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Mississippi Law Journal

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mississippi Law Journal
DisciplineLaw
LanguageEnglish
Edited byCody Austin
Publication details
History1928-present
Publisher
FrequencyQuarterly
Standard abbreviations
BluebookMiss. L.J.
ISO 4Miss. Law J.
Indexing
ISSN0026-6280
OCLC no.1588099
Links

The Mississippi Law Journal is a law review published at the University of Mississippi School of Law. It was established in 1928[1] by the Mississippi Bar Association and is the state's longest running law review. Originally published with the subtitle Journal of the State Bar Association, the Mississippi Law Journal is now independently published and is funded and operated almost exclusively through the income of its case briefing service, which provides succinct synopses of the decisions of the Mississippi Supreme Court and Mississippi Court of Appeals.[2]

Fourth Amendment symposium

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Each year since 2002, the National Center for Justice and the Rule of Law, located at the University of Mississippi School of Law, hosts an annual Fourth Amendment conference. As a part of this conference, the center invites some legal scholars to present papers on emerging issues in Fourth Amendment jurisprudence. The Mississippi Law Journal publishes these papers each year in its annual Fourth Amendment symposium issue. The journal also publishes an online companion called Supra, featuring short essays, responses to printed articles, and student case notes and comments.

Membership

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The Mississippi Law Journal accepts new members from the 2L class during the summer following their first-year of law school. All candidates for membership must have a 3.20 GPA and successfully complete a publication-quality case note, a Bluebook editing exercise, and an acceptable Mississippi case brief.

Notable alumni

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Past members Include:

References

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  1. ^ Mississippi Law Journal: Background
  2. ^ Mississippi Law Journal: Briefing service
  3. ^ "Rep. Evelyn Gandy Talks To State College Group". The Clarion-Ledger. June 13, 1949. p. 5.
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