Tag:law reviews

It's that time again — law review submission season is kicking into high gear! As authors prepare their latest submissions and editors work towards final article selections, we wanted to provide a few resources to help along the way.

In this interview, Editor in Chief of the Kansas Journal of Law & Public Policy, Jared Jevons, shares the details of the journal's upcoming special issue on race relations and how they are working to create a forum for public policy solutions to address systemic racism.

In this interview, members of Washington Law Review discuss their experience transitioning to a blind article selection process and steps they're taking to make implicit bias education part of new editor training.

In this interview, Mitch Crusto, Distinguished Professor of Law at Loyola University New Orleans, discusses the many obstacles to police reform in the US legal system and the transformational change he believes is needed to both save lives and foster community policing.

When will law reviews make the transition from print-driven to digitally-driven publishing models? Will they ever? In this blog post, we explore some of the potential benefits of law reviews embracing fully online publishing models as argued by legal scholars.

In this interview, Harold McDougall, professor of law at Howard University, discusses his forthcoming article about the key themes of Dr. King's last book and how they apply to civil rights and social inequities today.

In this interview, Associate Professor of Law and McKnight Presidential Fellow at the University of Minnesota, Francis X. Shen, discusses his forthcoming article on aging federal judges and how he believes regular, confidential cognitive assessment can help empower judges to know if and when they should consider retirement.

In this interview, Mitchell Crusto, the Henry F. Bonura Jr. Distinguished Professor of Law at Loyola University New Orleans College of Law, discusses why he believes amnesty for past pot offenders is a constitutional right.

In this interview, Marvin L. Astrada, professor of law at NYU, discusses the nexus between security law and public policy, and the details of his recent article on the far-reaching consequences of the securitization of immigration in America.

Houston Law Review's editor in chief shares how they are using Scholastica publishing tools and services to make their content more discoverable online and empower readers to explore the law review from all digital devices.