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The Yale Law Journal (YLJ) is a student-run law review affiliated with the Yale Law School. Published continuously since 1891, it is the most widely known of the eight law reviews published by students at Yale Law School.
The Yale Journal of International Law is the oldest of Yale Law School's eight secondary journals still in publication. [1] The journal was founded in 1974 by a group of students who were followers of the New Haven School of international law, [2] and their publication was originally known as Yale Studies in World Public Order.
The Yale Journal on Regulation (JREG) is a biannual student-edited law review covering regulatory and administrative law published at Yale Law School.The journal publishes articles, essays, notes, and commentaries that cover a wide range of topics in regulatory, corporate, administrative, international, and comparative law.
The Yale Journal of Law & Technology (YJoLT), formerly Yale Symposium on Law & Technology, is a law review of Yale Law School.. The 2014 Washington and Lee Law Review Rankings [1] rated YJoLT the 75th overall law review, 30th in impact factor, the #1 online law review, and the #3 law review for "intellectual property" & "science, technology, and computing".
The Yale Journal of Law and Feminism is a law review published biannually by Yale Law School.It was established in 1987 to provide a forum for "women's experiences as they have been structured, affected, controlled, discussed, and ignored by the law."
During his brief life, he published only a handful of law review articles. After his death the material forming the basis of Fundamental Legal Conceptions was derived from two articles first published in the Yale Law Journal (1913) and (1917) that had been partially revised in anticipation of publication in longer form. Editorial work was ...
Let’s be honest: Law reviews and journals aren’t exactly cutting-edge vanguards, but some are breaking new ground, both in their approach to content and in their subject matter.
John Harriss Langbein (born 1941) is an American legal scholar who serves as the Sterling Professor emeritus of Law and Legal History at Yale University. He is an expert in the fields of trusts and estates , comparative law , and Anglo-American legal history .