November 2024 New Resources

In November 2024, the Law Library added the following new resources to the collection to support the research and curricular needs of our faculty and students.

New Resources

New York Times

  • To access The New York Times, Law School users must create a personal account using the following steps: 
  • Step 1: Go to The New York Times Activate Access
  • Step 2: Search and select Texas Tech University Law School.
  • Step 3: On the new page, click icon “Go”.
  • Step 4: Activate your law school subscription using your TTU email login.
  • Step 5: Create a personal NY Times account.
  • Users will use the newly created account to access NYTimes

New Books

BANKRUPTCY LAW

Emilie Ghio, John Wood, and Jennifer Gant, Re-Examining Insolvency Law and Theory: Perspectives for the 21st Century (2023).

COMMERCIAL LAW

David Collins and Michael Geist, Research Handbook on Digital Trade (2023).

COMPARATIVE AND FOREIGN LAW

Roberto Scarciglia, Methods and Legal Comparison: Challenges for Methodological Pluralism (2023).

CRIMINAL LAW AND PROCEDURE

Thomas A. (Tad) DiBiase, No-Body Homicide Cases: A practical Guide to Investigating, Prosecuting, and Winning Cases When the Victim is Missing (2024).

ENVIRONMENTAL LAW

 Ignacio Anchustegui Herrera and Tina Soliman Hunter, Offshore Wind Licensing (2024).

HEALTH LAW AND POLICY

Emily Gold Waldman, Bridget J. Crawford, and Naomi R. Cahn, Hot Flash: How the Law Ignores Menopause and What We Can Do About It (2024).

HUMAN RIGHTS LAW

Arlette Ingram Willis, Anti-Black Literacy Laws and Policies (2023).

INFORMATION PRIVACY

Ari Ezra Waldman, Advanced Introduction to U.S. Data Privacy Law (2023).

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW

Enrico Bonadio and Chen Wei Zhu, Music Borrowing and Copyright Law: A Genre-by-Genre Analysis (2023).

Shaun M. Van Horn, Antitrust Issues in Intellectual Property Law (2024).

INTERNATIONAL LAW

Andrea Bianchi and Fuad Zarbiyev, Demystifying Treaty Interpretation (2024).

Lang Thai, Corporate Governance and Statutory Derivative Actions: Comparative Approach to Shareholder Litigation (2024).

LAND USE

John J. Infranca and Sarah Schindler, A Research Agenda for US Land Use and Planning Law (2023).

LEGAL PROFESSION

Scott Hershovitz, Law is a Moral Practice (2023).

Travis Hreno, Jury Nullification: The Jurisprudence of Jurors’ Privilege (2024).

MILITARY LAW AND PEACE

Geoffrey S. Corn, Ken Watkins, and Jamie Williamson, The Law in War: A Concise Overview (2023).

PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE

Marco Segatti, Equal Access to Justice: On the Duty to Pause, Cool Down, and Listen (2024).

RACE AND ETHNICITY

Alfredo, Mirande, Ordinary Injustice: Rascuache Lawyering and the Anatomy of a Criminal Case (2023).

All resources are available from the Law Library.  If you would like to check out any of these titles, please contact the circulation desk at either 806-742-3957 or circulation.law@ttu.edu

All electronic databases are available through the Library’s webpage, http://www.depts.ttu.edu/law/lawlibrary/index.php.   

Library staff will be able to assist in locating and checking out any of these items or helping you contact the Librarian on call for questions about electronic resources.

October 2024 Law Faculty Publications & News

Throughout the month of October, the Law Library received alerts for full-time TTU Law Faculty publications and news. Below is a compilation of those daily alerts for October 1st to October 31st, 2024.

Articles, Books, and More

  1. Gerry W. Beyer & James M. Kosakow, Revocable Trusts (5th ed. 2024-2025 update).

Quotations

  1. Prof. Corn is quoted in the following article: Marc Levy, Pennsylvania Republican in key swing-state Senate race backs using military to fight fentanyl, Associated Press (Oct. 2, 2024; 9:00pm).
  2. Prof. Hardberger is quoted in the following article: Marina Zhang, The Debate Around Fluoride is Changing: What it Means for Your Drinking Water, Epoch Health (Oct. 4, 2024).
  3. Prof. Hardberger is quoted in the following article: Lindsey Carnett, Meteorologists say severe drought is over in San Antonio. Local experts beg to differ., San Antonio Report (Oct. 9, 2024).
  4. Prof. Williams is quoted in the following article: Terri Langford, As Robert Roberson’s execution neared, Gov. Greg Abbott stuck to silence, The Texas Tribune, (Oct. 19, 2024; 3:00p,).
  5. Prof Hardberger is interviewed in the following article: Lucy Greenberg, Texas Tech Law Professor Advocates for a Different Approach to Water, Texas Tech Now, (Oct. 24, 2024).

Citations

  1. Prof. Murphy’s book Administrative Law and Practice is cited in the following article: Mila Sohoni, The Past and Future of Universal Vacatur, 133 Yale L.J. 2304 (2024).
  2. Prof. Casto’s article The Tort Liability of Insane Persons for Negligence: A Critique is cited in §9 and §11 of Restatement 3rd of Torts: Liability for Physical and Emotional Harm (October 2024 Update).
  3. Prof. Casto’s article The Early Supreme Court Justices’ Most Significant Opinion is cited in the following article: Joshua J. Schroeder,“Improve your Privileges While They Stay”: A Guide to Improve the Privileges of U.S. Citizenship for Everybody, 39 Touro L. Rev. 657 (2024).
  4. Prof. Soonpaa’s article Using Composition Theory and Scholarship to Teach Legal Writing More Effectively is cited in the following article: Carolyn V. Williams, Bracing for Impact: Revising Legal Writing Assessments Ahead of the Collision of Generative AI and the NextGen Bar Exam, 28 Legal Writing: J. Legal Writing Inst. 1 (2024).
  5. Prof. Murphy’s book Administrative Law and Practice is cited in the following article: Erin Lee, Surviving the Rule of Reason: An Antitrust Analysis of Employment Noncompetes, 93 Fordham L. Rev. 225 (2024).
  6. Prof. Corn’s article Imputed Liability for Supervising Prosecutors: Applying Military Doctrine of Command Responsibility to Reduce Prosecutorial Misconduct is cited in the following article: Caitlin Glass, Kat M. Albrecht, & Perry Moriearty, Prosecutorial Data Transparency and Data Justice, 119 Nw. U. L. Rev. 193 (2024).
  7. Prof. Pawlowic’s article Letters of Credit: A Framework for Analysis of Transfer, Assignment, Negotiation and Transfer by Operation of Law is cited in the annotations of §5-102, 5-106, 5-111, and 5-116 of Uniform Laws Annotated Uniform Commercial Code (October 2024 Update).
  8. Prof. Beyer’s article Enhancing Self-determination Through Guardian Self-Declaration is cited in the annotations of §2-205116 of Uniform Probate Code (October 2024 Update).
  9. Prof. Baker’s article 2018: A Legal Research Odyssey: Artificial Intelligence as Disruptor is cited in the following article: Jennifer Elisa Chapman, Teaching Critical Use of Legal Research Technology, 28 Legal Writing: J. Legal Writing Inst. 123 (2024).
  10. Prof. Baker’s article 2018: A Legal Research Odyssey: Artificial Intelligence as Disruptor is cited in the following article: Dr. Alvin Hoi-Chung Hung, Analyzing the Primary and Attendant Risks of Gai-Based Natural Language Processing Models in Legal Research, 39 Syracuse J. Sci. & Tech. L. 15 (2024).
  11. Prof. Christipher’s article The Bridging Model: Exploring the Roles of Trust and Enforcement in Banking, Bitcoin, and the Blockchain is cited in the following article: Ellion Malin, Toke(n)s: The Juncture of Cryptocurrency and Cannabis In A Blooming Ecosystem–Their Joint Utilization As Best Buds To Blunt Legal And Societal Stresses, 39 Syracuse J. Sci. & Tech. L. 73 (2024).
  12. Prof. Christopher’s article Eye of the Beholder: How Perception Management Can Counter Stereotype Threat Among Struggling Law Students is cited in the following article: Chelsea M. Baldwin, Bad Therapy: Conceptualizing the Teaching Of “Thinking Like A Lawyer” As Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, 55 St. Mary’s L.J. 917 (2024).
  13. Prof. Christopher’s article Mobile Banking: The Answer for the Unbanked in America? is cited in the following article: Tiffany Penner, Consumer Financial Inaccessibility, 2024 U. Ill L. Rev. 1227 (2024).

News

  1. Prof. Shannon was appointed by the Dean of the Texas Tech School of Medicine as an Adjunct Professor in the Department of Psychiatry at the Texas Tech Health Sciences Center.
  2. Prof. Shannon’s most recent publication, the 7th edition of his guidebook, Texas Criminal Procedure and the Offender with Mental Illness: An Analysis and Guide, is being published in October. The book was supported by a grant from the Texas Bar Foundation to NAMI-Texas. An online version was released in late September.
  3. The 1A FAR Board of Directors named Prof. Shannon to fill a vacancy on the NCAA Division I governing Council. The slot is designated for a faculty athletics representative. Shannon previously served on the NCAA DI Council from 2015-19.
  4. In his role as Chair of the Texas Judicial Commission on Mental Health (JCMH) Legislative Drafting Committee, Prof. Shannon presented the JCMH’s 2025 legislative proposals to the Texas Judicial Council; all were approved for submission to the legislature for consideration in the upcoming session.
  5. On September 18, 2024, Prof. Stephens was a speaker at the Far West Texas County Judges & Commissioners Association Annual Conference in Terlingua, TX. The focus of his presentation were the recently refined rules around magistration (in light of S.B. 6), writs of habeas corpus, and how to handle discovery disputes.
  6. On October 16, 2024, Prof. Beyer was the invited speaker for the October meeting of the South Plains Trust & Estate Council in Lubbock. His presentation and accompanying article were entitled Confidentiality Breach or Note: Revealing Information About a Client’s Testamentary Documents Post-Mortem.
  7. On October 19, 2024, Prof. Beyer was an invited speaker at the 72nd Annual Montana Tax Institute in Missoula, Montana. The topic of both his presentation and accompany article was Artificial Intelligence and Its Impact on Today’s Estate Planner. Approximately 150 attorneys and other estate planning professionals attended in-person and about another 100 via Zoom.

October 2024 New Books

In October 2024, the Law Library added the following new titles to the collection to support the research and curricular needs of our faculty and students.

AGRICULTURE LAW

Loka L. Ashwood, et.al., Empty Fields, Empty Promises: a State-by-State Guide to Understanding and Transforming the Right to Farm (2024).

Xaq Frohlich, From Label to Table: Regulating Food in America in the Information Age (2023)

ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT

Marianne Mason, Police Interrogation, Language, and the Law : The Invocation Game (2004).

Dickens and His Lawyers (2023).

BANKRUPTCY LAW

Daniel Platt, The Price of Misfortune : Rights and Wrongs in Indebted America (2023).

CIVIL RIGHTS, GENERALLY

Adam Chilton and Kyle Rozema, Trial By Numbers : a Lawyer’s Guide to Statistical Evidence (2024).

CONTRACTS

Kit Burden, Mark O’Conor, and Duncan Pithouse, Negotiating Technology Contracts (2023).

Damian Clifford, Kwan Ho Lau, and Jeannie Marie Paterson, Data and Private Law (2023).

CRIMINAL LAW AND PROCEDURE

Dominik Zajac, Non-State Actors Law-Making and Domestic Criminal Law (2024).

Anthea Hucklesby and Raymond Holts, eds., Tracking People : Wearable Technologies in Social and Public Policy (2024).

Sanaz Alasti, Judicial Corporal Punishment as an Alternative to Incarceration in the United States : Lessons Learned from Islamic Criminal Justice Systems (2023).

Miriam H. Baer, Myths and Misunderstandings in White-Collar Crime (2023).

ECONOMICS

Matthew Titolo, Privatization and Its Discontents : Infrastructure, Law, and American Democracy (2023).

EDUCATION LAW

George Fisher, Beware Euphoria : the Moral Roots and Racial Myths of America’s War on Drugs (2024).

Allyson Mower, Developing Authorship and Copyright Ownership Policies : Best Practice (2024).

James R. Stoner Jr., Paul O. Carrese, and Carol McNamara, eds., Free Speech and Intellectual Diversity in Higher Education (2023).

Michelle L. Boettcher and Cristobal Salinas Jr., Law and Ethics in Academic and Student Affairs : Developing an Institutional Intelligence Approach (2024).

ENVIRONMENTAL LAW

Madison Powers, A Livable Planet : Human Rights in the Global Economy (2024).

Yoshifumi Tanaka, Rachael Lorna Johnstone, and Vibe Ulfbeck, The Routledge Handbook of Polar Law (2023).

FIRST AMENDMENT

Cass R. Sunstein, Campus Free Speech : a Pocket Guide (2024).

FOOD AND DRUG LAW

Toby Seddon, Rethinking Drug Laws : Theory, History, Politics (2023).

GENDER

Kimberly Tao, Legal Categorization of “Transgender” : An Analysis of Statutory Interpretation of “Sex”, “Man”, and “Woman” in Transgender Jurisprudence (2024).

Sara Chatfield, In Her Own Name : the Politics of Women’s Rights Before Suffrage (2023).

HEALTH LAW AND POLICY

Susan Marie Sterett, Litigating the Pandemic : Disaster Cascades in Court (2023).

Donald H. Romano, Stark : a Practitioner’s Guide (2023).

Stefania Achella and Chantal Marazia, eds., Vulnerabilities : Rethinking Medicine Rights and Humanities in Post-Pandemic (2023).

IMMIGRATION LAW

Sarah Tosh, The Immigration Law Death Penalty : Aggravated Felonies, Deportation, and Legal Resistance (2023).

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW

Steven D. Jamar and Lateef Mtima, eds., Cambridge Handbook of Intellectual Property and Social Justice (2024).

INTERNATIONAL LAW

Ruth Margaret Buchanan, Luis Eslava, and Sundhya Pahuja, The Oxford Handbook of International Law and Development (2023).

M. Basheer Ahmed Khan and Kaushal Kishore, Policies, Practices, and Protocols for International Commercial Arbitration (2023).

LEGAL HISTORY

John Robertson, ed., Time, History, and Political Thought (2024).

LEGAL PROFESSION

Daniel Newman, ed., Leading Works On the Legal Profession (2024).

Morgan L. W. Hazelton, Rachael K. Hinkle, and Michael J. Nelson, The Elevator Effect : Contact and Collegiality in the American Judiciary (2023).

James J. Brosnahan, Justice at Trial : Courtroom Battles and Groundbreaking Cases (2023).

LEGISLATION

Andrew P. Napolitano, Freedom’s Anchor : An Introduction to Natural Law Jurisprudence in American Constitutional History (2023).

John R. Vile, Encyclopedia of Presidential Vetoes from Washington through to Biden : History, Subjects, and Procedures (2024).

MEDICAL JURISPRUDENCE

Angela Hume, Deep Care : the Radical Activists Who Provided Abortions, Defied the Law, and Fought to Keep Clinics Open (2023).

PSYCHOLOGY AND PSYCHIATRY

Allan Edward Barsky, Clinicians In Court : a Guide to Subpoenas, Depositions, Testifying, and Everything Else You Need to Know (2024).

RACE AND ETHNICITY

Charles F. Wilkinson, Treaty Justice : the Northwest Tribes, the Boldt Decision, and the Recognition of Fishing Rights (2024).

RELIGION

Cinzia Piciocchi, Courts, Pluralism and Law in the Everyday : Food, Clothing and Days of Rest (2024).

SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

Ignacio N. Cofone, The Privacy Fallacy : Harm and Power in the Information Economy (2024).

Roger Brownsword, Technology, Humans, and Discontent With Law : the Quest for Better Governance (2024).

Traci Cipriano, The Thriving Lawyer : a Multidimensional Model of Well-Being For a Sustainable Legal Profession (2024).

Mark Findlay, Li Min Ong, and Wenxi Zhang, eds., Mark Findlay, Li Min Ong, and Wenxi Zhang, eds. (2023).

Jerry W. Markham, Cryptocurrency Regulation : A Primer (2023).

SEX CRIMES

Emily Horowitz, From Rage to Reason : Why We Need Sex Crime Laws Based on Facts, Not Fear (2023).

Henry F. Fradella, Sex and Privacy in American Law (2023).

SPORTS

Ed Garvey, Never Ask “Why” : Football Players’ Fight for Freedom in the NFL (2023).

TAXATION–STATE AND LOCAL

Peter J. Wiedenbeck and Brendan S. Maher, ERISA Principles (2024).

TRANSPORTATION LAW

Charles U. Zug, Dwight D. Eisenhower and the Federal Highway Act (2024).

All of these books are available from the Law Library.  If you would like to check out any of these titles, please contact the circulation desk at either 806-742-3957 or circulation.law@ttu.edu.  Library staff will be able to assist in locating and checking out any of these items.

September 2024 Law Faculty Publications & News

Throughout the month of September, the Law Library received alerts for full-time TTU Law Faculty publications and news. Below is a compilation of those daily alerts for September 1st to September 30th, 2024.

Articles, Books, and More

  1. Gerry W. Beyer, Potpourri, 62-3 Real Est., Prob., & Tr. L. Rep., at 4 (2024).
  2. Gerry W. Beyer, Intestacy, Wills, Estate Administration, and Trusts Update, 62-3 Real Est., Prob., & Tr. L. Rep., at 5 (2024).
  3. Gerry W. Beyer, ed., Keeping Current—Probate, Prob. & Prop., Sept./Oct. 2024, at 29.
  4. Gerry W. Beyer, Recent Developments from the Texas Courts, Est. Plan. Dev. for Tex. Prof., Sept. 2024, at 1.
  5. Gerry W. Beyer, Beyer’s Texas Property Code Annotated (2024 ed).
  6. Gerry W. Beyer, He’s Dead, Jim” or Not?, review of Alyssa A. DiRusso, Life and Death Matters in Conflict of Laws, 97 Tul. L. Rev. 703 (2023), JOTWELL (Sept. 11, 2024).
  7. John L. Watts, The Confrontation Clause & State Action, 77 SMU L. Rev. 399 (2024).
  8. Richard W. Murphy, 32 Fed. Prac. & Proc. Judicial Review, Federal Practice and Procedure (September 2024 Update).

Op-Eds

  1. Victoria Sutton, Online Learning in Law Schools – The Pandemic Experiment (September 27, 2024).

Quotations

  1. Prof. Corn is quoted in the following article: Choice facing N.Y. judge: Does Taliban leader get war-related immunity? (Sept. 1, 2024; 10:00am), The Washington Post.
  2. Prof. Beyer is quoted in the following work: §5:16 of the Ga. Guardianship and Conservatorship (September 2024 Update).

Citations

  1. Prof. Murphy’s article Punitive Damages, Explanatory Verdicts, and the Hard Look is cited in §12:3 and §12:4 of the Illinois Civil Jury Instructions Companion Handbook (September 2024 Update).
  2. Prof. Murphy’s article Abandon Chevron and Modernize Stare Decisis for the Administrative State is cited in the following article: Alyssa Greenstein, The EPA in the Age of Chevron Deference Ambiguity and Decline, 36 Geo. Envtl. L. Rev. 269 (2024).
  3. Prof. Murphy’s article Democracy, Chevron Deference, and Major Questions Anti-Deference is cited in the following report: Supreme Court Overrules Chevron Doctrine’s Presumption of Favor of Agency Interpretation of Ambiguous Statutes, 45 No. 9 Construction Litigation Reporter NL 15 (September 2024).
  4. Prof. Corn’s article Self-Defense Targeting: Blurring the Line Between the Just ad Bellum and the Jus in Bello is cited in the following article: Peter S. Konchak, The Forty-Seven Years’ War: Identifying the Cold War as an Armed Conflict as a Matter of International Law, 38 Emory Int’l L. Rev. 263 (2024).
  5. Prof. Rosen’s article Deterring Pre-Viability Abortions in Texas Through Private Lawsuits is cited in the following article: Bailey Harvey, Welcome to Texas: Home of the Most Extreme Abortion Ban in the United States, Generating Vast Child Welfare Disparities, 26 Scholar: St. Mary’s L. Rev. & Soc. Just. 365 (2024).
  6. Prof. James’ article Twenty-First Century Pirates of the Caribbean: How the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development Robbed Fourteen CARICOM Countries of Their Tax and Economic Policy Sovereignty is cited in the following article: Allison Christians, Tarcisio Diniz Magalhaes, Why Data Giants Don’t Pay Enough Tax, 18 Harv. L. & Pol’y Rev. 119 (2024).
  7. Prof. Murphy’s article Judicial Deference, Agency Commitment, and Force of Law is cited in the following article: Jack M. Beermann, The Anti-Innovation Supreme Court: Major Questions, Delegation, Chevron, and More, 65 Wm. & Mary L. Rev. 1265 (2024).
  8. Prof. Casto’s article Pacificus & Helvidius Reconsidered is cited in the following article: Shalev Gad Roisman, Balancing Interests in the Separation of Powers, 91 U. Chi. L. Rev. 1331 (2024).
  9. Prof. Murphy’s article Politicized Judicial Review in Administrative Law: Three Improbable Responses is cited in the following article: Sanne Knudsen, Sidestepping Substance: How Administrative Law Plays an Outsized Role in Shaping Environmental Policy and Why Recalibration is Necessary, 76 Admin. L. Rev. 519 (2024).

News

  1. On September 6, 2024, Prof. Beyer was featured luncheon speaker for the Tarrant County Probate Bar Association in Fort Worth. Prof. Beyer’s presentation entitled attendees to one hour of Texas MCLE credit and was entitled Probate Case Law Update.
  2. On September 13, 2024, Prof. Beyer was the guest speaker for the Southern Nevada Estate Planning Council in Las Vegas. His presentation and accompanying article were entitled Artificial Intelligence and Its Impact on Today’s Estate Planner.
  3. On September 14, 2024, Prof. Gonzalez presented Private Contractors, Security-Clearance Determinations, and Employment Discrimination Law at the 19th Annual Colloquium on Scholarship in Employment and Labor Law (COSELL) co-hosted by the University of San Diego School of Law and California Western School of Law in San Diego, California. 
  4. On September 7, 2024, Prof. Arrington presented Will the NextGen Bar Truly Test Legal Research? An Evaluation to the Central States Law Schools Association Annual Conference in Lubbock, TX, and later delivered the same presentation at Western Regional Legal Writing Conference in Seattle, WA.
  5. On September 27, 2024, Prof. Gerry W. Beyer was an invited speaker at the 50th Annual Notre Dame Tax & Estate Planning Institute in South Bend, Indiana. His presentation was entitled Artificial Intelligence in the Trusts & Estates Practice.
  6. On September 19-22, 2024, Prof. Gerry W. Beyer attended the Fall meeting of the American College of Trust and Estate Counsel in Chicago. As the Chair of the Artificial Intelligence Subcommittee, Prof. Beyer organized and/or lead discussions on ABA Formal Opinion 512, Pennsylvania Opinion 2024-200, Deepfakes, Perplexity, AI hotlines for whistleblower protection, and required MCLE on AI imposed by a growing number of states. As Co-Chair of the Legal Education Committee, he organized and/or led discussions on the NextGen bar exam, the failed revision to the Uniform Determination of Death Act, the gift tax treatment of loan guarantees, and the use of artificial intelligence in the teaching of Wills & Trusts.
  7. On September 18, 2024, Prof. Gerry W. Beyer was a virtual speaker for the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants’ (AICPA) Engage webinar. His topic was entitled Artificial Intelligence: What CPAs Need to Know.
  8. On Sept. 27, 2024, Prof. Sutton presented her paper on her study that examines the effect of online learning in law schools and scores on the multi-state bar examination (MBE) and bar passage rate at the annual Online Learning Conference at the Univ of Denver, Sturm College of Law.

September 2024 New Resources

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In September 2024, the Law Library added the following new resources to the collection to support the research and curricular needs of our faculty and students.

New Resources

Democracy in America – An interactive digital edition of Tocqueville’s 1831 classic title. Provides more than 1,000 annotations and references, as well as links to the works Tocqueville read while he traveled, researched, and wrote.

New Books

DOMESTIC RELATIONS

Heather Douglas, The Criminalization of Violence against Women: Comparative Perspectives, 2024.

HEALTH LAW AND POLICY

Patricia J. Williams, The Miracle of the Black Leg: Notes on Race, Human Bodies, and the Spirit of the Law, 2024.

HUMAN RIGHTS LAW

Szymon Mazurkiewica, Grounding Human Rights in Human Nature, 2023.

INTERNATIONAL LAW

Yueduan Wang, Experimentalist Constitutions: Subnational Policy Innovations in China, India, and the United States, 2024.

Giuditta Cordero-Moss, Independence and Impartiality of International Adjudicators, 2023.

SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

Arvind Narayanan, AI Snake Oil: What Artificial Intelligence Can Do, What It Can’t, and How to Tell the Difference, 2024.

Alberto Quintavalla, Artificial Intelligence and Human Rights, 2023.

Nigel Shadbolt, As If Human: Ethics and Artificial Intelligence, 2024.

Kate Crawford, Atlas of AI: Power, Politics, and the Planetary Costs of Artificial Intelligence, 2021.

SEX CRIMES

Brian Bond, Conciliation of Construction Industry Disputes, 2024.

All resources are available from the Law Library.  If you would like to check out any of these titles, please contact the circulation desk at either 806-742-3957 or circulation.law@ttu.edu

All electronic databases are available through the Library’s webpage

Library staff will be able to assist in locating and checking out any of these items or helping you contact the Librarian on call for questions about electronic resources.