Conference Proposal

Use this page to put together a proposal for publishing a curated set of conference proceedings in the Journal of Digital Justice and Legal Innovation. Proposals are accepted on a rolling basis.

Eligible conferences

  • Peer-reviewed academic conferences, workshops, and symposia whose scope intersects with JDJLI: legal innovation, digital rights, algorithmic accountability, technology regulation, access to justice, and legal informatics.
  • Events that have completed at least one prior edition with published outputs are preferred; first-edition events may be considered with a strong programme committee.
  • Single-discipline and interdisciplinary conferences are both welcome.

What to include in a proposal

  1. Conference details: full name, edition, host institution, location, dates, programme committee, and prior editions (if any).
  2. Scope statement: one paragraph describing how the conference's themes align with JDJLI's scope.
  3. Guest editor team: up to three guest editors with affiliations, ORCIDs, and a one-line statement of editorial responsibility for the proceedings collection.
  4. Indicative table of contents: expected number of articles (typical range 6–14), proposed sections, and short titles or themes.
  5. Peer-review plan: how reviewers will be sourced for the JDJLI double-blind review, how conflicts of interest with the conference programme committee will be handled.
  6. Timeline: proposed deadlines for article submission, peer review, revisions, and final publication.
  7. Open-access disclosure: confirmation that all articles will be published under CC BY 4.0 in line with the journal's Open Access Policy.

How to submit

Email the proposal as a single PDF to [email protected] with the subject line: JDJLI Conference Proceedings: Proposal: [Conference Acronym] [Year]

Editorial review timeline

  • Acknowledgement: within 5 working days of receipt.
  • Initial editorial decision: within 4 weeks (accept / accept-with-revisions / decline).
  • Article submissions opened: within 2 weeks of proposal acceptance.

Article workflow once accepted

After a proposal is accepted, individual papers are submitted through the standard JDJLI submission system with a pre-agreed section identifier (e.g. proceedings-{conference}-{year}). Each article goes through JDJLI's standard double-blind peer review. Standard APCs apply, with bulk arrangements available at proposal stage.

Questions about a possible proposal, including informal scoping conversations, are welcome before a full proposal is submitted.