School of Law Lewis & Clark Law Review
 



Lewis & Clark Law Review

Welcome to the home of the Lewis & Clark Law Review, published by Lewis & Clark Law School. First founded as the Journal of Small and Emerging Business Law in 1996, and rededicated with a broader mission in Spring 2004, we are a general-purpose law review publishing original scholarship from across the legal academy.

Our current issue features interesting and relevant articles and comments.

This spring we held our Third Annual Law Review Spring Symposium: Crimes, War Crimes, and the War on Terror. For more information about the symposium participants, please visit the symposium web site. You can also download podcasts of each of the sessions from the Boley Law Library podcasts site. Papers from the symposium were published in issue 11:4 of the law review, in December 2007.

Please feel free to contact us with any comments or questions by phone at 503-768-6758, or by e-mail at lclr@lclark.edu.

Past Issues

Please visit our past issue archive to view articles dating back to our first issue in Spring 2005.

Note: For past issues from the Journal of Small and Emerging Business Law, please consult your library or an online legal resource such as Lexis or Westlaw.

A Word About Copyright

Unless a particular piece in the Lewis & Clark Law Review indicates otherwise, the author of each piece in the review has granted all interested readers the right to reproduce and distribute multiple copies of the piece for classroom use in classes at institutions of higher education. This grant is applicable so long as (1) copies are distributed only to students enrolled in the class, (2) no fee, other than a per page copying charge, is paid by the students, (3) the author and the Lewis & Clark Law Review are identified on each copy, and (4) copyright notice is affixed to each copy.

Please note ...

The views expressed by authors in the Lewis & Clark Law Review do not necessarily reflect those of the review's Editorial Board.

Current issue:
Vol. 12, No. 2
Summer 2008.
Papers from our Business Law Forum: Nonobviousness—The Shape of Things to Come

Recent issue:
Vol. 12, No. 1
Spring 2008.
Symposium: Speech and the Public Schools After Morse v. Frederick

LCLR Article Receives Prestigious Burton Award

Christopher A. Harkins' article Tattoos and Copyright Infringement: Celebrities, Marketers and Businesses Beware of the Ink, published in LCLR Volume 10, Issue 2, was one of the winners of the Burton Award for 2007. For more information please click here.

LCLR Adopts Open Access Principles

On June 6, 2005, Lewis & Clark Law Review adopted "open access" principles, which facilitates the sharing of scholarly knowledge. The review joined a number of leading journals in announcing its adoption of the principles. Learn more about open access.

Recruitment for LCLR

If you would like to learn more about how to join the LCLR staff, please listen to this podcast.