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.
Should you close submissions at your law review while you are not actively reviewing or should you keep them open? In this blog post we consider the pros and cons of both options and the importance of always making clear to authors whether or not your law review is open.
The U.S. News & World Report top law schools list is based on factors its creators have deemed students should look for in a law school. But do the list results reflect students' actual enrollment choices?
As a law professor Angela Kupenda isn't just teaching her students about legal scholarship, she is helping them become legal scholars. In this interview she shares the details.
Despite the ever-expanding nexuses between science, technology, and the law, Paul Enríquez notes that there are large gaps present between the law and outside disciplines.
Law School Transparency recently released a powerful podcast mini-series titled Women in the Law. In this interview Olympia Duhart, one of the series producers, shares the details of the series, which aims to raise awareness of obstacles women in the legal profession face.
Guest contributor Cassandra Klusmeyer shares what all law reviews need to know about spotting, addressing, and, most importantly, preventing plagiarism based on her 2017 NCLR presentation.
Ashley Heidemann, Founder of JD Advising, LLC, shares some legal writing do's and don'ts that everyone needs to be reminded of sometimes.