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About

Group photo of the LU Law Review

The Liberty University Law Review is a unique legal journal founded on the belief that there is a “necessary connection between law and morality, that objective truth does exist and it is knowable, and that faith and reason can be properly integrated in order to shed light upon relevant legal topics.”

In 2006, Liberty University Law Review’s inaugural issue featured Professor Joel Hesch’s article on Rockwell International Corp. v. United States, a False Claims Act case that he litigated as a trial attorney in the United States Department of Justice. Liberty University Law Review’s groundbreaking processes continued with Vice Dean Rodney Chrisman’s law review article analyzing a previously overlooked legal trend in business associations law—the rise of the Limited Liability Corporation. Since then, the Liberty University Law Review has published cutting-edge scholarship around parental rights, Title IX, the Sequential Intercept Model, Loper Bright, artificial intelligence, health law, trademark law, and the First Amendment. The Liberty University Law Review has featured authors from the Heritage Foundation, Alliance Defending Freedom, the Solicitor General’s office, West Point, Americans for Prosperity, New Civil Liberties Alliance, Home School Legal Defense Association, and more.

Today, the Liberty University Law Review carries this vision through four regular, annual publications. The first publication is the Supreme Court Review, which is an issue authored by professors at the Liberty University School of Law and is dedicated to analyzing the latest U.S. Supreme Court cases. The second publication features articles, case notes, and comments exclusively authored by members of the Liberty University Law Review. The third issue is a general issue that highlights pieces from professors, jurists, and practitioners around the nation. The fourth issue is devoted to analyzing the topic of the Liberty University Law Review’s annual symposium.