I would like the core research from my completed dissertation in International Humanitarian Rights Law and International Human Rights Law turned into a stand-alone article suitable for submission to a Scopus-indexed journal ranked in the Q1–Q2 tier. The dissertation is available in full, and you may draw on any chapter—introduction, methodology, data analysis, or conclusions—so long as the final piece reads as a coherent journal article. What I need from you • Identify and distill the most publishable material, shaping it into an article that meets Q1/Q2 length, structure, and citation norms. • Refresh and expand the literature review with the latest peer-reviewed sources, ensuring references are fully updated. • Refine language for academic publication: tighten arguments, improve flow, and follow the preferred style guide of the target journal. • Integrate any recent developments in humanitarian and human rights law that strengthen the article’s relevance. • Format everything—abstract, keywords, body, footnotes/endnotes, reference list, tables/figures—exactly to the chosen journal’s submission template. Deliverables 1. A polished manuscript (Word file) ready for submission. 2. A separate reference list in the required citation style. 3. A brief cover note summarising the contribution and fit with the journal. 4. Turnitin or similar originality report. Acceptance criteria – Manuscript length, section order, and referencing strictly match the journal’s author guidelines. – Language is publication-ready with no major edits flagged in a final proofread. – All references post-2020 are correctly incorporated, with at least 15 newly added sources. If you have experience placing articles in Scopus-indexed law journals and are comfortable working within tight editorial standards, I look forward to collaborating.