Submit Your Articles to the Journal of Free Speech Law, Before You Circulate Them to the Law Reviews

Our peer-reviewed Journal of Free Speech Law, which is now nearly three years old, has published 65 articles, including by Jack Balkin (Yale), Mark Lemley (Stanford), Jeremy Waldron (NYU), Cynthia Estlund (NYU), Christopher Yoo (Penn), Danielle Citron (Virginia), Keith Whittington (Princeton, moving to Yale) (forthcoming), and many others—both prominent figures in the field and emerging young scholars (including ones who didn’t have a tenure-track academic appointment). The articles have been cited so far in four court cases, over 125 articles (not counting articles in the Journal itself), and at least 50 briefs. And note that all the articles have only had two years or less to attract these citations.

I expect that many authors are planning to submit articles on free speech to the usual law reviews when the submission cycle restarts in February. But if you submit exclusively to us before that, we will give you an answer within 14 days (our guarantee, which we have so far never broken); and then if you’d like to have it published quickly, we can publish it in within several weeks, if it’s sufficiently clean and cite-checked by your research assistant. (We can also have it cite-checked for you by one of our student staffers, but that takes a bit longer.) This means your article can be published by us, if it’s accepted, almost a year (or more) before it would be published by the law journals.

Of course, also please pass this along to friends or colleagues who you think might be interested. Note that the submissions don’t compete for a limited number of slots in an issue or volume; we’ll publish articles that satisfy our quality standards whenever we get them.

All submissions must be exclusive to us, but, again, you’ll have an answer within 14 days, so you’ll be able to submit elsewhere if we say no. Please submit an anonymized draft, together with at https://freespeechlaw.scholasticahq.com/. A few guidelines:

Instead of a cover letter, please submit at most one page (and preferably just a paragraph or two) explaining how your article is novel. If there is a particular way of showing that (e.g., it’s the first article to discuss how case X and doctrine Y interact), please let us know. Please submit articles single-spaced, in a proportionally spaced font. Please make sure that the Introduction quickly and clearly explains the main claims you are making. Please avoid extended background sections reciting familiar Supreme Court precedents or other well-known matters. We prefer articles that get right down to the novel material (if necessary, quickly explaining the necessary legal principles as they go). Each article should be as short as possible, and as long as necessary. Like everyone else, we like simple, clear, engaging writing. We are open to student-written work, and we evaluate it under the same standards applicable to work written by others.

We publish:

Articles that say something we don’t already know. Articles with all sorts of approaches: doctrinal, theoretical, historical, empirical, or otherwise. Articles dealing with speech, press, assembly, petition, or expression more broadly. Generally not articles purely focused on the Free Exercise Clause or Establishment Clause, except if they also substantially discuss religious speech. Articles about the First Amendment, state constitutional free speech provisions, federal and state statutes, common-law rules, and regulations protecting or restricting speech, or private organizations’ speech regulations. Articles about U.S. law, foreign law, comparative law, or international law. Both big, ambitious work and narrower material. Articles that are useful to the academy, to the bench, or to the bar (or if possible, to all three). Articles arguing for broader speech protection, narrower speech protection, or anything else.

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