Arizona State Law Review Submissions

If you are a professor, law student or practitioner working in the sports and entertainment industry, we are also happy to receive contributions to our blog. We are a publication of general interest and invite the submission of unpublished manuscripts on all subjects. All submissions must comply with the 21st edition of the Bluebook. The Review Accepts Submissions of Essays and Articles: Founded in 1969 and originally published as Law and the Social Order, the Arizona State Law Journal is a nationally recognized law journal that serves as the lead scholarly publication of the Sandra Day O`Connor College of Law at Arizona State University. The journal is regularly cited in important textbooks, articles, and opinions at all levels of state and federal justice, including the U.S. Supreme Court. Blog submissions should cover current topics in sports and entertainment law. Unlike a journal article, a blog post should be limited in scope and should contain approximately 500 to 2000 words. Quotes must conform to the current citation style of the Bluebook.

If your article has been formally accepted by another journal, we will endeavor to respond to a request for expedited review. Our preferred submission location, Scholastica, offers authors the opportunity to request an expedited review. If your decision to publish depends on a response from the Arizona State Law Journal and you need an immediate response, please email our article editor. We are currently looking for articles and comments to publish in our next Fall 2022 issue. The Arizona Journal of Environmental Law and Policy (AJELP) is a leading legal journal in the field of environmental law and policy. As a journal, our goal is to bridge the gap between science, law and politics. With this goal in mind, we will accept all articles on environmental law, the interfaces between environmental law and other areas of law, environmental policy, resource management, raw materials law, energy law and water law. At present, we are particularly interested in articles that deal with the intersection of environmental law and tribal sovereignty, ecological tribal knowledge, indigenous science, and/or the protection and protection of the tribal environment. Please submit all articles to scholastica or email them directly to articles@ajelp.com or eic@ajelp.com.

We don`t have a strict word limit, but submissions are ideally less than 60 pages. Please attach a CV and/or CV to your submission. During the editorial process, the entire editorial team is at your disposal for content review and citation support. Article writers and the main editor of the article review each item and provide feedback on the content on grammar, style, formatting, organization, content, and clarity of arguments. Article writers are available to answer questions and share general comments about your article throughout the process via email and phone. Each article is also reviewed by the editor and “reviewed” by the review staff. Copywork ensures that each quote accurately reflects the suggestion given and complies with the citation rules of the Blue Book. Review staff also conduct a series of internal proofreadings to prepare each article for publication. Submissions to the journal can be made via Scholastica, Bepress or by e-mail. All manuscript submissions must include the author`s curriculum vitae or curriculum vitae, and all articles will be reviewed on an ongoing basis. If you have any questions about submissions, please email the Journal`s Submission Chair. We welcome general submissions on law and law-related topics.

The journal publishes four issues a year (spring, summer, autumn and winter). All submissions must be made through Scholastica. The journal does not publish student articles by non-members. Text and footnotes should match The Bluebook: A Uniform System of Citation (21st ed. 2020). Bids will be reviewed on an ongoing basis from August and will continue until all available seats are filled. Please submit your blog as a Microsoft Word document (or compatible format) and resume to the technology publisher. (7) Journal agrees that if Journal authorizes another party to reproduce, distribute, transmit or display the article in whole or in part, Journal requires Journal to include the name of the author and an appropriate copyright notice on each copy approved by Journal. The journal of the American Bar Association Section of Science & Technology Law and the Center for Law, Science & Innovation. Jurimetrics is a forum for the publication and exchange of ideas and information on the relationship between law, science and technology. Jurimetrics was first published in 1959. The current name was adopted in 1966.

Jurimetrics is the oldest law and science journal in the United States. (4) You warrant that the Work will not defame any person or entity or violate the intellectual property or proprietary rights of any person or company. (1) By signing this form, the author of the original work entitled [article title] (“Work”), you grant the Arizona State Law Journal (“Journal”) a license for the work and the Journal agrees to publish the work. Through this license, you grant Journal: A forum for the publication and exchange of ideas and information on trends and developments in business and corporate law. The journal publishes articles and commentaries on various topics such as corporate governance, securities regulation, financial market regulation, labour law and mergers and acquisitions law. Historically, corporate and business law has been heavily influenced by East Coast institutions and practitioners. As a result, CABLJ provides a unique opportunity for students, academics, and the Arizona community as a whole to voluntarily engage in discourse around these areas of practice. Here`s the agreement we ask our authors to sign: Essays: Essays may address topics of particular interest to the legal academic community, evoke something that is close to an idea rather than an argument, or contain topics that are more unusual than articles. Responses to previous articles are also treated as essays. Their scope, topics, approaches and ideas are diverse, and there is no “typical” or preferred structure of an essay. Essays also tend to be shorter than articles, although they don`t have to be. Finally, as part of the printing process, the Arizona Law Review provides authors with 25 free copies of their article, as well as 1 copy of the issue in which the article appears.

The journal sees that the article will be published on several online platforms. The Arizona State Law Journal uses Microsoft Word and WordPerfect on IBM-compatible PCs. Some articles in the journal are accessible via WESTLAW (database: AZSLJ) and LEXIS. Authors may retain the rights to their articles; Please see our publishing agreement (see below). However, all authors must agree to their inclusion in the WESTLAW and LEXIS databases. Thank you for your interest in AJELP. We will get back to you as soon as possible! (2) You agree that Journal may publish the work and that we may sell or distribute it in such publication, alone or with other related materials. You also agree that we may publish the work on our website, alone or with other related materials. Rountree Hall, Room 218 1145 North Mountain Ave. Tucson, Arizona 85719 Text and citations must conform to The Bluebook: A Uniform System of Citation (21st Edition 2020). (6) You grant each of the above rights on an indefinite, worldwide and royalty-free basis. By signing and returning this form, you, the authors and licensors represent that you understand, accept and accept all the terms and conditions of this Publication and Copyright Agreement.

Submit your work with AJELP! Contact the journal via our submission form or by e-mail to online@ajelp.com. Article: Articles tend to analyze a problem and suggest a solution. Such an analysis usually includes basic information to inform the reader before turning to a new argument. Often, articles follow a traditional roadmap of introduction, context, analysis/argumentation, and conclusion, providing a comprehensive treatment of a particular area of law. Articles tend to be formal in both the author`s tone and analysis, with extensive content and consistent citation. (5) You may not republish the Work or allow another to republish the Work in the same or similar form as appears in the Journal, unless the Work is marked at the beginning of the document as originally published in the Arizona State Law Journal using the form “First published by the Arizona State Law Journal, Volume [XX], Number [X]. Thank you for your interest in the Arizona State Sports and Entertainment Law Journal. (3) You warrant that the Work is your original work, that it has not yet been published in final form and that it will not be published in final form, in any medium (in whole or in part) until the Work is first published in final form by the Arizona State Law Journal. Authors may publish a recent draft of [article title] work on SSRN. The Sports and Entertainment Law Journal (SELJ) aims to promote debate and dialogue on issues in the evolving areas of sports and entertainment law.

SELJ provides research and analysis on such diverse areas, including agency law, antitrust law, contract law, cyber law, entertainment law, intellectual property law, labor law, publicity rights, sports law, and the First Amendment.

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