The St. John’s Law Review is a student-run organization that publishes scholarly articles of legal significance across all topics. First published in 1926 and part of the St. Thomas More Institute for Legal Research since 1954, the Law Review is the organization’s flagship journal. The Law Review provides legal practitioners and scholars with commentary and analysis of recent developments in diverse areas of local, national, and international law. The Law Review publishes four issues annually, with content primarily consisting of articles from outside authors and notes and comments from Law Review members. Periodically, the Law Review features conferences, symposia, and book reviews. All content in the Law Review is proudly selected, researched, and edited by Editors and Staff Members of the St. John’s Law Review.
Current Issue:
Volume 98, 2025, Number 6
Table of Contents
Editorial Board
Officers of Administration and Faculty
Symposium
Essays
The Gatekeepers: How State Bar Associations' Disciplinary Process Is Racialized and Classist
Brooke Girley and Jonathan Barry-Blocker
Ben Crump and Racialized Professionalism
Katherine A. Macfarlane
Notes
AI Inventorship: Recognizing the True Inventors Requires Change
Nicholas Scambia