From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nordic Journal of Human Rights
Discipline Law, human rights
LanguageEnglish
Publication details
Former name(s)
Mennesker og Rettigheter, Nordisk tidsskrift for menneskerettigheter
History1982–present
Publisher
Universitetsforlaget on behalf of the Norwegian Centre for Human Rights (Faculty of Law, University of Oslo) (Norway)
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Nord. J. Hum. Rights
Indexing
ISSN 1891-8131 (print)
1891-814X (web)
Links

The Nordic Journal of Human Rights is a peer-reviewed academic journal published by the Norwegian Centre for Human Rights (part of the Faculty of Law at the University of Oslo) in collaboration with Universitetsforlaget. The journal takes a broad and cross-disciplinary view on human rights, particularly in a Nordic context.

In the Norwegian Association of Higher Education Institutions' ranking of scientific journals ( Norwegian Scientific Index), the journal is ranked as a Level 2 journal (Level 2 comprises up to the 20% most prestigious journals in any discipline, in this case law). [1]

The journal was established in 1982 and was originally published as a Scandinavian-language journal, titled Mennesker og Rettigheter (Humans and Rights). It was renamed Nordisk tidsskrift for menneskerettigheter (Nordic Journal of Human Rights) in 2004. In 2010, the journal became an English-language journal, and was renamed Nordic Journal of Human Rights.

References

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nordic Journal of Human Rights
Discipline Law, human rights
LanguageEnglish
Publication details
Former name(s)
Mennesker og Rettigheter, Nordisk tidsskrift for menneskerettigheter
History1982–present
Publisher
Universitetsforlaget on behalf of the Norwegian Centre for Human Rights (Faculty of Law, University of Oslo) (Norway)
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Nord. J. Hum. Rights
Indexing
ISSN 1891-8131 (print)
1891-814X (web)
Links

The Nordic Journal of Human Rights is a peer-reviewed academic journal published by the Norwegian Centre for Human Rights (part of the Faculty of Law at the University of Oslo) in collaboration with Universitetsforlaget. The journal takes a broad and cross-disciplinary view on human rights, particularly in a Nordic context.

In the Norwegian Association of Higher Education Institutions' ranking of scientific journals ( Norwegian Scientific Index), the journal is ranked as a Level 2 journal (Level 2 comprises up to the 20% most prestigious journals in any discipline, in this case law). [1]

The journal was established in 1982 and was originally published as a Scandinavian-language journal, titled Mennesker og Rettigheter (Humans and Rights). It was renamed Nordisk tidsskrift for menneskerettigheter (Nordic Journal of Human Rights) in 2004. In 2010, the journal became an English-language journal, and was renamed Nordic Journal of Human Rights.

References


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