The Penn State Law Review is the flagship publication of Penn State Law. As a general-interest journal, the Penn State Law Review publishes in the broad range of legal scholarship and does not limit submissions by any specific topic. Generally, each issue includes several legal articles and comments. The articles are written by legal scholars and practitioners, and the comments are written by Penn State law students. Every year, as part of a stringent selection process, the journal evaluates a host of submissions. The Law Review publishes three print issues per year.
Current Issue: Volume 127, Issue 3 (2023)
Articles
How Should the Supreme Court Respond to the Combination of Political Polarity, Legislative Impotence, and Executive Branch Overreach?
Richard J. Pierce Jr.
Tribes, Nations, States: Our Three Commerce Powers
Christopher R. Green
Unpredictability in Contract Law
Nicholas Walter
Trapped Between the URPTODA and the UPHPA: Probate Reforms to Bridge the Gap and Save Heirs Property for Modest-Wealth Decedents
Danaya C. Wright
Appellate Panels and Second Opinions
Saul Levmore
Comments
Denying the Disability: The Phrase “Regular Occupation” in Long-Term Disability Benefit Plans
Luke Nelson
Stop the Music: How 50 Cent and Rick Ross Joined the Narrative for Right of Publicity Preemption
Leah Guzick