About
The Indian Constitutional Law Review is a bi-annual law journal that covers contemporary developments in Indian Constitutional Law as well as comparative constitution. The journal encourages contributions that engage deeply with constitutional developments, landmark judgments, emerging rights-based issues, and comparative constitutional perspectives. ICLRQ aims to foster informed dialogue among scholars, practitioners, policymakers, and students by publishing high-quality research articles, case comments, and essays. Committed to promoting a culture of constitutionalism, accountability, and the rule of law, the Review provides a space for examining how constitutional principles shape governance and individual freedoms in a rapidly evolving legal and technological environment.
- Call for Editors for the Editorial Board Indian Constitutional Law Review: Submit by 23/11
Call for Submissions: Edition XIV
The Editorial Board calls for submissions for the 14th Edition of the Journal to be published in the first half of the year 2026. Authors may make qualitative submissions in any of the following themes:
- Contemporary Developments in Constitutional Law
- Comparative Constitutionalism
- Climate Constitutionalism
- AI, Algorithmic Governance & Constitutionalism
- Populism, Democratic backsliding & Constitutionalism
- Constitutional transformations in social and economic rights
- Surveillance and Constitutionalism
Submissions may be made in the following categories and subject to the following word limits:
- Research Papers: 3000 words
- Articles & Notes: 2000 words
- Case Comments and Short Articles: 1500 words
All entries must align with the Submission Guidelines of the Journal published on this website.
Latest Edition
Edition 13: July 2021
- Foreword by Editorial Board
- Nominated MLA’s in the Union Territory of Puducherry Assembly: A Façade of Democracy
- Doctrine of Proportionality as a Standard of Review under Article 14
- The Constitutional Validity of a State Tax on Consumption of Electricity Sourced from outside the State
- The Proviso to Section 44(2) of the Government of National Capital Territory of Delhi Act, 1991: A Constitutional Perspective
- Government of NCT of Delhi v. Union of India: A Tale of Two Judgments