The South Carolina Law Review is the oldest legal publication in the South Carolina still in publication. It began in 1937 as the Year Book of the Selden Society (https://scholarcommons.sc.edu/selden-society-yearbooks) before becoming the South Carolina Law Quartely in 1948. Today, the Law Review is the flagship legal publication at the University of South Carolina School of Law and is frequently cited by courts, practitioners, and scholars.
Find the Aims and Scope for a complete coverage of the journal.
Find information about submissions and policies on the South Carolina Law Review's website.
Current Issue: Volume 73, Issue 4 (2022)
Article
Promoting Diversity as Professionalism
Davis G. Yee
Don't Ban the Bars: Why the South Carolina General Assembly Should Decline to Adopt a Revenue Requirement for Liquor Licenses
C. William Bootle II
And then There Were Two: Splitting South Carolina's Department of Health and Environmental Control
Arslan S. Valimohamed
Developing Nuclear Energy with Advanced Cost Recovery: Learning from the V.C. Summer Project Abandonment
Mary Geer Kirkland