
Symposium
Dead Poets and Academic Progenitors: The Next Generation of Law School Rankings (Symposium Introduction)
Paul L. Caron and Rafael Gely
Law School Rankings
Richard A. Posner
Ranking Law Schools: A Market Test?
Cass R. Sunstein
How To Rank Law Schools
Brian Leiter
The Rat Race as an Information-Forcing Device
Scott Baker, Stephen J. Choi, and Mitu Gulati
Ranking Law Schools: Using SSRN to Measure Scholarly Performance
Bernard S. Black and Paul L. Caron
Student Quality as Measured by LSAT Scores: Migration Patterns in the U.S. News Rankings Era
William D. Henderson and Andrew P. Morris
Strength in Numbers? The Advantages of Multiple Rankings
Michael Sauder and Wendy Nelson Espeland
The Interplay Between Law School Rankings, Reputations, and Resource Allocation: Ways Rankings Mislead
Jeffrey Evans Stake
Scholarly Profit Margins: Reflections on the Web
Lawrence A. Cunningham
Assessing the SSRN-Based Law School Rankings
Theodore Eisenberg
Segmented Rankings For Segmented Markets
Rafael Gely
Status Seeking and the Allure and Limits of Law School Rankings
Michael E. Solimine
The Destruction of the Holistic Approach to Admissions: The Pernicious Effects of Ranking
Alex M. Johnson Jr.
Of Rankings and Regulation: Are the U.S. News & World Report Rankings Really a Subversive Force in Legal Education?
Rachel F. Morán
Assessing What Matters in Law School: The Law School Survey of Student Engagement
Patrick T. O'Day and George D. Kuh
Notes
How the Xechem Decision May Insulate State Universities From Correction of Inventorship Suits
Stacey Drews
All Mixed Up: Bridgeport Music v. Dimension Films and De Minimis Digital Sampling
Jennifer R. R. Mueller