Jump to content

Penn State Law Review

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Penn State Law Review
DisciplineLaw review
LanguageEnglish
EditedbyDrew Weglarz (2024-2025)
Publication details
Former name(s)
The Forum
The Dickinson Law Review
History1897 to present
Publisher
Penn State Law(United States)
FrequencyTriannual
Standard abbreviations
BluebookPenn St. L. Rev.
ISO 4Penn State Law Rev.
Indexing
ISSN1545-7877
Links

ThePenn State Law Reviewis alaw reviewand the flagship legal publication ofPenn State Law.Its origins trace back to 1897[1]asThe Forum,later renamed theDickinson Law Reviewwhile affiliated with the Dickinson Law School, making it one of the oldest legal periodicals in the United States. When the Dickinson Law School merged withPenn State Universityin 2003, the name of the periodical was changed to thePenn State Law Review.[2]Following the separation of the Penn State Law andPenn State Dickinson Lawcampuses into separately-accreditedlaw schoolsin 2016,[3]each school maintained separate law reviews; the nameDickinson Law Reviewwas readopted by its respective law school, while the namePenn State Law Reviewwas retained by Penn State Law.

ThePenn State Law Reviewis one of three legal periodicals published by Penn State Law and one of the oldest law journals in theUnited States.The two other Penn State Law journals are Penn State Journal of Law and International Affairs[4]and Penn State Law Arbitration Law Review.[5]ThePenn StateLaw Reviewis a general-interest journal that is run entirely by students, publishing a broad range of legal scholarship without limiting submissions to any specific topic. The journal publishes three times annually, with each issue including legal articles written by scholars and professionals, and comments written by Penn State Law students. Every year, as part of a stringent selection process, the journal evaluates a host of article submissions from outside scholars and comments written by second-year associate editors; articles and comments meeting the standards of the editorial board are selected and published in the print edition of theLaw Review.

Admissions[edit]

An issue of thePenn State Law Review

The Penn State Law Review extends annual membership invitations to rising second-year students at the conclusion of the spring semester. Of the available membership invitations, one-half are based upon grades and the other half are based upon evaluations of the write-on competition, which commences during the summer.[6]

Associate editors[edit]

Selected second-year law students participate as associate editors of theLaw Review.Duties of the associate editors include checking sources cited in the articles pending publication to ensure accuracy and compliance with the most recent edition of theBluebookandLaw Reviewlocal rules. The associate editors are also required to produce a legal comment of publishable quality on a topic of their choosing. Once complete, the student-written comments are reviewed and graded by theLaw Reviewcomments editors, with the top scored comments selected for publication in the journal.

Editorial board[edit]

ThePenn State Law Reviewis managed by aneditorial board.[7]Following successful completion of their duties as associate editors, second-year law review members may choose to run for a position on theLaw Review'seditorial board, assuming their roles in their third years. ThePenn State Law Revieweditorial board presently consists of the following positions: editor-in-chief, managing editor, executive articles editor, executive comments editor, articles editors, comments editors, research editor, and online editor. The editorial board comprises the managing body of the journal, and day-to-day law review operations are carried out by the efforts of the editorial board. Third-year non-editorial board members serve as senior editors and act, in part, as advisers to the associate editors and assistants to the editorial board members.

Online companion[edit]

Penn State Law Reviewalso publishes an online companion calledPenn Statim.[8]Penn Statimcontains the Law Review's printed content in electronic format, as well as exclusive online scholarship submitted by academics, professionals, and law students on various topics concerning the law.[9]The online companion also housesThe Forum Blog,a less formal platform for Penn State Law students and others to write short blog posts on contemporary legal issues of interest.[10]

References[edit]

  1. ^"Penn State Law Review".Penn State Law | University Park, Pa.2012-11-30.Retrieved2018-08-16.
  2. ^The Penn State Dickinson School of Law (2008)."Penn State Law Review".Archived fromthe originalon 2008-10-22.Retrieved2008-10-14.
  3. ^"FAQs on Separate Accreditation".Penn State Law | University Park, Pa.2014-06-12.Retrieved2018-08-16.
  4. ^"JLIA, Penn State Journal of Law and International Affairs | Law Reviews and Journals | Penn State Law".elibrary.law.psu.edu.Retrieved2018-08-16.
  5. ^"Arbitration Law Review".Penn State Law | University Park, Pa.2013-04-12.Retrieved2018-08-16.
  6. ^"Writing Competition – Penn State Law Review".
  7. ^"Masthead – Penn State Law Review".
  8. ^"Home".pennstatelawreview.org.
  9. ^"Penn Statim: The Online Companion to the Penn State Law Review Penn State Law Review Online Companion Penn State Law Review".www.pennstatelawreview.org.Retrieved2018-08-16.
  10. ^"The Forum Blog Penn State Law Review Online Companion Penn State Law Review".www.pennstatelawreview.org.Retrieved2018-08-16.

External links[edit]