Call for Papers - Vol 30 No 79 Utrecht Journal of International - TopicsExpress



          

Call for Papers - Vol 30 No 79 Utrecht Journal of International and European Law is issuing a Call for Papers to be published in its forthcoming general edition on International and European Law. The Board of Editors of Utrecht Journal invites submissions addressing any aspect of International and European law; topics may include, but are not limited to, International and European Human Rights Law, International and European Criminal Law, Family Law, Health and Medical Law, Childrens Rights and the Law, Commercial Law, Media Law, Law of Democracy, Intellectual Property Law, Taxation, Comparative Law, Competition Law, Employment Law, Law of the Sea, Environmental Law, Indigenous Peoples, Land and Resources Law, Alternative Dispute Resolution or any other relevant topic. Authors are invited to address questions and issues arising from the specific area of law relating to their topic. All types of manuscripts, from socio-legal to comparative law papers, will be considered for publication. Authors may be graduate students, PhD-students, post-graduates, professors or university lecturers. Utrecht Journal will select articles based on quality of research and writing, diversity, and relevance of topic. Prospective articles should be submitted online via our website utrechtjournal.org/about/submissions) and should conform to the Oxford Standard for the Citation of Legal Authorities. Utrecht Journal has a word limit of 15,000 words including footnotes. For further information please consult our website or email us at [email protected]. Deadline for Submissions: 30 March 2014 Author guidelines and more information can be found on utrechtjournal.org. Only submissions made through our website will be taken into consideration. Utrecht Journal is the student-led, peer-reviewed biannual law journal of Urios Study Association for International and European Law. The Journal was founded in 1981 as Merkourios. In 2013, the Board of Editors changed it to its current name. In the years since 1981, Utrecht Journal has expanded its readership and is now distributed all over the world through databases such as HeinOnline and the Directory of Open Access Journals.
Posted on: Mon, 20 Jan 2014 22:03:32 +0000

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