"Journal of World Energy Law" from Oxford.Oxford University Press (Cary, NC) and the Association of International Petroleum Negotiators (Houston, TX) have begun the publication of "The Journal of World Energy Law & Business," a peer-reviewed "journal of record" designed to provide objective coverage of relevant issues affecting world energy policies and business. A print subscription costs $475 for institutions and $181 for individuals. An online subscription, not available for individuals, costs $452 for institutions. The journal will be published three times a year. Oxford said the journal is targeted to legal practitioners, government and international agency officials,experts from professional, industry and non-governmental organizations “NGO” redirects here. For other uses, see NGO (disambiguation). A non-governmental organization (NGO) is a legally constituted organization created by private persons or organizations with no participation or representation of any government. , and academics specializing in energy-related issues. The journal publishes articles on legal, business and policy issues in the international energy industry, including upstream From the consumer to the provider. See downstream. (networking) upstream - Fewer network hops away from a backbone or hub. For example, a small ISP that connects to the Internet through a larger ISP that has their own connection to the backbone is downstream from the larger oil and gas transactions, finance, taxation, regulation, dispute management, alternative energy resources, energy policy and security, and international energy organizations such as OPEC OPEC: see Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries. OPEC in full Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries Multinational organization established in 1960 to coordinate the petroleum production and export policies of its . Editor Prof. Thomas Wolfe said the journal's scope includes those industries that transport, produce, and disseminate dis·sem·i·nate v. dis·sem·i·nat·ed, dis·sem·i·nat·ing, dis·sem·i·nates v.tr. 1. To scatter widely, as in sowing seed. 2. electricity out of such varied conventional and non-conventional energy sources such as coal, uranium uranium (y rā`nēəm), radioactive metallic chemical element; symbol U; at. no. 92; at. wt. 238.0289; m.p. 1,132°C;; b.p. 3,818°C;; sp. gr. 19. , wind, and solar power, as well as new sources and
technologies. The premier issue of the journal includes articles on:
national and international oil companies in the Middle East; the
changing fiscal landscape of the energy industry; renegotiating acquired
rights in the oil and gas industries; and, stabilization StabilizationThe action undertakes a country when it buys and sells its own currency to protect its exchange value. Actions registered competitive traders undertake by on the NYSE to meet the exchange requirement that 75% of their traded be stabilizing, meaning that sell orders and adaptation in oil and gas investments. Related journals published by Oxford include "Journal of Competition Law and Economics," "Journal of Environmental Law," "Enterprise & Society: The International Journal of Business History" and "Capital Markets Law Journal." |
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