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THE PROMISE AND PERIL OF “LAW AND …”. The Columbia Law Review launched its Karl Llewellyn Lecture series on March 19, 2024, celebrating pioneers in the law who have innovated and challenged legal theory.
Columbia Law Review Secondary Navigation. Archived Announcements; The Bluebook; Archived Issues
The Columbia Law Review launched its Karl Llewellyn Lecture series on March 19, 2024, celebrating pioneers in the law who have innovated and challenged legal theory. The inaugural Lecture was delivered by Judge Guido Calabresi who spoke on the promise and peril of “Law and …” disciplines, such as Law and Economics, Law and Philosophy, and ...
The Columbia Law Review is one of the world’s leading publications of legal scholarship. Founded in 1901, the Review is an independent nonprofit corporation that produces a law journal edited and published entirely by students at Columbia Law School.
Considering the limits of existing legal frameworks, this Article goes on to analyze the legal anatomy of the ongoing Nakba. It positions displacement as the Nakba’s foundational violence, fragmentation as its structure, and the denial of self-determination as its purpose.
The Columbia Law Review Articles Committee is no longer accepting Article submissions for its August 2024 selection window. We anticipate reopening for our summer submission window on or around February 1, 2025.
The Review remains committed to increasing the interaction between alumni and our staff, including the hope that alumni will be interested in returning to the Review as a valuable source of information on careers, clerkships, and the substance and practice of the law.
The Columbia Law Review launched its Karl Llewellyn Lecture series on March 19, 2024, celebrating pioneers in the law who have innovated and challenged legal theory. The inaugural Lecture was delivered by Judge Guido Calabresi who spoke on the promise and peril of “Law and …” disciplines, such as Law and Economics, Law and Philosophy, and ...
As recognition of these systemic failings turns criminal justice reform into the rallying cry of a generation, the need to understand the regulatory levers hidden within subconstitutional procedural law—and to recognize which institutional actors are responsible for crafting these regulatory regimes—grows only more significant. 18 18 On the ...
We describe a unifying theme in many of these progressive criminalization projects—a focus on redistribution. We examine competing conceptions of what redistribution means in this context (for example, shifting power, reallocating resources, and signaling social inclusion and valuation).