Under the aegis of the MK Nambyar SAARC Law Chair in Comparative Constitutional Studies and the Constitutional Law Society at NALSAR, the Indian Journal of Constitutional Law serves as a forum for the promotion of scholarship on core and comparative constitutional law issues. The Journal strives and aims at providing a source of qualitative and well-researched scholarship to constitutional lawyers, academicians and students, while simultaneously encouraging contributions from all these quarters.
The Indian Journal of Constitutional Law is pleased to invite contributions for its 7th Issue slated to be released in July 2014. We shall be accepting original unpublished work in the fields of Constitutional and Comparative Constitutional Law and Theory. Submissions may be made in accordance with the Submission Guidelines, attached herewith
The Board also invites contributions for its blog on contemporary constitutional law and theory issues.
The last date for submissions is the 28th February, 2014.
For contributions and other related queries, you can contact us at ijcl.cls@gmail.com
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.
Summary: The persistent intrusion of work into personal time not only erodes an individual’s temporal boundaries, but also puts to test the inadequacies of the existing labour safeguards...
Summary: This article examines the discriminatory framework of the Maternity Benefit Act, 1961 which grants maternity leave to adoptive mothers only when the adopted child is below three months of...
Summary: This article examines the discriminatory framework of the Maternity Benefit Act, 1961 which grants maternity leave to adoptive mothers only when the adopted child is below three months of...
What happens when a Constitution promises rights, but the systems built around it keep concentrating power? In this episode, LAOT host Arnav Mathur speaks with constitutional scholar Dr...
In this article, the authors examine whether the Indian Space Research Organisation qualifies as an industry under the Industrial Disputes Act 1947. They argue that space exploration in India...
The Law and Other Things Blog (LAOT), in collaboration with the Community for the Eradication of Discrimination in Education and Employment (CEDE), is inviting applications for the position of Legal...
Who can contribute the constitution law. What Identity does it require?
Lawyers, academicians and students can contribute to this indian constitutional journal.