Karl Nickerson Llewellyn was born in Seattle but grew up in Brooklyn. His father was Welsh and his mother from New England. He attended Yale College and began Yale Law School in 1915 where he served as editor of the Yale Law Journal. He stayed on at Yale after his graduation to work on his J.D. degree and was invited to teach commercial law. His first legal position was as house counsel for the National City Bank of New York. He then joined the law firm of Shearman and Sterling. In 1923 he returned to Yale Law School as an associate professor. A year later he visited at Columbia Law School and joined their faculty in 1925, while continuing to teach at Yale. He remained at Columbia Law School until 1951. While at Columbia, Llewellyn became one of the major jurisprudential scholars of his day, and was a major figure in the debate over Legal Realism. He was a collaborator with E. Adamson Hoebel on an anthropological study of Cheyenne law and served as a drafter of the Uniform Commercial Code. In 1951 Llewellyn moved to the University of Chicago, where he worked with his third wife, Soia Mentschikoff, and spent his remaining years of teaching
Set up email alerts to be notified when this author's
articles are cited by new articles added to HeinOnline here (use a semicolon to separate multiple email addresses):
Karl Nickerson Llewellyn was born in Seattle but grew up in Brooklyn. His father was Welsh and his mother from New England. He attended Yale College and began Yale Law School in 1915 where he served as editor of the Yale Law Journal. He stayed on at Yale after his graduation to work on his J.D. degree and was invited to teach commercial law. His first legal position was as house counsel for the National City Bank of New York. He then joined the law firm of Shearman and Sterling. In 1923 he returned to Yale Law School as an associate professor. A year later he visited at Columbia Law School and joined their faculty in 1925, while continuing to teach at Yale. He remained at Columbia Law School until 1951. While at Columbia, Llewellyn became one of the major jurisprudential scholars of his day, and was a major figure in the debate over Legal Realism. He was a collaborator with E. Adamson Hoebel on an anthropological study of Cheyenne law and served as a drafter of the Uniform Commercial Code. In 1951 Llewellyn moved to the University of Chicago, where he worked with his third wife, Soia Mentschikoff, and spent his remaining years of teaching
The multidisciplinary content found throughout HeinOnline is organized into a subject hierarchy that we call PathFinder. Powered by a combination of human curation and artificial intelligence, PathFinder assigns subjects to documents, and then organizes them into broader subjects. View the PathFinder Subjects most frequently assigned to this author's article here.
#
Cited by Articles (0-5 Years)
479
This metric counts the number of times this author has been cited by other articles in HeinOnline within the past five years only. Citation sources include the Bluebook, Prince's Bieber Dictionary of Legal Abbreviations, and the Cardiff Index to Legal Abbreviations.
This metric counts the number of times this author has been cited by other articles in HeinOnline beyond the past five years only. Citation sources include the Bluebook, Prince's Bieber Dictionary of Legal Abbreviations, and the Cardiff Index to Legal Abbreviations.
Cited by Cases (0-5 Years)
22
This metric counts the number of times this author has been cited by cases available in HeinOnline or via Fastcase within the past five years only.
Cited by Cases (5+ Years)
189
This metric counts the number of times this author has been cited by cases available in HeinOnline or via Fastcase beyond the past five years only.
Accessed (Past 12 Months)
1,291
This metric counts the cumulative number of times an author's articles have been accessed by HeinOnline users within a rolling 12 month period. In order for an author's article to count as accessed, the article must be clicked from either search results or by browsing to the article, or retrieved using the citation navigator.
ScholarRank
74
ScholarRank is an overall ranking based on the calculation of five HeinOnline ScholarCheck metrics. The Z-score for each of the five metrics is taken and then averaged; the final average is entered into standard competition ranking to produce the overall ScholarRank for each author. Further information on HeinOnline's ScholarRank may be found in our Knowledge Base.
Average Citations per Article
119.37
This metric counts the cumulative number of times this author has been cited by other articles, then divides this number by this author's total number of articles written, to calculate the average number of citations per article.
Average Citations per Document
91.95
This metric counts the cumulative number of times this author has been cited by other articles, then divides this number by this author's total number of documents written, to calculate the average number of citations per document.
Self-Citations
26
This metric counts the cumulative number of an author's self-citations. This metric is not currently factored into the overall ScholarCheck ranking analysis.
H-Index
31.00
The h-index is an author-level metric that attempts to measure both the productivity and citation impact of the publications of an author. The index is based on the set of the author's most cited papers and the number of citations that they have received in other publications. Further information on an h-index can be found here.
74 results searching for (creator_facet:"Llewellyn, K. N." OR creator_facet:"Llewellyn, Karl" OR creator_facet:"Llewellyn, Karl Nickerson" OR creator_facet:"Llewellyn, K. N." OR creator_facet:"Llewellyn, Karl N.") in1
74 results searching for (creator_facet:"Llewellyn, K. N." OR creator_facet:"Llewellyn, Karl" OR creator_facet:"Llewellyn, Karl Nickerson" OR creator_facet:"Llewellyn, K. N." OR creator_facet:"Llewellyn, Karl N.") in Law Journal Library.
, sorted by "Number of Times Cited by Articles"