Current Students


Home  /  News  /  



@law.miami.edu:  Prof. John Hart Ely Is 4th Most Cited Legal Scholar Ever
  Admissions  |   Research  |   News |   Search  
UM Law
  Home  |   Students  |   Alumni  |   Law Library  |   Continuing Legal Education  |

Admission
Juris Doctor Program
LL.M. Programs
International Students
Joint Degree Programs
Events Calendar
Applications & Forms
Financial Aid
Law School Community Profiles



Student Life 
Academic Calendar
Course Schedule
Admission to the Bar
Student Bar Association
Student Organizations
Student Handbook
Career Planning
Student Spotlight

Alumni
Alumni Home Page
Alumni Calendar
Update Your Information
The Barrister

Foreign Summer Abroad Programs
London Summer Program
Tour de Espaņa

Programs
Center for Ethics & Public Service

The Law School
Faculty
Administration
Directions to Campus

Continuing Legal Education
C.L.E. Calendar  2000 - 2001
Programs
The Heckerling Institute

Law Library
Library Services
Research Sources
Library Catalog

News & Events
Events Calendar
News Archive


This site is best viewed with versions 4 (or above) of either Microsoft's Internet Explorer or Netscape's Communicator.

 


Prof. John Hart Ely Is 4th Most Cited Legal Scholar Ever;
His Book Is Most Cited Legal Work Of Past 2 Decades


     According to studies published in the January 2000 issue of the University of Chicago's Journal of Legal Studies, the University of Miami School of Law's Professor John Hart Ely is the fourth most frequently cited American legal scholar of all time.

     With 3,032 cites, he comes just after Oliver Wendell Holmes (who was cited 3,665 times) and ahead of Roscoe Pound (who had 3,018 cites). Richard A. Posner was in first place with 7,981 cites, and Ronald Dworkin in second, with 4,488.

     Moreover, Ely's 1980 book, Democracy and Distrust: A Theory of Judicial Review, is the most cited legal book since 1978. It has been cited 1,460 times. (Professor Dworkin's Law's Empire, which finished second, came in at 904 citations.)

     One of the nation's foremost constitutional law experts and theorists, Ely is the Richard A. Hausler Professor of Law at the University of Miami School of Law. He also has been on the faculties of Harvard and Yale and dean of Stanford Law School.

     Professor Ely is the author of On Constitutional Ground (1996), War and Responsibility (1993), and Democracy and Distrust, which won the Order of the Coif award as the best book about law published in 1980-82.

     The author of the Journal of Legal Studies articles, Fred R. Shapiro, is assistant librarian for public services and lecturer in legal research at Yale Law School. He also is the editor of the Oxford Dictionary of American Legal Quotations and co-editor of Trial and Error: An Oxford Anthology of Legal Stories.

     Shapiro pointed out that the list of most cited scholars covers legal and social science articles indexed by the Social Sciences Citation Index from 1956 to 1999. More than 100 legal periodicals plus more than 1,000 periodicals from a wide range of social sciences are included in the index. Although coverage is worldwide, most of the journals included are American. Citations are for periodicals, books, articles, and other publications (even works published prior to 1956, but cited in that year or later).

     The list of most cited legal books, Shapiro explained, is for books cited in legal scholarship, not in court decisions. He used 1978 as the starting point for his most-cited-book list "because of the limitations of the data" available about books published before that time.

     He noted that citation counts are "relatively objective tools for assessing scholarly impact" and can be used "to gauge the impact of a given author or writing."

     

Last Updated: Thursday, June 15, 2000 03:28 PM
©1999 University of Miami School of Law.
Legal
| Text-Only Home Page | Contact Us

University of Miami School of Law.  Copyright 2007  All Rights Reserved
1311 Miller Drive, Coral Gables, Florida 33146   |   Tel. (305) 284-2339
Legal   |    Acceptable-Use-Policy   |    Privacy   |    Visitors