CALL FOR PAPERS – EU Law ***SELECTED PAPERS***

KSLR European Law Blog hereby invites you to submit abstracts proposing to cover topics on EU law.

 

We encourage submissions that would address issues regarding the recent developments of EU Law. Submissions may address –amongst other areas- recent legal developments; recent developments of case-law; EU law related political developments; innovative topics regulated by EU law; developments in EU countries of relevance to EU law; interactions between national, EU and international law; judicial cooperation in civil matters (EU); Conflict of laws (EU); or, EU competition Law.

Please submit abstracts of no more than 200 words by 14 October 2012 to <agne.limante@kcl.ac.uk> or belen.menchon_orduna@kcl.ac.uk.

The articles resulting from selected abstracts will be posted on KSLR European Law Blog website http://kslr.org.uk/blogs/europeanlaw/. Authors of selected abstracts will be informed by 30 October 2012. A full paper (1,500 to 2,000 words) should be submitted before 1 December 2012. The style guidelines may be found at http://kslr.org.uk/blogs/europeanlaw/about-us/ .

The call for papers is open to submissions from students and professionals from the UK and abroad.

 

 

SELECTED PAPERS

 

After reviewing all the interesting abstracts submitted for the Call for Papers, we are pleased to inform that the following papers have been selected:

  • Alexander Kamp : “A recent UK proposal on “opt-out” collective redress proceedings in private competition claims and the Brussels I Regulation”
  • Amanda Spalding: “Accession to the European Convention on Human Rights: Where are we now?” and “Asylum Seekers Rights in the EU”
  • Gianni Lo Schiavo : “ Energy Efficiency in EU law at a conundrum? ”
  • Jelena Ganza: “Italian Golden Shares – a Never-Ending Story?”
  • Mehmed Yuseinov: “The Charter of Fundamental Rights: the ‘Bible’ of EU citizens’ rights or a voice crying in the wilderness?”
  • Nikolay Domanov: “How European are European elections” and “Nationalism and the European project”.

We appreciate all the effort from all the participants that have submitted their papers and encourage them to keep participating with the European Union Law Blog of the King’s Students Law Review in the future.