year ban on having your work reviewed at that journal.
As part of Law Day, @UofOklahomaLaw Professor @msmith750 presented on "The Rule of Law and the American Dream" to the Cleveland County Bar Association.
I am honored to have received the university research award for my article, “The Healing Power of Antitrust,” published in the @NwULRev. I dedicated this award to all physicians around the world who help people heal and to all those who fight for social justice and equality.