Washington University Jurisprudence Review is the only student-edited, in-print journal of jurisprudence in the United States. The Jurisprudence Review promotes academic discussion and scholarship at the nexus of law and legal theory by publishing two issues per year with works that contribute to analytic, normative, and comparative jurisprudence from scholars both within and without the legal academy. We also seek to enrich the law school experience by fostering critical analysis of the suppositions and theories that underpin the law school curriculum.
Current Issue: Volume 5, Issue 1 (2012)
Articles
Economic Development and The Problem With The Problem-Solving Approach
Justin Desautels-Stein
The Distinctiveness of Appellate Adjudication
Heidi Li Feldman
Notes
A Realistic Critique of Freedom of Contract in Labor Law Negotiations: Creating More Optimal and Just Outcomes
John S. Brubaker
The Resurgence of Secularism: Hostility Towards Religion in The United States and France
Sarah Nirenberg
Table of Contents
