R
Ridgerunner
Guest
Law journal articles are meticulously prepared. In top-flight schools, they do not contain errors or inadvertences. Every page is reviewed by at least two editors, as well as the author or authors. The Ginsberg journal article had two authors. There is no expression of different opinions on the part of either of them.
It is the job of the particlar editor (for this one it would likely be the Assistant Editor or the Lead Articles Editor, usually the second and third-ranking students in the class, varied only when someone else has demonstrated extraordinary research and writing skills.) It is not only the job of such editors to correct, e.g., grammar or spelling (usually handed to jounal staff lower on the pole) but to review content, flow and expression. It is not at all unusual, when something inexplicable or puzzling appears on the proofs, to call or write the author and ask, e.g., “did you mean this?.. It looks like you are saying…Wouldn’t you want to add?..Do you agree with this citation in toto?..Do you want to distinguish…?” In fact, it is the duty of the editors to do this, in order to avoid not only publication errors, but potential embarrassment to the author. When the intermediate proofs following clarification have been reviewed, they are sent to the author for final review, and any further corrections, additions or deletions are made. At the very minimum, Ginsberg deliberately left an inescapable mental query unanswered. Normally, legal writers do this when they want to imply, but not directly state, their approval. Failure to disassociate from an obvious bombshell portion of a citation carries this implication. Things like this are clever, but they not accidents.
But the reader can judge for himself.
It is the job of the particlar editor (for this one it would likely be the Assistant Editor or the Lead Articles Editor, usually the second and third-ranking students in the class, varied only when someone else has demonstrated extraordinary research and writing skills.) It is not only the job of such editors to correct, e.g., grammar or spelling (usually handed to jounal staff lower on the pole) but to review content, flow and expression. It is not at all unusual, when something inexplicable or puzzling appears on the proofs, to call or write the author and ask, e.g., “did you mean this?.. It looks like you are saying…Wouldn’t you want to add?..Do you agree with this citation in toto?..Do you want to distinguish…?” In fact, it is the duty of the editors to do this, in order to avoid not only publication errors, but potential embarrassment to the author. When the intermediate proofs following clarification have been reviewed, they are sent to the author for final review, and any further corrections, additions or deletions are made. At the very minimum, Ginsberg deliberately left an inescapable mental query unanswered. Normally, legal writers do this when they want to imply, but not directly state, their approval. Failure to disassociate from an obvious bombshell portion of a citation carries this implication. Things like this are clever, but they not accidents.
But the reader can judge for himself.