Call for Papers: The
National Law School of India Review
About NLSIR
The National Law School of India Review (NLSIR) is
now accepting submissions for its upcoming issue – Volume 32(1). The NLSIR is
the flagship law review of the National Law School of India University,
Bangalore, India. The NLSIR is a bi-annual, student edited, peer-reviewed law
journal providing incisive legal scholarship on issues that are at the
forefront of contemporary legal discourse. In the past 31 years, the NLSIR has
regularly featured articles authored by judges of the Indian Supreme Court,
senior counsels practicing at the Indian bar, and several renowned academics
from national and foreign universities.
The most recent volume of the NLSIR, Vol. 31, will
feature contributions by Professor Anthony Cassimatis (TC Beirne School of Law,
Australia), Professor
Philippe Cullet (School of Oriental and African Studies, London) and Professor Kalpana Kannabiran (Council for
Social Development, Hyderabad), among several others. Moreover, NLSIR has the
distinction of being cited twice by the Supreme Court of India, with the latest
one in the landmark judgment in Justice K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union
of India. NLSIR has also recently been cited in Justice R. S. Bachawat’s Law of Arbitration and Conciliation, a leading treatise on arbitration
law in India.
Submission Categories
Submissions are accepted for the following
categories:
- Long Articles: Between
5,000 and 10,000 words. Papers in this category are expected to engage
with the theme and literature comprehensively, and offer an innovative
reassessment of the current understanding of that theme. It is advisable,
though not necessary, to choose a theme that is of contemporary
importance. Purely theoretical pieces are also welcome.
- Essays: Between
3,000 and 5,000 words. Essays are far more concise in scope. These papers
usually deal with a very specific issue and argue that the issue must be
conceptualized differently. They are more engaging and make a more easily identifiable,
concrete argument.
- Book Reviews:
Between 2,000 to 3,000 words.
- Case Notes and Legislative Comments: Between 1,500 and 2,500 words. This is an analysis of any
contemporary judicial pronouncement or a new piece of legislation whether
in India or elsewhere. The note must identify and examine the line of
cases in which the decision in question came about and comment on
implications for the evolution of that branch of law. In case of
legislative comment, the note must analyze the objective of the legislation
and the legal impact the same is expected to have.
All word limits are exclusive of
footnotes. The journal is flexible regarding the word count depending on the
quality of the submission. Pieces in any of the above categories with relevance
to India or Indian law are particularly welcome. This, however, is not a
pre-requisite.
Formatting and Citation
Guidelines
The body of the manuscript should be in Times New
Roman, font size 12 with 1.5 line spacing. The footnotes should be in Times New
Roman, font size 10 with single line spacing.
The manuscript should contain only footnotes (and
not end notes) as a method of citation. Citations must conform to OSCOLA (Oxford University Standard for the
Citation of Legal Authorities) (4th edn.) style of citation.
How to submit?
The NLSIR only accepts electronic submissions. Submissions
may be emailed to mail.nlsir@gmail.com under the subject heading “32(1) NLSIR - Submission”. All submissions must contain the following:
- The
manuscript in .doc or .docx format. The manuscript should not contain the
name of the author or his/her institutional affiliation or any other
identification mark.
- A separate
cover letter in .doc or .docx format containing the name of the author,
professional information, the title of the manuscript, and contact
information.
- An
abstract of not more than 150 words.
NLSIR is accepting submissions on a rolling basis.
NLSIR shall shortly release a call for papers for
Volume 32(2). This volume is based on the theme of our Annual Symposium.
More Information
Subscribe to the NLSIR
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