Browse Journals and Peer-Reviewed Series

Hamline University formerly offered a School of Law. Please visit the Mitchell Hamline School of Law

Hamline Law Review (School of Law (historic))

Hamline School of Law combined with William Mitchell College of Law in 2015 to form Mitchell Hamline School of Law. This page serves as an archive of the journal edited by Hamline School of Law students. Mitchell-Hamline maintains its own institutional repository called Mitchell Hamline Open Access.

Hamline Law Review Is a student managed and operated publication of the Hamline University School of Law in Saint Paul, Minnesota. We are dedicated to providing a forum for legal professionals, academics, and students to discuss contemporary legal issues. We are the flagship academic journal of the School of Law at Hamline University, St. Paul, Minnesota. The law review is published three times annually by the students of Hamline University School of Law. The Hamline Law Review was established in 1978. Today, it is in the top 20% of the Most Cited Law Reviews (tied with Energy Law Review at #379), based upon the number of times its articles have been cited by other journals.

Journal of Public Law and Policy (School of Law (historic))

Welcome to Journal of Public Law and Policy website. The Mitchell Hamline Journal of Public Law and Policy is a student-run organization devoted to the discussion and analysis of contemporary legal and public policy issues. The Journal provides a forum for both students and the legal community to engage in scholarly thought, analysis, and writing on a wide range of ideas affecting national and international policy.

See the Aims and Scope for a complete coverage of the journal.

Journal of Scriptural Reasoning

ISSN 1551-3432

This is introductory text.

The Mahle Lectures Journal

ISSN 2997-0172

Editor

Rev. Dr. Kelly Figueroa-Ray,
Hamline University Chaplain and Director of the Wesley Center
The Mahle Lectures Journal is an archival publication of Hamline University's annual Mahle Lecture established in 2009 by the Stephen and Kathi Austin Mahle Endowed Fund on Progressive Christian Thought. After 15 years of lectures, the establishment of this journal in 2024, as a repository of lived theological reflection, supports the effort of Hamline University toward exploring and articulating contemporary forms of progressive theology and its relationship to the rest of the multi-faith community. Each issue will include a introduction to the theme and central content from the annual events will be published here in order to provide the Hamline community, and beyond theological resources and opportunities to reflect on the place of faith and spirituality in personal, social, political, and economic life.

See the Aims and Scope for a complete coverage of the journal.