Philippine Law Journal

Philippine Law Journal
DisciplineLaw, Legal Studies
LanguageEnglish
Publication details
History1914–present
Publisher
FrequencyQuarterly
Standard abbreviations
BluebookPhil. L.J.
ISO 4Philipp. Law J.
Indexing
ISSN0031-7721
OCLC no.1762247
Links

The Philippine Law Journal is an academic student-run law review affiliated with the UP College of Law at the University of the Philippines Diliman. Established in August 1914, the journal marked its 100th anniversary in 2014 as the oldest law review in the Philippines and the oldest English language law journal in Asia. It is managed by the editorial board, composed of select students of the University of the Philippines College of Law. The journal publishes four issues every year.

Its main office is at the Justice Alex A. Reyes Room of Malcolm Hall, University of the Philippines Diliman. The room is named after the Supreme Court Associate Justice who served as the journal's first editor.

History

Overview

The history of the journal is intertwined with the modern history of the Philippine legal system. Founded in the earlier part of the American Occupation, only three years after the University of the Philippines College of Law’s establishment in 1911, the journal served as a platform for the country's first legal scholars and luminaries to discuss highly contentious issues which would later become the foundations of our current laws and jurisprudence. Decades thereafter, the rationale behind our legal system's policy to protect indigenous people's rights sprang from theories originally presented in the journal. On several occasions, the journal advocated the advancement of reforms to the law curriculum and legal education, the formation of policies protecting academic freedom.

Inception and early years

Established in 1914 under the guidance of the UP College of Law's founder and first dean, Justice George A. Malcolm, and the law faculty, the journal was designed as a vital training tool for law students, and modeled after the student-edited law reviews of American law schools. At its inception, the journal was distinctively the only English legal publication in the Orient.

The pioneer editorial board was composed of former Associate Justice Alexander Reyes as managing editor; Paulino Gullas as business manager; and Jose A. Espiritu, Victoriano Yamzon, and Aurelio Montinola as associate editors. The inaugural issue featured a message from Justice Malcolm, which encouraged students to publish and maintain a law journal that would stimulate discourse and disseminate legal knowledge.

The journal originally published nine issues per academic year. The issues contained legal articles, comments, and case reviews. They also contained write-ups on the University of the Philippines College of Law, including its social events and co-curricular activities, and the college's alumni. Frontispieces of Supreme Court justices and prominent practitioners were also featured in the earlier issues. The issues also contained commercial advertisements in order to generate income for the operations of the journal.

Post-War publication

The journal temporarily ceased publication on several occasions, most notably during World War II. It was revived after the war with the release of Volume 22 in 1947. This volume consisted of six issues, with articles written by faculty members and law students. During this time, the students worked on assignments given by the faculty editor. The issues after the war contained annual surveys of Philippine Supreme Court decisions, case digests, recent legislation, and book reviews of local and foreign works. They also contained features on student law debates and symposia sponsored by the Order of the Purple Feather, the prestigious honor society of the College of Law.

From 1948 to 1955, journal issues were published bimonthly. In 1956, the journal published five issues. After several changes in the number of issues released, the journal, sometime in the late 1970s, adopted a policy of quarterly publication or four issues in an academic year. Student editorial boards were likewise given greater freedom and independence with the abolition of the post of faculty editor, which was replaced by a faculty adviser. Beginning this period, the issues generally contained legal articles, notes, comments, and book reviews mostly written by members of the judiciary, law professors, legal practitioners, and law students.

Impelled by the activism of the Journal's editors and its student and faculty contributors, articles prominently published in the late 1970s and the 1980s included those on native titles, indigenous peoples’ rights, pre-Hispanic legal systems, and academic freedom. In these areas, the Journal became an important resource, and was cited in the deliberations of the 1986 Constitutional Commission which drafted the Philippines’ present charter.

In 1990, the journal saw, for the first time, the publication of articles written in Filipino, the national language. In the 2000s, the journal published special issues on topics including Gender Rights, Environmental Law, Law & Economics, the Administration of Criminal Justice, and the Supreme Court, among others.

Recent history

In 2010, at the height of the disciplinary proceedings against the 37 faculty members of the College of Law who publicly spoke against the alleged plagiarism in Vinuya v. Executive Secretary,[1] the journal released a strong statement on defending legal scholarship.

While issues of the journal were, by then, available on the Internet for some time, in 2012 and 2013, a major push towards digitalization was made with the re-launch of the PLJ Website, containing an extensive archive of the Journal's published volumes. The ten-year digitalization project was heavily supported by Senior Associate Justice Antonio T. Carpio, who also sponsored the Special Maritime Issue of the journal, a continuing digital issue of the publication devoted to maritime law issues, particularly those surrounding the competing claims on the West Philippine Sea.

In 2014, the Centennial Year of the Journal, the publication was made available on HeinOnline, one of the world's biggest legal research services—a first for a Philippine law review—through the efforts of the College of Law and the UP Law Library.[2]

Editors

The journal is edited by a board of student editors under the supervision of a faculty adviser. A new board composed of sophomore, junior and senior students of the College of Law is formed annually, following a competitive examination graded by a committee of faculty members.

In its early years, members of the board were selected based on academic performance. The board composition varied according to the needs in a particular academic year. At that time, there was no chairperson. That position was created only in 1935, with Enrique Fernando being appointed as chairperson. Today, the members are selected on the basis of competitive examinations and academic qualifications. Until 2014, the board was composed of only eight members: a chair, vice-chair, and six editors. The number of editors was raised to eight in 2014. The students who rank first and second in the examinations serve as the chair and vice-chair, respectively.[2]

The issues of the journal are distributed to various legal and educational institutions in the Philippines and abroad, including the United States, Canada, England, Germany, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Belgium, Spain, Australia, Japan, India, China, Malaysia, South Africa, Argentina, Puerto Rico, Mexico, Colombia, Venezuela, and Brazil. The journal also maintains exchange arrangements with other law reviews, both domestic and foreign.[2]

Contents

The journal publishes articles and notes on various legal topics within the Philippine legal context. These articles are written by law students, faculty members, legal professionals, and members of the judiciary, including the Philippine Supreme Court. On occasion, the journal publishes articles written by non-Filipino members of the legal community. The articles are selected and edited by the members of the editorial board.

Citations

Articles published in the journal have been cited in numerous decisions of the Philippine Supreme Court, including:

  • Theodore O. Te, Stare (In)Decisis: Reflections on Judicial Flip-flopping in League of Cities v. Comelec and Navarro v. Ermita, 85 Phil. L.J. 784 (2011), cited in Fetalino v. Commission on Elections (2012)[3]
  • Florentino P. Feliciano, "Deconstruction of Constitutional Limitations and the Tariff Regime of the Philippines: The Strange Persistence of a Martial Law Syndrome," 84 Phil. L.J. 311 (2009), cited in BOCEA v. Teves (2011)[4]
  • Serafin P. Hilado, A Comparative Study of the Adoption Law under the Spanish Civil Code and the Code of Civil Procedure, 4 Phil. L.J. 313 (1918), cited in Lahom v. Sibulo (2003)[5]
  • Numeriano Rodriguez, Jr., Structural Analysis of the 1973 Constitution, 57 Phil. L.J. 104 (1982), cited in Francisco v. House of Representatives (2003)[6]
  • Hector Martinez, The High and Impregnable Wall of Separation Between Church and State, 37 Phil. L. J. 748 (1962), cited in Estrada v. Escritor (2003)[7]
  • Irene Cortes, Redress of Grievances and the Philippine Ombudsman (Tanodbayan), 57 Phil. L. J. 1 (1982), cited in Uy v. Sandiganbayan (2001)[8]
  • Tuason, A Commitment to Official Integrity (Background, Rationale and Explanation of Article XIII, Sandiganbayan and Tanodbayan), 48 Phil. L.J. 548 (1973), cited in Uy v. Sandiganbayan (2001)[8]
  • Owen J. Lynch, Jr., The Philippine Colonial Dichotomy: Attraction and Disenfranchisement, 63 Phil. L. J. 139 (1988), cited in Cruz v. Secretary of Environment and Natural Resources (2000)[9]
  • Owen J. Lynch, Jr., Invisible Peoples and a Hidden Agenda: The Origins of Contemporary Philippine Land Laws (1900-1913), 63 Phil. L.J. 249 (1988), cited in Cruz.
  • Owen J. Lynch, Jr., Legal Bases of Philippine Colonial Sovereignty: An Inquiry, 62 Phil. L.J. 279 (1987), cited in Cruz.
  • Owen J. Lynch, Jr., Land Rights, Land Laws and Land Usurpation: The Spanish Era (1568-1898), 63 P.L.J. 82 (1988), cited in Cruz.
  • Owen J. Lynch, Jr., Native Title, Private Right and Tribal Land Law, 57 Phil. L.J. 268 (1982), cited in Cruz.[10]
  • Ma. Lourdes Aranal-Sereno & Roan Libarios, The Interface Between National Land Law and Kalinga Land Law, 58 Phil. L.J. 420 (1983), cited in Cruz.

Alumni editors

More than a thousand former students and faculty members of the University of the Philippines College of Law have sat in either student or faculty editorial boards. Following contemporaneous law review tradition, the journal was likewise designed to be a training ground for legal scholars and practitioners of law. Many alumni editors have played important roles in shaping Philippine law, jurisprudence, and society, through their leadership in the judiciary, the government service, the academe, and the legal profession, both in the Philippines and abroad.[11] This is a list of notable editors. For a list of notable University of the Philippines College of Law graduates, see List of University of the Philippines College of Law alumni.

Judiciary

Chief Justices

Associate Justices

Politics

Executive

Legislative

Constitutional Commission and other bodies

References

  1. ^ "G.R. No. 162230". www.sc.judiciary.gov.ph. April 2010. Archived from the original on 2012-05-06. Retrieved 2014-11-19.
  2. ^ a b c "Philippine Law Journal Online".
  3. ^ "G.R. No. 191890". www.lawphil.net.
  4. ^ "G.R. No. 181704". www.lawphil.net.
  5. ^ "G.R. No. 143989". www.lawphil.net.
  6. ^ "G.R. No. 160261". www.lawphil.net.
  7. ^ "A.M. No. P-02-1651". www.lawphil.net.
  8. ^ a b "G.R. Nos. 105965-70". www.lawphil.net.
  9. ^ "G.R. No. 135385". www.lawphil.net.
  10. ^ Allan Chester Nadate, Constitutional Redemption and the Recognition of Indigenous Peoples Rights in a Transplanted Charter, 88 Phil. L. J. 640 (2014)
  11. ^ Philippine Law Journal, "Centennial Celebrations Souvenir Program (2014), p. 11"