Tag:law reviews

Minnesota Journal of International Law Editor-in-Chief Cayla Ebert and Lead Articles Editor Andrew Miles, explain why they think it's important for law reviews to start working on board transitions as early as possible.

Is your e-board considering launching an online supplement to expand your law review's web presence? In this blog post we overview the pros and cons of online supplements and some alternative options.

Donna Shestowsky, professor at UC Davis School of Law, shares the details of her recent study on litigant awareness of alternative dispute resolution programs.

Dennis Huber, law professor at Capella University, discusses why he believes SCOTUS should abandon the use of the term corporate personhood and replace it with corporatehood instead.

Ana Santos Rutschman, professor at DePaul University College of Law, discusses why intellectual property has a big role to play in the future of outbreak disease management.

In his article, Being Latino in the 21st Century: Reexamining Politicized Identity and the Problem of Representation, Marvin Astrada, Professor of Politics and History at NYU, explores the effects of politicization of the Latino identity during and beyond the 2016 presidential election.

In the wake of Elsevier's takeover of the Social Science Research Network (SSRN), LawArXiv has emerged as an alternative community-led repository for scholars to archive legal scholarship. In this interview members of its Legal Scholarship Advisory Board​​ share how they got the repository started and how they're working to expand it.

Effectively promoting your law review is the best way to increase readership and interest from prospective authors. Read on for new ideas about how to promote your volume.

In a recent paper titled Class Contradictions in the Civil Rights Movement: The Politics of Respectability, Disrespect, And Self-Respect Harold McDougall, professor of law at Howard University, looks at how the civil rights movement has progressed over time and the challenges activists still face.

Incoming and outgoing board members of Illinois Law Review describe how they worked together to publish an online symposium in less than 2 months.