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  2. Home | Connecticut Law Review

    connecticutlawreview.law.uconn.edu

    Connecticut Law Review has been ranked as the 50th flagship law review in the United States, according to the 2024 Law Journal Meta-Rankings. Connecticut Law Review improved 8 spots from its ranking in 2023 in order to break into the top-50 flagship journals in the nation in 2024.

  3. About Us | Connecticut Law Review - University of Connecticut

    connecticutlawreview.law.uconn.edu/about-us

    The Connecticut Law Review is the oldest, largest, and most active student organization at the University of Connecticut School of Law. Members are responsible for the organization’s operations, which center on the publication of the Law Review.

  4. Masthead | Connecticut Law Review

    connecticutlawreview.law.uconn.edu/masthead

    Connecticut Law Review Volume 57 2024-2025 . Editor-in-Chief. Bridget Casey

  5. Submissions | Connecticut Law Review

    connecticutlawreview.law.uconn.edu/submissions

    The Connecticut Law Review is the oldest, largest, and most active student-run publication at the University of Connecticut School of Law. We are a journal of general legal scholarship and publish four issues annually. The Law Review welcomes your submissions on law and law-related topics.

  6. Archives | Connecticut Law Review

    connecticutlawreview.law.uconn.edu/archive

    Search this Site Search in https://connecticutlawreview.law.uconn.edu/> Search

  7. Online Edition | Connecticut Law Review

    connecticutlawreview.law.uconn.edu/online-edition-4

    Connecticut currently upholds the common law view for a minor child’s medical decision-making authority. Consequently, one prominent topic of discussion in recent years deals with the Covid-19 pandemic and the public policy discussions over nationwide vaccination efforts.

  8. Issue 4 | Connecticut Law Review - University of Connecticut

    connecticutlawreview.law.uconn.edu/category/issue-4

    Despite the extreme consequences that climate change will have on humanity, jurisdictional issues—such as standing—impose considerable hurdles for climate litigants. And these hurdles ultimately keep plaintiffs from obtaining a ruling, or even a discussion, on the merits of their case. Continue reading →.

  9. Volume 55 Issue 2 | Connecticut Law Review - University of...

    connecticutlawreview.law.uconn.edu/archive/print-edition-archive/volume-55-issue-2

    Volume 55 Issue 2. The Right to Personality: Navigating the Brave New World of Personality-Altering Interventions, Christopher S. Sundby. Interagency Litigation Outside Article III, Adam Crews. Context, Purpose, and Coordination in Taxation, Blaine G. Saito.

  10. Ensuring Climate Litigants’ Standing: Insights from National and...

    connecticutlawreview.law.uconn.edu/2024/08/06/ensuring-climate-litigants...

    With the power to take immediate action, judges in the United States must view their constitutional role differently—more expansively—to advance climate change policy. But it is not just up to judges alone. Climate plaintiffs can assist judges in realizing their expanded role.

  11. Mahler, Samuel | Connecticut Law Review - University of...

    connecticutlawreview.law.uconn.edu/author/sam14052

    Connecticut Law Review has been ranked as the 50th flagship law review in the United States, according to the 2024 Law Journal Meta-Rankings. Connecticut Law Review improved 8 spots from its ranking in 2023 in order to break into the top-50 flagship journals in the nation in 2024. Professor Bryce Clayton Newell publishes Meta-Rankings of ...