The entire issue is available online here.
Forwarded message:
Issue in Honor of Professor Frickey
The August, 2010 issue of the California Law Review is dedicated to the lasting memory of Professor Philip P. Frickey — a towering scholar, beloved teacher, and inspiring mentor.
In April 2009, Boalt Hall hosted a festschrift honoring Professor Frickey, who had recently been diagnosed with terminal cancer. This issue collects essays presented at the event, as well as other contributions, including an annotated bibliography of Professor Frickey’s scholarly work; a tribute poem by a colleague; and a student comment that developed, with Professor Frickey’s guidance, in his Federal Indian Law course.
Most poignantly, this issue includes a posthumous Essay Professor Frickey authored in his final year. His wife, Mary Ann Bernard, provides a short introduction to the Essay, which takes the form of a prologue to a book he never finished.
In that Essay, the ever-humble Professor Frickey predicts that the legal academy will not remember his work in fifty years. We respectfully disagree, and hope this issue helps prove the contrary.
American Indian Tribal Law
Facing the Future: The Indian Child Welfare Act at 30
The Eagle Returns: The Legal History of the Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians
The Indian Civil Rights Act at Forty