Cardozo Arts & Entertainment Law Journal
Since 1982, the Cardozo Arts & Entertainment Law Journal (AELJ) has been a leader in national and international legal scholarship. For nearly four decades, AELJ has routinely published timely and influential legal analyses across a wide range of subjects, including arts, entertainment, intellectual property, First Amendment, sports, fashion, cyberlaw, and media and telecommunications law.
AELJ has earned recognition from legal scholars, academics, practitioners, and members of the judiciary in the United States and abroad for its scholarly impact. The Journal publishes three student-edited issues annually, continuing its longstanding commitment to advancing thoughtful research and discourse in its field.
Current Issue: Volume 43, Issue 3 (2025)
"Be Thankful I Don't Take It All ('Cause I'm the Taxman)": Music Transactions, Catalog Sales, and Tax Treatment
Hannah M. Bartfield
Duped: The Implications of The Proliferaiton of Superfake Luxury Goods and What Consumers May Not Have Considered
Riann Colbert