Osgoode Publishes Supreme Court Law Review Online
Finally, after a decade of exclusively print publication, a portion of the Supreme Court Law Review is available free and online. Each year for the past fifteen years, Osgoode Hall Law School has held a Constitutional Cases conference, the output of which is published in the SCLR. Now, thanks to the efforts of Jamie Cameron and others at York University, the broader community will have access to the more than 200 articles by constitutional scholars and litigation experts. As well, LexisNexis, publishers of the print SCLR, are to be congratulated for giving their permission and support to the project.
The journal web page has a search function, of course. And you’re able to browse by issue, author or title. Results present an abstract and a link to the article in PDF.
This is a very happy development indeed.


Advanced search function even allows full text searching! https://pi.library.yorku.ca/ojs/index.php/sclr/search
Thank you Simon for helping us get the word out. For professors especially, who might be interested in sharing some of these pieces with their students.
This is wonderful news! Thank you for sharing, and thanks to Osgoode and York. I will be sure to stop by the LexisNexis booth here at the CALL-ACBD conference to thank them personally also.
Every month or so a student or faculty member asks me whether electronic access to SCLR exists for an article. I refer back to Simon’s post about this from some time ago, I check to see if it’s in the small window of PDFs I can access via Osgoode’s site, and then usually say “no; it’s upstairs in print.” This will be welcome information.