Yale Journal on Regulation

Yale Journal on Regulation  
Discipline Law review
Language English
Edited by Daniel Alterbaum, Stephanie Lee
Publication details
Publisher Yale Journal on Regulation (United States)
Publication history 1983-present
Frequency Semiannual
Indexing
ISSN 0741-9457
LCCN 84646898
OCLC number 10212254
Links

The Yale Journal on Regulation is a biannual student-edited regulatory and administrative law review at the Yale Law School (New Haven, CT, USA). The journal publishes articles, essays, notes, and commentary that cover a wide range of topics in regulatory, corporate, administrative, international, and comparative law. Among Yale's secondary journals, it is ranked first in Washington and Lee University School of Law's rankings in the categories of impact and currency factors (based on number and rapidity of citations) and is in the top three of every other category.[1] The 2007 ExpressO Guide to Top Law Reviews ranked the journal first among business law reviews based on the number of manuscripts received.[2]

Contents

History

The journal was established in 1983 and has featured symposia and special issues on environmental law, federalism, and telecommunications. In 2009, it was a sponsor of the Weil, Gotshal & Manges Roundtable on the "Future of Financial Regulation," where legal academics and panelists evaluated the causes of the subprime mortgage crisis and proposed solutions.

In 2008, the journal launched the Walton H. Hamilton Prize (in honor of the former Yale Law professor, New Deal economic advisor and Antitrust Division official), awarded by its Executive Board to the most outstanding accepted manuscript on the study and understanding of regulatory policy.

Notable authors

Some notable authors are judges Patricia Wald, Juan Torruella, and Richard Dickson Cudahy; former SEC Chairman Harvey Pitt and SEC commissioner Troy Paredes; former FCC Chairman Reed Hundt; economists William G. Gale and Richard Zeckhauser; law/business school deans Paul G. Mahoney and Michael E. Levine; and law professors Jules Coleman, Jonathan Macey, George Priest, Judith Resnik, and Roberta Romano; and the President's Council of Economic Advisors.

Notable former editors

References

External links