About the Law Review

St. John's Law Review is a student-run organization that publishes scholarly articles of legal significance across all topics.  First published in 1926, the Law Review publishes four issues each year.  The Law Review also publishes two issues of The Journal of Catholic Legal Studies, a scholarly journal devoted to the study of law and religion in general, and law and Catholicism in particular.

All articles accepted for publication in the Law Review—even those from recognized figures in the law—are subject to an editorial process that is intended to strengthen both the substantive and technical aspects of the piece.  Member responsibilities include verifying sources, checking citations, proofreading, and critically analyzing these articles.  Members are also given the opportunity to write Notes, Comments, and Recent Developments for publication.  Accordingly, each issue contains pieces by student editors as well as outside authors.

Aside from serving as an academic forum, the Law Review has two other goals.  First, it provides students with the opportunity to develop their research, writing, and analytical skills through the scholarly treatment of current legal issues.  Second, the journal serves as an effective research tool for practitioners, judges, and students of the law.

The Law Review conducts a writing competition each year at the conclusion of the spring semester.  Students are selected for membership on the Law Review based on a combination of their performance on the writing competition and their grades.  In recent years, approximately 200 students have completed the competition.  Of these, between 32 and 37 are asked to join the Law Review.  Students who take the competition will be notified of the results in late June.  Those students who are selected to join the Law Review must be prepared to begin work in early July.