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SLR Subscriptions

For inquiries regarding SLR subscriptions, please contact the journal's manager, Meg Harrington, by email at business.manager@stanfordlawreview.org, by phone at (650) 723-2747, or by fax at (650) 724-5714.

Volume 68 Executive Board

President Brittany Jones president@stanfordlawreview.org
Executive Editors Liz Miller
Michael Qian
executive.editors@stanfordlawreview.org
Managing Editors Sean McElroy
Nick Medling
Alex Twinem
managing.editors@stanfordlawreview.org
Senior Articles Editor Grady Jung articles@stanfordlawreview.org
Senior Notes Editor Michael Skocpol notes@stanfordlawreview.org
Senior Development Editor Nicole Roberts development@stanfordlawreview.org
Senior Finance Editor John Mondel finance@stanfordlawreview.org
Senior Online Editor Brian Quinn online@stanfordlawreview.org

General Information

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Print Subscriptions & Copyright Permissions

Subscriptions: The Stanford Law Review (ISSN 0038-9765) is published six times a year, typically once per month starting in January, by students of the Stanford Law School, Crown Quadrangle, 559 Nathan Abbott Way, Stanford, CA 94305-8610. Volume prices are $60.00 domestic and $75.00 international. The price for a single issue is $22.00 plus a shipping fee.

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Back Issues: Issues in the current volume are available at the Law Review Business Office (call 650-723-2747). For back issues, volumes, and sets, contact William S. Hein and Co., 2350 North Forest Road, Getzville, NY 14068 (or by phone at 800-828-7571).

Reprint Requests: For reprint requests, please contact the Copyright Clearance Center at their website or by phone at (978) 750-8400.

 
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SLR in the News

The Washington Post mentions Richard A. Sander's article A Systemic Analysis of Affirmative Action in American Law Schools.

SCOTUSBlog references Jason Zarrow and William Milliken's SLR Online article Retroactivity, the Due Process Clause, and the Federal Question in Montgomery v. Louisiana.

The Atlantic mentions Keith Cunningham's article Father Time: Flexible Work Arrangements and the Law Firm's Failure of the Family.

Justice Scalia cites Is Capital Punishment Morally Required? Acts, Omissions, and Life-Life Tradeoffs in his concurring opinion in Glossip v. Gross.

Justice Breyer cites Uses and Abuses of Empirical Evidence in the Death Penalty Debate in his dissent in Glossip v. Gross.

Justice Kagan cites Statutory Interpretation from the Inside in her dissent in Yates v. United States.

SCOTUSBlog references Mark Rienzi's SLR Online article Substantive Due Process as a Two-Way Street.

The National Journal praises Substantive Due Process as a Two-Way Street.

The Economist references The Drone as a Privacy Catalyst.

The Green Bag lauds Toby Heytens's article Reassignment as an "exemplar of good legal writing" from 2014.

The Economist mentions Urska Velikonja's forthcoming article Public Compensation for Private Harm in the cover article of its August 30 issue.

The Economist writes a column on Stephen Bainbridge's and Todd Henderson's article Boards-R-Us.

SCOTUSBlog cites Eric Hansford's Volume 63 note Measuring the Effects of Specialization with Circuit Split Resolutions in one of its Academic Highlight blog posts.

The Atlantic and The National Journal cite Jeffrey Rosen's SLR Online article The Right to Be Forgotten.

WSJ MoneyBeat writes a column about Urska Velikonja's forthcoming article Public Compensation for Private Harm.

Education Law Prof Blog discusses Joshua Weishart's article Transcending Equality Versus Adequacy.

The D.C. Circuit cites Statutory Interpretation from the Inside in Loving v. IRS (PDF).

Constitutional Law Prof Blog discusses Toby Heytens's article Reassignment.

Justice Scalia cites Beyond DOMA: Choice of State Law in Federal Statutes in his dissent in Windsor.

Symposium