International Journal of Human Rights and Constitutional Studies (IJHRCS) is a journal based on an independent academic synergy of more than forty academics, experts in the field of human rights and governance from all over the world. Over the past two years it has foster the academic dialogue concerning all the modern subject of constitutional law and human rights protection from a global perspective. It had provided novel and original material in the fields of current economic and political crises, globalised democratic governance, human rights public policies, the theory and philosophy of rights, comparative constitutional law and methodology of law. The IJHRCS is an indexed by citation journal open especially to young researchers.
International Journal of Human Rights and Constitutional Studies issues an open call to young academics and researchers on the following topics:
· International constitutional law
· International human rights protection
· Comparative constitutional law
· Constitutional theory and policy
· Theory of rights
· Philosophy of rights
· Globalisation and governance
· Constitutional rights, constitutional freedoms
· Methodology of law
· Constitutional politics
· EU constitutionalisation
· Migration and multiculturalism
· Democratic deficit theory
· Political parties and elections
· Digital participation, e-democracy, e-governance
For information and questions you can contact the Chief Editor of the Journal at[email protected] (Ms Christina Akrivopoulou, PhD Constitutional Law AUTH, Greek Refugee Appeals Authority)
Professor Tarunabh Khaitan is a Professor of Public Law & Legal Theory and the Vice Dean at the Faculty of Law, Oxford. He is also a Professor and Future Fellow at Melbourne Law School. He is the founding General Editor of the Indian Law Review and the founder & Chief Advisor of the Junior Faculty Forum for Indian Law Teachers.
A mass movement led by students has ushered in a new dawn in Bangladesh. What began as a claim for reform of the quota system transformed into a national movement to oust Bangladesh’s long-standing...
A mass movement led by students has ushered in a new dawn in Bangladesh. What began as a claim for reform of the quota system transformed into a national movement to oust Bangladesh’s long standing...
A mass movement led by students has ushered in a new dawn in Bangladesh. What began as a claim for reform of the quota system transformed into a national movement to oust Bangladesh’s long-standing...
A fortnightly feature inspired by I-CONnects weekly What’s New in Public Law feature that addresses the lacuna of a one-stop-shop public law newsletter in the Indian legal space. What’s new at...
[As part of our New Scholarship section, we have been inviting discussants to respond to the public law-themed articles featured in Volume 5 the Indian Law Review. You can access all the posts in...