8th Summer School on European Business Law 2012

Termin: 
20.08.2012 - 10:00 - 31.08.2012 - 16:00

 

Be a Part…

The 8th Summer School on European Business Law at the Center for Business and Corporate Law at Heinrich-Heine-University Duesseldorf will take place from August 20th to 31st, 2012.

With our joint partners, the Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya (Israel), University of Tilburg (The Netherlands) and University of Liechtenstein (Principality of Liechtenstein), you will be a part of a two weeks intensive program on international and European business law with experts from academia and practice.

The diversity of European business law leads to a diverse and multi-angled curriculum which will optimize your professional skills on corporate and securities law, intellectual property, capital markets and finance law as well as mergers, acquisitions and takeovers.

Beside the academic experience, you have the unique opportunity to network with highly qualified participants from all over the world, law firm representatives and academics. The cultural and social side-events will also enrich your impression of the Summer School, Heinrich-Heine-University and Düsseldorf.

The curriculum of this year's 8th Summer School on European Business Law is currently in progress.

 

Register now!


For more information contact us or visit our website.

 

Veranstaltungsort: 
Center for Business and Corporate Law (Duesseldorf)

Submitting a Research Paper

Once received, members of the CBC will review the submission for content and composition. If the paper is accepted, members of the CBC editorial staff will provide comments and suggestions, where necessary. Eventual changes, to be agreed upon between the author and the CBC, are to be incorporated by the author.

If accepted, the CBC formats the paper according to its standards and publishes the paper on its worksite. The CBC also distributes published papers to a broad network of individuals and institutions with the request for comments and response. Such responses are provided in regular intervals to the original author; in some cases, comments may be published in a separate forum alongside the submission on the CBC homepage.

Publication rights remain with the authors. The CBC is provided only with a right of use which is revocable upon acceptance of the paper for publication with a print journal. The CBC then retains solely a right of use in respect of the abstract, as well as the right to acknowledge that the paper was accepted into the CBC-RPS, and has been published elsewhere. The authors are similarly obliged to make reference to the acceptance of the original paper in the CBC-RPS upon such eventual publication elsewhere.

Conditions

Papers may be submitted in English, German or French, and must focus on a business or taxation law topic: related topics, such as competition law, securities and investment law, economic analysis and law, trade law and business administrative law are also welcomed.

Papers must be submitted in MS-Word format, and should be between 3,000 and 40,000 words in length, not counting footnotes and other references. The CBC encourages the submission of academic papers, carefully researched, and finalized to a “working draft” stage.

This means:

- The theses of the paper must be clearly recognizable.

- Language errors must be reduced to a minimum.

- The paper must be preceded by an abstract of up to 300 words.

- All references by the authors to other sources must be documented within the text or as footnotes. In individual cases, the symbol “*” may be used to indicate the author’s intention to complete the respective footnote.

- Direct quotes are, without exception, to be properly documented and cited.

In keeping with professional and academic standards, papers should be thoroughly researched, and all citations and references precisely documented. The CBC accepts no liability for plagiarism or false documenting of resources.

Where such issues are raised, CBC staff reserve the right to remove the paper from the CBC-RPS, stating the reasons for such removal.