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 124, Issue 3 (2020)
Articles
Assessing AI Output in Legal Decision-Making With Nearest Neighbors
Timothy Lau and Alex Biedermann
Smart Guns, the Law, and the Second Amendment
Dru Stevenson
Standing Under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act
Michael J. O'Connor
Comments
The Governing Dynamics of State Marijuana Legislation: Game Theory and the Need for Interstate Cooperation
Adam R. Scott
"Pacing" Ourselves: Saving Medicaid through Programs of All-Inclusive Care for the Elderly
Megan Ingram-French