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June 8, 2012

The Most-Cited Law Review Articles of All Time

Fred Shapiro with the assistance of Michelle Pearse has added a third installment to his citation analysis of the most-cited law review articles. The first two studies were published at 73 Calif. L. Rev. 1540 (1985) and 71 Chi.-Kent L. Rev. 751 (1996). The latest study, The Most-Cited Law Review Articles of All Time, is published in the June 2012 issue of the Michigan Law Review.

From the abstract:

New research tools from the HeinOnline and Web of Science databases now allow lists to be compiled that are more thorough and more accurate than anything previously possible. Tables printed here present the 100 most-cited legal articles of all time, the 100 most-cited articles of the last twenty years, and some additional rankings. Characteristics of the top-ranked publications, authors, and law schools are analyzed as are trends in schools of legal thought. Data from the all-time rankings shed light on contributions to legal scholarship made over a long historical span; the recent-article rankings speak more to the impact of scholarship produced in the current era. The authors discuss alternative tools and metrics for measuring the impact of legal scholarship, running selected articles from the rankings through these tools to serve as points of illustration. The authors then contemplate how these alternative tools and metrics intersect with traditional citation studies and how they might impact legal scholarship in the future.

[JH]

June 8, 2012 in Info - Antics or Metrics?, Scholarship | Permalink

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