Browse Journals and Peer-Reviewed Series

Colorado Environmental Law Journal (Law School Journals)

ISSN 2327-0683

The Colorado Environmental Law Journal (CELJ) provides a forum for natural resources, energy, and environmental law and policy on local, regional, and global scales. CELJ works to empower unique perspectives and outlooks on complex environmental legal issues. These topics include but are not limited to natural resources, energy, and environmental law and policy on local, regional, and global scales. The Colorado Environmental Law Journal is proud to be an active part of the environmental law community at Colorado Law.

Colorado Technology Law Journal (Law School Journals)

ISSN 2374-9032

Introductory text for Colorado Technology Law Journal.

See the Aims and Scope for a complete coverage of the journal.

University of Colorado Law Review (Law School Journals)

ISSN 0041-9516

The University of Colorado Law Review was founded in 1928 as the Rocky Mountain Law Review, the first quarterly law journal in the Rocky Mountain Region. Since then, it has remained an important contributor to the legal literature of the American West and the entire United States. The Law Review’s original editors began the journal with “the hope that it may be a pleasure to its readers, bring them into more constant and intimate contact with the trend of legal thought in this section of the country, and perhaps from time to time contribute to a solution of the problems confronting the bar.”

In 1962, the journal changed its name to the University of Colorado Law Review to clarify its affiliation with the University of Colorado Law School, because its nationwide audience was confused about its location. Readers were particularly confused “east of the Mississippi,” noted one contemporary editor, “where the Rocky Mountains are generally considered to be in Nevada.”

University of Colorado Law Review Forum (Law School Journals)

ISSN 0041-9516

The University of Colorado Law Review was founded in 1928 as the Rocky Mountain Law Review, the first quarterly law journal in the Rocky Mountain Region. Since then, it has remained an important contributor to the legal literature of the American West and the entire United States. The Law Review’s original editors began the journal with “the hope that it may be a pleasure to its readers, bring them into more constant and intimate contact with the trend of legal thought in this section of the country, and perhaps from time to time contribute to a solution of the problems confronting the bar.”

In 1962, the journal changed its name to the University of Colorado Law Review to clarify its affiliation with the University of Colorado Law School, because its nationwide audience was confused about its location. Readers were particularly confused “east of the Mississippi,” noted one contemporary editor, “where the Rocky Mountains are generally considered to be in Nevada.”

The University of Colorado Law Review Forum is the online companion to the University of Colorado Law Review and began in 2017.