University of Pennsylvania Law Review

University of Pennsylvania Law Review  
Former names
American Law Register, American Law Register and Review, University of Pennsylvania Law Review and American Law Register
Abbreviated title (ISO 4)
Univ. Penn. Law Rev.
Discipline Law review
Language English
Edited by Michael McDonald
Publication details
Publisher
Publication history
1852-present
Frequency 6/year (monthly from December to May)
2.614
Indexing
ISSN 0041-9907 (print)
1942-8537 (web)
LCCN 75649838
OCLC no. 02359920
Links

The University of Pennsylvania Law Review (Bluebook abbreviation: U. Pa. L. Rev.) is a law review focusing on legal issues, published by an organization of second and third year J.D. students at the University of Pennsylvania Law School. It is the oldest law journal in the United States, having been published continuously since 1852.[1] Currently, seven issues are published each year with the last issue traditionally featuring papers from symposia held by the review each year. It is one of the four law reviews responsible for publication of the Bluebook. It is one of five official scholarly journals at the University of Pennsylvania Law School and the fifth most cited law journal in the world.[2]

In addition to the print edition, the University of Pennsylvania Law Review also publishes the University of Pennsylvania Law Review Online, formerly named PENNumbra, an online supplement, which publishes debates, essays, case notes, and responses to articles that appeared in the print edition.[3]

History

The journal was founded as the American Law Register, and was originally written, edited, and published by practitioners, but soon expanded its pool of editors and contributors to also include judges and law professors. In 1892, under the leadership of William Draper Lewis and George Wharton Pepper, it changed its name to the American Law Register and Review. In 1895, Lewis became the first full-time dean of the University of Pennsylvania Law School and had the Law School take over the journal. The 1896 volume was the first volume to be edited by law students. The journal changed its name in 1908 to the University of Pennsylvania Law Review and American Law Register, and adopted its current name in 1945.

In addition to publishing numerous influential works of scholarship, the law review has famously published a series of humorous "asides." The most well known is The Common Law Origins of the Infield Fly Rule, 123 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1474 (1975).

Membership selection

Positions on the University of Pennsylvania Law Review are filled based in part on students' grades during first year of law school and in part on students' performance during a writing competition conducted at the end of each school year. The writing competition has two major parts: an editing portion and a writing portion. During the twenty-hour editing portion, contestants are required to correct a sample portion of a fake law review article prepared by the current board. Contestants have at their disposal a copy of the Bluebook and a packet of source materials provided by the review. During the writing portion, contestants are required to create a cohesive, thesis-driven essay using only the set of sources provided. The sources cover a variety of topics, and the essay does not need to be law-related. Each year the review takes approximately fifty-five new members from the rising second-year class, including transfer students. The University of Pennsylvania Law Review is managed by a board of twenty members chosen from the rising 3L class in February of each year.

Notable alumni

Prominent alumni of the University of Pennsylvania Law Review include William Draper Lewis, George Wharton Pepper, Philip Werner Amram, Sadie Alexander, Thomas K. Finletter, Natalie Wexler, Loftus Becker, Owen Roberts, Alfred W. Putnam, Jr., Curtis Reitz, Peter J. Liacouras, Edward J. Normand, Jerome B. Simandle, Dolores Sloviter, Marci Hamilton, Arthur Raymond Randolph, Mark G. Yudof, Daniel Garodnick, and Tom Ellis.[4]

Notable articles

References

Further reading

External links

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