2020 Scholarship
‘We the Citizens?’: A Corpus Linguistic Inquiry into the Use of ‘People’ and ‘Citizens’ in the Founding Era.
Stout, A., Coetzee, D., & Romer, U. (2020). “We the Citizens?’: A Corpus Linguistic Inquiry into the Use of ‘People’ and ‘Citizens’ in the Founding Era.” Ga. St. UL Rev., 36, 665.
Corporations and the Original Meaning of “Citizens” in Article III
Moller, Mark, and Lawrence B. Solum. “Corporations and the Original Meaning of” Citizens” in Article III.” Hastings LJ 72 (2020): 169.
Corpus Linguistics as a Method of Legal Interpretation: Some progress, some quesitions
Solan, Lawrence M. “Corpus linguistics as a method of legal interpretation: Some progress, some questions.” International Journal for the Semiotics of Law-Revue internationale de Sémiotique juridique 33 (2020): 283-298.
“Questions Involving National Peace and Harmony” or “Injured Plaintiff Litigation”? The Original Meaning of “Cases” in Article III of The Constitution
Haoshan Ren, Margaret Wood, Clark D. Cunningham, Noor Abbady, Ute Römer, Heather Kuhn, & Jesse Egbert, “Questions Involving National Peace and Harmony” or “Injured Plaintiff Litigation”? The Original Meaning of “Cases” in Article III of the Constitution, 36 Ga. St. U. L. Rev. 535 (2020).
Corpora and Analyzing Legal Discourse in the United States
Cunningham, Clark D. and Egbert, Jesse, Corpora and Analyzing Legal Discourse in the United States (March 13, 2020). Routledge Handbook of Corpus Approaches to Discourse Analysis (Eric Friginal & Jack Hardy, eds. 2020 Forthcoming).
Corpora and Legal Interpretation: Corpus approaches to ordinary meaning in legal interpretation
Gries, Stefan Th. “Corpora and legal interpretation: Corpus approaches to ordinary meaning in legal interpretation.” The Routledge handbook of forensic linguistics (2020): 628-643.