期刊名称:ICON-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CONSTITUTIONAL LAW
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
I•CON, the International Journal of Constitutional Law, which is devoted to transnational constitutional law, is edited at NYU Law School and published by Oxford University Press. This English-language quarterly first appeared in January, 2003.
I•CON is the only journal that focuses on comparative constitutional issues. It has broadly representative, international editorial and advisory boards. It examines an array of theoretical and practical issues, and offers critical analyses of current debates.

Instructions to Authors
I•CON welcomes unsolicited articles, comments, essays, and book reviews. It accepts only original English-language material, and material previously published in languages other than English. It is an exclusive-submission journal.
Articles and correspondence should be addressed to Eugene Rusyn, Associate Editor, and sent by e-mail to law.icon@nyu.edu, or by regular mail to I•CON, International Journal of Constitutional Law, 40 Washington Square South, Room B14, New York, NY 10012, USA.
The following policies are designed to streamline the process for all concerned.
Format
I•CON accepts submissions by e-mail attachment (preferred) or regular mail but not by fax. It is imperative that manuscripts be submitted in Microsoft Word. Other word-processing programs, such as WordPerfect, can create onerous technical problems in the editing and typesetting process.
When submitting by e-mail, please use the article title in the subject heading of the message. If submitting by regular mail, send one double-spaced copy of the manuscript and an electronic copy on disk. In addition, please include a cover letter that provides contact information (including telephone and e-mail address). Curricula vitae are requested.
We are unable to return manuscripts to the authors.
Style and Standards
The desired article length is 10,000 to 14,000 words. Article submissions should include an abstract of roughly 150 words.
If a manuscript is accepted for publication, United States English must be used, and the conventions of The Chicago Manual of Style observed. Footnotes must conform to the 18th edition of the Bluebook: A Uniform System of Citation. Footnotes should be limited to citations wherever possible; long, discursive footnotes are strongly discouraged.
Citation Examples 1. Books: STEPHEN HOLMES & CASS SUNSTEIN, THE COST OF RIGHTS: WHY LIBERTY DEPENDS ON TAXES 53 (W.W. Norton & Company 1999). (NB: 53 denotes the page in which the citation appears.)
2. Journal Articles: Charles A. Reich, The New Property, 73 YALE L.J. 733, 737–738 (1964). (NB: Here, 733 denotes the page on which the article begins and 737–738 represents the range of pages to which the citation refers.)
3. Cases: Meritor Sav. Bank v. Vinson, 477 U.S. 57, 60 (1986). Minerva Mills v. Union of India, AIR 1980 SC 1789.
When citing a non-English source, if there is an English translation available, please cite to the translation. If no translation is available, please cite the original title (or a phonetic version, if the language does not use the Roman alphabet) and provide a translation in square brackets:
Marie-Thérèse Meulders-Klein, L'Enseignment du droit comparé en Belgique [Teaching Comparative Law in Belgium], 40 REV. INT'L DE DROIT COMPARÉ [R.I.D.C.] 715, 720–721 (1988).
While authors are ultimately responsible for the accuracy of their citations, the editors will endeavor to check all citations made to works in English, French, and Spanish. If I旵ON has difficulty confirming a citation, an author may be asked to send copies of pages cited.
Copyright
It is a condition of publication in I•CON that authors sign a licensing agreement with Oxford University Press and NYU School of Law. This ensures that requests from third parties to reproduce articles are handled efficiently and consistently and will also allow the article to be as widely disseminated as possible. Authors may use their own material in other publications provided that I•CON is acknowledged as the original place of publication, and Oxford University Press is notified in writing and in advance.
Editorial Board
EDITORIAL BOARD & STAFF
Editorial Director Norman Dorsen NYU Law School, US
Editor-in-Chief Michel Rosenfeld Cardozo Law School, US
Managing Editor Karen L. Barrett NYU Law School, US
Articles Editors Victor Ferreres Comella Pompeu Fabra University, Spain Vicki Jackson Georgetown University Law Center, US
Constitutional Developments Editors Juliane Kokott European Court of Justice, Luxembourg Stephanie Palmer Cambridge University, UK
Book Review Editors Mattias Kumm NYU Law School, US Andr¨¢s Saj¨® Central European University, Hungary
Constitutional Courts Editor Burt Neuborne NYU Law School, US
Symposium Editors Sujit Choudhry University of Toronto Law School, Canada Cheryl Saunders Melbourne Law School, Australia
Editors at Large Barry Friedman NYU Law School, US Dieter Grimm Wissenschafskolleg zu Berlin Yasuo Hasebe University of Tokyo, Japan Stephen Holmes NYU Law School, US Frank Michelman Harvard Law School, US Carlos Rosenkrantz University of Palermo, Argentina Michel Troper University of Paris X, France
ARTICLES CONSULTANTS Anil Kalhan Fordham Law School, US Smita Narula NYU Law School, US H. Kwasi Prempeh Seton Hall Law School, US Rebecca Rosenfeld NYU Law School, US Juliet Stumpf Lewis & Clark Law School, US
EDITORIAL ASSISTANTS Amanda Bakale, Senior Assistant NYU School of Law, US Julian Arato, Senior Assistant NYU School of Law, US Ioanna Dervisopoulos European Court of Justice, Luxembourg Melisa Gerecci NYU School of Law, US Ben Heath NYU School of Law, US Chris Kochevar NYU School of Law, US Eugene Smilansky NYU School of Law, US
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