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The Association of American Law Schools (AALS) is a non-profit association of 164 law schools. The purpose of the association is "the improvement of the legal profession through legal education." It serves as the learned society for law teachers and is legal education's principal representative to the federal government and to other national higher education organizations and learned societies. You can link to the AALS here.
The Section on Contracts, one of 85 AALS sections, is composed of members of the faculty and administration of member schools and others who are interested in contract law and teaching. One of the Section's responsibilities is to present a program at the AALS Annual Meeting. This web site represents an attempt by the section to provide other information, facilitate interchange, and conduct other activities of interest to the members.
This web site is designed to provide you with various resources about Contracts teaching and scholarship. We hope you will find the site helpful. To keep the site current, we need your help. As you browse the resources at the site, please let us know how it can be improved.
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In addition to this site, the Section operates a web log for contract law scholars and teachers, called ContractsProf Blog.
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We also operate a Listserv for faculty members who teach in law schools. To join the Listserv, click here.
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IMPORTANT SMALL PRINT LEGAL DISCLAIMER
This web site is a forum for the exchange of information and points of view. Opinions expressed here are not necessarily those of the Section on Contracts or of the Association of American Law Schools, which when you think about it are really only reified abstractions that have no independent existence and therefore can’t really have any "opinions" about anything at all, so we’re not sure why we have to say this. All statements herein are the sole responsibility of the authors, except for any that are inaccurate, irresponsible, tasteless, or actionable, which are solely the responsibility of student editorial assistants who are working as independent contractors and for whom we will accept absolutely no responsibility whatsoever. There are no warranties, either express or implied, for the use of this site. Nothing on this site should be taken as legal advice, since only an idiot would take free legal advice on an important issue from the casual musings of a law professor instead of paying a practicing lawyer who actually knows the law of the jurisdiction you're in. Any disputes arising as a result of your use of this site shall be decided by arbitration under the rules of the International Chamber of Commerce in Japan, unless you happen to be somewhere in or near Japan, in which case it shall be decided in Belgium. Your reading of this provision signifies your assent to all its terms.
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