Posted by Eugene Volokh:
Virginia Law Review:

   Many law reviews these days are trying to limit the free availability
   of the articles they publish, since that gets them more money from
   WESTLAW, LEXIS, and HeinOnline.

   The Virginia Law Review is doing better: It's making all its new
   articles (from 2004 on) [1]available for free (and google-findable) on
   its Web site. Law reviews are nonprofit institutions, dedicated to the
   spread of legal knowledge (and in the process helping educate the
   students, and get them better credentials). Editors should want to get
   more readers -- and thus make their hard work yield more benefit --
   and not more dollars.

   Journals need money to operate, but my sense is that they generally
   get an adequate amount from a combination of law school subsidies and
   subscription revenues. (Not a princely amount, but they're not
   supposed to get a princely amount.) If they can afford it, and I think
   most journals can, they should follow the Virginia's lead.

References

   1. http://virginialawreview.org/

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