Fordham Urban Law Journal

Fordham Urban Law Journal  
Abbreviated title (ISO 4)
Fordham Urban Law J.
Discipline Law, public policy
Language English
Edited by Jenna Lowy
Publication details
Publisher
Publication history
1972-present
Frequency 5/year
Yes
Indexing
ISSN 0199-4646
LCCN 72625897
OCLC no. 01112939
Links

The Fordham Urban Law Journal (Bluebook abbreviation: Fordham Urb. L.J.) is a student-run law review published at Fordham University School of Law. The journal publishes articles on a wide range of themes, with a focus on public policy and issues affecting urban areas.

Overview

The journal was established in 1972 and publishes five issues annually. It is the fifth-most cited student-edited specialty law journal in the United States and the seventh-most cited in judicial opinions. It is the second-most cited student-edited publication for public policy.[1] Second-year law students apply for staff positions by participating in the school's unified writing competition. Editors are elected annually in the spring semester. The current editor-in-chief is Chris Fennell.[2]

Notable articles

Articles cited by the Supreme Court of the United States:

Most-cited articles.[8]

Most-cited recent articles.[8]

Events

The journal hosts the annual Cooper-Walsh Colloquium and an annual symposium to discuss issues relevant to public policy and legal discourse. Select symposium and colloqium submissions are published. Recent publications have focused on a diverse range of legal issues, including immigration, forensic evidence, the subprime mortgage crisis, and the use of eminent domain in New York City.

The journal also hosts various student and alumni events, awarding its Louis J. Lefkowitz award at an annual alumni banquet. In addition to presenting the Lefkowitz Award, the Alumni Association honors the incoming and outgoing editors of the Urban Law Journal, and announces the winners of its Urban Law Alumni Fellowship (a fellowship awarded to a student who has accepted a public interest summer position and demonstrated a commitment to the improvement of our urban communities) and the Student Author/Note Award (awarded to a student who has authored the most outstanding note in the preceding school year).

Louis J. Lefkowitz Award

Each year the Fordham Law School Urban Law Journal Alumni Association (FULJAA) gives the Lefkowitz Award to a person who has made outstanding contributions to the law as it affects urban communities. The award is given in the spirit of Louis J. Lefkowitz, who served as New York Attorney General for almost twenty-two years (1957 through 1978).

References

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