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  1. Jul 20, 2024 · From Redlining to Greenlining. Abstract For generations, marginalized communities have been impacted by discriminatory land use, zoning, and property valuation policies, from redlining in the 1930s to the siting of undesirable land uses that persists today.

  2. The Law Review strives to publish articles of the highest academic quality, while also appealing to the general interests of practicing attorneys, legal scholars, law students, judges, and legislators.

  3. Race and Empire: Legal Theory Within, Through, and Across National Borders. Critical Race Theory Meets Third World Approaches to International Law. Slavery Is Not a Metaphor: U.S. Prison Labor and Racial Subordination Through the Lens of the ILO’s Abolition of Forced Labor Convention.

  4. law.ucla.edu › academics › journalsJournals | UCLA Law

    UCLA Law Review, which publishes six times a year, has earned a reputation as one of the nation's leading legal periodicals; it is run by a student board of editors which determines membership on the basis of a writing competition.

  5. Follow these guidelines to submit your article or comment to the UCLA Law Review: Scholar Submissions. Student Submissions. Submissions to Discourse.

  6. The UCLA Law Review is a bimonthly law review established in 1953 and published by students of the UCLA School of Law, where it also sponsors an annual symposium.

  7. UCLA Law Review welcomes submissions from eligible UCLA School of Law students who are not current members of the Law Review. In addition to the possibility of being published, non-member student authors may receive an offer of Law Review membership.

  8. UCLA Law Review welcomes submissions from UCLA School of Law students who are not current members of the journal. In addition to the possibility of being published, non-member student authors may receive an offer of UCLA Law Review membership.

  9. Submission Guidelines. The UCLA Law Review prefers articles between 18,000 and 25,000 words in length (including footnotes). We do not publish articles exceeding 30,000 words except in extraordinary circumstances. Works shorter than 10,000 words can be submitted to Discourse, our online publication.

  10. Founded in December 1953, the UCLA Law Review publishes six times per year by students of the UCLA School of Law and the Regents of the University of California. We also publish material solely for online consumption and dialogue in Discourse, and we produce podcasts in Dialectic.

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