"European Constitutional Law Review" to launch in '05.T.M.C. Asser Press (The Hague, the Hague, The (hāg), Du. 's Gravenhage or Den Haag, Fr. La Haye, city (1994 pop. 445,279), administrative and governmental seat of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, capital of South Holland prov., W Netherlands, on the North Sea. Neth.), established in 1999 to publish books and journal in the fields of European European emanating from or pertaining to Europe. European bat lyssavirus see lyssavirus. European beech tree fagussylvaticus. European blastomycosis see cryptococcosis. and international law, will begin the publication of European Constitutional Law Review with an issue in the first quarter of 2005. It will be published three times a year and an annual subscription costs $138. The new journal (EuConst) will be produced in English for practitioners, academics, politicians and others involved in the European constitutional process. Asser said the title will be used as a platform for advancing the study of European constitutional law, its history and evolution with information on European and constitutional law, history and theory, comparative law and jurisprudence jurisprudence (j r'ĭspr d`əns), study of the nature and the origin and development of law. . It will also include articles on doctrine and scholarship as well as reviews of relevant books and related media. The premier issue includes more than 20 short articles, each addressing a single topic in the Draft Constitutional Treaty for Europe. The new journal will be distributed to English-speaking markets by Cambridge University Press Cambridge University Press (known colloquially as CUP) is a publisher given a Royal Charter by Henry VIII in 1534, and one of the two privileged presses (the other being Oxford University Press). and will be available through the Cambridge Journals online service (http://journals.cambridge. org). The premier issue is available for free at www. journals.cambridge.org/jid_ECL (Emitter-Coupled Logic) A digital circuit composed of bipolar transistors in which the emitter ends are wired together. ECL gates switch faster than TTL gates, but consume more power. See TTL, I2L and bipolar. 1. . |
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