期刊名称:ECCLESIASTICAL LAW JOURNAL
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
Published three times a year in association with the Ecclesiastical Law Society, the Journal publishes articles on all aspects of ecclesiastical law. Particular emphasis is given to the regulation of the Church of England and worldwide Anglican Communion, but the range of coverage includes comparative studies of the laws of other faiths and of the interface between law and religion in a global perspective. Through its regular Comment section, the Ecclesiastical Law Journal provides a critical analysis of emergent trends written by distinguished scholars and practitioners in Europe and North America. The Journal also includes book reviews and summaries of recent ecclesiastical cases determined by both secular and church courts, together with a parliamentary report, a brief summary of the proceedings of national Synods, and summaries of major international conferences.
Instructions to Authors
Established under the auspices of the Ecclesiastical Law Society in 1987, the Ecclesiastical Law Journal exists to foster and promote the study of all aspects of ecclesiastical law. With a primary focus on the Church of England and Anglicanism, the Journal's content is now broader, and provides authoritative coverage and incisive commentary upon the laws applicable to Anglican churches and other religions and faith communities from ecumenical, international, social, historical, theological and comparative perspectives. Articles relating to any of these matters are welcomed for consideration by the editor of the Journal. The Journal also carries news of legislation and court judgments, and reviews of relevant
literature. More information about the society can be found at http://www.ecclawsoc.org.uk Submission
Articles submitted for publication should be sent to:
Professor Mark Hill
Ecclesiastical Law Journal
3 Pump Court
Temple
London
EC4Y 7AJ
e-mail mh@3pumpcourt.com
Manuscripts should be submitted in hard copy and on disk, together with full contact details. Contributors are responsible for obtaining permission to reproduce any materials, including photographs and illustrations, for which they do not hold copyright, and for ensuring that the appropriate acknowledgements are included in the manuscript. Upon acceptance of a paper, the author(s) will be asked to assign copyright to the Ecclesiastical Law Society. General Presentation
Articles should be written in English.
Manuscripts are to be set in times roman font 12 point with the exception of the title (which is to be 14 point) and footnotes (10 point). The title of any piece should be in capitals, as should the author's name, with the post or title in italics. The derivation of the paper may be stated as a footnote appended to the author's name. An abstract, single spaced in italics, of not more than 200 words, should then follow. A piece for the Comment section of the Journal should be in identical form, save for the omission of the abstract. The text should be 1.5-line spaced and not justified. Comment pieces should not exceed 2,000 words (including footnotes); articles should be in the region of 4,000 to 6,000 words.
SUB-HEADINGS
These should be flush against the left hand margin and in capitals. No additional space should be left between the subheading and the text. Where secondary sub-headings are required, these should be in lower case (except for the initial letter), bold weight.
QUOTATIONS
Where a lengthy quotation is to be used (more than about forty words) then it should be in a single block of indented text, without inverted commas, preceded and followed by a single blank line. Any use of italics, whether original or added, should be noted in the footnotes, not the main text, with the words "emphasis in original", "emphasis added" or "my emphasis". Where shorter quotations are used, these should come within the text and single inverted commas are to be used. Double inverted commas should never be used, save in the rare instance of having a quotation within a quotation.
LISTS
If there is to be a sequence of numbered points then they should appear as follows:
i. The lower-case roman numeral should be aligned with the left-hand margin and the whole of the text should be indented;
ii. The points should then follow sequentially, each beginning with a capital letter, with a semi-
colon at the end of each except the last.
OTHER GENERAL POINTS
i. Paragraphs should be indented, and not separated by a line break;
ii. Full stops should be followed by a single space;
iii. Footnote markers should appear, where necessary, outside (and not within) the punctuation markings;
iv. Spellings will be as standard British English usages, except for quoted matter. "ise" and "yse"
endings will be used;
v. The serial comma (ie the one before "and" in "red, white, and blue") will not be used;
vi. Possessive apostrophes should not be followed by"s" after names ending in "s";
vii. Excessive use of capitals should be avoided thus, "holy orders" and "chancellor"; also "it is the role of an archbishop" but "the Archbishop of Canterbury";
viii. Dates are to be given as 7 August 2005 without "th", "nd" or "rd", whether in superscript or otherwise;
ix. Spans of years and numbers should be given in full with no elision (1914-1918, pp 221-225), and separated by an en rule, not a hyphen;
x. Numerals will be written out up to ten, except in a discussion which includes a mixture of numbers above and below this, in which case all will be figures. Numbers of four or more digits should have a comma (11,000);
xi. Introduction of abbreviations for brevity of reference later in the article should be given as "the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction Measure 1963 (EJM)";
xii. Intrusive full stops after abbreviations etc should not be used. Mr NM Hill LLB, LLM(Canon Law), AKC should appear as such, so also the Rt Revd Christopher Hill BA and HHJ Bursell QC;
xiii. Likewise, expressions such as ibid, et seq, etc should not be followed by a full stop, nor should they be in italics. Italics should only be used for foreign phrases where they do not occur regularly in common parlance (thus mutatis mutandis should be italicised, but not prima facie); xiv. Similarly, accents should not be used on foreign words that occur regularly in common parlance. They should be used on capitals, if appropriate (eg Ladislas Örsy);
xv. Pages references should read p 1 or pp 17-23 without full stops.
REFERENCES
The Ecclesiastical Law Journal should be cited as (2005) 8 Ecc LJ 123 with no full stops, no italics, and the year in round brackets preceding the volume number. Acts of Parliament and Measures should appear as the Occupiers' Liability Act 1957 or the Church of England (Worship and Doctrine) Measure 1963. Section numbers should be referred to as section 37(3), except in the case of footnotes, where it is acceptable to refer to the Clergy Discipline Measure 2003, s 2(1)(a). Similarly, "paragraph" should be given in full in the text, but as "para" in the footnotes. Cases should be cited as Mandla v Dowell Lee [1983] 2 AC 548 or McFeekly v United Kingdom (1981) 3 EHRR 161, with all case names in italics,
BOOKS AND ARTICLES
There is a rigid style for references to both books and articles, which needs to be strictly followed. For books it should be as follows: M Hill, Ecclesiastical Law (second edition, Oxford, 2001), p 345. Subtitles should only have capitals where essential and should be separated by a colon from the main title: CA Mackinnon, Feminism Unmodified: discourses on life and law (Cambridge, MA, 1987). Where there are multiple authors, the volume should be cited as follows: N Doe, M Hill and R Ombres (eds), English Canon Law (Cardiff, 1998). Chapters within edited books should appear as M Hill, "A new dawn for freedom of religion" in M Hill (ed), Religious Liberty and Human Rights (Cardiff, 2004), pp 1-13 (note the minimum use of capitals in the chapter title). A similar style should be used for articles in journals: F Raday, "Culture, religion and gender", (2003) 1 International Journal of Constitutional Law 663, with page numbers given in full. Any abbreviated titles for journals should be set in roman, not italic, type: Crim LR; MLR. Internet references should be given in full and set within angle brackets, and the date on which they were accessed should be given: , accessed 28 September 2006. Subsequent references should use short titles: Hill, Ecclesiastical Law, p 123 or Doe, Hill and Ombres, English Canon Law (in the case of books), or M Hill, "A new dawn for freedom of religion", p 9 (for articles). The same rules apply in footnotes.
PROOFS
Only essential typographical or factual errors may be changed at proof stage. Resist the temptation to revise or add to the text. The publisher reserves the right to charge authors for correction of non-typographical errors.
OFFPRINTS
Twenty-five offprints of each article will be supplied free to the first named author. Extra copies may be purchased from the publisher if ordered at proof stage.
Last updated 5 September 2008
Editorial Board
Editor
Professor Mark Hill QC
3 Pump Court Temple London EC4Y 7AJ
mh@3pumpcourt.com
Book Review Editor
Mr David Harte
Newcastle Law School Newcastle University Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 7RU
Case Notes Editors
Ms Ruth Arlow
Pump Court Chambers 5 Temple Chambers Temple Street Swindon SN1 1SQ
Assistant Editor
Reverend Will Adam
The Rectory 42 Church Lane Girton Cambridge CB3 0JP
Parliament & Synod Editor
Mr Frank Cranmer
145 Marsham Court Marsham Street London SW1P 4LB
Editorial Assistant
Mr Peter Moore
Kirlands West Street Odiham Hook RG29 1NT
Editorial Board
Professor Sir John Baker QC
University of Cambridge, UK
Professor Garth Blake SC
Professional Standards Commission, Anglican Church of Australia, Australia
Professor Ana Maria Celis Brunet
Catholic University of Chile, Santiago, Chile
Professor Norman Doe
Centre for Law and Religion, Cardiff University Professor of Law, Cardiff Law School, UK
Right Worshipful Charles George QC
Dean of Arches, London, UK
Professor Richard Helmholz
University of Chicago, USA
Sir John Laws
Lord Justice of Appeal, UK
Professor Douglas Laycock,
University of Michigan Law School, USA
Professor Ian Leigh
Department of Law, Durham University, UK
Professor Javier Martinez-Torron
Complutense University, Madrid, Spain
Professor David McClean QC
Chancellor of Sheffield and Newcastle, UK
Dr Robert Ombres OP
Dominican Procurator General, Rome, Italy
Professor Julian Rivers
School of Law, University of Bristol, UK
Professor Dr Gerhard Robbers
University of Trier, Germany
Mr Stephen Slack
Head of the Legal Office, Archbishops' Council, London, UK
Professor Marco Ventura
University of Siena, Italy
Professor John Witte Jr
Emory University, Atlanta, USA
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