The 2019-2020 Editorial Board is proud to announce that the following student works were selected for publication in the Spring and Summer issues of the Missouri Law Review. Please join us in congratulating these wonderful authors!
Spring (Vol. 85, Issue 2)
Jackson Gilkey, Multi-Party Joinder and Venue: How Missouri Is Acting Against Historic Procedural Law Principles in an Effort to Curb Forum Shopping
Abigail Greene, Compliance Issues: The Supreme Court’s Confusing Messages to Municipalities
Claire Hawley, The Slow-Me State: The Emergence of Internet Sales Taxation and Missouri’s Anomalous Response
Maddie McMillian, Missouri Legislature Revises State Court’s Discovery Rules
Calla Mears, Risk of Choking to Death on One’s Own Blood Is Not Cruel and Unusual Punishment: How the Eighth Amendment Has Lost Its Meaning in Method-of-Execution Challenges
Summer (Vol. 85, Issue 3)
Alexander Brown, The Unappealing Nature of Guilty Plea Agreements: Johnson’s Restrictions on Appeals of Intellectual Disabilities
Zeb Charlton, A Judicial Balancing Act: Evaluating the First Amendment Claims of Sitting Judges
Michael Figenshau, The Diminishing Dominion of Expert Opinion: Missouri’s Imposition of the Ultimate Rule Issue in Criminal Cases
Luke Hawley, Twenty-Nine Photographs and the Deterioration of the Missouri Relevance Rule
Tyler Ludwig, Out for Blood: The Expansion of Exigent Circumstances and Erosion of the Fourth Amendment
Lindsey Wilkerson, Out of ‘Site: Can Government Officials Block Their Constituents on Social Media?