The circuit from linear brief 28 has some good aspects, but the LM395 is hard to get now. LM317 might work as a replacement. Still it's not that practical for high power, as there is quite some drop out (LM317+OP+balancing resistors).
I am just using it as an example of the following; I would not use it directly either.
1. Current limiting is high side and combines the current amplifier and current error amplifier so there is none of that nonsense about multiple amplifiers in series lowering phase margin.
2. The output capacitance is very low (0.22 microfarads!) considerably improving constant current performance.
3. Voltage and current error amplifier gain is fixed easing frequency compensation.
4. The current error amplifier is clamped.
5. The output has an active pull-down.
I would not use the LM395 either but it is essentially the output stage of an LM317. If the LM395 was available at the same price as the LM317, then I would use it.
If I were building something from scratch today, I would:
1. Move the high side current sensing to the output of the pass element before the output capacitor. This can present some difficulties at low output voltages for programmable current limiting if used but it is better than the alternative of a separate current sense amplifier and it provides a more accurate current limit. This basically duplicates the old Tektronix PS501/PS503 design and it is suitable for bipolar tracking outputs.
2. Moving the current shunt to the output before the output capacitor improves phase margin if AC feedback is taken before the shunt.
3. I would use an integrated regulator either for the output stage or for driving bipolar output transistors *if* this was not a problem for maximum current at low output voltages due to SOA (safe operating area) considerations. If I was a problem, then I might consider a cascode design despite the complexity. The alternative is significant derating of the output stage or including discrete SOA and thermal protection anyway.
4. I would at least consider clamping of the current and voltage error amplifiers for faster response however this presents practical difficulties with modern parts which do not provide for external clamping or compensation. In the LB-28 example, the current error amplifier is clamped through its external compensation pin.