The Boston College Law Review is a journal of legal scholarship and student organization at Boston College Law School. It has been continuously published since 1959. Up until 1977, it was known as the Boston College Industrial & Commercial Law Review. Among student-edited general-interest law reviews, it is currently ranked 23rd in the country based on citations per article.
The Law Review publishes five issues each year—in January, March, May, S...
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The Boston College Law Review is a journal of legal scholarship and student organization at Boston College Law School. It has been continuously published since 1959. Up until 1977, it was known as the Boston College Industrial & Commercial Law Review. Among student-edited general-interest law reviews, it is currently ranked 23rd in the country based on citations per article.
The Law Review publishes five issues each year—in January, March, May, September, and November (starting in 2007). Each issue typically includes two articles concerning legal issues of national interest written by prominent outside authors, as well as three student-written notes. The Law Review has published articles on such wide-ranging topics as the legal issues involved in managing the lives of ex-offenders (an article cited by Justice Stephen Breyer in his dissenting opinion in Blakely v. Washington, 2004), the compensation of fund managers in the mutual fund industry, and the contributions of...
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