King’s Student Law Review (KSLR) Call for Papers 2015

For the attention of LLB, LLM/MA and PhD students

Dear all,

The King’s Student Law Review is currently looking for students to submit articles between 5,000 and 7,000 words (excluding footnotes). The King’s Student Law Review (KSLR) is a King’s College London publication. It is edited by King’s College London PhD students, and seeks to publish the very best of legal scholarship written by students at King’s and other leading law schools. The KSLR is a prestigious publication that has a wide online presence and is listed in the international database HeinOnline.

The KSLR is an exclusively student-run enterprise, with emphasis on improving academic writing and legal knowledge amongst students. As such, the KSLR aims to provide detailed feedback and comments towards the improvement of the articles received and considered for publication.

Submissions are welcome from all law students, whether at the undergraduate or postgraduate level. It is possible to submit appropriate work that was written as coursework.  Students from all universities are invited to submit papers for consideration by the Editorial Board in the following areas:

Public and Constitutional Law, Human Rights, Tax Law, Financial Law, Commercial Law, Business Law, International Public Law, International Private Law, Legal Theory, Criminal Law, Criminology, EU Law, Tort Law, Competition Law, and Intellectual Property Law

Editors, based on the quality of writing, research and analysis, will make selections for the publication through a blind double peer review. The first issue of 2015 will be published in April.

Submissions for the next issue of the King’s Student Law Review are due by 6th March 2015.

Please submit one article between 5,000 and 7,000 words and an abstract (300 words maximum) using the submission form. For style guidelines and citation format refer to our website.

If you have any queries, please contact the editorial team at: kclstudentlawreview@gmail.com

Call For Papers – The Thousand Faces of the Four Freedoms

KSLR European Law Blog hereby invites you to submit abstracts on the topic of  “The Thousand Faces of the Four Freedoms

The EU internal market – the embodiment of the four fundamental freedoms of goods, services, persons and capital – has arguably been one of the EU’s most successful and indeed influential constructs. However, like most EU concepts, it is troubled by divergent interpretations. This has led to great debate by various commentators, and it is these plentiful widespread arguments to which we seek discussion for the blog. Articles and case comments on any areas related, directly or indirectly, with any one of the EU’s four freedoms are welcomed.

Please submit abstracts of no more than 250 words by 4 November 2013 to adrienne.m.yong@kcl.ac.uk and agne.limante@kcl.ac.uk. We only accept abstracts relating to EU law.

Authors of selected abstracts will be informed within two weeks. A full paper (1,500 to 2,000 words) should be submitted by 9 December 2013. The style guidelines may be found at http://kslr.org.uk/blogs/europeanlaw/about-us/. The articles resulting from selected abstracts will be posted on KSLR European Law Blog website.

The call for papers is open to submissions from students and professionals from the UK and abroad but only specific to EU law.

Please email the above addresses if you have any further questions. We look forward to hearing from you!


KSLR EU Law Blog is a blog run by the students of the King’s College London and forms a part of the KCL Student Law Review. The blog is an informal academic forum in which law students and professionals express their opinion EU law issues and are informed about recent developments in EU law. You can like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter @EUKSLR