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The information on this site does not constitute legal advice and is for educational purposes only. If you have a dispute or legal problem, please consult an attorney licensed to practice law in your state. Additionally, the information and views presented on this blog are solely the responsibility of Justin Bathon personally, or the other contributors, personally, and do not represent the views of the University of Kentucky or the institutional employer of any of the contributing editors.

Entries in Recent Scholarship (12)

Tuesday
Jun112013

New Education Law Blog

It is not that often that I get to announce a GREAT new outlet for education law news and resources, but today I do in the form of the Education Law Prof Blog. The blog is part of the Law Prof Blog network and is written primarily by Derek Black of the University of South Carolina Law School and LaJuana Davis of Samford University with occassional posts by Areto Imoukhuede of Nova Southeastern Law School. You absolutely must add it to your readers (and, remember, Google Reader is going away soon, so please switch to Feedly). 

I feel like this blog was the exact blog that I expected to exist way back in 2004 when I first searched googled "education law blog" and found nothing (and this started this one). I am glad that we finally have a presence at that law professor level (besides with this blog) and I hope that education law continues to be taken more seriously by those in the legal academy. 

Saturday
Jun082013

New Publication Opportunity

Information Age Press has a new publication opportunity for peer-reviewed chapters in a book to be titled "Law & Educational Inequality: Removing Barries to Educational Opportunities." The effort is lead by our friends Susan Bon, Kevin Brady, Karen Miksch & Jeffery Sun. The deadline for chapters is August 15 and publication is expected early next year. More information about the opportunity can be found in this call for papers

Wednesday
Dec192012

The Consequences of Overpaying University Presidents

Law professors Brian Galle and David Walker have just posted to SSRN (free download) a new article identifying a negative association between non-profit executive pay and donor generosity.  That is, according to their study, as we continue to increase the pay of university presidents, we should expect private gifts to the same universities to decline.  I am familiar at least with Brian's prior work, and his scholarship is top-notch, so I am inclined to take this study seriously, as Boards of Trustees should.  Check it out here: http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2187979 . 

Tuesday
Mar202012

New Education Law Text Takes a Different Approach

It is not often I review textbooks on the blog. In fact, I am not sure I ever have before. Mostly that is just because I am so firmly entrenched with this one, as it was the one I learned with and even helped a bit on an edition or two ago. Now, I use that one for my principal classes, but do not use a textbook for my teacher leader or undergraduate classes.  

But, recently I was made aware of a new textbook on education law that takes a different approach to publishing, namely, no publisher. John Dayton's new book, Education Law: Principles, Policy & Practice, has taken a self-publishing approach. It is a very comprehensive (480 pages) look at education law. It is also not a casebook, meaning John actually wrote all of the text. There is also a Kindle version coming soon. I have just briefly scanned the book and find it to be very well constructed and particularly strong on constitutional issues. It was clearly a labor of love and I recommend you at least give it a look on Amazon. To those folks teaching law out there, I'm sure if you contacted John he could get you part of the book to review even.

What is really interesting to me about the book, though, is that it signals a new potential path for publishing that changes the game. How, you ask?

(1) First, this type of publishing keeps costs much lower. So much of the price of a textbook is wrapped up in the publisher's overhead costs and not in the actual printing of the book. Pearson, all of those teaching in universities know, has an enormous staff. I have a personal Pearson representative that stops in my office about every three months. That is a salary John Dayton does not have to pay, nor does Amazon, nor does the start-up partner CreateSpace, and most importantly nor do any customers. In essence, all the cost of this book entails is the compensation for the time John spent writing it, the very small amount he paid CreateSpace to help with the process, and the cut Amazon takes. The author, usually the professor, is not in this for the money. There is some money, don't get me wrong, but ask your standard textbook author whether they care about the royalties and I bet they do not. There are so many other, and better, reasons to do it anyway (although I'm not sure vita-boost counts as better). Nevertheless, very few professors are motivated by the royalty money. Bottom line? 

Most popular text in education law: $172.30
Second most popular and one I favor: $110.99
This new textbook: $35.99 

Ask your students out there which one they favor. 

(2) Copyright. As an author, when you work with a standard publisher you lose the copyright to your work. The publisher holds and controls the rights to the future use of the book. This is a bad thing for everyone but the publisher. When a book runs initially, I do not mind the publisher recouping their costs even with a little extra added on for profit. What I do mind is the publisher keeping the rights of that book under lock and key long after their investment as been paid off and the book is marketable. Standard copyright these days is around 100 years. Thus, any traditional book (or journal article for that matter) is useful only while marketable and only to those capable and willing to pay the price (see #1, above).

Take away this traditional copyright game, however, and a whole new world opens up. An author has so many more options both in the near term and in the long term. The author can share the book with whomever he/she pleases. Can choose to use it in their own classes free of charge. Can partner with professional organizations to make snippets public. Can create websites that do so many different things. Can put the text out in ePUB, so it is digital and interactive. Can update the text whenever. And on and on. The long-term, though, is even more interesting to me. Once an author recoups the initial costs, why not release the text to the public with a Creative Commons license? Let the world share and remix and build from the text? Why not? So many awesome possibilities ... that are not behind a 100 year firewall.  

(3) Flexibility - When I write my textbook, I am going to put YouTube videos in it. No, not as some add on CD or some outside website with a crappy URL ... I mean seriously right in the text, sometimes in place of the text, right there seamlessly in the book. Why try to describe Savana Redding's case when she can describe it for herself? Seriously? When the few (and believe me, still few) publishers that have solicited me to write for them hear this, their eyes get really big and they cock their head a bit in confusion and look for an exit. But, I am serious. Traditional publishers ... are traditional. Print offers very little flexibility. Black, white, 8 1/2 x 11 ... that's about it. Digital text is different.

Ultimately, why I wanted to write this post is just to let you know it is okay to think differently about publishing. To have different expectations of authors, publishers, booksellers, and consumers. The inertia in the traditional publishing model is deep and long-lasting. We are going to be printing books in publishing houses for a great while longer. But, it is not the only model now. In niche fields like ours, it may not even be the best model. Certainly this book is a test case and we shall see in a few years the results. But, whether or not this effort is successful, it will not be the last effort (yes, that is a personal promise). Information is different now and it needs to be treated differently. This was one bold step forward along that path.

Bravo, Professor Dayton. Thank you for being a leader.    

Friday
Nov122010

Louisiana's Constitution and Education Reform

I have posted before about education reform in New Orleans since Hurricane Katrina.  In my most recent entry, I mentioned two law review issues that focus on the education law issues in the New Orleans reforms.  I just posted my contribution to one of these issues on SSRN.  My contribution addresses the unique education provisions of the Louisiana Constitution from the perspective of those thinking about state constitutional design, using New Orleans in part as a mini-case study.  You can download the full-text draft free of charge here.  The abstract appears below:

State Constitutional Design and Education Reform: Process Specification in Louisiana

In this article, I examine the role of state constitutional design in shaping the challenges of educational reform and the enforcement of affirmative state constitutional duties. I begin with a brief discussion of state constitutional design in general, and I expand this discussion to include the specific drafting approaches used in promulgating state constitutional education duties. I continue from this point with a review of how these provisions have been used in school finance litigation – the principal vehicle for enforcing education rights in the states – and how they have been modified in response to such litigation.

Following this analysis, I engage in a limited case study of constitutional design in Louisiana. I begin by outlining the education provisions in Louisiana’s current state constitution. I review both the drafting strategies used in the initial education article, and the unsuccessful school finance litigation that gave rise to the most prominent recent changes to the education article. I conclude that Louisiana’s reformers have chosen a decidedly unique, process-oriented path in amending Louisiana’s education article, as compared with reformers in other states, who have attempted substance-based reforms to their states’ education provisions.

Based on this case study, I present both general and situational arguments in support of the specification of process-based limitations as a strategy appropriate for drafting or amending state constitutional education articles and other affirmative-duty provisions. I base the general argument on the unique features of state constitutions and state governments, which leave courts well-positioned for review of legislative processes in pursuing affirmative constitutional duties. I present the situational argument in light of the current funding realities in the New Orleans school system. I argue that the specific, process-based limitations in the Louisiana Constitution could prove very useful in the coming years as federal relief funding largely disappears, and Louisiana is left to fund the state’s schools based mostly on state-derived revenues. Based on these arguments, I conclude with the suggestion that those drafting and amending state constitutions containing affirmative legislative duties should consider specific, process-based limitations as a useful element of state constitutional design.

Wednesday
Oct062010

Kiel on Hurricane Katrina and the Brown Legacy

Our own Daniel Kiel has posted to SSRN a draft of his forthcoming piece, entitled, It Takes a Hurricane: Might Katrina Deliver for New Orleans Students What Brown Once Promised?  Daniel presented this piece last January in a special session of the AALS Annual Meeting focusing on education in New Orleans after "The Storm."  You can download the full text of the draft here

Here is the abstract:

Presented as part of a program for the AALS Education Law section entitled “Five Years After Katrina: Access to Education,” this article places post-Katrina education in New Orleans directly in the line of education reform triggered by the decision in Brown v. Board of Education in 1954. The article agues that post-Katrina New Orleans represents the pursuit of the same goal pursued by the Brown plaintiffs: improved access to educational opportunities for students, most of whom are African American, not being equitably served by the status quo. The article then frames these two moments – the Brown decision and Hurricane Katrina – as inertia-jarring events in the history of New Orleans public education and compares the responses to these two hurricanes (one figurative, one literal).

Connecting the post-Brown and post-Katrina eras, the article focuses on themes common to both – state intervention in New Orleans schools and an increase in choice for students – and details the ways in which the response to one has shaped the response to the other. Looking at ways the city has learned from the Brown era and the ways in which the city seems on a path to repeating some of that era’s mistakes, the article argues that success or failure in post-Katrina public education will be impacted by the city’s post-Brown experience. Specifically, although the motivation behind state intervention is clearly different than it was during the Brown era, there remains skepticism about the role of the state in providing for New Orleans public schools.

Further, despite having made choice far more widely available after Katrina than it had been before, the potential for a return to a stratified system of schools – and the class- and race-based resentment such stratification engenders – could threaten the public support New Orleans public schools currently enjoy.

The progress of public education in New Orleans is important beyond the boundaries of Orleans Parish. Post-Katrina New Orleans serves as the pivotal proving ground for the use of increased choice and charter schools to provide more equitable access to quality education. With 61% of New Orleans public school students enrolled in 51 charter schools (both numbers by far the highest in the nation), post-Katrina New Orleans represents an opportunity for the choice movement to demonstrate success on a large scale. Success in New Orleans will lead to broader choice in struggling urban districts across the country. Conversely, failure to deliver improved access to quality education will reverse the current upward trajectory of the choice movement.

Given the stakes, the New Orleans public schools are likely to be among the most scrupulously evaluated in the coming years. However, as scholars and advocates begin evaluating this reform effort and continuing to shape the future of public education in New Orleans, it is imperative to recognize the ways in which the story that precedes the hurricane shapes and impacts the story unfolding in its wake. This article serves will help ensure that happens.

If reformers in New Orleans are able to focus on the goal of increasing access to quality educational opportunities, then the chance created out of the tragedy of Hurricane Katrina will not be wasted. It would be beautifully ironic if, thanks in part to a hurricane, the schools in the city whose segregated railcars gave us Plessy v. Ferguson could finally deliver on that elusive promise of Brown to provide more equitable access to quality educational opportunities.

Sunday
Aug292010

"The Storm" Turns Five

Most people in the Gulf Coast region do not call Hurricane Katrina by its name.  They call it "The Storm."  Perhaps this is because, especially in Mississippi and Louisiana, The Storm so fundamentally changed daily life that it is unnecessary to say which storm one refers to.  Perhaps it is a snub to the Hurricane gods, like turning one's back on a bad memory.  Whatever the reason, The Storm turned five today, and it is worth marking that milestone here on a blog dedicated to education law issues. 

The Storm is of particular interest here at Edjurist because of its profound effects on public schooling policy, especially in New Orleans.  In the past five years, the city schools in New Orleans have become what has often been called a "laboratory of experimentation," a term that Justice Brandeis used to refer to the states in general in defending his ideal of federalism.  New Orleans is now divided into traditional public schools, state-takeover public schools, and several different kinds of charter schools.  Around fifty percent of the schools in New Orleans are presently charters.  This situation is unprecedented in public education, and it is both excting and, in some ways, scary.  From the region, we hear both success stories and worrisome reports of neglect and discrimination--particularly in relation to disabled students. 

With the idea of education law and school reform in New Orleans in mind, I want to call the attention of our readers to two feature law review issues that focus on school reform in New Orleans since The Storm.  One is already published as Issue 2 of Volume 11 of the Loyola Journal of Public Interest Law.  The other will be published as the January 2011 issue of the Journal of Law and Education.  The papers in these volumes reveal a good deal of unknown or under-discussed information about the post-Katrina reforms in the area and their local and national implications, and they are worth a read for anyone interested in large-scale reform efforts. 

Tuesday
Jul202010

Educational Law Information Online - A Presentation to KSBA

Last week I presented to the Kentucky School Board's Association, Council of School Attorney's here in Lexington. I was asked to present on online resources for both educational attorneys and administrators. Below is the presentation that I gave (rerecorded after the session because of technical difficulties). It contains some research Kevin Brady and I did on educational law research as well as my take on how the information revolution is changing how legal information is distributed, focusing especially on what Google Scholar's new inclusion of legal information might mean. The materials and links I used in the presentation are below the video. Enjoy: 

Major Sites for Ed. Law Information

CSBA Summer 2010


(You have permission to share & add content at this location - http://bit.ly/avjQIq)


Introductory Story
Did you know? - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pMcfrLYDm2U

Cite for Legal Spending Statistics
Carl Malamud, Berkman Center Interview - http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/interactive/podcasts/radioberkman144

NSBA Insider Article I Wrote on Study- http://www.nsba.org/MainMenu/SchoolBoardPolicies/Newsletters/Insider-May-09.aspx

Primary Sources

Public.Resource.Org - http://public.resource.org/index.html
Bulk.Resource.Org - http://bulk.resource.org/

Google Scholar (check legal) - http://scholar.google.com/

Government Resources:
GPO Access - http://www.gpoaccess.gov/
Thomas - http://thomas.loc.gov/
USA.gov - http://www.usa.gov/
Data.gov - http://www.data.gov/
Kentucky Primary Legislative Sources: http://www.lrc.ky.gov/
 
Sample University Sites:
Legal Information Institiute - http://www.law.cornell.edu/
Oyez - http://www.oyez.org/

Corporate Freemuim Sites:
Findlaw - http://www.findlaw.com/
LexisOne - http://law.lexisnexis.com/webcenters/lexisone/
Public Library of Law - http://www.plol.org/Pages/Search.aspx

Secondary Sources
USC Open Law Journal Index - http://lawweb.usc.edu/library/resources/journals.cfm
Missouri School Law Index - http://dese.mo.gov/schoollaw/
Education Commission of the States Issues Pages - http://www.ecs.org/
Law.com Dictionary - http://dictionary.law.com/
NSBA School Law -  http://www.nsba.org/schoollaw
NSBA Legal Clips - http://legalclips.nsba.org/

Lexis Education Law Wiki - http://wiki.lexisnexis.com/academic/index.php?title=Education_Law

Wikipedia - http://www.wikipedia.org/
Special Education Law Facebook Page - http://www.facebook.com/?ref=logo#!/group.php?gid=44730632067
Education Law Association Facebook Page - http://www.facebook.com/?ref=logo#!/group.php?gid=177576668640
This Week in Law Podcast - http://twit.tv/twil
LawBox iPhone/iPad App - http://www.thelawbox.com/

Blogs

Justia Education Law Blog Directory - http://blawgsearch.justia.com/category.aspx?catid=1889

ABA Blawg Directory - http://www.abajournal.com/blawgs/education+law  
  • Spec. Ed. Law Blogs

Education Law Relevant Twitter Feeds
Justin Bathon - http://twitter.com/edjurist
Kentucky School Boards Ass’n - http://twitter.com/ksbanews
Rich Haglund - http://twitter.com/richhag
The Access Network - http://twitter.com/schoolfunding
Brian Jason Ford - http://twitter.com/BrianJasonFord
Jonathan Becker - http://twitter.com/jonbecker
Scott McLeod - http://twitter.com/mcleod
David S. Doty - http://twitter.com/canyonsdave
Jim Gerl - http://twitter.com/jimgerl
Legal Clips Staff - http://twitter.com/legalclips
Education Law Ass'n - http://twitter.com/ELAOffice
Tuesday
May042010

Education "Rights"

Following up on Daniel's recent post on fundamental rights to education, I hereby issue a shameless plug for my most recent piece of scholarship, which is forthcoming in the George Mason Law Review.  In it, I assess the conceptions of individual rights and legislative powers employed in both state and federal courts in constitutional cases, focusing on school finance litigation in the state courts.  Interested readers can download the full-text manuscript draft here

Wednesday
Jan202010

"Rose at 20": Foreword

I just posted to SSRN my latest draft of the Foreword to the "Rose at 20" Special Feature issue forthcoming in the Kentucky Law Journal.  The issue, which includes three featured papers by distinguished school finance scholars Bill Thro, R. Craig Wood, and Bill Koski, will be out in Spring 2010 as Issue 4 of Volume 98 of the Journal.  Here is the abstract of the Foreword:

In this Foreword to the University of Kentucky’s “Rose at 20” Symposium, I seek to introduce the three featured articles, as well as to identify two major paradigm shifts in school finance litigation that grew out of the Kentucky Supreme Court’s decision in Rose v. Council for Better Education.

Although the Rose decision is primarily noted for the success of adequacy theory as a strategy for proving constitutional harm, less noticed doctrinal innovations in Rose lay in the court’s treatment of education rights and the remedies warranted for their violation. As to rights, the Kentucky court was the first to enforce the right to education as a positive or affirmative individual right. As to remediation, the Kentucky court ushered in the still-dominant judicial view of separation of powers as an independent limit on judicial review at the remedial stage of litigation. These two doctrinal changes distinguished Rose from the litigation that preceded it, and they remain relevant today.

You can download the latest full-text version here

Wednesday
Sep162009

American University Law Review Symposium on Tinker

Our readers may be interested in a recent symposium issue on the Tinker case, which has its 40th anniversary this year, in the American University Law Review.  I was particularly interested in an article by Professor Kristi L. Bowman, of Michgan State University College of Law, entitled The Civil Rights Roots of Tinker’s Disruption Tests.  In it, she unearths and analyzes two Fifth Circuit cases arising from schools in Mississippi that were the direct precursors to Tinker.  In each of these cases, the political speech supressed involved the wearing of buttons to school opposing race-based vote supression, and the Fifth Circuit decided that the schools had to show "actual disruption" of the learning environment to suppress the speech (one student won and the other lost, due to "aggressive" handing out of buttons).  Professor Bowman's article helpfully reveals the links between the civil rights movement and the student speech rights movement.  The link to the SSRN download page is above, and I reprint the abstract below:

Abstract:     


This past spring marked the fortieth anniversary of Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District, the landmark student speech case in which the Supreme Court held that three students were protected by the First Amendment when they wore black armbands in their Des Moines, Iowa public schools to protest the Vietnam War. Looking at Supreme Court precedent alone, it would seem as though the Tinker tests were created out of whole cloth: the substantial or material disruption, reasonable anticipation of such disruption, and rights of others tests did not have much of a basis in earlier Supreme Court decisions. But, the district court in Tinker had employed the first two of these tests. For authority, it had looked to the Fifth Circuit’s decisions six weeks prior in two cases involving high school students’ speech about civil rights: Burnside v. Byars and Blackwell v. Issaquena County. Aside from Tinker’s citations to Burnside and Blackwell, those two cases - the roots of Tinker’s disruption tests - have largely been lost to history. Accordingly, this Article scrutinizes Burnside and Blackwell, considers lower courts’ applications of - and retreat from - the Burnside/Blackwell actual disruption test in the student speech context, and analyzes the presence of Burnside and Blackwell in the Tinker district court opinion and in various drafts of the Tinker Supreme Court opinion. Struggles for students’ speech rights and battles waged by the Civil Rights Movement rarely are seen as intertwined strands of history, but this Article demonstrates that the student free speech rights articulated in Tinker are built upon the struggles of the Civil Rights Movement.

Tuesday
Sep152009

Harrison and Harrison on the NCAA and Antitrust Law

Professor Jeffrey Harrison of the University of Florida Levin College of Law and Casey C. Harrison, a J.D./M.S. (Sport Science) candiate at the same school, have recently posted to SSRN an interesting working paper relating to the antitrust concerns of the NCAA, which they refer to as a "monopsony," a sole buyer in a market with multiple sellers (as opposed to a traditional monopoly, which would be a sole seller in a market with multiple buyers).  The working paper reviews several antitrust challenges that the NCAA has experienced and particularly takes the courts (including the Supreme Court) to task for failing to critically analyze the NCAA's primary justification for its anticompetitive practices--that the "amateur" character of the sport actually makes it more competitive than it would be if it were not an amateur pursuit.  This assumption is offered in the cases as the primary justification for the clear exploitation of top-talent players that results from compensating them far below their market value (i.e., through scholarships).  Among other things, the authors correctly point out that this assumption, as of yet, has no empirical support.  Very interesting read.  Here's the abstract and link to download: 

The Law and Economics of the NCAA’s Claim to Monopsony Rights 

Jeffrey Lynch Harrison and Casey C. Harrison

This article considers the legal and economic implications of the NCAA monopsony power with respect to players in the two most financially lucrative college sports - football and basketball. The principal means of doing so is through the evaluation of three recent legal challenges to the NCAA. Those challenges are to limits on payments to players, limits on the number of players receiving payment, and the rights of players under scholarship with respect to payments for commercial use of their images. The focus is on two questions. First, under current interpretations of the antitrust laws, what would the likely results of these cases be if they reached a final substantive resolution based on the strict application of these interpretations? More generally, what are the limits to the NCAA’s use of monopsony power? The second question is whether there should be liability under the antitrust laws. This is a more complex question with the answer depending, in part, on whether the antitrust laws are to be applied to affect allocative or distributive outcomes.