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Etiquette for Asking Professors for Drafts of Publications
Posted: Mon May 23, 2011 8:40 pm
by Corwin
I was looking at the faculty page of a Professor whose research I am interested in (I don't attend his law school). I've found the Professor's past publications to be interesting and accessible and the publication list says another is forthcoming. What is the etiquette for emailing and asking to see a draft of a forthcoming publication? In Engineering academia I know this is ok, but I have no idea what the standard is for law. I appreciate any advice!
Re: Etiquette for Asking Professors for Drafts of Publications
Posted: Mon May 23, 2011 9:16 pm
by leobowski
Just email and ask nicely. The worst thing that can happen is he'll say no.
Also check SSRN, sometimes stuff is available there before Lexis/West.
Re: Etiquette for Asking Professors for Drafts of Publications
Posted: Mon May 23, 2011 10:39 pm
by Corwin
leobowski wrote:Just email and ask nicely. The worst thing that can happen is he'll say no.
Also check SSRN, sometimes stuff is available there before Lexis/West.
Ok thanks for the advice. Professors deal with a lot of email and I don't really want to clog up his inbox if releasing drafts never happens. I know which LR the article is being published in, so safe to say that if it hasn't appeared on the LR's website I wont find it anywhere else?
Re: Etiquette for Asking Professors for Drafts of Publications
Posted: Mon May 23, 2011 11:04 pm
by DAJ_Summer
Corwin wrote:leobowski wrote:Just email and ask nicely. The worst thing that can happen is he'll say no.
Also check SSRN, sometimes stuff is available there before Lexis/West.
Ok thanks for the advice. Professors deal with a lot of email and I don't really want to clog up his inbox if releasing drafts never happens. I know which LR the article is being published in, so safe to say that if it hasn't appeared on the LR's website I wont find it anywhere else?
Correct. But the odds are a professor would love an eager student looking to read his or her week. The absolute worst case scenario is no response, but it's reasonably likely you'll get a copy in the reply email.