Volume 66, Issue 3
- Santa Clara Law Review
- 10 hours ago
- 1 min read
This issue of the Santa Clara Law Review brings together scholarship grappling with some of the most pressing legal questions emerging from rapid technological and social change. The Articles in this volume examine topics ranging from copyright law in the age of artificial intelligence to the constitutional role private law doctrines can play, as well as the growing importance of oral advocacy and communication skills in legal education. Although these pieces engage very different subject matters, each reflects broader questions about how legal institutions adapt to changing technologies, professional realities, and systems of governance. This issue also includes a student Note exploring the regulatory gaps that allow hazardous emissions during startup, shutdown, and malfunction events under the Clean Air Act, and the serious public health consequences that can follow. Together, these works showcase the range, depth, and continuing evolution of contemporary legal scholarship.
