Constitutional Court Review - NEW to NISC

Posted 13 December 2019 by NISC under Announcements & Notices • Journal: Constitutional Court Review
Constitutional Court Review - NEW to NISC

NISC welcomes The Constitutional Court Review (CCR) to its collection.

The CCR is an international journal of record that tracks the work of the Constitutional Court of South Africa, with Professor Stu Woolman as the Editor-in-Chief. Accredited with the DHET (SAPSE), the Journal follows a strict double-blind, peer-reviewed editorial process and will be published once a year.

The long essays, replies, articles and case comments use recent decisions to navigate more general currents in the Court’s jurisprudence.

The journal, which is published Open Access under a Creative Commons Attribution Licence (CC BY) invites contributions from outstanding scholars but also considers unsolicited submissions that fit with the aims and scope of the Journal. 

Published once annually, journal articles are available online at Sabinet at this link

 

Excellent attention by editor-in-chief; very good work of reviewers; good time for review and processing.
- Author - African Journal of Range & Forage Science
A very supportive, personal and committed editorial team, which takes quality of the work very seriously. I learned a lot through the experience of publishing with Anthropology Southern Africa, and felt supported throughout the process.
- Author - Anthropology Southern Africa
The biggest development in the history of Quaestiones Mathematicae was the association with NISC and to have the journal running in a very stable way without severe financial concerns.
- Barry Green, QM Editor
It has been an enriching experience working with such enthusiastic and professional people at NISC who have become more friends than business partners over the years.
- Stan Pillar, Editor of the African Journal of Marine Science (1996-2013)
The NISC partnership has benefited the Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology by bringing sustainability, additional branding and marketing, a wider reach through its websites, and the added value of expertise in the very competitive world of publishing.
- Chris Stones, IPJP Editor-in-Chief since 2003