The journal has a double-blind peer-review process with an academic review board[7] of eminent scholars in the field of International and Comparative Law.
In its first two volumes, the journal has published a number of articles by prominent academics, established practitioners and pre-eminent judges, including Sir Christopher Greenwood of the International Court of Justice.
The senior treasurer of the journal is James Crawford and the current editors-in-chief are Daniel Clarry, Valentin Jeutner, and Cameron Miles.
[8] The journal hosts an International and Comparative Law Conference annually at Cambridge, usually at St John’s Divinity School.
Two blog posts[12] on the site gained particular popularity when Julian Assange (who mistakenly believed their texts were related to the Cambridge Law Journal) cited them in an interview with the BBC.