• CALL FOR PAPERS

Evrigenis-Hellenic Yearbook for International and European Law (EVRHYIEL) Call for Papers

Aims and Scope
Evrigenis-Hellenic Yearbook for International and European Law (EVRHYIEL) from Ant. N. Sakkoulas Publishers (Athens, Greece) is an annual publication that provides a scholarly forum to discuss issues of Public International Law and European Union Law. It focuses on theoretical as well as practical questions and current developments in all the related scientific areas. Specifically, EVRHYIEL publishes articles, essays, research notes and book reviews on a range of the above mentioned scientific areas, including Public International and Private International Law, European Union Law, Immigration and Asylum Law, International Protection of Human Rights, International Economic Law as well as Legal Informatics. As such, it aims to provide a scientific forum for discussion on salient issues relating to the latter. Articles should be original and should not be under consideration elsewhere. It must be noted that, EVRHYIEL accepts annotated decisions and case law of international and regional courts and tribunals with emphasis on International Court of Justice, International Criminal Court, International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea, African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights, Inter-American Court of Human Rights, European Court of Human Rights, as well as the case law of International Committees of Human Rights.

Formatting Requirements

  • Articles should range between 5.000-10.000 words.
  • Manuscripts should be typed on one side of A4 (single-space, Palatino Linotype, 12, which can be forward electronically, saved as an attachment, to perraki@uom.edu.gr / danag@uom.edu.gr / ioannis.tzivaras@ouc.ac.cy / kkouroupis@protonmail.com manuscripts sent out anonymously for editorial evaluation, the author’s name should appear on a separate covering page. Also, a brief biographical paragraph (approximately 70-100 words) should also be included.
  • An abstract of no more than 150 words should be included on separate page together with keywords to define the article’s or the essay’s content (maximum 10)
  • Chapter structure: Each chapter should include a) the full name, affiliation and e-mail address of the author(s) in an unnumbered footnote and b) an abstract of the chapter.
  • Headings should appear as follows:
    1. Chapter title1.1. Section
    1.1.1. Subsection
    1.1.1.1. Sub-subsection
  • References: As the EVRHYIEL is a multi-disciplinary Yearbook, full references should adhere and cited in footnotes. References to books, book chapters or journal articles should be given in a shortened form:One author: Bernand 2008, pp 329-330
    Two authors: Bernand and Sroiter 2010, pp 123-124
    Three or more authors: Bernand et al 1993, pp 17-19In case there are two or more titles of one author in the same year, use a, b, c etc, for example:
    Bernand 2003a, Bernand 2003b etc
    References to Court decisions, laws and regulations should remain only in the footnotes.
    For the reference list, each chapter should contain a reference list
    of its own. Entries must be listed alphabetically:
    Books and monographs: Bantekas I (2009) Trust Funds under International Law, T.M.C. Asser Press, The Hague
    Chapters in books: Van de Brouiten A and Chalepis A (2011) International Law. In Van de Brouiten (ed), Health Care and International Law, T.M.C. Asser Press, The Hague
    Journal articles: Barnand A (2010) Understanding International
    Law, International Criminal Law Review 25: 312-319
    Websites: War Crimes Research Office (2004) The Gravity of
    ICTY. www………………………cfm. Accessed 12 September 2020.
  • Dates should appear as follows: 26 August 1982; 1990’s; twentieth century. Numbers should appear as follows: 1, 2, 3 etc.
  • Essays and Research Notes: essays on subjects relating to EVRHYIEL should be unreferenced and range between 1.500- 3.000 words in length. Research notes should be in the region of 5.000 words including footnotes.
  • Book Reviews and Case Law: 2.000 words maximum in length. In the case of Books Reviews, headings should appear as follows:
    Author/s, title, author/s, publisher, place, date, number of pages and ISBN registration.
    For example: Roberts, A., Is International Law International? (Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2017) 432pp. ISBN: 978- 0190696412.
    The reviewer’s name should appear at the end of the review plus a
    brief biographical paragraph (up to 100 words).
  • Each author will receive one complimentary e-copy of the issue in which his/her paper appears to use for additional re-prints.
  • Articles submitted to the Yearbook should be unpublished material and must not be reproduced for one year following publication in the EVRHYIEL. Submitted articles should conform to the EVRHYIEL Guidelines and will be sent for double-blind peer review.The editors put out this Call for Papers and invite all interested persons to submit contributions for Volume 6 (2024) of the EVRHYIEL, and the manuscripts should be sent, as was mentioned above, till 31.04.2025. The Editorial Board aims to publish next Volume at the beginning of the ensuing year.

The editors put out this Call for Papers and invite all interested persons to submit contributions for Volume 5 (2023) of the EVRYIEL, and the manuscripts should be sent, as was mentioned above, till 27.11.2023. The Editorial Board aims to publish next Volume at the end of the ensuing year.

The Editorial Board

Paraskevi Naskou-Perraki, Dr. Professor of International Law, University of Macedonia (Editor)
Despoina Anagnostopoulou, Professor of European Union Law, University of Macedonia (Editor)
Ioannis P. Tzivaras, Tutor, Open University of Cyprus (Associate Editor)
Konstantinos Kouroupis, Assistant Professor of European Union Law, Frederick University (Associate Editor)