Editor-in-Chief
South Carolina Law Review
University of South Carolina School of Law
1525 Senate Street
Room 209A
Columbia, SC 29208
Please submit e-mail submissions to sclreic@mailbox.sc.edu. Most authors will be notified of a decision within two weeks of submitting.
Guidelines for Publication: The South Carolina Law Review welcomes submissions by judges, professors, practitioners, and law students. All submissions should conform to the 21st edition of The Bluebook and include a cover letter and curriculum vitae.
In light of the ever-increasing length of law review articles, the South Carolina Law Review has adopted a policy limiting the length of articles we will accept or publish. The Law Review will give preferential review to articles under 30,000 words in length, including text and footnotes. The Law Review will not publish articles exceeding 40,000 words, except in extraordinary circumstances.
Requests for Expedited Review: Please submit requests for expedited review via e-mail to sclreic@mailbox.sc.edu. The Executive Articles Editors make every effort to accommodate authors’ requests. Please include your name, submission title, other offers for publication, and your deadline for review in the request.
Warren E. Berger Prize
Sponsored by the American Inns of Court
The following is excerpted from Donald G. Kempf, Jr., Preface to Stephen D. Easton, My Last Lecture: Unsolicited Advice for Future and Current Lawyers, 56 S.C. L. Rev. 229, i (2004).
In October, 2003, the Board of Trustees of the American Inns of Court Foundation announced the establishment of the Warren E. Burger Writing Competition, designed to encourage and recognize outstanding scholarship “promoting the ideals of excellence, civility, ethics and professionalism within the legal profession and beyond,” the core mission of the American Inns of Court.
The nationwide writing competition is in tribute to Chief Justice Burger, “founding father” of the American Inns of Court movement. As recounted by Justice O’Connor in her forward to The American Inns of Court: Reclaiming a Noble Profession, a history of the Inns movement, the American Inns movement is the “result of Chief Justice Burger’s commitment to improving the quality of legal professionalism in the United States.
In the 1960s, well before his appointment to the Supreme Court, Chief Justice Burger envisioned an organization that would help lawyers improve their advocacy skills, with an emphasis on the importance of professional integrity and ethics.” In 1977, he returned from a trip to London “with the idea of creating in the United States an organization patterned after the English Inns of Court, which have for hundreds of years provided mentoring to young lawyers. A number of prominent members of the legal community . . . joined the Chief Justice to hone his ideas into a workable concept. Forty-four members participated in the first American Inn of Court in Utah in 1980.”
[In 2004], as the American Inns of Court celebrates its twenty-fifth anniversary, Chief Justice Burger’s vision is shared and perpetuated by over 25,000 active members in more than 350 Inns nationwide as well as nearly 60,000 alumni who have benefited from the unique experience of mentoring and skill development offered by the organization.
For this writing competition, judges, lawyers, scholars and other authors were invited to submit an original, unpublished essay on a topic of their choice addressing issues of legal excellence, civility, ethics and professionalism. The author of the winning submission will receive the Warren E. Burger Prize, including a cash award, at the American Inns of Court Celebration of Excellence at the United States Supreme Court.
Additionally, the winning entry will be published annually in the South Carolina Law Review, a nationally recognized and respected law review chosen because of its reputation for quality, its focus on professional development, and the combination of academic and practical issues in the law.
The American Inns of Court, the University of South Carolina School of Law and the Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough Center on Professionalism invite judges, lawyers, scholars and other authors to participate in the [next] annual Warren E. Burger competition.
Donald G. Kempf, Jr., Vice President, 2002–2006
The American Inns of Court
For details about the American Inns of Court, visit American Inns of Court.
For more information about the Warren E. Burger Prize, including past winners, visit the Warren E. Burger Prize page.