Please pass the following along to anyone you think might be interested.
>From http://www.sjcl.edu/Default.aspx?tabid=81
The San Joaquin Agricultural Law Review, founded in 1991, is published by the students of San Joaquin College of Law, which is located in California's Central Valley, one of the richest agricultural regions in the world. The San Joaquin Agricultural Law Review presents student and scholar works on legal issues affecting our nation's most vital industry - agriculture. The topics discussed in each volume are always of current interest to those in agriculture, government, business and law.
Each year, the student editorial board members of the San Joaquin Agricultural Law Review gather, edit and publish articles, written by legal scholars and practitioners, and comments and case notes, written by students of San Joaquin College of Law. The San Joaquin Agricultural Law Review provides an objective, national forum for analyzing issues affecting agriculture.
The San Joaquin Agricultural Law Review has received judicial and critical recognition, and its articles have been cited by the California Supreme Court, the California Appellate Court, the United States District Court, the New Mexico Court of Appeals, the Middle District of Tennessee and the Minnesota Supreme Court. Articles have also been cited in the annotations of several California statutes.
Moreover, San Joaquin Agricultural Law Review has been mentioned frequently in National Law Journal's "Worth Reading" column and is included in Westlaw and LexisNexis and soon to be in Hein On-Line.
Subscriptions are also available. For more information, please contact:
Brooke Sorensen, Managing Editor at brooke.sorensen@student.sjcl.edu <mailto:brooke.sorensen@student.sjcl.edu>.
Brian L. Baker, JD, MLS
Director of the Law Library
& Professor of Law
San Joaquin College of Law
E: bbaker@sjcl.edu V: 559-323-2100 F: 559-323-5566
http://www.frappr.com/bbaker
As nightfall does not come all at once, neither does oppression. In both instances, there is a twilight when everything remains seemingly unchanged. And it is in such twilight that we all must be aware of change in the air however slight, lest we become unwitting victims of the darkness.
Justice William O. Douglas, US Supreme Court (1939-75)
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