Back MatterSource: Law & Society Review, Vol. 38, No. 3 (Sep., 2004)Published by: Wiley on behalf of the Law and Society AssociationStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/1555147 .
Accessed: 14/06/2014 02:12
Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
.JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range ofcontent in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new formsof scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].
.
Wiley and Law and Society Association are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access toLaw &Society Review.
http://www.jstor.org
This content downloaded from 185.2.32.110 on Sat, 14 Jun 2014 02:12:13 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Law & Society Review Condensed Style Sheet Manuscripts submitted for review should be double-spaced and should use a 12 pt. font. While manuscripts need not conform to this style sheet at the time of submission, all manuscripts must include an abstract, footnotes, and a list of references, and all accepted manuscripts must be revised by the authors to conform to the Review's style. The rules listed below supplement the manuscript information on the inside front cover of the Review. Authors are urged to consult Review issues in volume 35 or later for further illustrations. A detailed style sheet can be found at http://www.lawandsociety. org/review/Stylesheet.htm 1. Abstracts. All manuscripts should include an abstract of not more than 100
words. No abstracts are required for review essays or comments. 2. Footnotes. Footnotes should be numbered sequentially (except for the
author's footnote) and printed at the foot of the page. They should contain only substantive comments and additional references not immediately relevant to the text.
3. Tables and Figures. Tables should approximate the appearance of printed tables. Tables and/or figures should be placed at the end of the text, after footnotes, appendixes, and references. Their location within the text should be indicated as follows:
Table 1 about here
4. Citations. All notes that consist merely of supporting citations should be placed in parentheses in the text. For example:
In a thoughtful essay, Hayden (1991) . ..
OR Media stories often portray the civil jury as generous (Daniels & Martin 1986:236; Hans 1989; Huber 1988).
The same general rules apply to footnote text. 5. References. References are placed at the end of the manuscript following
the footnotes. The list should contain only those sources actually cited in text or notes. Give authors' names as they appear in the original source. For more than one publication by the same author, list them in chronological order, with the oldest item first. For more than one publication in one year by the same author, use small (lowercase) letters to distinguish them (e.g., 1970a, 1970b). BOOKS:
Example: Lerner, Melvin J. (1980) Belief in a Just World. New York: Plenum.
CHAPTER IN EDITED VOLUME:
Example: Glazer, Nathan (1979) "The Judiciary and Social Policy," in L. Theberge, ed., The Judiciary in a Democratic Society. Lexington, MA: Lexington Books.
ARTICLES:
Examples: Padgett, John F (1990) "Plea Bargaining in Prohibition," 24 Law & Society Rev. 413-50. Give month or issue number if each issue is separately paginated. Brill, Steven, & James Lyons (1986) "The Not-So-Simple Crisis," American Lawyer 12-15 (May).
UNPUBLISHED PAPERS:
Example: Lofquist, William S. (1991) "The Development of Organizational Probation." Presented at American Society of Criminology annual meeting, San Francisco.
WEB PAGES:
Example: Jones, Marion (2000) "What to Expect in Law School," Nearby University Law School, http://www.nearbylaw.edu/prospective (accessed 21 December 2000).
All cases cited in text are listed under "Cases Cited" following the References. All statutes cited are listed under "Statutes Cited." For style for cases and statutes, see A Uniform System of Citation.
This content downloaded from 185.2.32.110 on Sat, 14 Jun 2014 02:12:13 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Promises to Keep Technology, Law, and the Future of Entertainment WILLIAM W. FISHER Ii
"The strength of this book is Fisher's wit ingness to step above the political fray 1 solve problems. He has produced onei the most important books in media stu and law in some years. It is refreshing, bold, and provocative. We need it bad
-Siva Vaidhyanathan, New York University
$29.95 cloth
Free Trade and the Enviio.tieiit Mexico, NAFTA, and Beyond
KEVIN P. GALLAGHER "Kevin Gallagher makes an outstanding con- tribution to the trade-environment debate, offering some real breakthroughs in thinking about the relationship between trade expan- sion and environmental protection. The les- sons of Mexico and NAFTA are especially timely and will resonate in many countries throughout the Western hemisphere."
-Scott Vaughan, Director of the Unit for Sustainable Development and Environment, Organization of American States
$16.95 paper $42.50 cloth
Legal Ethics A Comparative Study
GEOFFREY C. HAZARD, JR. and ANGELO DONDI
"Professors Hazard and Dondi have a very large understanding of the realities of con- temporary law practice throughout the developed world. Their conversations with lawyers, judges, and government officials provide richness and depth to their analysis. Specialists and professionals worldwide will find this book stimulating and welcome."
-Roger Cramton, Comell University School of Law
$60.00 cloth
mit i""Ci ae- , .oeftexpe
American thri ' ers have erected their flimsy case, a tiows that the contin- gency fee system is far from spinning out of control."
-Malcolm M. Feeley, University of California, Berkeley, School of Law
$45.00 cloth
Somlithing to Believe In Politics, Professionalism and Cause Lawyering
STUART SCHEINGOLD and AUSTIN SARAT
"This highly engaging book is both a dis- criminating study and a rousing defense of what it unapologetically refers to as 'cause lawyering.' Professors Scheingold and Sarat offer fresh views on how lawyers so often end up isolated from their personal values, and are especially penetrating in analyzing the intricate con- nections between lawyers' roles and the ideals of a liberal democracy."
-Scott Turow, Author of Reversible Errors
$35.00 cloth
U
This content downloaded from 185.2.32.110 on Sat, 14 Jun 2014 02:12:13 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~l S~~~~~~~~~~~~~~SB
Compulsory Compassion A (ri'nrn ma rf Dae+nr',Harn Ih ue+ira r\ uI ILItquc Ul Irc3LUtIU LIVC JJUotLIu
Annalise E. Acorn "The literature on restorative justice is large and growing and this book is a unique contribution to the field ... It offers an important new adjustment to the landscape of responding to crime. I have seen no critique of restorative justice that comes close to this one in its depth, fairness, and richness ... It may well redefine and reorient the field." - Frances Olsen, Professor of Law, UCLA Law and Society Series 224 pages I ISBN 0-77480942-6 1 hc $85.00
Tournament of Appeals Granting Judicial Review in Canada Roy B. Flemming "The fact that the Supreme Court decides for itself what cases it is going to hear is an extremely important dimension of its strategic capacity ... This book does an excellent job of examining the issue and makes a significant original contribution to its field." - Peter McCormick, author of Supreme at Last: The Evolution of the Supreme Court of Canada Law and Society Series 144 pages I ISBN 0-7748-1082-3 1 hc $80.00
Collective Insecurity The Liberian Crisis, Unilateralism, and Global Order Ikechi Mgbeoji ""The book is a significant contribution to the fields of inter- national law and African studies ... It points the way forward and clarifies the difficult historical and intellectual problems that must be comprehended if Africa is to be understood both by Africans as well as outsiders." - Makau Mutua, Professor of Law and Director of the Human Rights Center at SUNY Buffalo Law and Society Series 200 pages I ISBN 0-7748-1037-8 1 pb $24.95
compulsor~ A Ct:jque of Resfoative J
Annalise Ac
:.' . . . . . . . .
,.,
1g.. ..
..
P:.
.
.
..
*: _t
: _&
i
.. ...
This content downloaded from 185.2.32.110 on Sat, 14 Jun 2014 02:12:13 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
JOURNAL OF
SUPREME COURT
HISTORY Editor: MELVIN I. UROFSKY
Managing Editor: CLARE CUSHMAN
For over twenty-five years the JOURNAL OF
SUPREME COURT HISTORY has been serving
the legal profession, historians, and the public.
Published for the Supreme Court Historical
Society, the journal and the society are dedicated
to the collection and preservation of the history
of the Supreme Court of the United States, and
to expanding public awareness of that history
and heritage.
www.supremecourthistory.org/
r BLACKWELL PUBLISHING E-ALERTS...
. .Blackwell You can now receive the tables of contents of Journal of E-mail Alerts Supreme Court History emailed directly to your desktop. "'rt ~ This free service allows you to choose exactly the
information you need. For updates on this journal and other Blackwell Publishing titles, please visit www.blackwellpublishing.com/ealerts
h
AVAILABLE ONLINE!
This content downloaded from 185.2.32.110 on Sat, 14 Jun 2014 02:12:13 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
I'............ :AIOaa - aag
Visit www.modernlawreview.org.uk for details of the full range of scholarly activities from The Modern Law Review The Modern Law Review is a peer-refereed journal that publishes original articles relating to common law jurisdictions, and increasingly to the law of the European Union. In addition to publishing articles in all branches of the law, the Review contains sections devoted to recent legislation and reports, to case analysis, and to review articles and book reviews.
Since its foundation over sixty-five years ago, The Modern Law Review has been providing a unique forum for the critical examination of contemporary legal issues and of the law as it functions in society. The Review today stands as one of Europe's leading scholarly journals, a ranking confirmed by recent research of UK legal academics which identified The Modern Law Review as having the highest academic quality of any UK-based law journal.*
*Campbell et ai, 'Journal Publishing, Journal Reputation, and the United Kingdom's Research Assessment Exercise'
(1999) 24 Journal of Law & Society 470-501
I U rrl~~I I1FT :rr~lllr I IS * S *I~
S 5 .
I~~~~~~ U IS
This content downloaded from 185.2.32.110 on Sat, 14 Jun 2014 02:12:13 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
Law and Society Association
Officers President: Howard Erlanger, Law and Sociology, University of Wisconsin, Madison Immediate Past President: Lauren Edelman, Jurisprudence & Social Policy, University of
California, Berkeley Secretary: Malcolm Feeley, Jurisprudence & Social Policy, University of California,
Berkeley Treasurer: Marianne Constable, Rhetoric, University of California, Berkeley Editors: Law & Society Review: Herbert M. Kritzer, Political Science, University of
Wisconsin Book Reviews: Martha M. Umphrey, Law, Jurisprudence and Social Thought, Amherst College
Executive Officer: Ronald M. Pipkin, Legal Studies, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Board of Trustees Class of John M. Conley, Law, University of North Carolina
2004 Susan B. Coutin, Criminology, Law and Society, University of California, Irvine
Lisa Hajjar, Sociology, University of California, Santa Barbara Haesook Kim, Sociology, Long Island University Dario Melossi, Criminology, University of Bologna Setsuo Miyazawa, Law, Omiya Law School Laura Beth Nielsen, Sociology and Law, American Bar Foundation Annelise Riles, Law, Cornell University
Class of Penelope Andrews, Law, City University of New York 2005 Elizabeth Heger Boyle, Sociology and Law, University of Minnesota
Ruth Buchanan, Law, University of British Columbia Davina Cooper, Law, Keele University Carol A. Jones, Sociology and Law, University of Glamorgan & University of
Hong Kong Kathleen M. Moore, Law and Society, University of California, Santa Barbara Leslye Amede Obiora, Law, University of Arizona Jonathan S. Simon, Jurisprudence & Social Policy, University of California,
Berkeley Class of Gad Barzilai, Political Science and Law, Tel Aviv University
2006 Jeannine Bell, Law, Indiana University Eric Feldman, Law, University of Pennsylvania Rebecca Redwood French, Law, University at Buffalo Felice J. Levine, Psychology, American Educational Research
Association Mona Lynch, Administration of Justice, San Jose State University Mary R. Rose, Sociology and Law, University of Texas, Austin Susan Shapiro, Sociology, American Bar Foundation
This content downloaded from 185.2.32.110 on Sat, 14 Jun 2014 02:12:13 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
TABLE OF CONTENTS VOLUME 38 NUMBER 3 SEPTEMBER 2004
CONSTITUTIONAL ETHNOGRAPHY: AN INTRODUCTION
Kim Lane Scheppele Editor, Special Issue 39
CONSTITUTIONAL EDGES
Reconstituting Paradise Lost: Temporality, Civility, and Ethnicity in Post-Communist Constitution-Making
Jiri Pibdn 407 Progress, Unity, and Democracy: Dissolving Political Parties in Turkey
Dicle Kogacioglu 433 CONSTITUTIONAL ARTICULATIONS
"Constrained" Constitutional Courts as Conduits for Democratic Consolidation
Nancy Maveety andAnke Grosskopf 463 Women's Rights, the European Court, and Supranational Constitutionalism
RachelA. Cichowski 489 Less Democracy, More Courts: A Puzzle of Judicial Review in Russia
Alexei Trochev S13 STATES, COURTS, AND PUBLICS
Judicial Power in Russia: Through the Prism of Administrative Justice Peter H. Solomon Jr. 549
The Impact of Legal Mobilization and Judicial Decisions: The Case of Official Minority-Language Education Policy in Canada for
Francophones Outside Quebec Troy Q. Riddell 583
REVIEW ESSAY
From Democracy to Juristocracy Leslie Friedman Goldstein 611
^ Blackwell Fy Publishing
This content downloaded from 185.2.32.110 on Sat, 14 Jun 2014 02:12:13 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions