From 052a7d7f68c3062a229aa7fc4ecc58c93185a403 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: "J.-S. Caux" <J.S.Caux@uva.nl>
Date: Tue, 15 May 2018 11:57:43 +0200
Subject: [PATCH] Correct wrong url

---
 submissions/templates/submissions/author_guidelines.html | 2 +-
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)

diff --git a/submissions/templates/submissions/author_guidelines.html b/submissions/templates/submissions/author_guidelines.html
index f4f14799d..8986cabec 100644
--- a/submissions/templates/submissions/author_guidelines.html
+++ b/submissions/templates/submissions/author_guidelines.html
@@ -182,7 +182,7 @@
 	<li>
 	  <h4>Can I invite people to referee my paper?</h4>
 	  <p>
-	    Yes, you can do that, in multiple ways. First of all, upon submission, you can provide a list of suggested referees. Second, remember that our peer-witnessed refereeing procedure, besides using invited Reports, also accepts contributed ones (namely: Reports coming from registered Contributors, but who were not specifically invited by the Editor-in-charge). You can thus self-invite potential referees to deliver a Report on your paper. Note however that our strict <a href="{% url 'submissions:refereeing_guidelines' %}#refereeCOIrules">referee conflict-of-interest rules</a> have to be obeyed.
+	    Yes, you can do that, in multiple ways. First of all, upon submission, you can provide a list of suggested referees. Second, remember that our peer-witnessed refereeing procedure, besides using invited Reports, also accepts contributed ones (namely: Reports coming from registered Contributors, but who were not specifically invited by the Editor-in-charge). You can thus self-invite potential referees to deliver a Report on your paper. Note however that our strict <a href="{% url 'submissions:referee_guidelines' %}#refereeCOIrules">referee conflict-of-interest rules</a> have to be obeyed.
 	  </p>
 	</li>
 	<li>
-- 
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