BYU Law Review

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
BYU Law Review
ISSN
0360-151X
Links

The Brigham Young University Law Review is a law journal edited by students at Brigham Young University's J. Reuben Clark Law School.[1] The journal publishes six issues per annual volume, with each issue generally including several professional articles and a number of student notes and comments.[2]

Annual symposia

The Brigham Young University Law Review typically publishes the proceedings of the annual International Law & Religion Symposium, sponsored by the BYU International Center for Law & Religious Studies, in the second issue of each volume. It also hosts and publishes the concomitant work of an annual faculty-organized symposium on a salient legal topic.

Notable articles

  • Floyd, C. Douglas. "The ALI, Supplemental Jurisdiction, and the Federal Constitutional Case" (PDF). BYU Law Review. 1995 (3): 877–414.
  • Olson, Theodore B. "The Advocate as Friend: The Solicitor General's Stewardship Through the Example of Rex E. Lee" (PDF). BYU Law Review. 2003 (1): 3–36.
  • Peters, Wm. C. "On Law, Wars, and Mercenaries: The Case for Courts-Martial Jurisdiction over Civilian Contractor Misconduct in Iraq" (PDF). BYU Law Review. 2006 (1): 367–414.
  • Elizabeth, Cosenza. "The Holy Grail of Corporate Governance Reform: Independence or Democracy?" (PDF). BYU Law Review. 2007 (1): 1–51.

References

  1. ^ http://lawreview.byu.edu/about.htm History of the BYU Law Review
  2. ^ http://lawreview.byu.edu/about.htm About the BYU Law Review

External links