Ocean and Coastal Law Journal

The Ocean and Coastal Law Journal is a biannual legal journal at the University of Maine School of Law. It covers legal issues related to domestic and international use of the sea and seashores. The journal is edited by second and third-year students. It was established in 1994 and is affiliated with the Center for Oceans & Coastal Law at Maine Law.

Ocean and Coastal Law Journal
DisciplineLaw
LanguageEnglish
Publication details
History1994-present
Publisher
FrequencyBiannually
Standard abbreviations
BluebookOcean & Coastal L.J.
ISO 4Ocean Coast. Law J.
Indexing
ISSN1073-8843
LCCN2009268090
OCLC no.51254118
Links

Membership

Members are chosen by class rank and an annual writing contest. Second year (or third-year students who did not join their second year) are members of the staff and third-year students (with one year of experience) are members of the Board of Editors.

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gollark: Quite a lot of browser APIs are weirdly inconsistent, because they only came up with the whole "asynchronous" thing after a lot had already been done, and then a while after that the idea of promises, but they're still sticking with events a lot for some reason.
gollark: JS is what you get if you put 100 language designers in a room, remove the language designers and add a bunch of monkeys with typewriters and DVORAK keyboards, and then bring the actual language designers back but force them to stick with what the monkeys wrote and only make small changes and tack on extra features after the fact, and also the language designers don't agree with each other most of the time.
gollark: Using TS means many of the errors JS wouldn't really catch except at runtime are much easier to deal with.
gollark: I like JS from an ease of development perspective, if not really a language design one.
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