The Universal Law Journal is Here.
CiteLaw Trails is a new era in legal scholarship. Trails is the first journal where the legal community, not a select group of editors, picks the articles for each Volume.
How it works: CiteLaw users submit their articles for free on the
@JoshuaLenon
Joshua, we couldn't agree more. We created CiteLaw to provide a platform for legal professionals to discuss the law and bring about change. Please check us out at !
@espinsegall
Eric, we completely agree. That's why we developed CiteLaw, a dedicated social media platform for legal discussions, featuring the first-ever community-driven law journal. We believe the legal community should determine what work gets published, rather than a select group of
X has become a popular hub for legal discussions (and recently arguments), but the nature of the platform often leads to personal attacks rather than constructive debate. That's why we created CiteLaw: a space dedicated to fostering thoughtful and intelligent legal discussions.
Read the latest on CiteLaw Trails:
"Toward a Tort Law Framework for Mitigating Catastrophic AI Risk" by
@gabriel_weil
Exploring how Tort Law may be used to compensate-or even prevent-potentially catastrophic damage caused by runaway AI.
Check it out @
Check out the latest CiteLaw Trails upload, "Dissecting the Frog: How a Meme Explains the Westlaw/Lexis Divide" by
@SamWill87352910
. The article explores how a legal meme of the controversial Olympic "Last Supper" recreation offers deep insights into the contrasts between Westlaw
THE UNIVERSAL LAW JOURNAL HAS ARRIVED --
is already the world's best free legal database of millions of Bluebook-perfect case, journal, and website citations, and where you can make your own with just a few clicks.
Now, CiteLaw Trails is your new home
Don’t miss out on 🔥🔥 new CiteLaw Trails upload, "The Importance of Cross-Functional Teams in Legal Technology" by
@Clevy_law
. The article explores cross-functional teams and collaboration in legal technology. Check it out at -
The legal world moves slowly—and then all at once. When it does, can you trust your social network?
On CiteLaw Trails, users are verified based on their institution and position, so you can be sure your time is spent reading accurate, researched, and relevant information.
Explore the newest addition to CiteLaw Trails, "Congressional Guesswork and the Separation of Powers" by
@isaac_park
about how Congress can interpret Section Five of the Fourteenth Amendment to address open constitutional questions. Check it out @
@CJFoxLaw
@LpcProf
@AmULRev
This is great! And, if your article isn’t selected, consider uploading it to CiteLaw, where others can instantly read, react (affirm/dissent) and comment to continue the discussion! Check it out free today at
@BradMossEsq
Awesome, Bradley! Please consider uploading your work to the first ever community driven law journal - . Check out our pinned post for more details!
@LWHensler3
@ScholarSift
Thanks for the question, Louis.
Our analysis of Scholar Sift shows that it is simply a platform where users can upload their work to a repository for law journals to view. It’s not a community-driven law journal, but rather a place to store work for existing traditional journals
Check out "The Protean Procurement Act" by one of our newest community members
@NotoriousJCV
. It explores the legal challenges to the contractor vaccine mandate and their impact on federal authority. He would love any comments/suggestions - link below!
Today’s Supreme Court is willing to grapple with long-standing precedent and, in many cases, overturn it.
What precedential case do you want to see overturned? Find the case, comment your thoughts, and leave your mark on it today at
@FPalmiotto
Congratulations, Francesca! Please consider uploading your work to the first ever community driven law journal - . Check out our pinned post for more details!
@msmith750
@brianlfrye
Michael, consider posting to — home to world’s first Universal Law Journal. Each quarter, the top ten most-endorsed articles are selected for publication in our free journal, CiteLaw Trails. Reach out if you have any questions!
@JudgeDillard
@orangetheory
You are off to a great start! When it gets tough in the middle of the month, remember the commitment you made today and the feeling that you will get when you achieve your goal!
@NicholasBednar
Nicholas, this is fascinating work. Consider posting your essay as a long-form “CiteLaw Trail”—each quarter, the ten most-endorsed articles (“Trails”) are published in our free to access journal. Check us out at !
@TaxLawProf
Great work, Victoria. Please consider uploading your draft to CiteLaw Trails - the Universal Law Journal. Once uploaded you can share the public link and other professionals can comment directly on it! Check out our pinned post for more details!
@WilliamBaude
@LeiderRob
William, congratulations! Please consider uploading your work to CiteLaw Trails - the Universal Law Journal.
Once uploaded you can share the public link and other professionals can comment and react (affirm or dissent) directly to it.
Check out our pinned post for more
@JacobDCharles
Jake, consider posting this on Bruen itself on CiteLaw: your thoughts on the case will be the first notes every user sees when they access the case. See Bruen at
All about the numbers - CiteLaw's My Dashboard allows you to see all your researching trends at a glance. Track case citations, journals, and more for free today at
Introducing Draft Status - designate your Trails post in one of four categories so colleagues know exactly where you are in the writing process and how they can help:
Idea: Open to Collaboration
Draft: Open to Suggestions
Complete
Forthcoming
Try it on
Read the latest on CiteLaw Trails: "The Standard Business Deduction" by
@ProfessorMcTax
Proposing the small business standard business deduction, which has recently become part of presidential candidate Kamala Harris' platform!
Check it out @
@GusHurwitz
@brianlfrye
@SSRN
Hey guys. We are offering a free alternative to Law Journals. You can now instantly publish and share your work with CiteLaw Trails. Check out our latest post and let us know if you have any feedback or features you would like to see!
Tired of paying for journal submissions or having the fate of your hard work decided by just a handful of editors? That's why we created CiteLaw Trails—the first community-driven law journal.
Together, we can revolutionize the outdated journal process to better reflect our
@ryan_dane
Ryan, we totally agree with you. That is why we created CiteLaw Trails, the first ever community driven law journal. Submission is completely free and the publication contents are decided by the community rather than just a few editors. See our pinned post for more!
Hurry! There are only 19 days left to submit your entry for consideration for publication in CiteLaw's Fall journal!
Reminder: Entries can only be endorsed by other verified users (i.e., legal scholars and practitioners), and only the top 10 most-endorsed entries will be
@mark_tottenham
@PrivateEyeNews
Mark, we would love to hear your take on — the world’s first social media site dedicated to the legal profession and scholarship.
@david__simon
David,
Consider uploading your draft to CiteLaw! There, verified legal scholars can review and comment. We even have a draft status feature allowing you to designate this as a work in progress. CiteLaw encourages collaboration and feedback so your legal scholarship is always the
THE UNIVERSAL LAW JOURNAL (TRAILS FEED UPDATE)
Introducing the new Trail feature—upload your article for free and instantly gain the attention and reach your ideas deserve, bypassing the wait for law journal editorial boards to publish your work.
Whenever a Trail document is
On Constitution Day, CiteLaw calls our attention to the tremendous scholarship fostered by this extraordinary document.
What are your thoughts on the constitutional limits of the Judicial branch?
Let us know by commenting on Marbury v. Madison at
@david__simon
David, it’s time to make the switch to CiteLaw. We are completely free-to-use and always have been. Check out over 300,000 journal articles today at