The Notre Dame Law Review was founded in 1925 and was known as the Notre Dame Lawyer until the name was changed in 1982. It is published five times a year by our students. It affords qualified students an invaluable opportunity for training in precise analysis of legal problems and in clear and cogent presentation of legal issues. The Law Review contains articles and lectures by eminent members of the legal profession and comments and notes by members of the staff. Entirely student edited, the Law Review has maintained a tradition of excellence, and its membership has included some of the most able judges, professors and practitioners in the country. Staff selection is based on either academic standing or demonstrated writing ability.
Current Issue: Volume 99, Issue 4 (2024)
Articles
The Incoherence of Evidence Law
G. Alexander Nunn
Patent Law’s Role in Protecting Public Health
Sean B. Seymore
Technology, Tradition, and “The Terror of the People”
Darrell A.H. Miller, Alexandra Filindra, and Noah Kaplan
Bruen’s Enforcement Puzzle: Unearthing and Adjudicating the Historical Enforcement Record in Second Amendment Cases
Andrew Willinger
The General-Law Right to Bear Arms
William Baude and Robert Leider
Diverse Originalism, History & Tradition
Christina Mulligan
Historical Fact
Ryan C. Williams
Guns, Analogies, and Constitutional Interpretation Across Centuries
Frederick Schauer and Barbara A. Spellman
Notes
Strengthening State Constitutions
Jared C. Huber