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Melbourne University Law Review

Melbourne University Law Review  
Former names
Res Judicatae
Abbreviated title (ISO 4)
Melbourne Univ. Law R.
Discipline Law
Language English
Edited by Jordonne Colley, Chenez Dyer Bray and Marcus Roberts
Publication details
Publisher
Publication history
1957–present
Frequency Triannually
Indexing
ISSN 0025-8938
LCCN sf84007069
OCLC no. 60630207
Links

The Melbourne University Law Review is a triannual law journal published by a student group at Melbourne Law School covering all areas of law. It is one of two student-run law journals at the University of Melbourne, the other being the Melbourne Journal of International Law. Students who have completed at least one semester of law are eligible to apply for membership of the editorial board. Applicants are assessed on the basis of their performance in a practical exercise, academic aptitude, proofreading skills, editing skills and enthusiasm. The 2017 editors-in-chief are Jordonne Colley, Chenez Dyer Bray and Marcus Roberts.

Occasionally, the review produces a symposium issue devoted to a particular aspect of law. Past symposium issues have focused on the centenary of the federation of Australia, contemporary human rights in Australia, and tort law. The Review's alumni include two High Court Justices, three Solicitors-General, five Federal Court judges and at least six Supreme Court judges.

The journal has been awarded an A* ranking by the Australian Research Council.

The first periodical published at the Melbourne Law School was The Summons. It appeared with the subtitle A Magazine of Legal and General Literature and was published by the Articled Law Clerks' Society of Victoria between 1891 and 1903. It was a yellow-covered sixteen-page journal depicting an angel with a trumpet on its cover and served as more of a current affairs magazine than an academic journal, publishing reports of moots and discussing topical issues, which at the time included the fusion of the two branches of the Victorian legal profession and the admission of women.

In 1935, the students of the Faculty of Law established Res Judicatae — roughly translated as "things that have been judicially adjudicated on" — which was intended to provide a forum for discussion and debate among students of the law. Published by the Law Students' Society of Victoria, it focused on legal journalism.


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