Details of the Organization
The Society For Constitutional Law Discussion (TSCLD) was established by the students of Chanakya National Law University, Patna, with a vision to provide a platform for public discourse and deliberation vis-à-vis Constitutional Law. This Society vides its blog and Journal (JCS) has worked diligently to successfully get ranked 21st globally and 2nd in India in the field of Constitutional Law blogs by Feedspot.
Details of the Blog/Paper
The Society For Constitutional Law Discussion invites submissions wherein the central theme of the article deals with constitutional law covering relevant and contemporary legal and policy issues. Additionally, the Society encourages submissions which are analytical in nature and not merely descriptive. The submissions must ideally be argumentative and also contribute something new to the existing literature.
Topic of paper/Blog
Central theme of the article deals with constitutional law covering relevant and contemporary legal and policy issues.
Submission Guidelines
The Editorial Board of The Society For Constitutional Law Discussion’s Blog invites submissions in keeping with the following guidelines:
- Submissions shall be accepted on a rolling basis from students, legal professionals, teachers, researchers, policymakers, senior academicians, and any member of the legal and humanities fraternity.
- Co-authorship of up to 2 authors is allowed.
- The submission should be original, exclusive, and unpublished, and should not be under review by any similar platform. Non-adherence to this rule shall result in a rejection of the submission, irrespective of its quality.
- The authors, by submitting their entries, will be deemed to have divested the copyright to TSCLD. However, all the moral rights shall remain with the Author(s).
- The submission should reflect the original and unpublished work of the author(s). The Blog, however, permits a maximum similarity index of 15% and in no case a submission shall exceed this limit.
Formatting Guidelines
Submission in the Word document must adhere to the following formatting:
- Heading Fonts should be set properly in the Word document itself. H1: Times New Roman; font size- 14, Bold.
- Subsequent Headings should be set to a font size of 12, Bold.
- Body: Font - Times New Roman; Font size- 12; line spacing- 1.5.
- The document should be justified.
- Use double quotes and italics when quoting verbatim.
- References must be in the form of hyperlinks to primary sources, including any judgments, laws, treaties, or legal text that are referenced. Hyperlinks must link only to legal or respected news sources. The editors make the final decision over what constitutes a primary source. (Use of India Code for statutes and original Judgment from the website of the Hon’ble Court is suggested wherever necessary instead of Indian Kanoon).
- Use of endnotes should be limited to circumstances where a hyperlink reference is not available. For endnotes, the Oxford University Standard for Citation of Legal Authorities (OSCOLA) (4th Edition) must be adhered to.
- Endnotes (if used) shall be in Times New Roman, font size 10, line spacing- 1.0 and justified.
- No speaking endnotes are allowed.
How to Register?
After you apply, you will receive the next steps of the application process via email.
Find the best legal roles every day! Join our exclusive WhatsApp channel by clicking here: https://bit.ly/3xfjZV4
For any questions or concerns, please contact us via email at: [email protected]