The Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review is accepting student writing submissions for Volume 57, Issue 1 of our journal. We welcome submissions from students at all law schools. Any interested student may submit writing that relates to the broad umbrella of civil rights and civil liberties. We welcome pieces in the traditional law review style, case comments, critical race theory pieces, book reviews, or something entirely different. Submissions may be in the form of a finished paper or a comprehensive proposal. Harvard CR-CL is the premier publisher of revolutionary legal scholarship. In past years, we have published articles on parental rights, jails as polling places, consumer abuses in the criminal legal system, energy and environmental justice, and forced arbitration. You can access all of our past issues here. We will be accepting student writing submissions for Volume 56, Issue 2 from September 14–October 11, 2021. Please submit manuscripts and questions to studentwriting.crcl.vol57@gmail.com.
Search
Categories
Our founders envisioned a journal dedicated to promoting revolutionary law, meant to focus on using progressive law actively in order to make a better world for all. We're celebrating 55 years as one of the nation’s leading progressive law journals!
https://today.law.harvard.edu/a-journal-dedicated-to-promoting-revolutionary-law/
Submissions close THIS SATURDAY! Learn more at http://harvardcrcl.org/submit/
Submissions are now open through February 20! Please submit via Scholastica (preferred) or email. More information is available on our website.
Today on CR-CL's Amicus Blog, @ava_cilia interrogates the racial disparities in the family regulation system: https://harvardcrcl.org/the-family-regulation-system-why-those-committed-to-racial-justice-must-interrogate-it/
Congratulations to one of our authors from Volume 55, Professor @DeborahNArcher, for her selection as the first Black president of the @ACLU in its 101-year history!
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/feb/01/aclu-deborah-archer-first-black-president