Vol. 3 No. 1 (2025)
This issue presents scholarly contributions addressing contemporary developments in public law, administrative law, criminal law, civil liability, and commercial dispute resolution, with particular emphasis on emerging technological and governance challenges. The published studies examine the civil liability of oil companies for environmental damages and behavioral patterns in medical liability with predictive implications for patient safety outcomes. The interpretative role of the Administrative Justice Court in shaping Iranian administrative law and the principle of transparency in administrative interpretation and enforcement are also critically analyzed.
The issue further explores cybercrimes with a victim-centered approach focusing on women as vulnerable victims, and offers a comparative analysis of Iran and England regarding preventive legal and institutional frameworks for emerging cyber offenses. Money laundering in the sports industry and the challenges posed by emerging technologies such as deepfake in sports contracts are assessed from a criminal law and prevention perspective.
Additional contributions address the role of local policing in enhancing social capital and reducing urban crime, ownership structures in digital asset management and emerging data-based property regimes, efficiency indicators in online commercial arbitration and cross-border enforcement success, the identification of commercial character in immovable property transactions in Iranian and French judicial practice, and the doctrinal challenges in distinguishing bribery from unlawful influence in Iranian criminal law.
All contributions have undergone a rigorous peer-review process and aim to provide analytical and policy-relevant frameworks for strengthening administrative justice, institutional transparency, citizen protection, and legal adaptability in the face of technological transformation.


