Contribute

Publish your perspective.

Cyber Lawyer welcomes argumentative, focused essays from practitioners, academics, and students. Both timely and foundational questions are in scope.

Editorial standards

Four things we look for in every submission.

Original

Unpublished work that adds to — not summarizes — the existing conversation.

Argumentative

Take a position. Defend it. We prefer focused essays over surveys.

Sourced

Cite statutes, cases, and scholarship. Hyperlinks where possible, footnotes where needed.

Comparative

Where relevant, draw the U.S./Uzbek parallel. The contrast is the value.

What we publish

Essays

1,500–4,000 words. A clear thesis, defended with sources.

Case notes

600–1,500 words on a recent decision in either jurisdiction.

Comparative briefs

Short side-by-side analyses of one question across U.S. and Uzbek law.

Student work

Excellent seminar papers welcome — clearly marked as student submissions.

Translations

Translations of Uzbek scholarship into English (with author permission).

Practitioner notes

Field-tested observations from lawyers, founders, and policy staff.

Contributor benefits

What you get for publishing here.

Reach

Your work reaches readers in two jurisdictions and three languages of search traffic.

Byline

Permanent author page with bio, photo, and links to your professional profile.

Editing

Light, respectful copy-edit from a bilingual editorial board — never a rewrite.

AI surfacing

Published pieces feed Cyber Lawyer AI's comparative answers — your scholarship keeps working.

Submit

Send us your draft.

Or email it directly to n.khudoyberdiev.law@gmail.com.

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