Call for Papers for Isareal Law Review ; Submission on Rolling Basis

About the Journal

The Isareal Law Review invites submissions on areas of interest in human rights, international and public law.

The Israel Law Review is a double-blind peer reviewed journal established in 1966, published by Cambridge University Press under the auspices and management of the Minerva Center for Human Rights at the Law Faculty of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Under this stewardship, it focuses on scholarship in the fields of human rights, public law and international law. The Chief editors of the journal are Prof. Sir Nigel Rodley, University of Essex, UK, and Prof. Yuval Shany, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel. Issues of recent years have featured contributions by prominent scholars such as Martti Koskenniemi, Lech Garlicki, David Kretzmer, Kenneth Watkin, Yuval Shany and Mark Tushnet.

The journal publishes articles, shorter pieces addressing topical issues under the rubric of ‘opposing views’, as well as book reviews and review essays. We aim to present scholarship that is representative in terms of gender, geographical distribution and viewpoint. We accept submissions on a rolling basis.

Submission Guidelines

(a) Given that the Israel Law Review operates a double blind review procedure, all submissions
should aim to exclude anything that may explicitly or implicitly identify the author(s). This
means that all potentially identifying information – such as acknowledgements, websites,
names of colleagues or institutions – should be omitted from the manuscript at the submission
stage.
(b) A title page, as a separate document, should be provided with the following information:
 the full title of the manuscript;
 full names, academic rank and current institutional affiliation for all authors in the order in
which their names should appear;
 full contact details;
 any acknowledgements and the author’s email address to be included in the introductory
footnote on the opening page; and
 word count (including footnotes).
(c) The text should be in 1.5 line spacing in a font no smaller than 12 points, with pages numbered consecutively.

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