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Comparative Labor Law & Policy Journal

Comparative Labour Law and Policy Journal

The Comparative Labor Law & Policy Journal (CLLPJ) provides a venue for leading scholarship in international labour law and the comparative analysis of labour law, employment policy, and social security issues. With an extensive world-wide circulation, the Journal has become a major international forum for research, theoretical and applied, in a field of growing global importance. The CLLPJ produces three issues per year, including scholarly articles, dispatches and book reviews. Commencing with Volume 45, Number 1, and going forward, the Journal has become open access and available digitally through the Osgoode Digital Commons. The CLLPJ is a non-profit journal, and is generously funded by Osgoode Hall Law School and the Canadian Association of Labour Lawyers

History

The Comparative Labor Law Journal was founded in 1976, with UCLA’s Benjamin Aaron as Founding Editor, and with the support of the United States Branch of the International Society for Labor Law and Social Security (US ISLLSS). Upon Professor Aaron’s retirement, the Journal moved to the University of Pennsylvania, under the Editorship of Clyde Summers and Janice Bellace. In 1997, the Journal then moved to the University of Illinois, under the direction of General Editors Matthew Finkin and Sanford Jacoby. There it was renamed the Comparative Labor Law & Policy Journal and its Editorial Advisory Board expanded. During this period the Journal was supported by the University of Illinois College of Law and the US ISLLSS. In 2024, and commencing with Volume 45, Number 1, the CLLPJ moved to Osgoode Hall Law School, with Professors Valerio De Stefano and Sara Slinn assuming the General Editorship. The CLLPJ is generously supported by Osgoode Hall Law School and the Canadian Association of Labour Lawyers.