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At the height of the political turmoil of the late 1960s, a group of
activist students and professors at N.Y.U. School of Law came together
and discussed the ways in which legal scholarship could respond to the
injustices suffered by those relegated to society's margins. These students
and faculty felt that the dominant legal discourse found in countless
law reviews failed to address sufficiently the gross inequities that existed
(and continue to exist) along the lines of race, gender, class, sexuality,
age, and ability.
The response of these students and academics was to establish the N.Y.U.
Review of Law & Social Change. As the foreword to the first issue
states, Social Change was "created to provide an outlet for student
scholarship and analysis in areas of the law of particular interest to
socially concerned attorneys." That first issue contained four student-written
articles, the commitments of the authors reflected in their topics: ineffective
assistance of counsel for the poor, tactics for squatters in abandoned
New York City buildings, reformation of laws regarding retaliatory evictions,
and the legality of maximum grant regulations for welfare recipients.
As stated in the foreword to that first issue, the founding members of
Social Change sought to "provide a forum for law students at New
York University, and perhaps others, who are anxious to develop creative
solutions through law to social problems." Over the past thirty years,
Social Change has remained true to that commitment, while growing in scope
and stature. Originally an annual publication, Social Change now publishes
four issues per year. In addition to publishing the work of N.Y.U. students,
we also now publish articles by nationally recognized scholars, legal
practitioners, and activists.
Social Change also provides a space in which members of the law school
community can come together to socialize, network, and organize. A variety
of progressive student groups use Social Change as everything from a home-base
to a storage facility. On any given day in our offices you may see students
wrapping presents for a gift drive, organizing a public service auction,
planning a sit-in, making posters for a protest, or drafting a habeas
petition for a client.
We at Social Change are proud of who we are and what we do. If you have
any questions or comments, please feel free to contact us.

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