CENTRE FOR ALTERNATIVE DISPUTE RESOLUTION – CALL FOR BLOGS
The Centre for Alternative Dispute Resolution, RGNUL (CADR-RGNUL) invites blog posts from legal practitioners, academics, research fellows, undergraduate and postgraduate students etc.
ABOUT THE UNIVERSITY
The Rajiv Gandhi National University of Law (RGNUL), Punjab, was established by the State Legislature of Punjab by passing the Rajiv Gandhi National University of Law, Punjab Act, 2006 (Punjab Act No. 12 of 2006). The Act incorporated a University of Law of national stature in Punjab, to fulfil the need for a Centre of Excellence in legal education in the modern era of globalisation and liberalisation.
ABOUT THE CENTRE
The Centre for Alternative DisputeResolution, RGNUL (CADR-RGNUL) was established in the year 2018 as a Centre dedicated to research and capacity-building in ADR. One of the foremost aims was to fill voids that plague existing literature and bridge the often-daunting gap between the academia and practicalities of a career in ADR.
ABOUT THE BLOG
The CADR Blog is aimed towards integrating insights from the professional and the academic world. To that extent, the Blog publishes articles on contemporary issues plaguing and developing in ADR.
CALL FOR BLOGS
The CADR Blog runs on a rolling basis and accepts articles for submission throughout the year, and are pleased to invite submissions on all topics related to ADR in the form of articles, case comments
THEMES
There is no constraint on authors for choosing a topic as long as it pertains to the field of ADR.
GENERAL SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
GENERAL GUIDELINES
Co-authorship is limited to a maximum of two authors.
All submissions must be in Times New Roman or Garamond, font size 12, and Spacing 1.5.
Word limit for all submissions is between 800 – 1500 words. This stipulation is, however, flexible at the Editor’s discretion in exceptional cases.
All entries should be submitted in .doc or .docx format.
The submissions must be original, unpublished, and an outcome of the author’s own efforts. Any submission to the CADR Blog automatically includes a declaration to the effect of "The article is an original work of the author(s). I(We) certify that my(our) submission is original, has not been published elsewhere, and is not under review or consideration elsewhere."
Authors must acknowledge and give due reference to any source. Plagiarism is strictly prohibited, and articles found to be plagiarised will not be considered for publication.
Use of AI is strictly prohibited and any manuscript found to have AI generated content exceeding 20 percentage would be summarily rejected
On submission, authors shall be deemed to have divested the copyright to CADR. However, all moral rights shall vest with the author(s).
The submissions shall be accepted on a rolling basis. CADR Reserves the right to stop accepting submissions per their discretion.
CONTENT
The articles that we desire to publish on the CADR Blog are ones which are analytical, provide commentary and stimulate discussion on developments and issues in vogue. At the same time, we realise the import of revisiting issues which have gone dormant, un-researched, or have scope for renewed discussions. We look forward to such submissions. And thoughmere summaries of cases do not usually contribute much to these ends, we encourage authors to provide their critiques and explore different, consociated themes if they do submit such articles.
We would also be highly receptive to submissions which initiate or elaborate as well as comment on developments and concepts from foreign jurisdictions or which are multi-jurisdictional in nature. An increasing trend has been the internationalisation of ADR, and we welcome submissions which shed light on pastures outside. Juxtaposed/Comparative analysis of various jurisdictions is welcome too.
SUBMISSION PROCESS
The CADR Editorial Board has a strict double-blind review process. For an understanding of the process, we encourage listening to this podcast here.
At the outset, the authors are requested to send manuscripts which are originaland unpublished. In case plagiarism is detected, the Editorial Board has the right to reject the submission. Due credit must be given, to the best of the authors’ abilities, to all who have ideated the content the authors have submitted.
All submissions must be accompanied by an abstract of preferably 100–150 words, and at no time more than 200 words, briefly explaining the crux of the submission/the research question/focus of commentary or analysis and if possible, the structure of the submission.
All submissions should be in .doc or .docx format.
The manuscripts must be submitted on our submission form here.
The authors can expect to receive a decision on their submission within 3 weeks from the receipt of the submission.
LENGTH
Submissions should preferably be within 800-1500 words. Submissions with word-limits greater than 1500 words may be published in parts.
LEGAL
The copyright over the manuscripts vest with the CADR, however, all the moral rights vest with the author. At no time will CADR use the submission for commercial use without notice to the author(s) or without attributing to them.
We do not cross-post from other websites. If your work published on the CADR Blog needs to be cross-posted to another website, the same can only be done after grant of explicit permission from the Editorial Board of the CADR Blog.
REFERENCES
In keeping with the informal tenor of Blog posts, unlike research articles, we prefer hyperlinks over footnotes and endnotes. However, if the Author deems the latter to be appropriate, we request them to follow the Bluebook, A Uniform System of Citation (21st Ed.).
CONTACT DETAILS
For any queries, please contact the Editorial Board at submissions.cadr@rgnul.ac.in.
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