Best secondary journals at HLS?
Posted: Mon Jul 24, 2023 12:39 pm
Didn't make law review.
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JLPP is a strong signal if you are applying to conservative judges. Disagree that conservative judges don't care abt law review anymore, HLR + JLPP > JLPP and it's not close.
I have personally heard multiple conservative federal judges explicitly say they don’t care about law review anymore. My judge did not even have it in his filtering criteria for narrowing down clerkship apps. Many of my friends have told me the same thing. When you read the full application package (transcripts, resume, writing samples, recs, etc.) as a judge, it quickly becomes very obvious that law review membership at the top schools is no longer based on merit. Do something useful with your time instead.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Mon Jul 24, 2023 6:16 pmJLPP is a strong signal if you are applying to conservative judges. Disagree that conservative judges don't care abt law review anymore, HLR + JLPP > JLPP and it's not close.
Don't think any of the other journals are distinguishable, they only really have value as an indicator that you did something extracurricular or if you are EIC or EME.
JOLT or HBLR are probably the two best funded and give the best swag/have the best food, so would probably do them based on those. CR-CL seems to be a decent signal for progressive leaning people but would imagine it kneecaps your bipartisan appeal if you are trying to apply broadly for clerkships
Depends on what your motivation is. I do think there is substantive value in getting law review experience to get the reps in with technical editing to make it second nature. If nothing else, the number of clerkship applications I saw on SDNY from otherwise top-tier candidates (like magna HLS, top 5% Columbia, etc) that had obvious Bluebooking problems was astounding. Far more applicants with top transcripts had those types of issues in their writing samples than didn't. And that's significant, even if it isn't the biggest thing. If your co-clerk doesn't know the rules or just does not have an eye for detail, it can be a long year.
Not as strongly as fedsoc would, but there’d likely be a pretty strong chill. At least in my chambers there definitely would have been.
I appreciate the insight!Anonymous User wrote: ↑Thu Jul 27, 2023 8:55 pmNot as strongly as fedsoc would, but there’d likely be a pretty strong chill. At least in my chambers there definitely would have been.
Yes for my judge
Anonymous User wrote: ↑Mon Jul 24, 2023 9:30 pm
I have personally heard multiple conservative federal judges explicitly say they don’t care about law review anymore. My judge did not even have it in his filtering criteria for narrowing down clerkship apps. Many of my friends have told me the same thing. When you read the full application package (transcripts, resume, writing samples, recs, etc.) as a judge, it quickly becomes very obvious that law review membership at the top schools is no longer based on merit. Do something useful with your time instead.
I can't speak for HLR/YLJ processes, but I was on the managing board of one of these top law reviews, and that was really only true for two positions: EIC and the officer in charge of the DEI stuff. For things like the articles board, we went for a mix of ideologies/interests/etc., and the majority-liberal board my year ended up picking a majority-conservative board for the current crop.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Fri Jul 28, 2023 10:21 amAnonymous User wrote: ↑Mon Jul 24, 2023 9:30 pm
I have personally heard multiple conservative federal judges explicitly say they don’t care about law review anymore. My judge did not even have it in his filtering criteria for narrowing down clerkship apps. Many of my friends have told me the same thing. When you read the full application package (transcripts, resume, writing samples, recs, etc.) as a judge, it quickly becomes very obvious that law review membership at the top schools is no longer based on merit. Do something useful with your time instead.
This is definitely true, and it's not just for conservative judges. Everyone in the real world is realizing that at top Law Reviews like HLR, YLJ, etc., membership and especially officer positions are more a function of race/gender/ethnicity than hard work, intelligence, academic expertise, etc.
HLR members stumble over themselves these days to appoint officers so they can say stuff like "First Non-Binary Woman President in HLR History!" or the like. It's become a matter of politics, and so -- ironically, both for students advantaged and non-advantaged by the increasing emphasis on diversity rather than merit -- Law Review has lost most of its value as an employment or job-market signal.
TLDR: don't sweat it, just get good grades and you'll be fine.
It's one of those very obvious things that isn't allowed to be talked about openly in law school, like most things related to affirmative action.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Fri Jul 28, 2023 11:26 amI can't speak for HLR/YLJ processes, but I was on the managing board of one of these top law reviews, and that was really only true for two positions: EIC and the officer in charge of the DEI stuff. For things like the articles board, we went for a mix of ideologies/interests/etc., and the majority-liberal board my year ended up picking a majority-conservative board for the current crop.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Fri Jul 28, 2023 10:21 amAnonymous User wrote: ↑Mon Jul 24, 2023 9:30 pm
I have personally heard multiple conservative federal judges explicitly say they don’t care about law review anymore. My judge did not even have it in his filtering criteria for narrowing down clerkship apps. Many of my friends have told me the same thing. When you read the full application package (transcripts, resume, writing samples, recs, etc.) as a judge, it quickly becomes very obvious that law review membership at the top schools is no longer based on merit. Do something useful with your time instead.
This is definitely true, and it's not just for conservative judges. Everyone in the real world is realizing that at top Law Reviews like HLR, YLJ, etc., membership and especially officer positions are more a function of race/gender/ethnicity than hard work, intelligence, academic expertise, etc.
HLR members stumble over themselves these days to appoint officers so they can say stuff like "First Non-Binary Woman President in HLR History!" or the like. It's become a matter of politics, and so -- ironically, both for students advantaged and non-advantaged by the increasing emphasis on diversity rather than merit -- Law Review has lost most of its value as an employment or job-market signal.
TLDR: don't sweat it, just get good grades and you'll be fine.
I was not on our membership selection committee, but I'll acknowledge that checkbox identity probably plays an outsized role in selection (though I would argue that having a diverse membership is in a journal's best interests beyond just optics). With that said, I had to supervise the work of editors in my managing board role, and I did not see any drop off in quality for people who might be labeled a "diversity candidate," and the worst work was submitted by a guy who I know is in the top 10 in his class. All this is to say that I think the whole thing about law review not being a meritocracy because it is not automatically given to the top 50 GPAs or whatever is totally overblown.
Finally, and more to your main point, I have never heard this take from someone who wasn't conservative, and frankly, I hear it most often from people who didn't make law review. It feels to me like a view held by a vocal minority rather than something that "everyone" in "the real world" believes to be true.
At Penn, roughly half of Coif didn’t make LR. And more than half of LR didn’t get honors (top 30%)Anonymous User wrote: ↑Fri Jul 28, 2023 11:48 amIt's one of those very obvious things that isn't allowed to be talked about openly in law school, like most things related to affirmative action.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Fri Jul 28, 2023 11:26 amI can't speak for HLR/YLJ processes, but I was on the managing board of one of these top law reviews, and that was really only true for two positions: EIC and the officer in charge of the DEI stuff. For things like the articles board, we went for a mix of ideologies/interests/etc., and the majority-liberal board my year ended up picking a majority-conservative board for the current crop.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Fri Jul 28, 2023 10:21 amAnonymous User wrote: ↑Mon Jul 24, 2023 9:30 pm
I have personally heard multiple conservative federal judges explicitly say they don’t care about law review anymore. My judge did not even have it in his filtering criteria for narrowing down clerkship apps. Many of my friends have told me the same thing. When you read the full application package (transcripts, resume, writing samples, recs, etc.) as a judge, it quickly becomes very obvious that law review membership at the top schools is no longer based on merit. Do something useful with your time instead.
This is definitely true, and it's not just for conservative judges. Everyone in the real world is realizing that at top Law Reviews like HLR, YLJ, etc., membership and especially officer positions are more a function of race/gender/ethnicity than hard work, intelligence, academic expertise, etc.
HLR members stumble over themselves these days to appoint officers so they can say stuff like "First Non-Binary Woman President in HLR History!" or the like. It's become a matter of politics, and so -- ironically, both for students advantaged and non-advantaged by the increasing emphasis on diversity rather than merit -- Law Review has lost most of its value as an employment or job-market signal.
TLDR: don't sweat it, just get good grades and you'll be fine.
I was not on our membership selection committee, but I'll acknowledge that checkbox identity probably plays an outsized role in selection (though I would argue that having a diverse membership is in a journal's best interests beyond just optics). With that said, I had to supervise the work of editors in my managing board role, and I did not see any drop off in quality for people who might be labeled a "diversity candidate," and the worst work was submitted by a guy who I know is in the top 10 in his class. All this is to say that I think the whole thing about law review not being a meritocracy because it is not automatically given to the top 50 GPAs or whatever is totally overblown.
Finally, and more to your main point, I have never heard this take from someone who wasn't conservative, and frankly, I hear it most often from people who didn't make law review. It feels to me like a view held by a vocal minority rather than something that "everyone" in "the real world" believes to be true.
As you pointed out, the real way to check who is actually trusted to do the hard work is to look at who is on the articles subcommittees of law reviews. But that's at most 10 spots, and has no impact on the original selection of members.
no because it's mostly based on write-onAnonymous User wrote: ↑Fri Jul 28, 2023 10:21 amAnonymous User wrote: ↑Mon Jul 24, 2023 9:30 pm
I have personally heard multiple conservative federal judges explicitly say they don’t care about law review anymore. My judge did not even have it in his filtering criteria for narrowing down clerkship apps. Many of my friends have told me the same thing. When you read the full application package (transcripts, resume, writing samples, recs, etc.) as a judge, it quickly becomes very obvious that law review membership at the top schools is no longer based on merit. Do something useful with your time instead.
This is definitely true, and it's not just for conservative judges. Everyone in the real world is realizing that at top Law Reviews like HLR, YLJ, etc., membership and especially officer positions are more a function of race/gender/ethnicity than hard work, intelligence, academic expertise, etc.
HLR members stumble over themselves these days to appoint officers so they can say stuff like "First Non-Binary Woman President in HLR History!" or the like. It's become a matter of politics, and so -- ironically, both for students advantaged and non-advantaged by the increasing emphasis on diversity rather than merit -- Law Review has lost most of its value as an employment or job-market signal.
TLDR: don't sweat it, just get good grades and you'll be fine.
Not at Penn, but I always found this type of criticism to be hilarious and pure cope. Ask the inverse question: Is there any other organization at a school where half of the membership is Coif? It's not even close. LR is still the strongest indicator of grades at any school when you need to do some quick filtering. Then you can look at transcripts to do another layer of filtering.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Fri Jul 28, 2023 12:43 pmAt Penn, roughly half of Coif didn’t make LR. And more than half of LR didn’t get honors (top 30%)Anonymous User wrote: ↑Fri Jul 28, 2023 11:48 amIt's one of those very obvious things that isn't allowed to be talked about openly in law school, like most things related to affirmative action.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Fri Jul 28, 2023 11:26 amI can't speak for HLR/YLJ processes, but I was on the managing board of one of these top law reviews, and that was really only true for two positions: EIC and the officer in charge of the DEI stuff. For things like the articles board, we went for a mix of ideologies/interests/etc., and the majority-liberal board my year ended up picking a majority-conservative board for the current crop.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Fri Jul 28, 2023 10:21 amAnonymous User wrote: ↑Mon Jul 24, 2023 9:30 pm
I have personally heard multiple conservative federal judges explicitly say they don’t care about law review anymore. My judge did not even have it in his filtering criteria for narrowing down clerkship apps. Many of my friends have told me the same thing. When you read the full application package (transcripts, resume, writing samples, recs, etc.) as a judge, it quickly becomes very obvious that law review membership at the top schools is no longer based on merit. Do something useful with your time instead.
This is definitely true, and it's not just for conservative judges. Everyone in the real world is realizing that at top Law Reviews like HLR, YLJ, etc., membership and especially officer positions are more a function of race/gender/ethnicity than hard work, intelligence, academic expertise, etc.
HLR members stumble over themselves these days to appoint officers so they can say stuff like "First Non-Binary Woman President in HLR History!" or the like. It's become a matter of politics, and so -- ironically, both for students advantaged and non-advantaged by the increasing emphasis on diversity rather than merit -- Law Review has lost most of its value as an employment or job-market signal.
TLDR: don't sweat it, just get good grades and you'll be fine.
I was not on our membership selection committee, but I'll acknowledge that checkbox identity probably plays an outsized role in selection (though I would argue that having a diverse membership is in a journal's best interests beyond just optics). With that said, I had to supervise the work of editors in my managing board role, and I did not see any drop off in quality for people who might be labeled a "diversity candidate," and the worst work was submitted by a guy who I know is in the top 10 in his class. All this is to say that I think the whole thing about law review not being a meritocracy because it is not automatically given to the top 50 GPAs or whatever is totally overblown.
Finally, and more to your main point, I have never heard this take from someone who wasn't conservative, and frankly, I hear it most often from people who didn't make law review. It feels to me like a view held by a vocal minority rather than something that "everyone" in "the real world" believes to be true.
As you pointed out, the real way to check who is actually trusted to do the hard work is to look at who is on the articles subcommittees of law reviews. But that's at most 10 spots, and has no impact on the original selection of members.
Not to be too obnoxious, but more than half of LR did get honors this year (30/55). Makes sense given the breakdown between grade-on slots, write-on slots, and personal statement slots.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Fri Jul 28, 2023 12:43 pmAt Penn, roughly half of Coif didn’t make LR. And more than half of LR didn’t get honors (top 30%)
Law Review would still have significantly diminished its signaling value if only half of the members are within the top 30% of the class.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Fri Jul 28, 2023 1:31 pmNot to be too obnoxious, but more than half of LR did get honors this year (30/55). Makes sense given the breakdown between grade-on slots, write-on slots, and personal statement slots.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Fri Jul 28, 2023 12:43 pmAt Penn, roughly half of Coif didn’t make LR. And more than half of LR didn’t get honors (top 30%)
If you clerk and see the application packages you will understand that it is very obvious law review selection is not based primarily on grades and writing at almost all of the top schools. Those are the things that judges care about. It makes no sense to give a bump for law review anymore. Some judges still like to see journal work just so they know the bluebooking is up to par, but you can get that experience with secondary journals too.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Fri Jul 28, 2023 11:26 amI can't speak for HLR/YLJ processes, but I was on the managing board of one of these top law reviews, and that was really only true for two positions: EIC and the officer in charge of the DEI stuff. For things like the articles board, we went for a mix of ideologies/interests/etc., and the majority-liberal board my year ended up picking a majority-conservative board for the current crop.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Fri Jul 28, 2023 10:21 amAnonymous User wrote: ↑Mon Jul 24, 2023 9:30 pm
I have personally heard multiple conservative federal judges explicitly say they don’t care about law review anymore. My judge did not even have it in his filtering criteria for narrowing down clerkship apps. Many of my friends have told me the same thing. When you read the full application package (transcripts, resume, writing samples, recs, etc.) as a judge, it quickly becomes very obvious that law review membership at the top schools is no longer based on merit. Do something useful with your time instead.
This is definitely true, and it's not just for conservative judges. Everyone in the real world is realizing that at top Law Reviews like HLR, YLJ, etc., membership and especially officer positions are more a function of race/gender/ethnicity than hard work, intelligence, academic expertise, etc.
HLR members stumble over themselves these days to appoint officers so they can say stuff like "First Non-Binary Woman President in HLR History!" or the like. It's become a matter of politics, and so -- ironically, both for students advantaged and non-advantaged by the increasing emphasis on diversity rather than merit -- Law Review has lost most of its value as an employment or job-market signal.
TLDR: don't sweat it, just get good grades and you'll be fine.
I was not on our membership selection committee, but I'll acknowledge that checkbox identity probably plays an outsized role in selection (though I would argue that having a diverse membership is in a journal's best interests beyond just optics). With that said, I had to supervise the work of editors in my managing board role, and I did not see any drop off in quality for people who might be labeled a "diversity candidate," and the worst work was submitted by a guy who I know is in the top 10 in his class. All this is to say that I think the whole thing about law review not being a meritocracy because it is not automatically given to the top 50 GPAs or whatever is totally overblown.
Finally, and more to your main point, I have never heard this take from someone who wasn't conservative, and frankly, I hear it most often from people who didn't make law review. It feels to me like a view held by a vocal minority rather than something that "everyone" in "the real world" believes to be true.
Penn doesn't even have a single pure grade on slot. And the "writing" competition includes a personal statement and is basically a dumb creative writing exercise. It's not legal writing at all.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Fri Jul 28, 2023 1:31 pmNot to be too obnoxious, but more than half of LR did get honors this year (30/55). Makes sense given the breakdown between grade-on slots, write-on slots, and personal statement slots.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Fri Jul 28, 2023 12:43 pmAt Penn, roughly half of Coif didn’t make LR. And more than half of LR didn’t get honors (top 30%)
In theory, if it’s just based on writing competition, law review membership would say something about legal writing skills even if it didn’t say anything about grades. It’s ridiculous that Penn’s writing competition doesn’t even include *any* legal writing. Just a funny essay based on tiktoks and memes. Way worse than HLR even if you ignore the diversity BS. Penn Law Review only has ~half honors because there’s a correlation between putting effort into figuring out how to do well on the writing competition and putting effort into school generally.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Fri Jul 28, 2023 2:29 pmPenn doesn't even have a single pure grade on slot. And the "writing" competition includes a personal statement and is basically a dumb creative writing exercise. It's not legal writing at all.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Fri Jul 28, 2023 1:31 pmNot to be too obnoxious, but more than half of LR did get honors this year (30/55). Makes sense given the breakdown between grade-on slots, write-on slots, and personal statement slots.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Fri Jul 28, 2023 12:43 pmAt Penn, roughly half of Coif didn’t make LR. And more than half of LR didn’t get honors (top 30%)
Judges for sure still care about HLR if they/you are anywhere left of center.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Fri Jul 28, 2023 5:02 pmIn theory, if it’s just based on writing competition, law review membership would say something about legal writing skills even if it didn’t say anything about grades. It’s ridiculous that Penn’s writing competition doesn’t even include *any* legal writing. Just a funny essay based on tiktoks and memes. Way worse than HLR even if you ignore the diversity BS. Penn Law Review only has ~half honors because there’s a correlation between putting effort into figuring out how to do well on the writing competition and putting effort into school generally.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Fri Jul 28, 2023 2:29 pmPenn doesn't even have a single pure grade on slot. And the "writing" competition includes a personal statement and is basically a dumb creative writing exercise. It's not legal writing at all.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Fri Jul 28, 2023 1:31 pmNot to be too obnoxious, but more than half of LR did get honors this year (30/55). Makes sense given the breakdown between grade-on slots, write-on slots, and personal statement slots.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Fri Jul 28, 2023 12:43 pmAt Penn, roughly half of Coif didn’t make LR. And more than half of LR didn’t get honors (top 30%)