Lecture Series
  The Stanford Law Review is pleased to announce a new series of lectures and panel discussions based on the articles we publish.

The Stanford Law Review Lecture Series was developed to allow authors that we publish to share their work with the Law School. Throughout this academic year we will invite selected authors to spend a half-day on campus participating in various events with students and faculty such as panel discussions and brown bag lunches. We hope that this program will provide a forum to highlight important legal scholarship and will serve as an opportunity for the Stanford Law Review to connect with the greater legal community.


October 18, 2007
Refugee Roulette: Disparities in Asylum Adjudication

March 4, 2005
Affirmative Action Panel

February 4, 2003
The Screening/Bargaining Tradeoff

April 15, 2002
Civil Liberties and National Security in a Time of Terror

April 8, 2002
Cultural Dissent

December 3, 2001
Copyright and the First Amendment

November 15, 2001
The First Amendment: Pragmatism v. Purposivism