Washington Law Review will soon be seeking submissions from current UW Law students for publication in Washington Law Review Online. One selected paper will be published in Washington Law Review Online as a student Comment, and the author will win a cash prize of $500, thanks to law firm Lane Powell. The accepted paper will go through rounds of edits by WLR editors, and be published in 2021.
Student Eligibility
WLR will accept submissions from UW Law students who are currently 2Ls, 3Ls, MJs, LLMs or Ph.D. candidates. We will only accept papers that have not been previously published.
Paper Criteria
Topic Selection
WLR publishes pieces for a general legal audience and invites authors to submit papers on all topics. WLR embraces a multi-faceted, intersectional approach to legal issues relevant to the Pacific Northwest and Alaska. We seek to respond to the overdue and critical need for diverse voices in law; primarily voices that have been historically underrepresented in our legal community. To that end, WLR is particularly interested in submissions from scholars of color, submissions that address legal issues facing historically marginalized communities, and submissions that discuss legal issues specific to the Pacific Northwest and the Ninth Circuit.
Word Count and Citations
Submitted papers must be no longer than 10,000 words, including footnotes. Papers should include footnote citations and those citations should be formatted according to the Bluebook’s white pages.
Editorial Process
After selection, WLR editors will work with the author by providing substantive and stylistic feedback on the author’s work. Our goal is to make editorial suggestions that will help authors produce high-quality scholarship without infringing on their personal style, voice, and expertise. For citations, Washington Law Review conforms to The Bluebook: A Uniform System of Citation (21st ed.). For grammar, WLR follows the conventions of The Redbook: A Manual on Legal Style (2d ed.) and The Chicago Manual of Style (16th ed.). For spelling, WLR follows the conventions of Webster’s Third New International Dictionary and Black’s Law Dictionary (10th ed.). WLR’s Style Guide departs from these authorities in limited circumstances, most notably in our Inclusive Language Policy. If selected, we require all authors to cite the following unless an editor approves an exception: factual assertions, direct quotations, statutes, and case references (immediately after the case and including a pin cite with each following reference).
Submission Instructions
WLR will accept submissions from March 5th through March 26th.
Washington Law Review uses an anonymous review process to reduce implicit bias in article selection. To that end, WLR asks authors to redact all personally identifying information from submissions.
Please apply here: https://forms.gle/o4ZwwwDgU7T6WVj8A
Award
Thanks to law firm Lane Powell, we are offering a $500 award to the student winner of this competition.
Questions?
If you have any questions, please contact our Chief Online Editor, Annie Holden, at aholden@washlrev.org.
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Washington Law Review is extremely grateful to K&L Gates for sponsoring our first ever Diversity in Legal Scholarship Award!
This Award will provide $500 to one student-published Note or Comment that either (1) was written by a student of color or (2) addresses legal issues facing historically marginalized communities.
The winner of this award will be announced at our annual banquet on April 30, 2021.
Thank you, K&L Gates, for supporting diversity in legal scholarship!