Tuesday, 12 February 2008

jeffrey harrison joins moneylaw



Jeffrey Harrison joins MoneyLaw

Jeffrey Harrison MoneyLaw proudly welcomes Jeffrey L. Harrison of the

University of Florida Levin College of Law as its newest contributor.

Professor Harrison is a preeminent scholar of antitrust and law and

economics. He is the author, inter alia, of Law and Economics: Cases,

Materials, and Behavioral Perspectives, Understanding Antitrust and

Its Economic Implications, and Law and Economics in a Nutshell.

Professor Harrison is also the creator and host of the weblog Class

Bias in Higher Education, the subject of a recent MoneyLaw post by Tom

Bell. Class Bias describes itself in these terms:

This blog is devoted to discussion of class bias in higher

education. My specific interest is in legal education where most

law professors are supplied by a small number of elite schools. I

am interested in the manifestations of this bias and solutions. My

experience is that the bias affects everything from hiring to

acceptable forms of dress and discourse. The dominant

characteristic of those in power is a "sense of entitlement."

We are delighted to welcome Jeffrey Harrison to MoneyLaw.

posted by Jim Chen at 1:09 AM

1 Comments:

Blogger Ann Bartow said...

I look foward to reading more. Even among folks who make it to

the elite law schools, class issues take their toll on the

abaility to accumulate "teaching credentials." People who need

to work part time can't effectively participate on journals, or

other Moot Court and the like. And people who can't afford to

fly around the country at their own expense for interviews, no

less live for a year or two on a low govt salary once loan

payments start coming due, are hard pressed to seek or accpt

clerkship opportunities.

9/11/2006 4:47 PM

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