Category Archives: Uncategorized

Presidential candidate commercials through time

While the satirical candidate public service announcement video (below), starring Tina Fey (as Sarah Palin) and Amy Poehler (as Hillary Clinton) is good fun, if you want to see the actual presidential candidate commercials they are available on “The Living Room Candidate.”


The Republican convention and Comic-Con to merge?

Sorry, I just couldn’t resist. This is an awesome photo. 

(hat tip to Volokh blog)

Who pays for what?

This Marginal Revolution post on faculty subsidization is, um… interesting. And here I was thinking that football paid all faculty salaries ;-)

Actually, more interesting is a comment from the post which I provide below the fold.

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Battlestar Galactica – the show up to now

Get ready for the Battlestar Galactica finale by watching show video clips below! You can skip the “Caprica” ad video and go straight to the final season recap if you prefer.If you’ve never seen the show, then you might start out with the earlier recap here. Warning: these recaps have spoilers. So, if you haven’t seen episodes and want to watch them without such knowledge, then don’ watch the recaps.

Voir Dire post featured

A VDB post was recently featured on a blog carnival. Check it out here, under the “work” section.

Are you a problem solver? Need a problem solved? Now there’s a social network

The New York Times reports on Innocentive, a company that’s all about solving problems – and highly varied ones at that. Here’s an excerpt:

Dwayne Spradlin, president and chief executive of InnoCentive, said in an interview that the company had solved 250 challenges, for prizes typically in the $10,000 to $25,000 range. According to the Web site (www.innocentive.com), the achievements include a compound for skin tanning, a method of preventing snack chip breakage and a mini-extruder in brick-making.

“Odds are one or more products in your home has been innovated in our network,” Mr. Spradlin said. “Procter & Gamble has products that were innovated on the InnoCentive network.”

InnoCentive began in 2000 as e.Lilly, an in-house innovation “incubator” at the pharmaceutical giant Eli Lilly, Mr. Spradlin said, with the company posting problems that its employees had been unable to solve. From the beginning the results were good, he said. “Most of our companies tell us they have a one-third or better solve rate on their problems and that is more cost-effective than anything they could have done internally.”

Here are some of the problems that are currently available to be solved:

We are interested in finding ways for people to make long-term habit changes in lifestyle. This is an Ideation challenge so your creativity and experience qualify you to participate in this challenge. Responses are expected to be about 2 written pages. (award $20,000)

My solution: spankings for adults when they engage in bad habits; problem solved, but there may be limitations

Design a long chewing product that does not require disposal. The product can dissolve in the mouth or break-up and be swallowable with no negative health impact on the body. (award $100,000)

My solution: I have this product I’m “developing” – I call it “salt water taffy”

We are looking for a technology that allows a timed-release flavor change to occur in a food product. (award $50.000)

Wait a minute, didn’t Willy Wonka already invent this? Oh yeah, he did, but it turned Veruca Salt into a giant blueberry.

Yale prof on elite education

William Deresiewicz‘s article, “The Disadvantages of an Elite Education: Our best universities have forgotten that the reason they exist is to make minds, not careers,” appears in the current issue of The American Scholar. [hat tip to Prettier Than Napoleon blog]

A city in a time of cholera

The New York Times has an intriguing article on how the city of New York was influenced by and how it reacted to the cholera epidemics of the 18th century. It is an interesting case study for students of public policy and perhaps topical given recent threats of epidemics.

Despite the epidemics of ’32 and ’49, people still flocked to New York and other teeming cities. But the first outbreak bolstered support for the Croton Aqueduct system to bring clean upstate water to the city, a project, completed in 1842, that led to the phasing out of private and neighborhood wells that were often polluted with human and animal waste. In 1849, the municipal government banished more than 20,000 pigs to the outer reaches of the city. A similar effort in previous years had provoked riots, but this time a public chastened by epidemic complied.

Finally, after the work of Dr. Snow in London and a lesser cholera outbreak in New York in 1866, the Metropolitan Board of Health was established with doctors in commanding roles and broad powers to clean up the city. Inspectors went to houses and burned clothing of people who had just died. They cleared the filth, spread lime and instructed survivors in proper sanitation.

Cities had learned, or should have, that epidemics as a consequence of urbanization were their responsibility to prevent and control.

Who are the most powerful members of Congress?

 It’s all right here:

Check out more on this graphic on the Monkey Cage Blog.

The topic: government subsidies for college tuition – talk amongst yourselves

The Volokh Conspiracy Blog has a provocative post outlining the case against government subsidization of college tuition. You don’t have to agree with everything it says to find it interesting. The comments are also pretty read-worthy.

The law of ‘Battlestar Galactica’

Over on Concurring Opinions Blog, Daniel Solove and crew are featuring a three part interview with the creators, writers, and producers of the sci-fi tv show ‘Battlestar Galactica‘. The focus of the interviews is the role of law in the show; topics include trials and tribunals, necessity vs. moral principles, torture, and deference to the military, among others.

Finally, two independently great nerdy things (i.e. sci-fi and legal academia) come together to produce something really great. Surely, supernerds Ira Glass, David Sedaris, and Sarah Vowell are involved somehow.

Labor relations explained through sock puppets

I think that the title pretty much says it all. Congrats to the television writers on their successful strike! What did they actually win and what did we learn? (Hat tip to Balkinization)

Update on Reich’s “Totally Spent”

 Some interesting comments on Robert Reich‘s NY Times article, “Totally Spent,” can be found here. His blog is here.

Below are some remarks by Reich at the Goldman School.

It’s the economy stupid – Robert Reich on being “Totally Spent”

As the presidential candidate field narrows and the parties begin to square off against each other we will be hearing many familiar “competing yet somehow similar” solutions to how to handle the economy. Will any of the usual strategies offered by the candidates work? Robert Reich doesn’t seem to think they will. In his NY Times op-ed piece,”Totally Spent,” he writes:

The problem lies deeper. It is the culmination of three decades during which American consumers have spent beyond their means. That era is now coming to an end. Consumers have run out of ways to keep the spending binge going.

The only lasting remedy, other than for Americans to accept a lower standard of living and for businesses to adjust to a smaller economy, is to give middle- and lower-income Americans more buying power — and not just temporarily.

He adds that familiar fixes such as tax breaks for businesses or fed rate adjustments will not ultimately be effective solutions. The problem, he explains, is much deeper.

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Marriage as a mundane and boring non-profit business – but in a good way!

In The Atlantic, Lori Gottlieb’s article, “Marry Him!The Case for Settling for Mr. Good Enough” advises women to heed just what the title indicates. While it’s certain to be an argument-starter, it’s also a very interesting read, regardless of how you feel about her views. Here are some excerpts:

What I didn’t realize when I decided, in my 30s, to break up with boyfriends I might otherwise have ended up marrying, is that while settling seems like an enormous act of resignation when you’re looking at it from the vantage point of a single person, once you take the plunge and do it, you’ll probably be relatively content. It sounds obvious now, but I didn’t fully appreciate back then that what makes for a good marriage isn’t necessarily what makes for a good romantic relationship. Once you’re married, it’s not about whom you want to go on vacation with; it’s about whom you want to run a household with. Marriage isn’t a passion-fest; it’s more like a partnership formed to run a very small, mundane, and often boring nonprofit business. And I mean this in a good way. (Emphasis added)

and…

Settling is mostly a women’s game. Men settle far less often and, when they do, they don’t seem the least bit bothered by the fact that they’re settling.

and finally this …

But then my married friends say things like, “Oh, you’re so lucky, you don’t have to negotiate with your husband about the cost of piano lessons” or “You’re so lucky, you don’t have anyone putting the kid in front of the TV and you can raise your son the way you want.” I’ll even hear things like, “You’re so lucky, you don’t have to have sex with someone you don’t want to.”

The lists go on, and each time, I say, “OK, if you’re so unhappy, and if I’m so lucky, leave your husband! In fact, send him over here!”

Not one person has taken me up on this offer.

I initially saw this article posted on VC and the comments there are almost as interesting as the article. There’s also an interview with Lori concerning the article here.

Update: The men respond here. Actually, it’s Dr. Helen Smith’s post, but a ton of male comments follow (along with some comments by women). Perhaps this puts a whole new spin on John Edwards’ “Two Americas” – apparently it’s split on gender lines, not class ;-) I had no idea that there was this much discontent out there.

Interdisciplinary faculty, publishing, teaching loads, and the costs of legal education

In the seemingly never ending discussion of the utility and appropriateness of hiring  interdisciplinary scholars for 3-4 tier law schools Alfred Brophy offers a fresh perspective that gets to the bottom line. First, no one has offered any systematic evidence that interdisciplinary scholars are better or worse law teachers than non-interdisciplinary scholars – when I see such evidence, then we can begin discussing its accuracy and insightfulness. Until then, Brophy does a wonderful job of stating the obvious – and I mean this in a non-sarcastic way – hard to believe, but true. The real question here is about law faculty publishing vs. law faculty teaching in tier 3-4 schools. In most of these schools, the non-law faculty have anywhere from a 3-2 teaching load to a 4-4 teaching load. The expectations for these professors regarding research are certainly lower than their counterparts at 2-2 load schools.  Brody sets forth an example of the potential savings to a law school and its students if such a teaching load.

So, take a hypothetical fourth tier law school with 21 faculty. Each faculty members costs $110,000 per year and teach 12 hours a year. Then increase their teaching load to 18 hours a year (a three-three load.) That increase by 50% in the teaching load would allow us to reduce the faculty to 14, for a savings of $770,000 per year. If all of that savings were passed on to student body of 630, that’s a savings of $1222 per student. That is perhaps not the earth-shaking transformation in legal education (or the cost of it) that we might hope for. Yet, this might very well be something some schools want to do and it’s a choice some students might opt for as well.

Brophy sets this forth as an all or nothing idea – abandon the writing requirement and have law faculty teach a 3-3 course load. I don’t think that most political science departments with a 3-3 load allow their faculty to do away with the writing component of their jobs – it’s less than what one finds at a 2-2 load school, but there are still requirements to publish. I know of a good number of people at 3-3 load schools who actively publish and do it well (and teach well). So, I am wondering what the new publishing standard for tenure and promotion in law schools might be with, say, a 3-3 or 4-4 teaching load.  Brophy wonders about why such teaching load adjustments haven’t already occurred:

Perhaps there is more of it already going on than I’m familiar with–but for the moment let’s assume that increases in teaching loads beyond 12 hours/year are rare even at fourth tier schools. Why we’re not seeing more of this? It would seem to me that there are sufficient opportunities for fourth tier schools to innovate in this direction, if there is a need for this and if it makes sense. In short, I’m wondering, if dropping scholarship is such a great idea, why hasn’t it happened yet? I wouldn’t imagine that the ABA’s accreditation standards (particularly 402) would prevent this change.

I have a tentative answer to Alfred’s question “why hasn’t it happened yet?” Some faculty at 2-2 load schools who loudly protest that we should emphasize teaching more and research less may not actually want to teach more classes – they may simply want more credit for teaching the 4 classes per year that they already teach.

So, again, I ask – what would be the proposed publication standard for tenure at a law school with a 3-3 load? A 4-4 load? A 2-2 load for that matter? I recognize that it’s hard to state such things specifically, but we’re looking for a ballpark figure here? 8 articles? A book and 3 articles? 7 articles? Placement and impact considerations? Teaching performance considerations? Other factors?

Presidential Candidate Crushes – “Who Loves Ya Baby?”

Lee Sigelman has chronicled all (or at least most) of the candidate crushes on The Monkey Cage. What can we say? People love their presidential hopefuls. Yup, Obama Girl, Hillary Boy, McCain Momma, they’re all there (and below):

Hillary Boy

Just when I think I’ve gotten caught up, along comes something new.

Or, in this case, something derivative and not nearly as good as the original. But something inevitable. We should have seen it coming.

Click here to find out for yourself.

Could “McCain Mama” be next? Nope, not next — it’s already been done.

And here, as a Hit Parade Extra, is yet another “Obama Girl” wanna-be video, this one (“You’re So Lame”) focusing on George W. Bush.

[Hat tip to Paul Gronke for Hillary Boy; I found the others by myself, though I’m not sure why I bothered]

In a piece of totally unrelated pop culture that does not warrant its own post, I do urge you to check out possibly one of the 21st century’s boldest ideas Cheeseburger in a Can. (hat tip to GeekPress)

Does your TSCS data sometimes feel sluggish or time-invariant?

… If so, then maybe it’s time you tried FEVD, that’s right, FEVD – or “Panel Fixed Effects Regression with Vector Decomposition” (stata command is xtfevd). It’ll have your data up and feeling better in no time.

Well, ok, maybe not all that. Just be glad that I didn’t provide one of those “rapid fire at the end of the message statements” regarding the potential not so great side-effects of the treatment. In a recent issue of Political Analysis, there is a series of articles on the perils of TSCS data that suffer from sluggish (slow moving over time) or time-invariant variables. In what some may consider an unprecedented move in statistical methodology,Thomas Plumper (University of Essex) and his co-author, Vera Troeger, actually propose an understandable solution to the problem. ;-) Here’s the paper’s abstract:

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The death of the billable hour and speculations on the limits of legal change

Nancy Rapoport’s recent post ponders the viability of the “death of the billable hour.” There is also a recent NY Times article on changing attitudes toward the billable hour at Big Law firms. Most of the discussion focuses on the lifestyles of lawyers, but what are the long term legal policy implications of such a potentially fundamental shift in fee mechanisms? Several decades ago, fee mechanisms were an integral part of Marc Galanter’s classic article, “Why the Haves Come Out Ahead: Speculations on the Limits of Legal Change.” (9 Law & Society Review 95 (1974)). One of his points was that corporations and insurance companies used Big Law lawyers, whose profitability incentives typically involved putting as many hours into a case as the client would bear. On the flip side of the litigation, single-shot ‘have not’ litigants were typically represented by plaintiff lawyers (working on a contingency arrangement) whose profitability incentives typically involved putting as few hours as possible on a case to attain desired settlement or, in the rare situation, trial victory. This situation and other concerns, Galanter argued, led to long term policy implications favoring “have” litigants. Certainly, other factors mattered – such as the ability to play long term litigation strategies; however, the billing structure may be important.

If Big Law has agreed to a flat fee arrangement in a typical case, might the likelihood of a “Have” winning be diminished? Clearly, Big Law has less incentives to put in hours on a single case – the inability to move on to a new case with a new flat fee is the relevant opportunity cost. If, in fact, a new pay structure for corporate clients means fewer hours per case, does this mean “better” representation and a higher likelihood of winning? And, if so, what are the long term legal implications of this phenomenon?

I don’t pretend to have all of this sorted out, but I think that the specter of the “death of the billable hour” raises some interesting policy questions.

Apparently, someone doesn’t like STATA

On the Law and Letters Blog, Belle Lettre goes into some detail on exactly how much she hates the statistics software program STATA. Below is an excerpt from her rant (slightly edited to preserve our pseudo PG rating):

STATA is the worst program in the history of the world, and if I didn’t need to know how to read/do statistics better, I’d want to drop the class. If I wasn’t concurrently enrolled in an awesome Empirical Analysis of Gender Discrimination course, I would definitely drop it, except that I actually want to get an article out on sexual harassment by the summer, and I sort of argue for the use of empirical analysis of discrimination by courts and the EEOC.

Also, while the professors and the TA are awesome, I do not really understand the pedagogy of belaboring the basic DOS commands (granted, I suck at those, but dude, just give a handout) and rushing through, in the last half hour of class, the section on how to tell Stata to calculate the fraction of observations that are one standard deviation away from the mean for the two variables it took me three hours to figure out how to generate and code as dummy variables. I cannot, for the life of me, recall learning how to do this in class. Nor how to properly do a histogram and specify heights and widths and $#@&. I think I can calculate this stuff with a calculator and draw boxes on graph paper faster, but I have to send in log files. Which also took me a half hour to figure out how to do.

Thus, I do not get the point of making people muddle through basic DOS-like commands without instructive guides. Isn’t the point to teach the statistics, not “learn how to be frustrated at a &*$% irritating program”?! Tell people what stupid monkey commands to enter, but ask them to analyze the significance, which is the important part, right?

First, I’d like to say that I really like her phrase “stupid monkey commands” – it seems like a phrase that people could use in everyday conversation – much like another phrase I just learned, “leave Britney alone!” which can be used against someone when they are giving you a hard time (e.g. your paper discussant on a conference panel). But I digress.

Belle, stupid monkey commands and feeling frustrated and inept for no good reason are all an integral part of the development of a social science scholar. It’s kind of like the Socratic method in law school – there’s not a lot of solid evidence that it actually makes you a good lawyer and it’s usually pedagogically inefficient and even abused by some profs. But, it establishes the hierarchy and makes you “work for it”. If everyone just gave you the STATA code or taught their law classes in a concise, straightforward manner, then you wouldn’t learn to “think like a social scientist (or lawyer).” ;-)

All fun aside, there is a “hide the ball” dynamic in almost every professional field, but hate the game, not the player (i.e. STATA). It’s funny that STATA should be criticized for being nonintuitive; when people came to discover it in the mid to late 1990s it was heralded as a great advancement, because it allowed you to perform some relatively high end statistical analysis (much more so than SPSS) and was much easier to use than other dos command based programs (e.g. LIMDEP, SAS, EVIEWS etc.). Now, STATA even has a windows based interface, although it’s not that great yet.

For what it’s worth there are some great books for the beginning STATA user – they’re kind of like the Emanuel’s law outlines of statistics. These can be found in the STATA bookstore, although you might find used copies cheaper on Amazon or elsewhere. I have found Lawrence Hamilton’s series of books very helpful. STATA also runs an email listserve where you can post your questions, but that can mean a lot of emails unless you take steps to get it in batches. I also find the UCLA statistics tutorial to be very helpful. Finally, and this is most important Belle, you need to convince your law school to hire more interdisciplinary legal scholars – not only will it help you with these STATA problems, but it will give bloggers endless fodder for debate.

Meanwhile, I think that this little video of “Nick Burns the Computer Guy” is relevant and appropriate to the topic.

Questioning the midlife crises

In the New York Times health section, Dr. Richard Friedman questions the viability of the seemingly widespread “midlife crises” among people (primarily men) of a certain age. He notes:

Why do we have to label a common reaction of the male species to one of life’s challenges — the boredom of the routine — as a crisis? True, men are generally more novelty-seeking than women, but they certainly can decide what they do with their impulses.

But surely someone has had a genuine midlife crisis. After all, don’t people routinely struggle with questions like “What can I expect from the rest of my life?” or “Is this all there is?”

Then, a study…

Of course. But it turns out that only a distinct minority think it constitutes a crisis. In 1999, the MacArthur Foundation study on midlife development surveyed 8,000 Americans ages 25 to 74. While everyone recognized the term “midlife crisis,” only 23 percent of subjects reported having one. And only 8 percent viewed their crisis as something tied to the realization that they were aging; the remaining 15 percent felt the crisis resulted from specific life events. Strikingly, most people also reported an increased sense of well-being and contentment in middle age.

And some reflections…

So what keeps the myth of the midlife crisis alive?

The main culprit, I think, is our youth-obsessed culture, which makes a virtue of the relentless pursuit of self-renewal. The news media abound with stories of people who seek to recapture their youth simply by shedding their spouses, quitting their jobs or leaving their families. Who can resist?

Most middle-aged people, it turns out, if we are to believe the definitive survey.

Except, of course, for the few — mainly men, it seems — who find the midlife crisis a socially acceptable shorthand for what you do when you suddenly wake up and discover that you’re not 20 anymore.

I guess I shouldn’t like this article since it denies me the American male birthright to have a midlife crises, but I thought that it was pretty interesting. I have some questions though. Do we really even know when a midlife crises is supposed to occur? You usually see it discussed in the context of men in their late forties or early fifties – does this mean that they expect to live to be 100? Perhaps we should call it a 2/3 life crises. What if you have a family history of, let’s say, lack of longevity – should you go ahead and start your midlife crises at 28? I think that there was a Northern Exposure episode on this issue, but I forget the details. Also, what implications does this have for the quarter-life crises (which allegedly affects males and females equally) that I heard so much about a while back?

Are the legal and medical professions ‘falling down’?

Apparently it’s not cool to be a doctor or lawyer anymore. Of course, this assumes that it ever really was. In fairness, law and medical schools turn down thousands of applicants every year and this provides at least some supporting evidence of each profession’s coolness or at least its relative popularity. The New York Times reports that people are rapidly becoming disenchanted with these two professions and are looking for something “cooler,” namely something more on the creative side of the occupational spectrum.

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Edwards, Class Politics, and “What’s the Matter With Kansas?”

Enik Rising Blog (ER) has an insightful post on the politics of culture vs. the politics of class. With some help from Larry Bartels, ER makes a powerful case that for Democrats the road to the presidency is paved with class politics bricks. This stands in contrast to Frank’s book, What’s the Matter With Kansas? which makes the case that it’s all about cultural differences.

Where Frank’s book fails is that it largely buys into this culture argument. That is, he maintains that culture war politics are actually working – that working class whites are abandoning the Democrats due to cultural appeals. As Bartels shows, that’s not true. If anything, the class schism in this country has become more pronounced over the past few decades, with the wealthier far more likely to vote Republican than they used to be.

ER then goes on to argue that Edwards is the only Democratic candidate who is forcefully making the class based argument and that the culture based arguments are essentially, “not the way the [Democratic] electorate rolls.”  Here’s a final exerpt:

Strip away all the hot air about Republicans liking NASCAR and beer and Democrats liking Volvos and wine and you see that the real split between the parties is economic. And it’s not just rhetorical – poorer people do better under Democratic presidents than they do under Republican presidents. Poorer voters seem to get this, and there are a lot more of them than there are wealthy voters.

Thanks for answering my question on the writers’ strike

On Workplace Prof Blog, Jeffrey Hirsch (University of Tennessee) recently noted the settlement of the strike by David Letterman (who owns his show) and, more importantly, addressed  a lingering question that I had on the writers’ strike. The claim of entertainment executives is essentially that they can’t give writers a piece of the internet/digital profits because it’s too early; no one knows exactly how profitable such ventures will be. Hirsh writes:

Details on the Letterman deal have not emerged, but the show has essentially said that they gave the writers what they were asking for, which wasn’t very much.  This fits my understanding of the dispute, which seems not to be about any significant amount of money.  The writers are asking for a percentage of revenue that may come from the Internet and other digital sources, much like they do from more traditional sources.  The studios are objecting, in part because they can’t predict what will happen.  But, isn’t that what a percentage takes into account?  If there’s nothing, the studios don’t have to pay anything more.  If significant revenues eventually occur, they would have to pay–but why shouldn’t they?  This seems much more of a power play than anything related to studios bottom-line, a story that is quite familiar to those of us who have practiced in this area.

Of course, the obvious retort would be that while they (management) don’t know the expected profitability of the internet/digital ventures, they have taken risks and invested capital in the new idea – so, no one knows what the profit to investment ratio might be. Well, I’m pretty sure that it’s not a number that appropriately yields a zero percent cut for writers. If management is actually taking a loss, then, as Hirsch points out, 5% of nothing is nothing.  If it turns out to be profitable, then the writers still certainly deserve to have a stake in a gain that derives from their work. But, there should be an appropriate discounting of the writers’ cut, given that the risks were undertaken by management.  However, I hesitate to say that management executives took risks – the shareholders maybe – but I find it hard to argue that CEOs and other upper management are taking meaningful risks – as far as I can tell they do pretty well (what with the golden parachutes and all) regardless of whether ventures fail or succeed.

Caron’s wrap-up on why professors are so unhappy

Is available on TaxProf blog here. As you may have seen his second post on this question generated a good amount of blog buzz. Below are the blog links that discussed the issue:

From what I have read of the posts’ comments (Volokh has some good ones) most don’t believe that law professors are unhappy as a general group, but that some may be. Potential reasons for unhappiness include the real or perceived irrelevance of their work and real or perceived competitiveness in the academy, among others. Of course, a good number of commenters suggest that even if law professors (and I’m guessing that they mean professors generally) are unhappy, then they should get over it.

After having had many, many conversations concerning peoples’ employment happiness (some being voluntary on my part; some not so much) with people from a wide variety of occupations , I’ve come to the conclusion that nearly everyone believes that their job is really hard, really important and socially-redeeming,  and that they are really underappreciated, and really underpaid.

A trend in lateral hiring?

On Prawfsblawg, Michael O’Hear wonders about what is driving the perceived trend in more lateral hiring in law schools. I say ‘perceived trend’ because I haven’t seen any hard evidence of it. I’m pretty sure that he’s right that such a trend does exist, although I wonder about the magnitude. Could it just be that more fanfare surrounds lateral hiring because of websites like Brian Leiter’s  Law School Reports? O’Hear notes:

If there has been a broader upswing in lateral hiring, I wonder if it has been more supply or demand driven. On the demand side, the importance of the U.S. News survey has made law schools more sensitive to their reputation within the national legal academy, and lateral hiring seems more likely to provide an immediate reputational bump than entry-level hiring. On the supply side, as a member of our Appointments Committee in the recent past, I was surprised by the number of direct contacts we had from faculty members at other law schools looking to move on. (I once even had an expression of interest from someone I was calling for a reference check for an entry-level candidate!) Perhaps the greater connectedness of the academy in the Internet age has spawned a generation of junior faculty members who feel less attached to their home institutions than previous generations and who are more motivated to make moves that will enhance opportunities or status within the national academic community. Likewise, for junior faculty members who are not entirely satisfied with their current situations (for geographical reasons or otherwise), the Internet provides opportunities to build a reputation relatively quickly, and also facilitates the sort of networking that may pave the way for lateral moves.

On the Conglomerate Blog, Gordon Smith follows up by commenting that this activity may be driven by a broader trend – the spread of scholarly ambition beyond the top law schools. He says:

Notice the implicit assumption: that the driving force behind lateral hiring is scholarship. Of course, this is widely understood, but making that assumption explicit highlights the spread of scholarly ambition beyond elite law schools. While lower-ranked law schools may have their own unique missions — and thus may be worthy receptacles of institutional  investment by faculty members — they also serve, in some instances, as “farm teams” for higher-ranked schools. Oddly, the quickest path to increased reputational capital for lower-ranked law schools probably does not come from hiring laterals, but from producing laterals for elite law schools.

All of this causes me to wonder: Is there any development in legal education of the past generation that has had a more important influence on the teaching of law than the spread of scholarly ambition beyond elite law schools?

I think that most would agree that both trends are found in political science as well, to one degree or another. I’m not sure if all of the lateral movement in pol sci is upward – there appears to be a lot of “sideways” movement as non-top tier departments vie over productive tenured (and almost tenured) faculty. Given that I know that most people don’t like going on the market and generally don’t like the transaction costs of moving, I am left to wonder if the internal compensation mechanisms and incentive structures of academic institutions don’t play some role in the lateral movement trend. Could it be that the market compensation level for academics is becoming more transparent and national in scope?  It seems that (at least) three forces are clearly at work: (a) schools are willing to pay a premium for lateral candidates; (b) home institutions are sometimes willing to make counter offers; (c) faculty are actually willing to move if they do not.

What are the implications of these trends? Is it becoming a winner take all market? Will institutions have to adjust to keep up in this marketplace?

Yet another presidential candidate quiz

From the NYTimes – How well do you really know the candidates?

1. Mitt Romney’s real first name is:

A) Mitten

B) Joe-Bob

C) Willard

2. Asked to name his most prized possession, Fred Thompson picked his:

A) Winchester rifle

B) Trophy wife

C) Autographed picture of Ronald Reagan

3. Which Temptations song did Maya Angelou invoke in a recent radio ad for Hillary Clinton?

A) “Ain’t Too Proud to Beg”

B) “Treat Her Like a Lady”

C) “My Girl”

D) “The Girl’s Alright With Me”

4. Looking wistfully at the candidates running to replace him, George W. Bush said he liked everything about campaigning for president except:

A) Homesickness for favorite pillow

B) Getting viruses from the press corps

C) The awesome responsibility of preparing to govern the most powerful nation on earth

5. During the campaign, Barack Obama learned that Dick Cheney is:

A) His worst nightmare

B) A distant cousin

C) Not really a bad guy once you get to know him

6. Speaking at a livestock auction barn in Iowa, Hillary Clinton said she expected voters to inspect her, and offered:

A) “You can look inside my mouth if you want.”

B) “You can take a gander at my withers.”

C) “You can examine the stock I came from.”

7. Ratcheting it up in New Hampshire, Romney charged Giuliani with being:

A) A person in a glass house who throws stones

B) A rolling stone who gathers no moss

C) A twice-divorced, thrice-married ferret-hater

8. Giuliani retorted that Romney was:

A) A person in a glass house who throws stones

B) A rolling stone who gathers no moss

C) A flip-flopping ferret lover

9. Somewhere along the line, reporters have noticed, Hillary Clinton dropped:

A) Bill

B) The Celine Dion theme song

C) The black pantsuit

10. Texas Gov. Rick Perry endorsed Rudy Giuliani by comparing him to:

A) A great stallion with one sore hoof

B) A pickup truck with one undesirable option

C) A great date with bad breath

11. BEYOND BARBRA AND OPRAH: Match the candidate with the celebrity backer.

A) “Nature Boy” Ric Flair

B) Kevin Bacon

C) Forest Whitaker

D) The Osmonds

E) Melissa Gilbert

F) Merle Haggard

G) Red Sox pitcher Curt Schilling

H) Pat Sajak

I) Sean Penn

1) Hillary Clinton

2) Barack Obama

3) John Edwards

4) Rudy Giuliani

5) Dennis Kucinich

6) Mike Huckabee

7) Fred Thompson

8 ) John McCain

9) Mitt Romney

12. When asked if he ever inhaled, Barack Obama said:

A) “I’m not going to talk about what I did as a child.”

B) “That depends on what the definition of inhale is.”

C) “That was the point.”

13. In Iowa, John Edwards drives:

A) The Man-of-the-People Express

B) The Main Street Express

C) A beat-up sedan formerly owned by his father, the millworker.

14. Among the special interest groups running political ads in Iowa were two nursing associations that said that if Dick Cheney “were anyone else, he’d probably:

A) … be having Christmas dinner alone.”

B) … be dead by now.”

C) … be under indictment.”

15. Mike Huckabee compared his fast rise in the polls to:

A) The miracle of the loaves and the fishes

B) The parting of the Red Sea

C) The battle between Chuck Norris and David Carradine in “Lone Wolf McQuade”

16. In speeches for his wife, Bill Clinton makes fun of the idea that Hillary had a plot to become president that boiled down to:

A) Save Arkansas, then the nation, then the world.

B) Go to a state I’ve barely seen and marry some pale politician who has a $26,000 salary and a $42,000 debt.

C) Help Bill into the White House, endure endless crises and unimaginable embarrassment. Then it’s my turn.

Answers below the fold….

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Can you name the SCOTUS justices? Charles Barkley nails it

A while back I blogged on a recent paper by Jim Gibson and Greg Caldeira in which they argue that people have a better knowledge of the Court and its activities than prior studies suggest. But, at bottom line, how many people can actually name the justices of the US Supreme Court, and – more importantly – can they do it under pressure? Former NBA star and sports analyst Charles Barkley can – and does it while enduring significant razzing from his peers. It’s all about having the right “technique” and frame of mind – as we see in the video below.

See? It’s all about ingenuity and not blowing your cool under pressure. He handles the situation with a lot more finesse and aplomb than fellow former athlete and sports commenter Dan Marino does here:

Money, marriage, and being “average”

On the Conglomerate Blog Gordon Smith has an interesting post on a recent WSJ article regarding a study on how much money people would need a potential mate to have if said potential mate was “average” looking.  Here’s an excerpt:

The survey polled 1,134 people nationwide with incomes ranging between $30,000 to $60,000 (squarely in the median range for nationwide incomes). The survey asked: “How willing are you to marry an average-looking person that you liked, if they had money?”

Fully two-thirds of women and half of the men said they were “very” or “extremely” willing to marry for money. The answers varied by age: Women in their 30s were the most likely to say they would marry for money (74%) while men in their 20s were the least likely (41%).

… In the Prince & Associates study, 61% of men in their 40s said they would marry for money….

The matrimonial price tag varies by gender and age. Asked how much a potential spouse would need to have to be money-marriage material, women in their 20s said $2.5 million. The going rate fell to $1.1 million for women in their 30s, and rose again to $2.2 million for women in their 40s….

Men have cheaper requirements. In the Prince survey, their asking price overall was $1.2 million, with men in their 20s asking $1 million and men in their 40s asking $1.4 million.

Frank calls the price tag “surprisingly low, given the new landscape of wealth.” He continues, “While $1 million or $2 million may sound like a lot to people making $30,000, it’s hardly enough to transform someone’s life or make them ‘rich’ by contemporary billionaire standards.”

First, Gordon is right when he notes later in his post that Frank is horribly out of touch with what it is like to earn 30k per year. Second, I’m guessing that a person’s price point may also be influenced by their personal definition of “average looking.” It has been my experience that this definition varies quite a bit from person to person. As usual, the “Seinfeld” show is instructive on this point. While I couldn’t find a Youtube video on this episode, here’s my very rough memory of a classic scene featuring Jerry and Elaine discussing this matter.

Jerry: So, what percentage of people would you say are really attractive?

Elaine: I don’t know, maybe 25 percent or so?

Jerry: Oh, no way! It’s maybe 4-6 percent, tops. There are really very few good looking people out there.

Elaine: Then what’s getting all of these average looking people together?

Jerry: Alcohol.

Social Science Research Network enters the citation count business

On TaxProf Blog Paul Carron reports here that SSRN has entered the fray on scholarly citations:

SSRN has now entered the citation count field with its new “References & Cites” feature.  To check it out, go to SSRN and click on “Search,” and then “Beta Lab.”  In the left column, you will see the “References & Cites” with statistics on:

  • Papers with Resolved References: Total number of papers in the SSRN eLibrary with resolved references.
  • Papers with Cites: Total number of papers in the SSRN eLibrary with one or more resolved cites from other papers (described above).
  • Note: The links for the two pages containing a paper’s References and Cited By links (when available) are on each paper’s SSRN abstract page.
  • Total References: Total number of references to other papers that have been resolved to date, for papers in in the SSRN eLibrary.
  • Total Cited by: Total number of cites to papers in the SSRN eLibrary whose links have been resolved to date.

Rhetoric Wars

On BlackProf blog, Marc Lamont Hill has some interesting commentary on political rhetoric wars promoting policy initiatives – you know, a war on drugs, a war on gangs, and so on. Andy and I have a paper on this topic here. Here’s an excerpt of Hill’s comments:

For decades, politicians have used the rhetoric of war in order to draw public support for questionable domestic policy initiatives. In 1971, President Nixon launched a full scale “War on Drugs” that has heavily tipped the criminal justice scales against poor people, petty drug users, and small time dealers. More recently, after the September 11 tragedy, President Bush unleashed a War on Terror that has undermined any semblance of individual privacy and civil liberty for the entire nation.

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How I learned to stop worrying and love the Carnegie Report

On the Empirical Legal Studies Blog Bill Henderson has a post titled “Why I worry about the Carnegie Report (2007): Four data points.” It is a very interesting critique of the Carnegie Report which, in turn, purports to provide a constructive critique of the state of U.S. legal education. My take on this situation is that one can only expect so much out of such reports. They are rarely the catalyst for change in any given institution or discipline. There is an extremely bad joke about psychiatrists and lightbulbs that goes something like this: How many psychiatrists does it take to change a lightbulb? Answer: Well, only one, but it takes a long time and the lightbulb has to really want to change. And this seems to be (at least one) of Bill’s primary criticisms of the report – it doesn’t tell us how to get the discipline to change.

Speaking as an outsider, I don’t get the impression that the majority of law profs really want to change the way things are done, or they only want to change things slightly and not in a way that leads to systemic change (i.e. they have different views of how things should be changed). However, it may be that this institutional inertia presents each school with the possibility for increasing its relative market share within legal education. I don’t think that many schools below the top 30 are going to drastically drop in the rankings by adopting innovation; similarly most schools in the top 15 will likely stay in the top of the rankings. Thus, the former have incentives to engage in innovation and the latter will probably do fine without it. So, to get back to the lightbulb analogy – I do not know how to get the discipline to change, or even a school for that matter, but a school can change if it really wants to do so and it is likely at the school level where a catalyst for broader change could occur. If a number of schools begin making gains in legal academia through innovation, then others will likely follow. People love to copy success stories.

Again, being an outsider, I will limit my offerings for innovation. I only submit 3 brief possibilities for a given school.

1. Many schools already have internship programs – you should have more of them – at the local, state, national and international levels. It has been my experience (and I do have some on this matter) that internship programs are efficient and, if properly run, can provide an excellent opportunity for students to learn a valuable combination of the theoretical and applied aspects of a given field. It also leads to greater employment opportunities for your students and often better alumni relations, since your internship sponsors are often alumni.

2. Engage your students and even alumni in the research process. They will find it more rewarding than you might think. Students and alumni likely rail against professors spending “too much” time on research because they are not exposed to it and feel that they have no stake in it. They do have a stake in it. If profs shut down on research, the institution’s prestige suffers – it has a long lag time, but it ultimately suffers; and their degree becomes less marketable – especially if they are looking for opportunities outside of their home state. Schools should encourage faculty co-authoring with students and alumni and invite both to research presentations and other research related activities.

3. And this is most important – listen to Jim Chen. Again, listen to Jim Chen. He is right, and deep down, you know it.

That’s it – I’m done. I’m sure that there will be plenty of people ready, willing, and able to set me straight – at least perhaps a meaningful dialogue will begin.

More on AMC’s “Mad Men”

Apparently, I’m not the only person who finds AMC’s show “Mad Men” intriguing. Concurring Opinions pays tribute to the show and discusses some of the ironies involved when a show that pulls the curtain back on the world of advertising also has to, um, advertise products. The show incorporates a number of interesting techniques, including mixing story product placement with commercials and providing factoids about the advertising business (and products) right before commercial breaks. Here’s an excerpt from the Concurring Opinions post:

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Old Polls: The coming 3 day work week

Apparently, a good percentage of people in the 1950s (but not a majority) believed that we would be enjoying a three day work week by now. Were robots going to do all the work? Is it like George Jetson worked – just pressing the button once in a while?

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On legal practice experience, visiting assistant professor programs, and Moneylaw

On the Volokh Conspiracy (and on the Leiter and Caron blogs) they note the rise of visiting assistant professor programs (VAPs) in law schools as a pathway to legal academia (i.e. tenure track positions in law schools). A related hot topic in legal academia is the seemingly perennial debate on the merits of a highly experienced practitioners vs. legal scholar types (e.g. publishes, well known in academic circles, etc.). (The new Harvard VAP program discussed in the Volokh post is ostensibly geared toward practicing lawyers with lots of experience.)

Two quick points on these matters:

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Presidential candidate match game

USA Today has a candidate match game that allows you to compare your answers to policy questions to the various candidates. Here’s the intro from the USA Today story.

About the game

Polls suggest Americans are concerned primarily with a few key issues in the 2008 presidential election. USA TODAY researched candidate positions on those top issues — Iraq, immigration and health care — as well as a few others that may influence the election. We then came up with 11 multiple-choice questions that would help differentiate the candidates and their stances.

Get a grip (on perfectionism) … and get a hobby

There are two seemingly unrelated stories in the New York Times. The first story tells us that the platitudes and motivational sayings that we see in movies, television, and in sports — “be the best you can be,” “don’t settle for second best,” etc., are not necessarily your friends. Being a perfectionist can apparently have a detrimental effect on various aspects of your life – not that I am personally in any danger on this matter (Andy will attest to that). Here’s a brief excerpt:

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Toward a more robust law review process

In reading legal blogs, I’ve noticed some dissatisfaction with the law review publishing process, primarily on the part of law professors. I won’t attempt to comprehensively document this dissatisfaction, but a few recent examples include Alfred Brophy’s multi-stage postings of advice for law reviews on PropertyProf Blog and Jeff Harrison’s questioning of the rigor of the law review process as well as the worthwhileness their the aggregate product on Moneylaw blog. Certainly, there are plenty of opportunities to publish in law reviews. Harrison estimates the number as follows:

These numbers must be off but, think about it: 180 law schools, 2 journals per school, 5 issues a year, 4 article per issue. I think that is a demand for 7200 articles per year. (72,000 since 1997) That may be conservative.

This suggests that there is quite a demand for manuscripts. However, as we know, not all journals are created equal. Certainly, placement in top tier law reviews is taken seriously in a range of important decisions such as promotion and hiring. Further, it is likely that a publication in a high tier journal tends to result in more citations in subsequent journals. Citation count studies like Brian Leiter’s are apparently also taken seriously in important decisions although their usefulness is contested by some. All of this is to say that there is something important at stake in determining the relative perceived quality of law reviews and the articles contained therein.

I won’t take on the task of comprehensively listing the alleged shortcomings of law reviews. Some of the main concern-themes I have seen have focused on the perceived unfairness and arbitrariness of the selection of articles for publication. I will detail below my argument for how law reviews (or at least some law reviews) could become more robust, fair, and accurate in selecting quality articles. If this can in fact be done, then we perhaps have a better basis for employing a hierarchy of law reviews basis for making important hiring and promotion decisions. I am quite sure that there will be plenty of people who will be willing to correct me where I am mistaken.

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New Blog – The Monkey Cage

There’s a new political science blog in town – The Monkey Cage. Its editors are David Park, John Sides, and Lee Sigelman – all at George Washington University. You can find below an excerpt from one of their recent posts – this one is on Presidential Trivia.

1. Who was the first president to attend a baseball game?
2. Who was the first president to refer officially to the Executive Mansion as the White House?
3. Who were the only two sitting senators to be elected president?
4. Who was the only president to serve in the House of Representatives after his presidency?
5. Who was the only president to serve in the Senate after his presidency?
6. Who was the only president to be named a sworn enemy of the United States?
7. Who was the only president who had a career in modeling?
8. To how many other presidents have genealogists determined that Franklin Delano Roosevelt was related?

For the answers, check out the post.

Friday fun for academic job applicants: The letter you wish you could send

A version of the mock letter below the fold made the rounds while I was in graduate school. It was funny then and is still funny in my humble opinion. I suppose that a slightly amended version could be used by law students re law firm applications.  (Hat tip to Prawfsblawg and Interweavers)

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Doctor Drug Rep – coming to a town near you?

Think about the background of financial incentives detailed in this NYTimes article the next time you receive a prescription. And here I was worried about the attractive drug rep flirting with doctors and handing out little gifts bearing the company logo … I should have been afraid of the person in the white coat. Below are two excerpts, one from the beginning (of a long article) and the other toward the end; but it’s worth reading the entire piece.

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Stras on Books on Judicial Appointment

In “The New Politics of Judicial Appointment” David Stras (University of Minnesota School of Law) reviews two interesting books – Supreme Conflict (by Jan Crawford Greenburg) and Confirmation Wars (by Benjamin Wittes). Both are insightful, journalistic accounts of the Supreme Court nomination/confirmation process and Stras brings  helpful social science insights to bear on this highly charged subject in his review. The abstract is available below the fold.

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Tis the season for avoiding office party lawsuits

The Conglomerate blog has a post on a recent article in the Boston Globe on how to avoid lawsuits over activities occurring at holiday office parties. The tips are provided by the Bryan Cave law firm. Some of the tips provided:

* Avoid salty foods such as chicken wings because they may result in excessive consumption of alcoholic beverages.

* Set the tone with a series of pre-party memos. Memos should note that the party is a business-related function, and they should also remind everyone of the company’s anti-harrassment policies. Pre-party memos should suggest that everyone should give gag gifts and provocative decorations a good leaving-alone.

* If party plans call for music, tell the band or DJ, “No slow dances.”

I have heard many tales of out of control office parties leading to foolish, and perhaps even litigious behavior. However, after having worked in a corporation, small law firm, and now academia, I have never seen anything that approximates such a holiday office party. I’m not complaining, it’s just that I wonder if I’ve missed out on an important life experience.

On the other hand, I’ve also never had to endure the ultimate awful spectacle of the holiday office party - the “Elaine Dance”…. (courtesy of “Seinfeld,” – caution, some cursing).

When tenure cases attack!

My co-author Jack Chin posts on Concurring Opinions about litigation concerning a denial of tenure at University of Michigan Law School. We might sometimes think about what one of these cases look like, but this post and accompanying links provides an inside view. Here’s an excerpt:

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This is your brain on presidential candidates…

The New York Times features an article which discusses a recent study on brain imaging and political stimuli. Here’s an excerpt:

IN anticipation of the 2008 presidential election, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging to watch the brains of a group of swing voters as they responded to the leading presidential candidates. Our results reveal some voter impressions on which this election may well turn.

Our 20 subjects — registered voters who stated that they were open to choosing a candidate from either party next November — included 10 men and 10 women. In late summer, we asked them to answer a list of questions about their political preferences, then observed their brain activity for nearly an hour in the scanner at the Ahmanson Lovelace Brain Mapping Center at the University of California, Los Angeles. Afterward, each subject filled out a second questionnaire.

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Making a good (and extremely fast) first impression

Apparently, getting elected turns on making a good first impression and, here’s the kicker, you’d better make that good impression in less than 250 milliseconds. At least these are the results of a recent study concerning gubernatorial elections. The story is on Scientific American, but here’s an excerpt.

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Law reviews vs. peer review: Belle Lettre offers insights

On the Law and Letters Blog, Bell Lettre weighs in on the recurring debate on the relative merit of student edited law reviews (as opposed to peer reviewed journals). You can check out the full post (and comments) here, but I provide an excerpt below the fold. (hat tip to Moneylaw)

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Q & A with Levinson on becoming (and being) an academic

The Record details a recent talk by Harvard law professor Daryl Levinson to a group of HLS students/aspiring law professors.  The Record’s summary of the talk is pretty interesting, but perhaps most intriguing is the Q & A session that followed. Actually, his answers are almost uncomfortably honest in parts – in my humble opinion. (Hat tip to Volokh Conspiracy Blog)

Q: So how easy is it to get a job as a law professor?
A: There are two ways to read the numbers. The discouraging interpretation is that out of 1,000 applications for teaching positions last year, 150 were hired. On the other hand, out of that 1,000 you can automatically throw out about half because they didn’t go to a top 20 law school (that’s just how the academic world works), and you can throw out another twenty-five percent because they didn’t attend this presentation and have no idea what it takes to be a law professor – maybe they think they like teaching, but not scholarship, or maybe they’ve been practicing for a long time and think it would be nice to retire into a professorship. So when you look at the pool of viable, serious candidates, and the students in that pool who graduated from Harvard Law, virtually all of those applicants got academic positions of some sort.
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Learning from the past: The “Mad Men” series

    

In researching and teaching on present day issues we often link to the past for context. However, how well do we even know, or for those old enough, remember the historical context? AMC’s series “Mad Men,” the title an ode to the term traditionally used to describe Madison Avenue advertising executives, makes a valiant effort to get the historical context right (here, circa 1960). Many television shows and movies have provided historical context treatment, however these are usually either cleaned up versions of the past or deliberately provocative portraits of the ugly aspects of our history, done in such a way to make a specific point. If we are to learn from the past to inform our understanding of the present, it helps to get the past, especially the more subtle aspects, right. Now, I’m sure that “Mad Men” doesn’t always get it right and it only covers a very narrow, elite group of people from the era. Nonetheless, its portrait of 1960 – the little things – is compelling. Here’s some “ad copy” from the AMC website and a video link:

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Privatizing regulation and the development of a “Nanny State”

Gary Hovland

(pictures by Gary Hovland)

Both Althouse and Concurring Opinions discuss a recent New York Times article on the development of a blog which allows users to post and/or read about instances of, um … un-nannylike behavior – basically, private parties regulate nannies by taking cell phone pictures of and providing accounts of bad nannying and posting them online for the client population. Of course, this development may yield benefits (better childcare) or detriments (libel and unfair reputation damage), but one is left to wonder whether the general phenomenon will spread.