Lorraine Bannai & Anne Enquist, (Un)Examined Assumptions and (Un)Intended Messages: Teaching Students to Recognize Bias in Legal Analysis and Language, 27 Seattle U. L. Rev. 1, 40 (2003). [Lorraine Bannai and Anne Enquist are also grateful for…the research assistance of Bob Menanteaux, and Stephanie Wilson.]
Lisa Brodoff et al., The ADA : One Avenue to Appointed Counsel Before A Full Civil Gideon, 2 Seattle J. for Soc. Just. 609, 630 (2004). [The authors wish to thank…law librarian Stephanie Wilson for her extraordinary research skills and support.]
Mark A. Chinen, Game Theory and Customary International Law: A Response to Professors Goldsmith and Posner, 23 Mich. J. Int'l L. 143, 189 (2001). [Special thanks are due to Robert Menanteaux, Reference Librarian at the Seattle University School of Law, for his invaluable help on this project and for his comments on earlier drafts.]
Ronald K. L. Collin & David M. Skover, The Trials of Lenny Bruce: The Fall and Rise of an American Icon, 561 (2002). [Special thanks, as well, to Susan H. Kezele, Kelly Kunsch, Bob Menanteaux, and Brendan Starkey, the librarians at Seattle University School of Law, who tolerated endless requests for interlibrary loans and computer searches.]
Margaret Chon & Eric Yamamoto, Resurrecting Korematsu: Post-September 11th National Security Curtailment of Civil Liberties (Supplementary Chapter 8) in MARGARET CHON & MEYER KRAMER, RACE, RIGHTS AND REPARATION: LAW AND THE JAPANESE AMERICAN INTERNMENT (Aspen 2001) (July 8, 2003). [We gratefully acknowledge the assistance of… law librarian Kerry Fitz-Gerald.]
Margaret Chon, Erasing Race?: A Critical Race Feminist View of Internet Identity-Shifting, 3 J. Gender Race & Just. 439, 473 (2000). [I am grateful to…Seattle University reference librarian Kelly Kunsch for research support.]
John B. Mitchell, “Preemptive War”: Is It Constitutional?, 44 Santa Clara L. Rev. 497, 527 (2004). [The author wishes to thank…extraordinary librarians Kelly Kunsch and Bob Menanteaux for all of their invaluable help.]
John B. Mitchell, Why Should the Prosecutor Get the Last Word?, 27 27 Am. J. Crim. L. 139, 216 (2000). […as always, thanks [to] Kelly Kunsch, librarian extraordinaire.]
Laurel Currie Oates et al., The Legal Writing Handbook, xxxv (3d ed.
2002).
[In the first two editions, our co-author Kelly Kunsch provided
invaluable information and several well written chapters on legal research.
He has moved onto other projects, but we are still grateful to him not only
for sharing his knowledge about legal research but also for being the most cooperative
and responsible co-author we could have dared hope for.]
Gregory M. Silverman, Rise of the Machines: Justice Information Systems
and The Question of Public Access to Court Records Over the Internet, 79
Wash. L. Rev. 175, 221 (2004). [For helpful comments on earlier drafts of
this Article, the author
gratefully thanks…Bob Menanteaux.]
Ronald C. Slye, The Legitimacy of Amnesties Under International Law and General Principles of Anglo-American Law: Is a Legitimate Amnesty Possible?, 43 Va. J. Int'l L. 173, 247 (2002). [I would also like to thank our international law librarian, Robert Menanteaux for invaluable research help and ideas.]
Ronald C. Slye, International Law, Human Rights Beneficiaries, and South Africa: Some Thoughts on the Utility of International Human Rights Law, 2 Chi. J. Int'l L. 59, 79 (2001). [I want to thank…in particular Bob Menanteaux, for both ideas and quick research help.]
Kellye Y. Testy, Linking Progressive Corporate Law With Progressive Social Movements, 76 Tul. L. Rev. 1227, 1252 (2002). [I thank Stephanie Wilson…for assistance with various aspects of this project.]