Exonerating the Innocent: Pre-Trial Innocence Procedures is sponsored by The New York Law School Law Review and the West Point Center for the Rule of Law
The New York Law School
Law Review is a journal of legal scholarship edited and published by
students at New York Law School four times a year, with oversight by a
full-time faculty publisher. The Law Review has both a
professional and an educational mission. It serves as an academic forum
for legal scholarship and is intended to provide effective research
materials for judges, attorneys, and students of the law. The Law
Review also provides opportunities for its student members to develop
their own editing and writing skills. Accordingly, each issue contains
notes and comments written by students in addition to contributions from
outside authors. The Law Review has published articles, notes,
comments, essays, book reviews, and speeches on many areas of legal
scholarship, including constitutional law, criminal law, international
law, corporate law, legal education, and legal history. All selected
pieces are subjected to a rigorous editorial process designed to improve
substance and form.
The purpose
of the West Point Center for the Rule of Law is to promote the development,
application, dissemination, and teaching of the Rule of Law in all its
dimensions, thus contributing to success on the battlefield and
safeguarding and respecting of human rights. The goal of the center is to
examine current and potential issues related to the Rule of Law. The
Center will pursue an ambitious and comprehensive program of activities to
explore and promote a greater understanding and appreciation for the Rule
of Law as serving as well as serving as an engine of change in the area of
law critical to West Point and the Army.
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