← All journals

Current Legal Problems

Oxford University Press

ABDC A
Abstract coveragesee Methodology
Recent paperssorted by most recent
PaperYearCitations
Family Law as Social Policy: Taking Family Problems Upstream
Rob George
20252 citations
Family Law for Family Life: Rethinking the Boundaries of Family Law
Leanne Smith
20251 citations
The Inconspicuous Impact of Feminist Pressure through Law
Sharon Thompson
20251 citations
Corporate Borders: A Provocation
E Tendayi Achiume
20250 citations
Accessibility and the Limits of the Equality Act 2010: Time for a UK Accessibility Act?
Anna Lawson
20250 citations
The EU and the Administration’s Unattainable Subordination to the Law
Joana Mendes
20250 citations
‘I Didn’t Know What I Was Doing!’ Not Knowing as the Grounding for Exculpation in Automatism
Bebhinn Donnelly-Lazarov
20250 citations
The Social Side of Fair Process
Joe Tomlinson
20250 citations
Not Just in Outer Space: ‘Aliens’ in Immigration and Nationality Law
Devyani Prabhat
20250 citations
Of Promulgation and Purpose: Revisiting the Hart–Fuller Debate With the Case of the Archaic Athenian Lawgiver Solon
Melissa Lane
20250 citations
Towards a Legal Theory of Price
Anna Chadwick
20250 citations
Public Land Law
Antonia Layard
20250 citations
Interpreting the Paris Agreement in its Normative Environment
Lavanya Rajamani
20248 citations
Atrocity’s Glass Booth
Neha Jain
20248 citations
Responsibly Buying Artificial Intelligence: A ‘Regulatory Hallucination’
Albert Sánchez-Graells
20247 citations
The Challenges of Designing Sexual Assault Law
Tatjana Hörnle
20244 citations
The Unseen ‘Others’: A Framework for Investor Stewardship
Dionysia Katelouzou
20243 citations
Redundancy as a Legal Strategy to Combat Corruption: Exploring the Potential of Institutional Multiplicity to Create Fail-Safe Systems
Mariana Mota Prado
20242 citations
Current Legal Fictions in Public Law
John W F Allison
20241 citations
In Memoriam: Prof. Valentine Korah
Ioannis Lianos
20240 citations

Search evidence from this journal →

Start a search

Access requires your institution's subscription. Ask your librarian →