The Alabama Law Review, now approaching its sixty-first volume, is building on a rich tradition of scholarship aimed at exploring issues of national as well as local significance to scholars, legislators, jurists, and practitioners. In its early years, the Review published articles by such leading national figures as Justice Hugo Black, Judge Charles Clark of the United States Court of Appeals and Harry Jones of Columbia Law School, as well as then-emerging (now distinguished, senior) scholar Daniel J. Meador of the University of Virginia. Going back to the very first issue of the Alabama Law Review, published in 1948, the Review has taken progressive stances on the issues of race and civil liberties. In the aftermath of Brown v. Board of Education, Alabama Professor Jay Murphy argued against the constitutionality of a legislative attempt to set up segregated schools. His advocacy led to the demise of the proposal. Murphy had previously argued -- in "Free Speech and the Atom Bomb" -- for expansive protection of civil liberties during the Read more...
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Alabama Law Review in the Wall Street Journal Online
On June 19, 2007, the WSJ ran a blog entry entitled "Do Judges Favor the Interests of the Legal Profession?" about a forthcoming article with the same title authored by Benjamin Barton, a law professor at the University of Tennessee. The article is to be published in Volume 59 of the Alabama Law Review, forthcoming 2008.
Professor Mary Ellen O'Connell
On April 4, 2007, Mary Ellen O'Connell, Robert and Marion Short Professor of Law at the University of Notre Dame School of law, will deliver the Meador Lecture on Wealth.