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The following students have earned editorial positions on The Campbell Law Review, the flagship student-operated academic legal journal of the Norman A. Wiggins School of Law for the 2009-1010 academic year.
Board of Editors:
Lynn C. Percival, IV, Editor-in-Chief
John Maddux, Managing Editor
Matthew J. Cochran, Executive Editor
Meagan Ivanov, Chief Publications Editor
Amanda Johnson, Chief Articles Editor
Brian Love, Chief Comments Editor
Alex Wallin, Business Editor
J. Whitfield Gibson, Membership Editor
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Luke Dalton, Submissions Editor
Matthew C. Phillips, Technology Editor
Megan West, Consulting Editor
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Stephanie Owens, Symposium Editor
Mallory Williams, Symposium Editor
Articles Editors:
Laura Ardrey
James E. Griffin, III
Gregory Morgan
Justin Nichols
Linsy Wells
Ephriam B. Wright, III
Comments Editors:
Heather Beam
Brian Humphrey
Katherine Jones
Paula Shearon
Timothy Snead
Cheryl Sullivan
Membership on the Law Review is extended automatically to students comprising the top
5 percent of the class after their first semester of law school, and may also be awarded to an exceptional selection of students participating in its writing competition at the conclusion of the full academic year.
Since 1979, the Campbell Law Review has provided the legal community with scholarly articles and commentary on a wide range of practical and academic legal issues. The Law Review places special emphasis on issues arising in North Carolina and other states in the Southeast, and frequently addresses national legislation and constitutional questions from all federal circuits and the Supreme Court.
The Campbell Law Review also hosts an annual symposium featuring lectures and discussions by experts on selected issues of practice or policy that are of special relevance to the profession. In January, lawyers from across the region attended the Law Review’s Health Law Symposium, earning CLE credit and valuable insights on laws affecting representation of the health care profession. A topic being considered for the 2010 symposium is the controversial and uncharted area of electronic discovery in litigation.
The Law Review welcomes submissions for publication. Well-researched, scholarly articles should be sent to the Editor-in-Chief at culawreview@email.campbell.edu. Citations should conform to The Bluebook: A Uniform System of Citation (18th ed. 2005). Manuscripts should be submitted in MS Word and include the author’s curriculum vitae as well as an article abstract.
About Campbell Law School: Since its founding in 1976, the Norman Adrian Wiggins School of Law at Campbell University has developed lawyers who possess moral conviction, social compassion and professional competence, and who view the law as a calling to serve others and create a more just society. The School has been recognized by the American Bar Association (ABA) as having the nation’s top Professionalism Program and by the American Academy of Trial Lawyers for having the nation’s best Trial Advocacy Program. In 2008, the Law School’s Moot Court Program was ranked in the top ten nationally by the University of Houston’s Blakely Advocacy Institute among 196 ABA accredited law schools. Campbell Law boasts more than 3,000 alumni, including 2,000 who reside and work in North Carolina. For the past 20 years, Campbell Law’s record of success on the North Carolina bar exam is unsurpassed by any other North Carolina law school. In the fall of 2009, Campbell Law School will relocate from the main Campbell University campus to a new location in downtown Raleigh.
Media Contact: Britt Davis, 910.893.1811, davis@law.campbell.edu
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