Notre Dame Law Review

The Notre Dame Law Review is a law review published by an organization of students at the University of Notre Dame Law School in Indiana.

Notre Dame Law Review
DisciplineLaw
LanguageEnglish
Edited byBraden Murphy
Publication details
History1925-present
Frequency5/year
Standard abbreviations
BluebookNotre Dame L. Rev.
ISO 4Notre Dame Law Rev.
Indexing
ISSN0745-3515
LCCN83642997
OCLC no.46998308
Links

History

The Notre Dame Law Review was originally founded by a group of students in 1925 as the Notre Dame Lawyer,[1] changing its name after publication of the 8182 (Vol. 57) volume.[2] It is published by students as an annual volume, each of which consists of 5 separate issues released between October and June corresponding to a single academic year.[3] The Faculty Advisor is Nicole Stelle Garnett.[4]

In 2014 an online publication called the Notre Dame Law Review Online was launched as a supplement to the print edition.[5] The Online publication has taken up hosting its own symposium.[6] In 2019, the online journal was renamed the Notre Dame Law Review Reflection.[7]

Symposium

The Notre Dame Law Review generally hosts an annual symposium dedicated to a particular set of ideas or a specific body of work.[8][9] These conferences are open to lawyers from outside the Notre Dame Law Faculty. The proceedings of each symposium are published contemporaneously in that year's Law Review. Recent examples of symposia topics are Administrative Lawmaking in the 21st Century (2017)[8], Contemporary Free Speech: The Marketplace of Ideas a Century Later (2018)[9], and Pioneering Research in Empirical Legal Studies: A Symposium in Honor of Professor Margaret Brinig (2019). [10]

Ranking and impact

The Notre Dame Law Review is well regarded among the various rankings of US law reviews. It was ranked #8 in a 2020 study by Washington and Lee School of Law based on data collected from 20152019.[11] The Notre Dame Law Review Reflection was ranked #25 among US online law reviews in a 2017 study conducted by the Illinois Law Review.[12]

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gollark: Well, caddy v1 was apparently "deprecated" - there were annoying warnings about this on the site before there was even a non-release-candidate v2 - and I had an issue, so I thought "hmm yes maybe a newer webserver would fix this".
gollark: I actually migrated from caddy v1 to caddy v2 yesterday, and now I'm going back to nginx after... a few years?
gollark: I imagine it was sort of valid enough that nginx *logged* it.
gollark: Basically.

References

  1. "History". Notre Dame Law Review.
  2. "Notre Dame Law Review | HeinOnline". home.heinonline.org.
  3. "The Notre Dame law review". ResearchGate.
  4. "Masthead". Notre Dame Law Review.
  5. "Notre Dame Law Review Online | HeinOnline". home.heinonline.org. Retrieved 2020-05-08.
  6. "Notre Dame Law Review Online Hosts Symposium on Feminist Judgments: Rewritten Opinions of the United States Supreme Court". The Faculty Lounge. Retrieved 2020-05-08.
  7. "Notre Dame Law Review Reflection". Notre Dame Law School.
  8. Pojanowski, Jeffrey (November 8, 2017). "Notre Dame Law Review Symposium "Administrative Lawmaking in the 21st Century"". Yale Journal on Regulation.
  9. "Contemporary Free Speech: The Marketplace of Ideas a Century Later (2018-11-02)". legalscholarshipblog.com. Retrieved 2020-05-08.
  10. "Symposium". Notre Dame Law Review (official website).
  11. "W&L Law Journal Rankings". Washington and Lee University School of Law. 2020.
  12. "Online Rankings". Illinois Law Review. May 15, 2017.

official website

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