Posted on
February 9, 2009 in
East Central Illinois criminal-defense lawyer Jeremy Richey hosts Blawg Review 198, on the theme of “The Seven Deadly Sins.”
I will be hosting next week’s Blawg Review.
What’s Blawg Review?
Blawg Review is the blog carnival for everyone interested in law. A peer-reviewed blog carnival, the host of each Blawg Review decides which of the submissions and recommended posts are suitable for inclusion in the presentation. And the host is encouraged to source another dozen or so interesting posts to fit with any special theme of that issue of Blawg Review. The host’s personal selections usually include several that reflect the character and subject interests of the host blawg, recognizing that the regular readership of the blog should find some of the usual content, and new readers of the blog via Blawg Review ought to get some sense of the unique perspective and subject specialties of the host. Thanks to all the law bloggers who collaborate to make Blawg Review one of the very best blog carnivals of any genre.
Here are the guidelines for submitting posts for Blawg Review.
Submit a link for my consideration here.
Please Mark, tell me that you’re not going with a theme. Or if you are, that it will be a theme so broad that you can link to anything, like “the presumption of innocence.” Every blawgreview has a theme. Some are great (Randazza’s Bill of Rights Day and Coleman’s Chanukah, recently, come to mind), but most these days seem either to steer toward a niche or to be so contrived that they detract from the writing.
On that note, I think your comments on the criminal lawyer’s understanding of “not guilty” (“prove it”), should go into whatever you produce.
I was thinking I might use the theme “Valentine’s Day”, which would cover both romance and massacres.
Broad enough for you?
That’ll work. You can do anything with it.
Ken and I are thinking about asking to host one of these, but they’re booked so far out that the most likely themes would be the 75th anniversary of Calvin Coolidge’s reelection, or America Recycles Day.