Law Journals

The review Acta Universitatis Juridica, published with the help of the Law Faculty in 2005, has the mission to distribute, in the academic national and international environment, the results of scientific research of our teacher staff and collaborators by publishing studies of high theoretical and applied performance. This review is annually published and in its pages. The review intends to be a debating court for promoting the spread of ideas and for widening the dialogue in a European scientific spirit. The thematic studies will encompass legal doctrine, jurisprudence, philosophy and law, the debates, the notable results of scientific investigations or the reviews to genuine theoretical successes.

ALB is the only independent magazine dedicated to the latest legal news, events and developments in Australia, Hong Kong, Singapore, China, Asia and the international business community. With a circulation throughout Australia, Hong Kong, Singapore, China, along with parts of Japan, Taiwan and Korea, ALB is the region's most effective way to reach all the major lawyers, corporate counsel and business leaders. With coverage on all the important and emerging areas of practice and business, ALB provides the most updated legal and business news from in and around the region.

The American University Law Review ("Law Review") is the oldest and largest student-run publication at American University, Washington College of Law. The Law Review receives approximately 2,500 submissions from outside authors each year and publishes articles from professors, judges, practicing lawyers, and renowned legal thinkers.

The Duke Environmental Law & Policy Forum began in 1991 as an interdisciplinary magazine published annually. Since then, the Forum has grown into an environmental law journal, taking on a format normal to legal scholarship. DELPF has retained its interdisciplinary roots and presents scholarship that examines environmental issues by drawing on legal, scientific, economic, and public policy resources. DELPF’s affiliations with the Nicholas School for the Environment and Earth Sciences, the Terry Sanford Institute for Public Policy, and the Law School render it uniquely positioned to adapt to the increasingly interdisciplinary nature of environmental law.

The Duke Journal of Gender Law & Policy is an interdisciplinary publication devoted to a discussion of gender, sexuality, race, and class in the context of law and public policy. Our mission is to foster debate, to publish work largely overlooked by other law reviews, and to encourage scholarship outside the bounds of conventional law school curricula. In doing so, we take an expansive view of law, engaging other disciplines including literature, sociology, anthropology, psychology, politics, and critical theory. Our goal is not only to explore what the law was and is, but what it could and should be.

According to Theodore Roosevelt:

“No man is above the law and no man is below it; nor do we ask any man's permission when we ask him to obey it. Obedience to the law is demanded as a right; not asked as a favor.”