Search results
The Liverpool Law Review is a tri-annual journal dedicated to the examination of contemporary United Kingdom, European, and international legal and social policy issues. The journal features articles, commentaries, and reviews across a wide range of theoretical and practical legal and social policy matters.
Special Issue: Social Justice tropes in Law and Literature: Rights Narratives, Legal Fictions, and (Un)Writable Wrongs? Issue 2 August 2023. Special Issue on The Legal and the Literary: Cultural perspectives on Brexit. Issue 1 April 2023.
To find out more about publishing your work Open Access in Liverpool Law Review, including information on fees, funding and licenses, visit our Open access publishing page.
The Liverpool Law Review is a peer-reviewed academic law journal published by Springer. Established in 1979, the Journal has been based in the School of Law at LJMU since its creation.
The core year one syllabus comprises modules that must be studied in order to pass the academic stage of the route to practice, known as the ‘foundations of legal knowledge’. The remaining modules are undertaken to introduce you to the English legal system and basic legal study and research skills.
People also ask
What is the Liverpool Law Review?
What is a law journal?
What is Liverpool Law?
What can you do at Liverpool Law Clinic?
Why should you visit Liverpool Law School in June 2024?
How many members does the Liverpool Law Society have?
The Liverpool Law Review deals with a wide range of practical and theoretical legal issues of contemporary relevance - including public law, private law, criminal justice, international law, legal systems, ethics and legal theory.