International Journal of Human Rights and Constitutional Laws aims to put a spotlight on new developments on the theory and practice of human rights and constitutional laws.
It also aims to dig deep into human rights issues by covering a broad spectrum of topics ranging from the law, race, religion, gender, children, refugees, and immigration. The concept of "human rights practice" will be interpreted liberally in this journal.
Furthermore, the journal will publish articles and reports on genocide, ethnic cleansing, torture, capital punishment, laws of war, war crimes and crimes against humanity from a human rights point of view.
We are eager to hear from those who are breaking new ground in investigating and analyzing the potential of the international human rights framework as a vehicle for legislative, social, and cultural change through advocacy, mobilization, or education.
We are keen to publish views on how human rights are being used in new and challenging ways to enhance the protection of individuals or specific groups of persons and the drawbacks of this framework.
We will continuously work to make the journal essential reading for academics and students of political science and international law, officers in relevant NGOs, lawyers, politicians and civil servants, human rights activists and interested members of the general public. This peer-review journal is a vehicle for scholars and students of those disciplines who strive to learn about human rights and constitutional laws and share it with others.
All research articles in this journal have undergone rigorous peer review based on initial editor screening and double-blind peer review by anonymous expert referees. Review articles, comment pieces and reports are assessed by the journal's editors.