New England Law Review

The New England Law Review is a law review that was established in 1965 as the Portia Law Journal. It obtained its current name when Portia Law School changed its name to New England School of Law in 1969. It is run by students and currently publishes four issues annually. The review also conducts Fall and Spring symposiums.

New England Law Review
DisciplineLaw
LanguageEnglish
Edited byGabrielle Mainiero[1]
Publication details
Former name(s)
Portia Law Journal
Frequencyquarterly
Standard abbreviations
BluebookNew Eng. L. Rev.
ISO 4N. Engl. Law Rev.
Indexing
ISSN0028-4823
OCLC no.818988564
Links

On Remand

On Remand was developed and launched by the members of the Volume 45 editorial board. It is an online extension of the review's print content: it features original works, unique legal commentaries, and responses to articles printed in the review.

Membership

The New England Law Review consists of approximately sixty second- and third-year law students at the New England School of Law. To become a member of the review, students completing their first-year in the top fifty percent of their class may participate in a spring write-on competition. Based on performance in this competition, approximately thirty students are invited to join the review, beginning in the Fall semester of their second year.

gollark: I mean, it is at least probably *okay* for simple web applications...
gollark: <@!221273650131763200> Are you using Go? Stop.
gollark: "I don't need to know anything, I'll just copy example code."
gollark: Virtual cloud blockchain, *but* serverless.
gollark: Go's easy to read, but not easy to understand, since it actively discourages abstraction.

References

  1. "Volume 55 Staff (2020-2021)". New England Law Review. 2017-08-14. Retrieved 2020-05-28.
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