Ateneo Law J. | |
Find out here or hereFind out here or here | |
Discipline | Law, Legal Studies |
Language | English |
Publication details | |
Publisher |
Ateneo de Manila University School of Law (Philippines)
|
Publication history
|
1951-present |
Frequency | Quarterly |
Indexing | |
ISSN |
0115-6136 |
Links | |
The Ateneo Law Journal is an academic journal of legal scholarship published by an independent student group at Ateneo Law School.
The journal is published four times a year, with occasional special issues. Topics covered are not restricted to local themes and the journal publishes foreign and international essayists whom it considers noteworthy. The Supreme Court of the Philippines has cited articles published in the journal in its decisions, the latest of which is Heirs of Dicman v. Cariño, G.R. No. 146459, June 8, 2006. Since volume 47, each June issue is covers the most important cases decided by the Supreme Court for the previous year.
The Ateneo Law Journal published its first issue in 1951. It began as a bi-monthly publication and early volumes featured the digests of Supreme Court decisions and questions and suggested answers to the Philippine Bar Examination. The journal celebrated its 50th anniversary in 2001 with the publication of its 46th volume (there was no publication in 1971 to 1973 when all co-curricular activities in the Ateneo de Manila University were suspended during the early years of martial law). Isabelita A. Tapia served as the journal's first female Editor-in-chief in 1970.
Beginning with Volume 47, the journal stopped the admission of staff members and adopted a more stringent admission process and criteria where only editors would be admitted, directly to the journal's Board of Editors. The admission process now includes the setting of a minimum cumulative grade or quality point index for candidates, the exclusion of candidates on academic probation, an editing examination, a written commentary on a novel legal issue or Supreme Court decision, and a panel interview conducted by the Membership Committee of the Journal. Under this new policy, the journal ceased to be headed by an Editor-in-chief and an Executive Committee was established to head the Board of Editors. Three executive editors are selected by the Board of Editors through election.
The Board of Editors is made up of around 20 student editors. Around 10 new editors are admitted each year from the first, second and third year classes of the Ateneo Law School (totaling around 600 students).