Skip to Main Content

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. 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).
  2. 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).
  3. 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).
  4. 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.