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Transnational Legal Discourse: Reflections on My Time with the German Law Journal

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 March 2019

Extract

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By October 2013, the German Law Journal, published monthly and available at no cost on the Internet – www.germanlawjournal.com – counted approximately 1593 publications, authored by approximately 1.450-1.500 authors. A journal project of such magnitude in itself could certainly not have been expected by its founders. Just as unlikely it would have seemed to them or anyone else, for that matter, that their little, bi-monthly email newsletter, originally entitled “Momentaufnahme” (Engl.: snapshot; French: glimpse d'oueil), would grow into a web-based, peer-reviewed legal periodical with more than 13.000 registered subscribers worldwide and a sizable journal ranking among existing international law reviews. If I only had a moment to express my thoughts on leaving the Journal, I would use it to express my immense gratitude to those whom I can never thank enough. My colleagues in this project, present and former members on the editorial board, and the authors, from near and far, many of whom we never had the fortune to meet in person despite an often vivid exchange of thoughts and ideas, as well as, of course, our readers throughout the years – it is to all of them that I owe thanks too comprehensive to measure. It is one thing to launch a journal, it is another for it to be read, sustained, shaped and encouraged over the span of almost fifteen years. The GLJ is what it is today because of the input it has received over all this time, and for that I am immensely grateful.

Type
Reflections
Copyright
Copyright © 2013 by German Law Journal GbR

Footnotes

*

Professor of Law, Osgoode Hall Law School, Toronto. State Exam (LL.B./JD equivalent), Frankfurt; Licence en droit, Paris-Ouest (Nanterre); LL.M., Harvard; PhD. (law), Frankfurt; Habilitation (Frankfurt). Co-founder/editor in Chief, German Law Journal, 2000–2013. E: [email protected]

References

1 The GLJ was founded in October 2000 by Russell Miller, a former U.S. criminal defence attorney and at the time a Robert-Bosch-Foundation Fellow at the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany, and by Peer Zumbansen, at the time a post-doctoral, senior research associate at Goethe University, Frankfurt and a clerk to FCC Justice, Dieter Hömig.Google Scholar

2 According to a 2013 Google Scholar ranking, the GLJ ranks 9th among the most cited international law journals: http://scholar.google.com/citations?view_op=top_venues&hl=en&vq=soc_internationallawGoogle Scholar

4 http://www.germanlawjournal.com/index.php?pageID=2&vol=2&no=9. Over the course of time, the GLJ published further scholarship from members of the FCC's bench.Google Scholar

6 The first editorial board convened members in Germany, the U.S., the UK, Italy, Belgium, and South Africa.Google Scholar

7 Special Symposium: The World We (International Lawyers) Live in: Law and Politics One Year after 9/11: http://germanlawjournal.com/index.php?pageID=13&vol=3&no=9Google Scholar

13 See, e.g., Matthias Mahlmann, The Basic Law at 60 – Human Dignity and the Culture of Republicanism, 11 German Law Journal 9–32 (2010), available at: http://germanlawjournal.com/pdfs/Vol11-No1/PDF_Vol_11_No_01_9-32_GG60_Mahlmann.pdf; Christian Joerges, Sozialstaatlichkeit in Europe? A Conflict-of-Laws Approach to the Law of the EU and the Proceduralisation of Constitutionalisation, 10 German Law Journal 335–360 (2009), available at http://www.germanlawjournal.com/pdfs/Vol10No04/PDF_Vol_10_No_04_335-360_SI_Articles_Joerges.pdf; Stephan Leibfried, Christoph Möllers, Christoph Schmied and Peer Zumbansen, Redefining the Traditional Pillars of German Legal Studies and Setting the Stage for Contemporary Interdisciplinary Research, 7 German Law Journal 661–680 (2006), available at http://www.germanlawjournal.com/index.php?pageID=11&artID=750; Armin von Bogdandy, Positioning German Scholarship in the Global Arena: The Transformative Project of the German Law Journal, 10 German Law Journal 1295–1300 (2009), available at http://www.germanlawjournal.com/index.php?pageID=11&artID=1204, as well as Peer Zumbansen, Comparative Law's Coming of Age? Twenty Years after Critical Comparisons, 6 German Law Journal 1073–1084 (2005), available at http://www.germanlawjournal.com/index.php?pageID=11&artID=614.Google Scholar

14 Robert Kagan, Power and Weakness. Why the United States and Europe see the World differently, 113 Policy Review (June 1, 2002), online: http://www.hoover.org/publications/policy-review/article/7107Google Scholar

31 See, e.g., Hoffmann, Jürgen, Co-ordinated Continental European Market Economies Under Pressure From Globalisation: Germany's “Rhineland capitalism, 5 German Law Journal 985–1002 (2004), available at http://germanlawjournal.com/pdfs/Vol05No08/PDF_Vol_05_No_08_985-1002_Legal_Culture_Hoffmann.pdf; John Cioffi, Corporate Governance Reform, Regulatory Politics, and the Foundations of Finance Capitalism in the United States and Germany, 7 German Law Journal 533–562 (2006), available at http://germanlawjournal.com/pdfs/Vol07No06/PDF_Vol_07_No_06_533-562_Articles_Cioffi.pdf, as well as Reforming German Corporate Governance: Inside a Law Making Process of a Very New Nature Interview with Professor Dr. Theodor Baums, 2 German Law Journal (2001), available at http://www.germanlawjournal.com/index.php?pageID=11&artID=43.Google Scholar

32 See the Symposium on TPRG, supra, note 22.Google Scholar