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Request for Submissions
Harvard/Stanford/Yale Junior Faculty Forum
May 21-22, Yale Law School
Harvard,
Stanford, and Yale Law Schools are soliciting submissions for the 2026
Harvard/Stanford/Yale Junior Faculty Forum, to be held at Yale Law School on May
21-22, 2026. Ten to fifteen junior scholars (with one to seven years of
teaching experience) will be chosen, through a double-blind selection process,
to present their work at the Forum. A jury of accomplished scholars will choose
the papers to be presented. A senior scholar will comment on each paper. The
audience will include the participating junior faculty, senior faculty from the
host institutions, and any invited guests. There is no publication commitment.
Yale Law School will pay presenters’ travel expenses, though international
flights may be only partially reimbursed.
The goal of the
Forum is to promote in-depth discussion about particular papers and more
general reflections on broader methodological issues, as well as to foster a
stronger sense of community among American legal scholars, particularly by
strengthening ties between new and veteran professors.
TOPICS: Each year,
the Forum invites submissions on selected topics in public and private law,
legal theory, and law and humanities topics, alternating loosely between public
law and humanities subjects in one year, and private law and dispute resolution
in the next. For the upcoming 2026 meeting, the topics will cover these areas
of the law:
Antitrust
Bankruptcy
Civil Litigation
and Dispute Resolution
Contracts and
Commercial Law
Corporate and
Securities Law
Intellectual
Property
Private Law
Theory and Comparative Private Law
Property,
Estates, and Unjust Enrichment
Taxation
Torts
QUALIFICATIONS: Authors
who teach law in the U.S. in a tenured or tenure-track position and have not
been teaching at either of those ranks for a total of more than seven years are
eligible to submit their work. American citizens or permanent residents
teaching abroad are also eligible, provided that they have held a faculty
position or the equivalent, including positions comparable to junior faculty
positions in research institutions, for not more than seven years, and that
they earned their last degree after 2016. Authors must be qualified as of the
date of submission. We accept jointly authored submissions, but each of the
coauthors must meet the qualification requirements. Papers that will be
published prior to the Forum are not eligible. There is no limit on the number
of submissions by any individual author. Faculty from Harvard, Stanford, and
Yale Law Schools are not eligible.
PAPER
SUBMISSION PROCEDURE: Please use the following form to submit: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSeE-Y1decyDrkmejVoztM2oPI3MrLfxdP3kCT500H1TwUBiMg/viewform?usp=header. The deadline for submissions is February 20,
2026. Remove all references to the author(s) in the paper. The form will ask for the title of your paper; under which
topic your paper falls; an affirmation that your paper satisfies the
non-publication qualification above; and the year in which you began teaching
in one of the qualifying positions above. Each paper may only be considered
under one topic. Any inquiries about the form should be directed to Christine
Jolls.
FURTHER
INFORMATION: General inquiries concerning the Forum should be sent to Christine
Jolls (christine.jolls@yale.edu)
at Yale Law School, Norman Spaulding (nspaulding@stanford.law.edu) at
Stanford Law School, or Rebecca Tushnet (rtushnet@law.harvard.edu) at Harvard
Law School.
Christine Jolls
Norman Spaulding
Rebecca Tushnet
from Blogger http://tushnet.blogspot.com/2026/01/cfp-yaleharvardstanford-junior-faculty.html