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<title>Introduction to the Becker-Posner Blog</title>
<link>http://www.becker-posner-blog.com/archives/2004/12/introduction_to_1.html</link>
<description>Blogging is a major new social, political, and economic phenomenon. It is a fresh and striking exemplification of Friedrich Hayek’s thesis that knowledge is widely distributed among people and that the challenge to society is to create mechanisms for pooling...</description>
<language>en-us</language>
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<title>å§‹ã‚ã‚‹ã€‚</title>
<link>http://blog.livedoor.jp/good_country/archives/13203267.html</link>
<description>ãªã‚“ã¨ã‚ã®ãƒã‚¹ãƒŠãƒ¼ã‚‚ãƒ–ãƒ­ã‚°ã‚’ç«‹ã¡ä¸Šã’ã¦ã„ã‚‹ã®ã§ã‚ã‚‹ã€‚</description>
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<title>Judge prefers blogs to law reviews</title>
<link>http://www.nathanslaughter.com/blog_against_law_review</link>
<description><![CDATA[<p>Richard Posner, judge of the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals, criticized law reviews and then posted a weblog. He criticized fundamental problems in the methods of law journal scholarship and then turned to the form. "THE RESULT OF THE SYSTEM OF SCHOLARLY]]></description>
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<title>A Polite, Though Extraordinarily Serious, Dissent from the Becker-Posner Definition of the Term &quot;Weblog&quot;</title>
<link>http://www.legalunderground.com/2005/01/a_polite_though.html</link>
<description>A few months ago, the esteemed member of the federal judiciary and noted author, Richard Posner, undertook a new project to explore issues relating to society, politics, and economics. The venture was not undertaken alone, but with a co-scholar, the</description>
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<title>Smart cookies</title>
<link>http://blogs.salon.com/0004082/2004/12/16.html#a145</link>
<description>Nobel prize winner Gary S Becker, and federal circuit judge Richard Posner have started a joint blog .</description>
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<title>Blogs and the Information Market</title>
<link>http://aleembawany.com/weblog/technophilia/000035_blogs_and_the_information_market.html</link>
<description>The internet undoubtedly amplified the power of the press but the direction blogging is paving for the future of information collaboration is mind blowing. The recent embrace of blogging by Nobel prize winning economist (Dr. Beckner) and federal circui...</description>
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<title>Blogs of note</title>
<link>http://techpolicy.typepad.com/tpp/2004/12/blogs_of_note.html</link>
<description>Here are some blogs that have come under my radar recently: Brad Setser&apos;s Weblog: Excellent commentary on Fiscal policy, trade deficits and exchange rates. Becker-Posner blog: Federal circuit court judge and nobel prize winner in economics blogging tog...</description>
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<title>Power of weblogs</title>
<link>http://hybrid28.ucr.edu/breilly/2004/12/09#a470</link>
<description>For me, one of the results of reading a wide range of weblogs has been the realization that there are many, many people who are more intelligent and articulate than I am.</description>
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<title>Self Cleaning</title>
<link>http://www.crumbtrail.org/mt/archives/000774.html</link>
<description> Bill Tozier meditates on net cruft. The Web, as Google sees it, is purely aggregative; there is no forgetting, no adjustment, no editing. Yet the first page of Google is, in some sense, supposed to be the best answer to any question. What is the natur...</description>
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<title>Blogs by Spitzer and Posner</title>
<link>http://www.benefitscounsel.com/archives/001297.html</link>
<description>It goes without saying that blogs are gaining in popularity, as evidenced recently by the appearance of two new blogs by individuals who have greatly impacted the benefits world. While they will obviously not be blogging about benefits, readers will...</description>
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<title>A Judge and a Nobelist</title>
<link>http://conatus.blogspot.com/2004/12/nobelist.html</link>
<description>They&apos;ve begun.</description>
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