URBAN DESIGN International is:* an essential forum for the exchange of information and debate concerning issues of urban design and management* a vital resource for urban designers, architects, planners, landscape architects and developers*an international peer-reviewed publication.URBAN DESIGN International is the first truly international network for all of those involved in the multi-disciplinary tasks of urban design and management.In providing a direct forum for the exchange of information and a vehicle for the debate which constantly redefines the scope of urban design, the journal places a primary emphasis on bringing together practice and research. It addresses current issues and aims to make a range of materials accessible to all: from in-depth papers and reviews of projects, to book reviews, comments on previous contributions and a diary of international events. Some issues are themed by topic or geographic region.The international range of the journal is impressive as witnessed by contributions from all the major continents and an active and extensive editorial structure.Amongst the issues the journal addresses are:*urban design*urban development and management*urban ecology*transportation and highway design*heritage and local identity*diverse communities of interest.
The University of Toronto Law Journal has taken a broad and visionary approach to legal scholarship since its beginnings in 1935. Its first editor, Professor WPM Kennedy, hoped that the Journal would foster a knowledge of law as expressions of organized human life, of ordered progress, and of social justice. The University of Toronto Law Journal has since established itself as a leading journal for theoretical, interdisciplinary, comparative and other conceptually oriented inquiries into law and law reform. The Journal regularly publishes articles that study law from such perspectives as legal philosophy, law and economics, legal history, criminology, law and literature, and feminist analysis. Global in relevance, international in scope, it publishes work by highly regarded scholars from many countries, including Australia, Israel, Germany, New Zealand, the United States and the United Kingdom.