PARTNERS
The Bristol Law Review is proud to be partnered with the below Reviews and Journals.
Founded 10 years ago as the UK’s first undergraduate law journal, the OUULJ is independent and entirely student-run. The journal is Oxford’s only publication for undergraduate legal writing. Its Honorary Board comprises distinguished members such as Lord Neuberger and Lord Phillips as well as various notable legal academics and professionals. The Journal appears in print as well as on HeinOnline and LexisNexis, and submissions are accepted on a rolling basis from undergraduate students (and recent graduates) at all universities.
The LSE Law Review is a law journal supported by the LSE Law Department and a subsidiary of the Houghton Press. As an entirely student-led initiative, the Review has a vision of attracting submissions on topics of contemporary legal significance from students, academics and practitioners alike and fostering an environment of legal scholarship that is accessible at any stage of an academic career. Unlike other student journals, the Review not only welcomes submissions for publications in their Winter, Spring and Summer issues, but also in their blog as well.
The Cambridge Law Review (CLR) is an independent academic journal run by students of the University of Cambridge which aims to provide a forum for the discussion of contemporary and cutting-edge legal issues. We welcome contemporary submissions on issues relating to all common law jurisdictions, or those with a former connection to the English common law; European law; international law; comparative pieces; as well as interdisciplinary legal scholarship that has regard to economics and political studies. We do consider purely jurisprudential or historical pieces on a case-by-case basis. Despite being a journal run by students of English law, we do not evince a preference for submissions relating to English law; our most important criteria for publication is that your submission relates to a contemporary legal issue and provides critical insight into the area of law you have chosen.
De Jure is a student-run law journal established in 2008 under the auspices of ELSA Athens. It remains the only purely legal, student-run journal at the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens. De Jure has published a great variety of student articles in Greek and English, as well as pieces and interviews by esteemed law professors and practitioners, such as CJEU AG Rantos and ECtHR Judge Ktistakis.
The Durham Law Review (DLR) has been in existence since 1992. Over the years, the DLR has become recognised as a legal journal that aims to stimulate lively discussion and debate on topical legal, social, and political issues. The DLR publishes an annual hard and soft copy journal with contributions from students, leading academics, and practitioners whose entries provide exceptional scholarship across all areas of the law. The DLR also issues weekly feature articles and shares daily updates on developments in the legal and commercial press.
The Columbia Undergraduate Law Review is Columbia's premier undergraduate legal publication, staffed by students from Columbia College, SEAS, GS, and Barnard, and publishing pieces from undergraduate students across the globe.
The Penn Undergraduate Law Journal (PULJ) was founded in 2012. The journal's principal objective is to publish exceptional undergraduate works, drawn from an array of disciplinary perspectives, that evaluate and elucidate the intricacies, vagaries and nuances of law as they relate to domestic and international affairs, business, academia, and society.
The King’s Student Law Review (KSLR) in an independent, online academic publication managed by the law PhD students of the Dickson Poon School of Law, King’s College London. The KSLR seeks to publish high quality legal scholarship written by law students at King’s College and other leading law schools around the globe. The KSLR publishes two issues per year, Volume I in the Spring and Volume II in the Winter. The KSLR's publications are listed on HeinOnline and on its website. The KSLR also has two blogs – the KSLR EU Law Blog and the KSLR Commercial Law Blog.
Trinity College Law Review (TCLR) is the student law journal of Trinity College Dublin. Founded 22 years ago, it is Ireland's leading student-edited law journal, assisted in its activities by its advisory board of legal academics and professionals. Though composed of students from the Dublin University Law Society, it takes submissions for its annual editions from both domestic and international law students.
The Warwick Undergraduate Law Journal (WULJ) is a peer-reviewed academic publication aiming to spark conversation and encourage reflection on contemporary and cutting-edge legal issues among scholars and students. By combining contributions of the highest quality with a rigorous editing process, the Warwick Undergraduate Law Journal strives to educate and foster intellectual discourse among students and to contribute to legal scholarship by addressing important legal and social issues. The journal seeks to add to the vibrant life of Warwick’s world-renowned Law School, a place where the shared pursuit of ideas remains fundamental to the School’s continuing success.