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Publication year | 2016 |
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General Information. Mercer Law Review is edited and published by students of the Mercer University School of Law. Mercer Law Review was founded in 1949. It is the oldest continually published law review in Georgia.
Issues. Mercer Law Review (ISSN 0025-987X) is published four times a year: Annual Survey of Georgia Law (Fall), Articles (Winter), Lead Articles (Spring), and Annual Eleventh Circuit Survey (Summer). The issues appear, respectively, in January, March, May, and July. Copies are available at $15.00 for survey volumes and $15.00 for Leads and Articles volumes.
Indices. Each issue of the Mercer Law Review contains a table of cases. A full index of each volume (all four issues) is published in the Annual Eleventh Circuit Survey. A cumulative index for volumes I through LVI has been published. Copies are available at a cost of $30.00 each.
Subscriptions. Annual subscriptions are available to all four issues ($40.00), to the Annual Survey of Georgia Law ($15.00), to the Annual Eleventh Circuit Survey ($15.00), and to both Survey issues ($30.00). Subscriptions are payable in advance and are renewed automatically unless notice to the contrary is received by August 1st. Single copies of the Lead and Articles issues are available at $15.00 each. Subscriptions to only the Lead and Articles issues are not available. Single copies of the Survey issues are available at $15.00 each; orders must be clearly marked "Single Copy." Georgia residents should add the appropriate state, local, and special district taxes. All domestic subscriptions are sent via periodicals mail. Foreign subscriptions are sent via surface mail. Subscribe online at http://www.law.mercer.edu/academics/lawreview/subscribe.cfm
Back Issues, Reprints, and Microfilm. For back stock, reprints, or microfilm of Mercer Law Review, contact: William S. Hein & Co., Inc., 1285 Main Street, Buffalo, NY 14209 or call (800) 828-7571 or (716) 882-2600.
Missing and Imperfect Copies. Replacement copies will be sent to subscribers who report missing or imperfect copies of Mercer Law Review within six months of the publication date. Mercer Law Review regrets that it cannot replace copies not reported missing or imperfect within six months of publication.
Correspondence. Unless indicated...
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