Editorial An embarrassment of riches Elaine Hall Northumbria University, UK Elaine.Hall@northumbria.ac.uk This edition is so full of good things and arrives alongside the fantastic bounty of the joint IJCLE-CLEO-ENCLE conference (follow this link to find out the details of papers and later, to view presentations) that I am going to renege on my promise in the last edition to provide more editorial content. I will simply urge you to feast on · Recipes for mapping legal need from Richard Owen · Sustaining data on the student experience of pro bono from Paul McKeown · A palate cleansing look at the European Clinical literature from Rachel Dunn · A seven course banquet of Streetlaw pedagogy from Seán Arthurs, Melinda Cooperman, Jessica Gallagher, Freda Grealy, John Lunney, Rob Marrs and Richard Roe · Rich reflections from the development of clinic from Stefan Kreiger, Veronika Tomoskova and Maxim Tomoszek · and just when you thought your appetite was sated, a tempting review of Research Methods in Human Rights: a Handbook by Christopher Morris. Next edition will see the return of ‘archive dive’ in November – unless the flow of clinical scholarship continues at its current rate and we need to have an extra edition in September. Meanwhile, I look forward to meeting those clinicians who are able to come to Newcastle for the conference and encourage those of you who can’t be there to follow us on twitter (@ijcle #IJCLE17). One final piece of exciting news, the 2018 IJCLE conference will take place in Hong Kong in collaboration with the Faculty of Law at the Chinese University of Hong Kong – more details soon! 1