Legal Studies
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Edited by Rob Merkin, Jenny Steele, and Jill Poole.
Legal Studies is the journal of the Society of Legal Scholars (SLS). Legal Studies is recognised as one of the foremost academic law journals in the UK and enjoys an international readership both within the common law world and beyond. Legal Studies is a truly generalist peer-reviewed law journal and aims to include a varied range of scholarly articles in each issue, including doctrinal, conceptual, and socio-legal analyses. The journal warmly welcomes contributions from all those who wish to reach a broad international and UK readership.
Information about Legal Studies is also available at www.blackwellpublishing.com/lest
Table of Contents
The table of contents from the latest Legal Studies is not available becuase of problems with the XML feed. We hope to reinstate it shortly.
Editorial
The first editorial by the new team of editors is currently available free online.
Access Legal Studies Online
Current and back issues of the journal are now available online. If you or your institution has a subscription, you will be able to access the full text. Members of the SLS receive free online access to Legal Studies as part of their membership. Back issues are also available via Hein Online.
Submissions
The Editors welcome the submission of articles for consideration. Articles for publication should be sent to the editors, Rob Merkin, Southampton, Jenny Steele, York, and Jill Poole at Aston:
Legal Studies
School of Law
University of Southampton
Highfield
Southampton SO17 1BJ
Submission by e-mail is much preferred: please e-mail to any or all of rm8@soton.ac.uk and jcs507@york.ac.uk., and j.poole@aston.ac.uk . In submitting manuscripts for publication it would be helpful if authors could observe the submission guidelines. Corrections and amendments of contributions at proof stage are very expensive. Authors are asked to make sure their typescript is carefully checked and finalised particularly with regard to internal cross referencing and the citation of references. Afterthoughts cannot be incorporated in proofs.