Stanford Law Review
Impact Factor & Key Scientometrics

Stanford Law Review
Overview

Impact Factor

4.29

H Index

80

Impact Factor

1.786

I. Basic Journal Info

Country

United States
Journal ISSN: 389765
Publisher: Stanford Law Review
History: 1974-1976, 1978-1979, 1987-1994, 1996-ongoing
Journal Hompage: Link
How to Get Published:

Research Categories

Scope/Description:

The Stanford Law Review Online was founded in 2011 to supplement to the Law Review’s print editions with short, accessible, and timely pieces of legal scholarship.To this day, the Law Review has two principal functions: to educate and foster intellectual discourse among the student membership and to contribute to legal scholarship by addressing important legal and social issues. It serves these dual functions each year through the publication of one print volume with six separate issues—published once a month from January through June. These issues contain original scholarship by, among others, Law Review members, other Stanford Law School students, professors, judges, and practicing attorneys.The Law Review is operated entirely by Stanford Law School students and is fully independent of faculty and administration review or supervision. Student Law Review editors select, edit, and publish articles and notes on the cutting edge of legal scholarship. They are trained to critically and comprehensively evaluate submissions. Through a team-editing process, they address each piece’s analysis, writing style, research, organization, and accuracy and work closely with authors to improve their work. In addition, student authors who submit notes for publication receive extensive editorial assistance.

II. Science Citation Report (SCR)



Stanford Law Review
SCR Impact Factor

Stanford Law Review
SCR Journal Ranking

Stanford Law Review
SCImago SJR Rank

SCImago Journal Rank (SJR indicator) is a measure of scientific influence of scholarly journals that accounts for both the number of citations received by a journal and the importance or prestige of the journals where such citations come from.

0.671

Stanford Law Review
Scopus 2-Year Impact Factor Trend

Note: impact factor data for reference only

Stanford Law Review
Scopus 3-Year Impact Factor Trend

Note: impact factor data for reference only

Stanford Law Review
Scopus 4-Year Impact Factor Trend

Note: impact factor data for reference only

Stanford Law Review
Impact Factor History

2-year 3-year 4-year
  • 2023 Impact Factor
    #N/A #N/A #N/A
  • 2022 Impact Factor
    1.54 1.776 1.552
  • 2021 Impact Factor
    1.786 1.625 1.435
  • 2020 Impact Factor
    1.855 1.697 1.762
  • 2019 Impact Factor
    1.579 1.459 1.588
  • 2018 Impact Factor
    2.396 1.98 2.183
  • 2017 Impact Factor
    3.067 3.134 3.279
  • 2016 Impact Factor
    3.523 3 2.939
  • 2015 Impact Factor
    3.438 2.782 2.688
  • 2014 Impact Factor
    2.529 NA NA
  • 2013 Impact Factor
    3.093 NA NA
  • 2012 Impact Factor
    4.174 NA NA
  • 2011 Impact Factor
    2.54 NA NA
  • 2010 Impact Factor
    2.063 NA NA
  • 2009 Impact Factor
    1.59 NA NA
  • 2008 Impact Factor
    0.743 NA NA
  • 2007 Impact Factor
    0.448 NA NA
  • 2006 Impact Factor
    0.522 NA NA
  • 2005 Impact Factor
    1.053 NA NA
  • 2004 Impact Factor
    0.686 NA NA
  • 2003 Impact Factor
    0.369 NA NA
  • 2002 Impact Factor
    0.667 NA NA
  • 2001 Impact Factor
    0.872 NA NA
  • 2000 Impact Factor
    0.764 NA NA
Note: impact factor data for reference only

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Impact Factor

Impact factor (IF) is a scientometric factor based on the yearly average number of citations on articles published by a particular journal in the last two years. A journal impact factor is frequently used as a proxy for the relative importance of a journal within its field. Find out more: What is a good impact factor?


III. Other Science Influence Indicators

Any impact factor or scientometric indicator alone will not give you the full picture of a science journal. There are also other factors such as H-Index, Self-Citation Ratio, SJR, SNIP, etc. Researchers may also consider the practical aspect of a journal such as publication fees, acceptance rate, review speed. (Learn More)

Stanford Law Review
H-Index

The h-index is an author-level metric that attempts to measure both the productivity and citation impact of the publications of a scientist or scholar. The index is based on the set of the scientist's most cited papers and the number of citations that they have received in other publications

80

Stanford Law Review
H-Index History