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Faculty Scholarship Support: Related Articles

This guide is intended to help law faculty navigate the process of submitting papers to law journals.

Further Readings

  1. Academic Law Libraries Special Interest Section of the American Association of Law Libraries Scholarly Communications Committee, Report on Citation Metrics of Scholarly Impact An Update to the 2016 Study (2024), https://www.aallnet.org/allsis/wp-content/uploads/sites/4/2024/07/ALL-SIS_CitationMethodsWhitePaper_6_14_24_final.pdf (last visited July 17, 2024).
  2. Caroline Osborne & Stephanie Miller, The Scholarly Impact Matrix: An Empirical Study of How Multiple Metrics Create an Informed Story of a Scholar’s Work (2020), https://papers.ssrn.com/abstract=3582607 (last visited Aug 24, 2021).
  3. Ignacio Cofone & Pierre-Jean Malé, How to Choose a Law Review: An Empirical Study, 71 Journal of Legal Education (2022), https://jle.aals.org/home/vol71/iss2/5 (last visited July 27, 2023).
  4. Responding to US News’ Decision Not to Create Scholarly Impact Ranking – Law Librarians Still Play a Key Role in Maximizing Scholarly Visibility, Wisblawg (2021), https://wisblawg.law.wisc.edu/2021/08/23/responding-to-us-news-decision-not-to-create-scholarly-impact-ranking-law-librarians-still-play-a-key-role-in-maximizing-scholarly-visibility/ (last visited Aug 25, 2021).
  5. Bonnie J. Shucha, Representing Law Faculty Scholarly Impact: Strategies for Improving Citation Metrics Accuracy and Promoting Scholarly Visibility (2021), https://papers.ssrn.com/abstract=3808250 (last visited Aug 24, 2021).

Additional Resources

The American Association of Law Libraries ALL-SIS Scholarly Communication Toolkit is produced by the ALL-SIS Scholarly Communication Committee. it has useful information on such topics as author checklist, author profiles, copyright, digital object identifiers, interdisciplinary publishing, link rot, measuring impact, and open access publishing.