The National Black Law Students Association presents the

 

The Representative Black Voice for

Law Students and Practitioners Living in the South.

 

 

NOW AVAILABLE

VOLUME II: ECONOMIC SUSTAINABILITY

To order a Deluxe Bound copy at $25.00 each

Please send an email to eic@srblsalawjournal.org.

Be sure to include the number of copies and a mailing address.

(See the "Volumes" tab for more information)

 

  The Southern Regional Black Law Students Association Law Journal was created in 2005 as an answer to law students' and other professionals' concern of a lack of a representative voice for issues facing southern Blacks.  The Journal strives to serve as a forum for sound legal scholarship reflecting the interests of southern Black communities that will stimulate thought and simultaneously trigger positive change. While the Journal's primary focus is on the southern Black populace, it will afford writing opportunities to all persons and appeal to a plethora of audiences regardless of race. A student-run publication, the Journal endeavors to provide an outlet for both professional and student-authored works that embody the Journal's mission of serving as a vehicle for social, economical, and political uplift in southern Black society.

Assisting College Students with their Personal Statements. The SRBLSA Law Journal is committed to increasing diversity in law schools  and has offered to edit the personal statements of interested student members of NBLSA College Student Divisions, as well as, non-BLSA members. If you are interested in having your personal statement edited by members of the Journal Editorial Staff, please email your personal statement to eic@srblsalawjournal.org.

  Subscribers of the Social Science Research Network are now able to electronically submit articles to the SRBLSA Law Journal for publication through SSRN's eSubmission service.

  The State of Black America 2006, published by the National Urban League.  An annual report that examines issues central to Black America, and provides a cohesive and systematic approach for closing the nation's equality gaps. Included in this year's report are essays on Hurricane Katrina and poverty, race and healthcare disparities, racial disparity and prison boom, and the state of civil rights.

The National Black Law Students Association, the largest student-run organization in the Nation. 

Emory BLSA, the local BLSA chapter of the 2007-2008 sponsoring institution of the SRBLSA Law Journal.

The National Black Law Journal, a scholarly discourse exploring the intersection of race and the law for 35 years.

The Modern American, a publication dedicated to diversity and the law.

 The Harvard Black Letter Law Journal, founded in 1983, a publication that critiques traditional constitutionalism and promotes civil rights.