Studentische Zeitschrift für Rechtswissenschaft Heidelberg

The Studentische Zeitschrift für Rechtswissenschaft Heidelberg ("StudZR"; English: "Heidelberg Law Review") is a law review published by an independent group of law students at Heidelberg University (Germany). It was established in 2004.[1][2][3][4] To celebrate its 10th anniversary a symposium was organized in June 2014 under the patronage of the Baden-Württemberg Ministry of Science, Research and Art.[3]

Studentische Zeitschrift für Rechtswissenschaft Heidelberg
DisciplineLaw
LanguageGerman
Publication details
History2004-present
Publisher
C.F. Müller Verlag
FrequencyBiannually
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Stud. Z. Rechtswiss. Heidelb.
Links

Content

The journal comprises two separate publications with different objectives. The bi-annual StudZR Ausbildung print edition focuses on study-related topics such as case solutions based on previous law exams from Heidelberg University, essays concerning exam techniques as well as jurisprudence and textbook reviews. The StudZR Wissenschaft Online (WissOn)[5] website includes classic legal articles, analyses of recent court cases and book reviews. Since 2012, the StudZR Heidelberg Law Review also manages an online blog with relevant news and updates.[6]

Organisation

The editorial board comprises around 50 law students, articled clerks, and post-graduate PhDs who manage the entire editing and publishing process as well as marketing and sponsorship functions. The journal is headed by an editor-in-chief, a chief of marketing and a chief of finance.[7]

gollark: You could *maybe* stretch that to extend to *all* humans, but *also* probably-not-organism things like stars, which also reproduce (ish), process things into usable energy (ish), sort of respond to stimuli for very broad definitions of stimuli, maintain a balance between radiation pressure and gravity, and grow (ish).
gollark: Individual humans are "organisms" by any sensible definition, inasmuch as they... reproduce, think, maintain homeostasis, grow, respond to stimuli, process inputs into usable energy and whatever.
gollark: I consider myself an atheist, since even though don't *know* there isn't a god, that doesn't mean I'm going to treat it as "well, maaaaaaybe" when the general policy for poorly evidenced claims is just to say "no".
gollark: Is not an organism, except by very stretched definitions which admit stars and such.
gollark: Troubling.

References



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