Tulane Maritime Law Journal

Tulane Maritime Law Journal  
A Typical TMLJ Cover
Discipline Maritime law
Language English
Publication details
Publication history
Vol. 1., No. 1, Spring 1975
Publisher
Frequency Semiannual
Standard abbreviations
Tul. Mar. L.J.
Tulane Marit. Law J.
Indexing
ISSN 1048-3748
Links
The Tulane Maritime Law Journal ship steering wheel adorns the entrance to the journal's student offices in Weinmann Hall.

The Tulane Maritime Law Journal is the preeminent student-edited law journal in the field of Admiralty and Maritime Law. Published semi-annually, each issue of the Journal includes scholarly works written by academics, practitioners, and students concerning current topics in Admiralty and Maritime Law. In addition, the Journal publishes an annual section on Recent Developments in Admiralty and Maritime Law for the United States and the international community, as well as periodic symposia on relevant topical areas in the field and quantum, collision, and forum selection clause surveys every other year.

The Tulane Maritime Law Journal launched a new website on August 28, 2013.[1]

Articles

The Journal has been cited by the U.S. Supreme Court many times—most recently, in 2010.[2] The Court also cited the Journal in 2009, when it relied, in part, on an article by New York maritime attorney Paul S. Edelman (Guevara v. Maritime Overseas Corp., 20 Tul. Mar. L. J. 349 (1996)).[3]

History

The Tulane Maritime Law Journal was founded in 1973 in conjunction with the student-run Tulane Maritime Law Society. The first issue of the Journal was released in March 1975 as The Maritime Lawyer. The next few years were formative and interesting times for the Journal, a history that is retraced in the 20th Anniversary issue (Volume 20, Issue 1). In the fall of 1977, the Journal established its independence from the Tulane Maritime Law Society. Since that fall, the Journal has been published every winter and summer. Starting with Volume 12, in 1987, the publication changed its name from The Maritime Lawyer to the Tulane Maritime Law Journal. The name change was to better reflect the Journal’s status as a student-edited law journal.[4]

Distinguished alumni

  • Todd D. Lochner, JD 1998, Annapolis M.D., Partner of Lochner Law Firm, P.C.[5]
  • Lucas T. Elliot, JD 1989, Houston partner of Morgan Lewis, former Articles Editor of the Journal[6]
  • Bryant E. Gardner, JD 2000, Washington D.C. partner of Winston & Strawn, former Editor in Chief of the Journal[7]
  • Gerald A. Morrissey III, JD 2002, Washington D.C. partner of Winston & Strawn, former Editor in Chief of the Journal[8]
  • Colleen E. Laduzinski, JD/MBA 2000, New York City partner of Jones Day, former Business Editor of the Journal[9]
  • William Pallas, JD 1994, Partner Freehill Hogan and Mahar LLP
  • Rick Rambo, JD/MBA 1994, Houston partner of Morgan Lewis, former Notes and Comments Editor of the Journal[10]
  • Jennifer Ancona Semko, JD 1998, Washington D.C. partner of Baker & McKenzie[11]
  • Stuart Sperling, JD 2002, Head Shipping Attorney, BG Group, former Managing Editor of the Journal[12]
  • Marc J. Veilleux, JD 1988, New York City/ Sao Paulo partner of K&L Gates, former Editor in Chief of the Journal[13]

See also

References

  1. http://www.tulanemaritimejournal.org
  2. "STOLT-NIELSEN S. A. ET AL. v. ANIMALFEEDS INTERNATIONAL CORP" (PDF). supremecourt.gov.
  3. "Tulane University Law School - News Item Detail". law.tulane.edu.
  4. "History". tulanemaritimejournal.org.
  5. "boatinglaw.com Bios". boatinglaw.com. Retrieved October 28, 2016.
  6. "Bio". morganlewis.com.
  7. "Bryant E. Gardner - Winston & Strawn". winston.com.
  8. "Gerald A. Morrissey - Winston & Strawn".
  9. "Jones Day - Jones Day names 36 new partners". jonesday.com.
  10. "Bio". morganlewis.com.
  11. "Jennifer Ancona Semko - Our People - Baker & McKenzie". bakernet.com. Archived from the original on 2008-06-02.
  12. "Volume 26 Summer 2002 Issue 2" (PDF). tulanemaritimejournal.org.
  13. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2007-06-17. Retrieved 2009-12-24.
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