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On March 10, 2002, the New York Law School faculty approved a new Law Review structure as set forth in a proposal authored by Professor Cameron Stracher and Associate Dean Stephen Ellmann.  The highlights of the new structure included the merger of the three existing law journals (Journal of Human Rights, Journal of International and Comparative Law, and Law Review) and all their members into one new Law Review, and the linking of the Law Review to the five Academic Centers and the Harlan Scholars Honors Program. Students who are members of the new Law Review are now Harlan Scholars affiliated with one of the Law School five centers (the Justice Action Center, the Center for International Law, the Center for New York City Law, the Center for Professional Values and Practice, and the Institute for Information Law and Policy).
Although neither the Journal of Human Rights nor the Journal of International and Comparative Law will continue to publish independent volumes, the Law Review intends to publish special symposia issues dealing with topics of interest to readers of those journals.

The New York Law School Journal of International and Comparative Law was a student-edited academic journal dedicated to the publication of articles, notes, case comments and book reviews concerning international and comparative law. Since the publication of its first issue in 1979, the Journal sought to provide a forum for a wide spectrum of views and published articles by prominent scholars and practitioners.