Submissions

General Guidelines for Submissions to the EPLO Publications

To avoid any conflict of interest, authors should state their present affiliation and indicate any personal or professional involvement in the subject matter of their manuscript.

Submission of a manuscript will be held to imply that the work described contains original material that has been approved by all co-authors and is not under consideration for any other publication at the same time. If the manuscript, or another version of it, is under consideration by another publication or has been or will be published elsewhere, authors are required to state this at the time of submission. Once material has been accepted for first publication by the EPLO, it should not be submitted for publication elsewhere, either in print or electronic form, without the consent of the Editors/Publisher.

No proofs are submitted to the authors before publication unless explicitly required upon submission of the manuscript or if deemed necessary by the EPLO Publications Editing Secretariat.

In order to attract scholarship of the highest standard, papers submitted by authors undergo rigorous peer review. The process of review normally takes between six to eight weeks.

General Policies and Information: The content of the manuscripts engages only their authors and in no case the EPLO Publications or the EPLO. The Authors of articles/chronicles in the EPLO journals receive a free copy of the journal’s issue in which their articles/chronicles appear as well as the PDF format of their article/chronicle.

Copyright in all pieces accepted for publication remains with the Publisher, unless otherwise explicitly requested by the Author. lf all or any part of a manuscript is reproduced elsewhere, the Author should refer to its original place of publication, that is, the European Review of Public Law / the Central and Eastern European Legal Studies / the European Politeia or any other EPLO Publication. All rights reserved. No part of the EPLO Publications may be reproduced in any form, by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval system without written permission from the publisher.

Formatting Standards

This is not intended to be a comprehensive guide to our house style and formatting guidelines but it does offer a few key points that we would appreciate if respected. However, authors are kindly requested to note that their texts will be edited thoroughly for house style points by the EPLO Publications Editing Secretariat.

General

  • The texts should be presented in Times New Roman font, size 11, text justified. Paragraphs should not be indented. Please use footnotes rather than endnotes, using Times New Roman font, size 10.
  • The text should start with the title of the article which is to be followed by the author’s name. The full first name of the author should be used (not only the initial) and a footnote marked with an asterisk (*) should refer to the author’s institutional affiliation (e.g. Professor at the University of Paris I).
  • If there are more than one author, then the names should be separated by slashes (/), and separate asterisk footnotes (e.g. * for the first author, ** for the second author etc.) should be used referring to their institutional affiliation (see point above).
  • If authors wish to present acknowledgements, disclaimers or other text of this kind, they are requested to insert an asterisk (*) footnote to the title of the article. In this case, the footnote to the author’s name referring to his/her affiliation (see points above) should be a double asterisk (**) footnote.
  • Cross-references should refer to the relevant section of the article or to the exact footnote number and not to a page number of the article.
  • All references, cross-references and citations should be checked by the authors before the submission of their articles.
  • Final decisions on formatting matters, or matters of grammar, punctuation etc. that are not mentioned in this document are to be taken by the Editors.
 
ERPL

1. Submissions

Articles should not normally exceed 12,000 words including footnotes. They should begin with an indented and italicised abstract of around 150 words which sets out the main arguments and conclusions of the article.

The ERPL is committed to linguistic diversity by accepting submissions in seven languages: English, French, Spanish, Russian, Portuguese, German and Italian. If the article is written in a language other than English, then an abstract and title in English should be submitted as well. 3-4 keywords in English for indexing purposes should accompany the paper. Authors’ names and affiliations as well as Bibliographical References should be in Roman script (or also in Roman script) in case of papers written in non-Roman script.

Shorter articles dealing with developments in recent legislation and case-law within the European institutions for the on-line edition of the European Review of Public Law should usually be in the vicinity of 1,500-3,000 words.

Book reviews should normally be of 1,000-2,000 words in length. Expressions of interest for specific book reviews or suggestions of books to be reviewed should be communicated in advance to the Book Review editor. Reviews are also considered from the review books sent to us by publishers. Contributions and proposals regarding literature of non-English publications are particularly encouraged. In order to ensure the widest possible readership of the review information about these publications, submissions for book reviews are accepted in English or French only.

Authors are requested to use the house style and formatting guidelines.

2. ERPL Formatting Styles

 
  • Bolds or underlining are not used according to the ERPL formatting styles. If the author wishes to emphasize, he/she should use italics.
  • Italics should be used for the following (italics are not used for the following cases when the relevant words or phrases are part of a wider sentence in italics):
    1. The names of cases (e.g. affaire Dubreuil, Kherouaa case etc.)
    2. Short phrases or individual words using another language than the one in which the article is written (e.g. Conseil d’Etat when the article is not written in French but in one of the other official languages of the ERPL)
    3. Common Latin abbreviations or words (e.g., i.e., cf., ad hoc, per se, ibid., etc.)
  • Special emphasis should be given to the formatting of the footnotes:
    1. The names of the authors mentioned in the footnotes should not be written in capital letters (All Caps). According to the ERPL formatting standards, the author names are presented in Small Caps. However, if this is not possible, please use regular letters (e.g. or Aster Veldkamp). In case there are two or more authors, please separate their names with a slash (/). In case there are more than three authors, the name of the first author can be used followed by: et al.
    2. The titles of books are italicised.
    3. The titles of articles are regular and they should not be between inverted commas.
    4. The titles of periodicals are italicised (even their abbreviated titles).
    5. Abbreviated Law Reports are not italicised.
    6. If a reference is made to an article in a book, this should be made as follows: author, title of the article, in: editor, book title, etc.
  • The footnote numbers should be placed before the punctuation mark. Endnotes should not be used.
  • Footnoting should not be excessive.
  • Hyphens used as a punctuation device should be short, with a space either side.
  • It is advisable that when acronyms or abbreviations are used, items are spelt out in full when first appearing (e.g. European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) or (hereafter ECHR)).
  • Website addresses should not be bold or underlined.
 
CEELS

1. Submissions

Articles should not normally exceed 12,000 words including footnotes. They should begin with an indented and italicised abstract of around 150 words which sets out the main arguments and conclusions of the article.

The CEELS accepts articles in English, French, Russian, German, Italian as well as in the native languages of authors coming from Central and Eastern European countries (including the Turkish and Greek languages). If the article is written in a language other than English, then an abstract and title in English should be submitted as well. 3-4 keywords in English for indexing purposes should accompany the paper. Authors’ names and affiliations as well as Bibliographical References should be in Roman script (or also in Roman script) in case of papers written in non-Roman script.

Authors are requested to use the house style and formatting guidelines.

2. CEELS Formatting Styles

 
  • Bolds or underlining are not used according to the CEELS formatting styles. If the author wishes to emphasize, he/she should use italics.
  • Italics should be used for the following (italics are not used for the following cases when the relevant words or phrases are part of a wider sentence in italics):
    1. The names of cases (e.g. affaire Dubreuil, Kherouaa case etc.)
    2. Short phrases or individual words using another language than the one in which the article is written (e.g. Conseil d’Etat when the article is not written in French but in one of the other official languages of the ERPL)
    3. Common Latin abbreviations or words (e.g., i.e., cf., ad hoc, per se, ibid., etc.)
  • Special emphasis should be given to the formatting of the footnotes:
    1. The names of the authors mentioned in the footnotes should not be written in capital letters (All Caps). According to the CEELS formatting standards, the author names are presented in Small Caps. However, if this is not possible, please use regular letters (e.g. or Aster Veldkamp). In case there are two or more authors, please separate their names with a slash (/). In case there are more than three authors, the name of the first author can be used followed by: et al.
    2. The titles of books are italicised.
    3. The titles of articles are regular and they should not be between inverted commas.
    4. The titles of periodicals are italicised (even their abbreviated titles).
    5. Abbreviated Law Reports are not italicised.
    6. If a reference is made to an article in a book, this should be made as follows: author, title of the article, in: editor, book title, etc.
  • The footnote numbers should be placed before the punctuation mark. Endnotes should not be used.
  • Footnoting should not be excessive.
  • Hyphens used as a punctuation device should be short, with a space either side.
  • It is advisable that when acronyms or abbreviations are used, items are spelt out in full when first appearing (e.g. European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) or (hereafter ECHR)).
  • Website addresses should not be bold or underlined.
 
European Journal of History and Culture

Submissions

In order to attract scholarship of the highest standard, papers submitted by authors undergo rigorous peer review. The process of review normally takes between six to eight weeks.

Articles should not normally exceed 12,000 words including footnotes. They should begin with an indented and italicised abstract in English (of around 200 words) which sets out the main arguments and conclusions of the article. 4-5 keywords in the language in which the paper is written and in English should accompany the paper for indexing purposes. The author could also submitt up to 8 images (black & white or colored, in format jpeg). 

2. European Journal of History and Culture Formatting Styles

 

The European Journal of History and Culture is committed to linguistic diversity by accepting submissions in eight languages: English, French, German, Greek, Italian, Portuguese, Russian and Spanish. If the article is written in a language other than English, its title should be provided in English as well. Authors’ names and affiliations should also be in Roman script in case of papers written in non-Roman script. Bibliographical References in the Cyrillic script shall be accompanied by the respective References in Roman script between brackets.

  • The texts should be presented in Times New Roman font, size 11, text justified. Paragraphs should not be indented. Please use footnotes rather than endnotes, using Times New Roman font, size 10.
  • The text should start with the title of the article which is to be followed by the author’s name. The full first name of the author should be used (not only the initial) and a footnote marked with an asterisk (*) should refer to the author’s institutional affiliation (e.g. Professor at the University of Paris I).
  • If there are more than one author, then the names should be separated by slashes (/), and separate asterisk footnotes (e.g. * for the first author, ** for the second author etc.) should be used referring to their institutional affiliation (see point above).
  • If authors wish to present acknowledgements, disclaimers or other text of this kind, they are requested to insert an asterisk (*) footnote to the title of the article. In this case, the footnote to the author’s name referring to his/her affiliation (see points above) should be a double asterisk (**) footnote.
  • Cross-references should refer to the relevant section of the article or to the exact footnote number and not to a page number of the article.
  • All references, cross-references and citations should be checked by the authors before the submission of their articles.

Authors who wish to publish archival documents are requested to use the following guidelines:

  • The date and the place of writing the document should be presented in Times New Roman font, size 11, text align right.
  • A small abstract of the document (2-3 lines) should be presented in Times New Roman font, size 11, text justified.
  • The archival reference should be presented in Times New Roman font, size 10, text justified.
  • The texts of the published archival documents should be presented in Times New Roman font, size 11, italicised, text justified.

Authors are requested to use the house style and formatting guidelines.

  • Bolds or underlining are not used according to the European Journal of History and Culture formatting styles. If the author wishes to emphasize, he/she should use italics.
  • Italics should be used for the following (italics are not used for the following cases when the relevant words or phrases are part of a wider sentence in italics):
    1. Short phrases or individual words using another language than the one in which the article is written
    2. Common Latin abbreviations or words (e.g., i.e., cf., ad hoc, per se, ibid., etc.)
  • Special emphasis should be given to the formatting of the footnotes:
  1. The names of the authors / editors mentioned in the footnotes should not be written in capital letters (All Caps). According to the European Journal of History and Culture formatting standards, the author / editor(s) names are presented in Small Caps. However, if this is not possible, please use regular letters (e.g. Aster Veldkamp). In case there are two or more authors / editors, please separate their names with a slash (/). In case there are more than three authors / editors, the name of the first author can be used followed by: et al.
  2. The titles of books are italicised.

St. Runciman, The Eastern Schism, Oxford 1955,  pp. 78-170

Italian Etchers of the Renaissance & Baroque, Exhibition Catalogue (Boston, Museum of Fine Arts - Cleveland, The Cleveland Museum of Art – Washington D. C., National Gallery of Art), ed. S. Welsh Reed / R. Wallace, Boston 1989, pp. 85-88

M. Tziatzi-Papagianni (ed.), Theodori Metropolitae Cyzici Epistulae. Accedunt epistulae mutuae Costantini Porphyrogeniti, [Corpus Fontium Historiae Byzantinae - Series Berolinensis 48], Berlin-Boston 2012, p. 212

  1. The titles of articles are regular and they should not be between inverted commas.

D. M. Nicol, The Byzantine View of Western Europe, Greek, Roman and Byzantine Studies 8 (1967), 315-339

  1. The titles of periodicals are italicised (even their abbreviated titles).
  2. If a reference is made to an article in a book, this should be made as follows: author, title of the article, in: editor, book title, etc.

T. M. Kolbaba, Byzantine Perceptions of Latin Religious ‘Errors’: Themes and Changes from 850 to 1350, in:A. E. Laiou / R. Parviz Mottahedeh (eds.), The Crusades from the Perspective of Byzantium and the Muslim World, Washington DC 2001, pp. 117-143

  1. Website addresses should not be bold or underlined.

http://ec.europa.eu/sport/library/documents/b24/xg-gg-201307-dlvrbl2-sep...
(last visited 22 Oct. 2013).

  • The footnote numbers should be placed before the punctuation mark. Endnotes should not be used.
  • Footnoting should not be excessive.
  • It is advisable that when acronyms or abbreviations are used, items are spelt out in full when first appearing (e.g. Archivio di Stato di Venezia (ASV) or (hereinafter ASV).

Archivio di Stato di Venezia (ASV), Senato, Dispacci dei provveditori da Terra e da Mar (PTM), filza 1003, f. 3v (12 maggio 1797)

Final decisions on formatting matters, or matters of grammar, punctuation etc. that are not mentioned in this document are to be taken by the Editors.

 

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