The UCL Practitioner has moved! Please visit the first and only weblog on California's Business & Professions Code section 17200 (otherwise known as the Unfair Competition Law or "UCL") at its new home, www.uclpractitioner.com.
Proposition 64:
Text of Proposition 64
Trial Court Orders
Appellate Opinions
Pending Appeals
Appellate Briefs
The CLRA:
Text of the CLRA
Class Actions:
Code Civ. Proc. §382
Fed. R. Civ. P. 23
"Fairness" Act
Recent Posts:
And then there were three
"Lawyers Rush To Join Fight on Prop. 64's Scope"
"Appeal Court Seeks Clarity in Prop. 64's Quagmire"
Let the retroactivity battle begin
"New JAMS rule rejects ban on class actions"
17200 blog hiatus
Wasting no time
Most recent Supreme Court word on retroactivity
Some lawyer named Mike agrees with me
Can Proposition 64 be undone at the ballot box in ...
California Law Blogs:
Bag and Baggage
California Appellate Report
California Election Law
California Labor & Employment Law
California Wage Law
Class Action Spot
Criminal Appeal
Declarations and Exclusions
Alextronic Discovery
Employment Law Observer
Freespace
Gilbert Submits
Law Limits
Legal Commentary
The Legal Reader
May it Please the Court
Ninth Circuit Blog (criminal)
Public Defender Dude
Silicon Valley Media Law Blog
So Cal Law Blog
More Law Blogs:
Abstract Appeal
Appellate Law & Practice
Between Lawyers
Blawg Republic
Blawg Review
Blog 702
Closing Argument
The Common Scold
Connecticut Law Blog
Corp Law Blog
Delaware Law Office
Dennis Kennedy
eLawyer Blog
Election Law
Employee Relations Law and News
Employment Blawg
Ernie the Attorney
Groklaw
Have Opinion, Will Travel
How Appealing
InhouseBlog
Inter Alia
Internet Cases
IP Law Observer
LawMeme
LawSites
Legal Blog Watch
Legal Tags
Legal Underground
LibraryLaw Blog
My Shingle
netlawblog
the [non]billable hour
Out-of-the-Box Lawyering
Point of Law
Real Lawyers Have Blogs
SCOTUSblog
Sentencing Law & Policy
TechnoLawyer Blog
UnivAtty
The Volokh Conspiracy
The UCL Practitioner
Wednesday, November 24, 2004
Happy Thanksgiving!
On a somewhat tangentially related note, the Supreme Court issued a press release yesterday announcing the formation of a committee to study whether the rules governing publication of appellate opinions should be revised. Changes to those rules could impact the development of UCL jurisprudence, because there are a great many unpublished UCL decisions (most of which I do not report on here).
That having been said, I hope that over the next few days, we can all focus our energies on something other than the appellate rules and Proposition 64 retroactivity—such as family, friends and good food. Talk to you next week!
- posted by Kim Kralowec @ 12:15 PM
Comments:
Post a Comment