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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200122
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200125
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20191115T142022Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191206T085922Z
UID:10000930-1579651200-1579910399@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Workshop: “Mosques\, power and politics” (22-24 January 2020\, University of Copenhagen)
DESCRIPTION:Workshop Programme  “Mosques\, power and politics”  Copenhagen\, Denmark  22-24 January 2020  Venue: University of Copenhagen\, South Campus  Karen Blixens Plads 8\, 2300 Copenhagen\, Denmark Workshop theme:For this workshop we address the changing politics of mosque building\, the different kinds of conflict surrounding the building of a mosque and the symbolic appropriation of territory by the mosque. The building of a mosque can be seen as a social transformative interaction and accounts for the many stakeholders involved in the construction of mosques (e.g.\, Muslim organizations\, international donors\, local politicians\, anti-Islam groups and other critics). As such\, the mosques and the politics of construction can be seen as microcosms of the discourse on Muslims in a country.Concerns with security\, extremism and visibility of Muslim institutions in the Nordic and Western European countries are causing “existential” difficulties for mosques. The state criticizes mosques and change the politics of religion with reference to incidents in mosques as in Denmark in 2016-18. This seminar will examine the power strategies used by national and local politicians\, examining national legislation and municipal planning on mosques\, and will investigate a number of concrete cases of contested mosque building. The operable questions are what are the political power dynamics at play in mosque building? Do the mosques challenge the existing models of state-religion-relations? How may mosques present and organize themselves to defuse these tensions of power?Paper abstracts of 300 words and a short CV to be submitted to Niels Valdemar Vinding\, lbm993@hum.ku.dk\, on November 15th 2019 at the latest.Read more on: https://mosques.ku.dk/nordic-mosques/ 2ExpensesThe project covers reasonable expenses from transport. Hotel and meals are already booked. Please contact Niels Valdemar Vinding\, lbm993@hum.ku.dk\, if you have expenses.Workshop seriesThis is the second in a series of three workshops on Nordic Mosques in Context – On the institutional embeddedness of Islam in the Nordic countries sponsored by a NOS-HS Workshop Grant. The third seminar is on “Mosques\, communities and finance\,” in Oslo\, Norway\, August 2020. The purpose of the workshops is to investigate the dimensions of institutional embeddedness of Islam in the Nordic countries as mosques seek to be responsive institutions for the needs of Muslims\, challenged by economic\, legal and political alternatives. We are considering mosques as the focal point of Islam in economic\, legal and political terms\, the primary objective of this research project is to study the institutional strategies of mosques and Muslims in embedding Islam in the Nordic wider societies. The key here is to see to what extend mosques are responsive institutions for the needs of Muslim in soliciting the wider public\, or if Muslims go beyond the mosque in the pursuit of other more apt forms of institutionalized religious life such as invoking Islamic economic\, legal and political responses. We argue that the entire future of mosques depends on whether they can give and refine responsive and meaningful answers and make them coherent with the economic\, legal and politics questions that Muslims seek the answers to. As such\, this may result in the secularization of mosques as they negotiate and find their place in society. Will these new or re-interpreted institutional expressions clash with the general public\, will they fail Muslims or will they be viable alternatives for embedding Islam in the Nordic countries?A call for the workshop “Mosques\, communities and finance\,” in August 2020\, in Oslo\, Norway\, will be circulated in February\, 2020.On behalf of the convenersBrian Arly Jacobsen\, assoc. professor\, Sociology of Religion\, University of Copenhagen\, Denmark Torkel Brekke\, Research Professor\, Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO)\, Norway Göran Larsson\, Professor in Religious Studies\, Göteborg University\, Sweden Niels Valdemar Vinding\, post.doc.\, Islamic Studies\, University of Copenhagen\, Denmark We are funded by a NOS-HS Workshop Grant as “Nordic Mosques in Context – On the institutional embeddedness of Islam in the Nordic countries” (Grant No. 2018-00085).
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/workshop-mosques-power-and-politics-22-24-january-2020-university-of-copenhagen/
LOCATION:University of Copenhagen\, South Campus Karen Blixens Plads 8\, 2300 Copenhagen\, Denmark
CATEGORIES:Call for papers,conferences and workshops,Due dates,Opportunities
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200207
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200208
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20191126T153225Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191206T085922Z
UID:10001201-1581033600-1581119999@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Call for Papers: Thirteenth International Junior Faculty Forum (Oct 2020 | Stanford Law School)
DESCRIPTION:Call for Papers: Thirteenth International Junior Faculty Forum\, Stanford Law SchoolSponsored by Stanford Law School\, the International Junior Faculty Forum (IJFF) was established to stimulate the exchange of ideas and research among younger legal scholars from around the world. We live today in a global community– in particular\, a global legal community. The IJFF is designed to foster transnational legal scholarship that surmounts barriers of time\, space\, legal traditions and cultures\, and to create an engaged global community of scholars. The Thirteenth IJFF will be held at Stanford Law School in fall 2020 (the exact date has not yet been fixed; but it will probably be in October).In order to be considered for the 2020 International Junior Faculty Forum\, authors must meet the following criteria: Citizen of a country other than the United States Current academic institution is outside of the United States Not currently a student in the United States Have held a faculty position or the equivalent\, including positions comparable to junior faculty positions in research institutions\, for less than seven years as of 2020; and Last degree earned less than ten years before 2020.Papers may be on any legally relevant subject and can make use of any relevant approach: they can be quantitative or qualitative\, sociological\, anthropological\, historical\, or economic. The host institution is committed to intellectual\, methodological\, and regional diversity\, and welcomes papers from junior scholars from all parts of the world. Please note\, however\, that already published papers are not eligible for consideration. We particularly welcome work that is interdisciplinary.Those who would like to participate in the IJFF must first submit an abstract of the proposed paper. Abstracts should be no more than two (2) pages long and must be in English. The abstract should provide a roadmap of your paper—it should tell us what you plan to do\, lay out the major argument of the paper\, say something about the methodology\, and indicate the paper’s contribution to scholarship. The due date for abstracts is Friday\, February 7\, 2020\, although earlier submissions are welcome. To submit your abstract\, please complete our abstract submission form. Abstracts must have the name of the author(s) and title of the abstract on the document that is submitted to be considered for the forum.After the abstracts have been reviewed\, we will invite\, no later than the end of March 2020\, a number of junior scholars to submit full papers of no more than 15\,000 words\, electronically\, in English\, by a deadline of approximately mid-May 2020. Please include a word count for final papers. There is no fixed number of papers to be invited\, but in the past years\, up to 50 invitations have been issued from among a much larger number of abstracts.An international committee of legal scholars will review the papers and select a small number of them\, but at least seven\, for full presentation at the conference\, where two senior scholars will comment on each paper. After the remarks of the commentators\, all of the participants\, junior and senior alike\, will have a chance to join in the discussion. One of the most valuable—and enjoyable—aspects of the Forum\, in the opinion of many participants\, has been the chance to meet junior and senior scholars and to talk about your work and theirs.Participants are encouraged to seek funding from their home institutions. In default\, Stanford will cover expenses of travel\, including airfare\, lodging\, and food for participants. Questions about the forum should be directed to ijff@law.stanford.edu.
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/call-for-papers-thirteenth-international-junior-faculty-forum-oct-2020-stanford-law-school/
CATEGORIES:Call for papers,Due dates,Opportunities
ORGANIZER;CN="International Junior Faculty Forum%2C Stanford Law School":MAILTO:ijff@law.stanford.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200215
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200216
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20200208T200110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200208T200110Z
UID:10001207-1581724800-1581811199@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Call for Proposals: "Ibadi Manuscripts in European & North American Libraries” (24-25 Apr | Lviv\, Ukraine)
DESCRIPTION:Second Workshop on Ibadi Manuscripts & Manuscript CulturesOrganizers of the Second Annual Workshop on Ibadi Manuscripts & Manuscript Cultures\, “Ibadi Manuscripts in European and North American Libraries\,” are pleased to announce a call for participants. The workshop will be held in Lviv\, Ukraine on 24-25 April 2020\, and the deadline for proposals is 15 February 2020.Details can be found in Arabic\, English\, and French at: https://ibadistudies.files.wordpress.com/2020/01/lviv_ibadi_mss_cfp_2020.pdf
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/call-for-proposals-ibadi-manuscripts-in-european-north-american-libraries-24-25-apr-lviv-ukraine/
LOCATION:Ivan Franko National University in Lviv Ukraine
CATEGORIES:Call for papers,conferences and workshops,Due dates,Opportunities
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200218
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200219
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20200208T200110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200208T200110Z
UID:10001208-1581984000-1582070399@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Call for Papers: Middle East Studies Association 54th Annual Meeting (10-12 Oct | Washington\, DC)
DESCRIPTION:MESA’S 54th ANNUAL MEETINGCall for PapersDeadline: February 18\, 2020The Middle East Studies Association calls for submissions from members for its 54th annual meeting to be held October 10-13\, 2020 in Washington\, DC.All submissions must be made through myMESA\, MESA’s membership and electronic submissions system. The system is now open and closes at midnight (Mountain Standard Time) on February 18\, 2020.Questions about the submission process are always welcome. Please email Kat Kassanitz at kat@mesana.org.Please be reminded that MESA membership is a requirement to submit a proposal. To renew your 2020 membership\, login to myMESA or use the attached form. Contact Sara Palmer at sara@mesana.org with questions about membership.
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/call-for-papers-middle-east-studies-association-54th-annual-meeting-10-12-oct-washington-dc/
CATEGORIES:Call for papers,Due dates,Opportunities
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200220
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200221
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20200208T200111Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200208T200111Z
UID:10000940-1582156800-1582243199@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Call for Papers: "Dissenting Voices: The Making\, Debating\, and Shaping of Law" (16-17 Sep | University of Liège)
DESCRIPTION:Dissenting Voices: The Making\, Debating\, and Shaping of Law  16 and 17 September 2020  University of Liège  Organizers:Sophie Andreetta (MPI for Social Anthropology/ULiège)Susanne Verheul (University of Oxford)Eugenia Relano Pastor (MPI for Social Anthropology)While laws\, reforms\, and public policies are often assumed to be coherent (Holm Vohnsen 2017)\, dissenting opinions\, contradicting trends in the jurisprudence\, and variations in daily administrative practices suggest otherwise. Breaking away from the assumption that legal regimes speak with one\, unanimous voice\, this workshop will explore the place and the role of dissenting voices in the way legality is constructed.Building on studies of legal professionals on the one hand (Andreetta & Kolloch 2018; Boigeol 1996 ; Bessière & Mille 2013 ; Budniok 2015; Oumarou 2014 ; Rubbers & Gallez 2015; Verheul 2013)\, and on the literature on litigation and judicial decision-making on the other (Dupret 2006 ; Gill & Good 2019 ; Good\, Berti & Tarabout 2015 ; Ben Hounet & Puccio-Den 2017 ; Colemans & Dupret 2018 ; Truffin & Laperche 2011 ; Simon & Truffin 2018)\, we aim to explore contradictions within\, resistance to\, and the telling of different\, potentially competing stories in legal proceedings\, texts\, or laws\, and the manner of their interpretation. How do legal professionals decide between different trends in the jurisprudence? How do they understand their role within\, or against the legal system? How do they relate to legal narratives\, and to the stories of law told by the state with which they might regularly work? This workshop will delve into competing understandings of professionalism\, interests at stake\, and narratives around legal work\, on the one hand\, and the way legal actors navigate\, or mobilize competing interpretations of legal texts\, on the other hand. It will also investigate how unanimous voices are challenged\, through cause-lawyering or strategic litigation for example\, and how dissenting opinions can sometimes gain traction and trigger shifts in the jurisprudence.We are particularly interested in three areas where dissenting voices might be heard: 1. the process of appointing the decision-makers; 2. the bureaucratic\, professional or political environment in which they make their decisions; and finally\, 3. the role of legal professionals’ discretion in legal procedures and judicial crafting.In relation to the appointment of legal decision-makers\, papers can examine the processes through which one becomes a judicial officer\, including training and education. Papers can further explore how are judges\, magistrates or prosecutors are selected by the bodies that control access to the profession. Do these processes give rise to any forms of dissent\, or advice on how to manage dissent? What does this tell us about the judicial profession\, and the wider socio-political context in which judicial officers operate? We particularly welcome papers that build on socio-historical perspectives\, and examine the way legal professions have been shaped within or across a variety of political contexts.Second\, to gain an understanding of how dissent works and circulates within the environment in which decisions are made\, we are interested in judges’ and prosecutors’ practical work routines\, the daily challenges they face\, and the way they deal with them. How do these actors define their role within the justice system? How do they frame their professional work ethics\, and how do they balance these with potentially competing everyday working conditions\, and social or political pressure?Third\, this workshop will interact with the (personal) values and norms judges and magistrates mobilize in order to come to their decisions. How do judges understand and interpret the law in specific cases? What kind of presumptions do they make\, or what sort of questions do they ask\, and why? How much room for dissent is there within the judiciary\, how is it perceived\, and what role do dissenting opinions play in the wider process of legal\, or political change? Building on the idea that law and litigation can be used as a tool to create social change\, contributions could further focus on the role of judges\, prosecutors\, or third-party interventions in advancing legal debates and legal production\, exploring how they make sense of “open” concepts or highly disputed issues such as human dignity\, ill-treatment or the superior interest of the child\, among others.This workshop finally aims to combine papers looking at a range of national\, and international courts\, and at the actors who play within\, or near those courts in order to achieve various social or political goals. How do different sets of actors mobilize the law and its institutions across civil or common law systems? What is the place of dissenting voices\, how are they expressed and what kind of effects do have on the construction of legality and jurisprudence?This 2-day workshop will bring together interested researchers (including those who are in the final stages of their PhD) from various disciplines (such as anthropology\, history\, socio-legal studies\, sociology\, and political science) to engage with the above and related questions. Discussions and findings from the workshop are intended for publication.To apply\, send a 250-word abstract\, a short biography\, and an indication of where you will be located in September 2020 to dissentingvoices2020@gmail.com by 20 February 2020. Funding may be available to cover participants’ travel expenses and accommodation; this is to be confirmed closer to the workshop date.
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/call-for-papers-dissenting-voices-the-making-debating-and-shaping-of-law-16-17-sep-university-of-liege/
LOCATION:University of Liège
CATEGORIES:Call for papers,conferences and workshops,Due dates,Opportunities
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200308
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200309
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20200208T200111Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200208T200111Z
UID:10000945-1583625600-1583711999@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Call for Papers: Oxford Symposium on Religious Studies
DESCRIPTION:The Symposium\, held at colleges in the University of Oxford\, is a forum for discourse and presentation of papers or commentaries by scholars\, students\, religious leaders\, and others who have an interest in issues related to religion and ethics. You may participate as an observer\, panel member or a presenter. We accept abstracts on a rolling basis and send notifications within a week of submission. Presenters are allocated 20 minutes to present followed by a ten-minute question session. Papers presented will be subsequently peer reviewed by external readers for possible inclusion in Symposium books or journal articles. (Optional) Conference Oxford has hundreds of affordable bedrooms in Oxford colleges available\, offering splendid views of college quadrangles and gardens. See our website for additional lodging and travel information.Important dates:SUMMER Session\, 31 July–2 August\, at Harris Manchester CollegeAbstract submission – 12 JulyRegular registration – 16 JulyAUTUMN Session\, 2–4 December\, at Green Templeton CollegeAbstract submission – 16 NovemberEarly registration – 2 SeptemberRegular registration – 20 NovemberSPRING Session\, 26 –27 March 2020\, at The Queens CollegeAbstract submission – 8 MarchEarly registration – 15 DecemberRegular registration – 10 MarchPlease direct inquiries to info@oxfordsymposiumonreligiousstudies.com.
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/call-for-papers-oxford-symposium-on-religious-studies-3/
LOCATION:University of Oxford\, Oxford\, United Kingdom
CATEGORIES:Call for papers,Due dates,Opportunities
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200308
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200309
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20200208T200111Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200208T200111Z
UID:10000946-1583625600-1583711999@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Call for Papers: Oxford Symposium on Religious Studies\, Oxford University
DESCRIPTION:SPRING Session 26 –27 March 2020 at The Queens College\, Oxford University The upcoming 17th International Oxford Symposium on Religious Studies is a forum for discourse and presentation of papers by scholars who have a particular interest in the study of religion. Canon Brian Mountford MBE\, former Vicar of St Mary’s Church and Fellow of St Hilda’s College in the University of Oxford\, will host the meeting.You are invited to make a presentation and lead a discussion of a relevant aspect of religious studies\, or you may wish to participate as a panel member or as an observer. Your disquisition must adhere to an abstract of about 300 words approved by the Programme Committee of the Symposium. You are also encouraged to submit a paper\, in keeping with your abstract\, which may be published in an appropriate journal or book of conference proceedings. All papers presented for publication or inclusion in books or sponsored journals will be subject to peer review by external readers.Abstract Submission and Registration is open for the Fall 2019 session and the Spring 2020 session of the Oxford Symposium on Religious Studies. Abstracts and Presentation Proposals are reviewed on a rolling basis and notifications sent within ten days of submission.Important dates:SPRING Session 26 –27 March 2020 at The Queens College\, Oxford UniversityAbstract submission  – 8 MarchEarly registration – 15 DecemberRegular registration – 10 March
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/call-for-papers-oxford-symposium-on-religious-studies-oxford-university-2/
LOCATION:The Queens College\, Oxford University
CATEGORIES:Call for papers,Due dates,Opportunities
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200308
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200309
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20200208T200111Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200208T200111Z
UID:10000947-1583625600-1583711999@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Call for Papers: Oxford Symposium on Religious Studies\, Spring Session (26 –27 Mar | Oxford\, UK)
DESCRIPTION:The Oxford Symposium on Religious Studies is a forum for discourse and presentation of papers by scholars who have a particular interest in the study of religion. Canon Brian Mountford MBE\, former Vicar of St Mary’s Church and Fellow of St Hilda’s College at the University of Oxford\, will host the 2020 sessions.You are invited to make a presentation and lead a discussion on an aspect of religious studies\, or you may wish to participate as a panel member or as an observer. Your disquisition must adhere to an abstract of about 300 words approved by the Programme Committee of the Symposium.You are also encouraged to submit a paper\, in keeping with your abstract\, which may be published in an appropriate journal or book of conference proceedings. All papers presented for publication or inclusion in books or sponsored journals will be subject to peer review by external readers. Attendees may participate as observers\, panel members and presenters of papers\, reports\, and commentaries concerning aspects relevant to the theory and practice of topics in religion and ethics. (Poster presentations are also welcome.) We accept abstracts on a rolling basis and return notifications within a week of submission. Presenters are allocated 20 minutes to present\, followed by a ten-minute question session. Optional: After the conclusion of the symposium\, participants may submit papers to be peer-reviewed by external readers for possible inclusion in Symposium Books or sponsored academic journals. Conference Oxford has hundreds of affordable bedrooms in Oxford colleges available\, offering splendid views of college quadrangles. See our website for lodging\, travel and other information.SPRING Session 26 –27 March 2020 at The Queen’s College\, Oxford UniversityAbstract submission  – 8 MarchEarly registration – 20 JanuaryRegular registration – 10 MarchPlease direct inquiries to info@oxfordsymposiumonreligiousstudies.com
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/call-for-papers-oxford-symposium-on-religious-studies-spring-session-26-27-mar-oxford-uk/
LOCATION:The Queen’s College\, Oxford University
CATEGORIES:Call for papers
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200311
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200312
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20200208T200111Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200208T200111Z
UID:10000948-1583884800-1583971199@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Call for Papers: International Qur’anic Studies Association Annual Meeting 2020 (20-23 Nov | Boston\, MA)
DESCRIPTION:Call for Papers: IQSA Annual Meeting 2020The International Qur’anic Studies Association has opened its call for papers for its Annual Meeting to be held in Boston\, Massachusetts from November 20–23\, 2020. Paper proposals should be submitted through the SBL’s automated online submission system under the corresponding “Affiliates” link by March 11\, 2019 (note: IQSA membership is required for proposal submission; see below). Submission links can be found below under the respective program units. If you require further information or experience difficulties with the submission process\, please contact the chairs of the program unit to which you would like to apply.Please note that all proposals must include: Author name and affiliation Paper title 400 word paper abstract (written in English)Eligibility for proposal submissions is contingent upon the following: Active IQSA membership is required at the time of proposal submission for the IQSA Program\, and the membership status of all applicants will be checked prior to acceptance Participants must maintain current IQSA Membership through their participation in the Annual MeetingPlease also note that: To ensure equity and diversity amongst participants\, participants should submit only one paper presentation per IQSA Annual Meeting All participants must adhere to IQSA’s Professional Conduct Policy Participants will be required to register for the conference by submitting payment through SBL’s online submission system (users are strongly encouraged to take advantage of the “Super Saver” rates which end mid-May)Please email contact@iqsaweb.org with questions or concerns. We look forward to seeing you in Boston!The Annual Meeting includes panels for each of IQSA’s eight program units:Linguistic\, Literary\, and Thematic Perspectives on the Qur’anic CorpusThe Societal Qur’anThe Qur’an and the Biblical TraditionThe Qur’an: Manuscripts and Textual CriticismThe Qur’an: Surah StudiesThe Qur’an and Late AntiquityQur’anic Studies: Methodology and HermeneuticsQur’anic Exegesis: Unpublished and Recently Published tafsīr StudiesPROGRAM UNIT 1Linguistic\, Literary\, and Thematic Perspectives on the Qur’anic CorpusProgram Unit ChairsAnne-Sylvie BoisliveauMohsen GoudarziFor the 2020 meeting in Boston\, the Linguistic\, Literary\, and Thematic Perspectives on the Qur’anic Corpus Unit invites papers to an open session on any topic that engages linguistic\, literary\, or thematic features of the Qur’an.PROGRAM UNIT 2Societal Qur’anProgram Unit ChairsJohanna PinkThomas HoffmannThe Societal Qur’an unit invites proposals for papers that investigate the Qur’an in its lived and societal contexts throughout history\, from Late Antiquity to contemporary Late Modernity. Proposals are encouraged that engage with sociological\, anthropological\, and political science theories and methods in their pursuit of the societal and lived Qur’an. Papers might\, for instance\, discuss topics such as ritual and artistic uses of the Qur’an\, practices of teaching the Qur’an\, talismanic and medical uses of the Qur’an\, the production of manuscript\, print\, and new media versions of the Qur’an\, or the deployment of the Qur’an in terms of social identity and political organization.PROGRAM UNIT 3The Qur’an and the Biblical TraditionProgram Unit ChairsNora SchmidHolger ZellentinThe focus of this unit is the Qur’an’s relationship to the Biblical tradition in the broadest sense: the books of the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament in the various languages of their original composition and later translations (regardless of a particular book’s status of canonization within specific Jewish or Christian groups)\, as well as the exegetical\, homiletic\, and narrative traditions of the Bible in written or oral form. For the 2020 meeting in Boston\, the Qur’an and the Biblical Tradition unit welcomes proposals that engage any aspect of the relationship between the Bible and the Qur’an.PROGRAM UNIT 4The Qur’an: Manuscripts and Textual CriticismProgram Unit ChairsAlba FedeliShady NasserThe aim of the Qur’an: Manuscripts and Textual Criticism unit is to provide a cross-disciplinary setting for the exploration of the various interconnected issues that arise when questions concerning the Qur’an’s text are investigated through the prism of its manuscript tradition. This latter term encompasses the field of Qur’an manuscripts per se\, but also alludes to such information regarding the history of the text that can be gleaned from the citations\, marginal notes\, and detailed analysis provided in other branches of the Islamic sciences\, for example Qur’an commentaries and the qira’at literature. It is hoped that bringing together scholars from a variety of disciplines will serve to enrich and strengthen each of these fields. The Manuscripts and Textual Criticism unit seeks to create a forum for the application of textual criticism to the Qur’anic text attested both in physical manuscripts and within the wider Islamic tradition. It also aims to investigate palaeographic\, codicological\, and art historical features in the Qur’an’s manuscript tradition.For the 2022 meeting in Boston\, the unit welcomes papers on any topic within the range of the interests of the Manuscripts and Textual Criticism program unit.PROGRAM UNIT 5The Qur’an: Surah StudiesProgram Unit ChairsNevin RedaShawkat ToorawaThe Surah Studies Unit invites proposals for individual papers on any aspect of Surat al-An‘am (6\, ‘Livestock’)\, which has attracted little attention in Western scholarship.  One of the seven long ones (al-sab‘ al-tiwal)\, it is a polythematic Meccan surah of 165 verses. Proposals might explore: material relating to Abraham or to Moses; engagement with Biblical laws or the Decalogue; its devotional uses\, especially in Shiite liturgy; its important passages on dietary law; its polemic and critique of pagan rituals; its legal minimalism; rhyme and acoustics; depictions of non-human animals; its architecture and traces of compositional procedures; its affinities with Medinan surahs; or much else besides. The Surah Studies Unit encourages and welcomes diverse methods and approaches. The raison d’etre of the Unit is to bring different perspectives on a given sura into dialogue with one another.PROGRAM UNIT 6The Qur’an and Late AntiquityProgram Unit ChairsMichael PregillJohanne ChristiansenThe Qur’an and Late Antiquity program unit invites proposals that utilize various types of material or evidence—be that literary\, documentary\, or epigraphic—to illuminate the historical context in which the Qur’an was revealed and the early Islamic polity emerged. We are especially interested in papers that present and discuss comparative methodologies to contribute to a better understanding of the Qur’an’s place in the cultural\, political\, social\, and religious environment of Late Antiquity.Additionally\, for the 2020 Annual Meeting in Boston\, we seek proposals for a themed session considering the state of the field on the Jews in the prophetic milieu and early Islam.PROGRAM UNIT 7Qur’anic Studies: Methodology and HermeneuticsProgram Unit ChairsKhalil AndaniKaren BauerThis unit aims to understand and contextualize the methods and hermeneutics applied to the Qur’anic text\, both historical and contemporary. The Methodology and Hermeneutics unit addresses questions that might implicitly govern other units\, such as: What is Qur’anic Studies\, and how does the study of the Qur’an differ from the study of its interpretation? What are the methodological differences between descriptive and normative approaches to the text? How does context (intellectual\, social\, ethical\, historical) affect hermeneutical approaches to the text? The unit welcomes papers addressed to the hermeneutics and methods of particular schools of interpretation or thought\, and also on hermeneutics as applied to specific subjects or concepts such as social justice and gender.This year the Methodology and Hermeneutics unit will feature a pre-arranged panel that surveys Muslim engagements with the Qur’an from the classical and post-classical periods that focus on different visions of the Qur’an as a revelatory discourse and its major themes.The Unit also invites submissions for a second panel on any aspect of Qur’anic interpretation\, hermeneutics\, and methodology. Proposals can focus on\, among other topics\, the following areas: The overlaps and distinctions between tafsīr and ta’wīl in exoteric and esoteric Qur’an commentary literature as they have evolved historically; The distinctive hermeneutical features of Qur’anic exegesis performed by minority Muslim communities including Sufi and Shi‘i (Twelver\, Ismaili\, Nusayri) commentators; How the Muslim Peripatetics (falasifa)\, such as Avicenna\, have engaged with the Qur’an through Aristotelian and Neoplatonic lenses; The unique hermeneutical approaches of Muslim modernist thinkers in the 19th and 20th centuries; Interpretative engagements with the Qur’an from thinkers in South Asia and Southeastern Asia.Any other topic that deals with Qur’anic hermeneutics is welcome.PROGRAM UNIT 8Qur’anic Exegesis: Unpublished and Recently Published tafsīr StudiesProgram Unit ChairShady NasserThis exploratory panel is dedicated to exploring Qurʾānic exegetical works (tafsīr proper or otherwise) that were recently published or still in manuscript form. The goal of the panel is to shed light on these works of tafsīr that have not got enough scholarly attention\, and which fall outside the “familiar” canon of Muslim exegetical works often used in modern scholarship. This panel encourages scholars to consult and study these recent publications in order to enrich our understanding of Qurʾānic exegesis and widen our perspectives with a more holistic and comprehensive view of tafsīr studies that fall outside the traditional sources often used.For the 2020 annual meeting\, the unit welcomes papers on any topic within the range of the interests of unpublished and recently published tafsīr works.
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/call-for-papers-international-quranic-studies-association-annual-meeting-2020-20-23-nov-boston-ma/
CATEGORIES:Applications,Call for papers,Due dates,Opportunities
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200313
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200314
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20200208T200112Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200208T200112Z
UID:10001211-1584057600-1584143999@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Call for Submissions: Preyer Award\, American Society for Legal History
DESCRIPTION:Call for Submissions:  Preyer Award. American Society for Legal HistorySubmissions are welcome on any topic in legal\, institutional and/or constitutional history. Early career scholars\, including those pursuing graduate or law degrees\, those who have completed their terminal degree within the previous year\, and those independent scholars at a comparable stage\, are eligible to apply. At the annual meeting of the Society two early career legal historians designated Kathryn T. Preyer Scholars will present what would normally be their first papers to the Society. While papers simultaneously submitted to the ASLH Program committee are eligible\, Preyer Award winners must present their paper as part of the Preyer panel and will be removed from any other panel.Submissions should be a single MS Word document consisting of a complete curriculum vitae\, contact information\, and a complete draft of the paper to be presented. Papers should not exceed 50 pages (12 point font\, double-spaced) and must contain supporting documentation. In past competitions\, the Committee has given preference to draft articles and essays\, though the Committee will also consider shorter conference papers\, as one of the criteria for selection will be the suitability of the paper for reduction to a twenty-minute oral presentation. The deadline for submission is MARCH 13\, 2020.  The two Kathryn T. Preyer Scholars will receive a $500 cash award and reimbursement of expenses up to $750 for travel\, hotels\, and meals. Each will present the paper that s/he submitted to the competition at the Society’s annual meeting. The Society’s journal\, Law and History Review\, has published several past winners of the Preyer competition\, though it is under no obligation to do so.Named after the late Kathryn T. Preyer\, a distinguished historian of the law of early America known for her generosity to early career legal historians\, the program of Kathryn T. Preyer Scholars is designed to help legal historians at the beginning of their careers. At the annual meeting of the Society two early career legal historians designated Kathryn T. Preyer Scholars will present what would normally be their first papers to the Society. The generosity of Professor Preyer’s friends and family has enabled the Society to offer a small honorarium to the Preyer Scholars and to reimburse\, in some measure or entirely\, their costs of attending the meeting. The competition for Preyer Scholars is organized by the Society’s Kathryn T. Preyer Memorial Committee.Please send submissions by March 13\, 2020 to Laura Kalman\, Chair\, Preyer Award Committee\, University of California\, Santa Barbara\, kalman@history.ucsb.edu.  She will forward them to other committee members.(Cross-posted from the Legal History Blog).
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/call-for-submissions-preyer-award-american-society-for-legal-history/
CATEGORIES:Call for papers,conferences and workshops,Due dates,Opportunities
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200429
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200430
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20200423T054453Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200423T054453Z
UID:10001234-1588118400-1588204799@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Call for Submissions: 3rd Islamicate Digital Humanities Network Conference (29 Apr | Remote)
DESCRIPTION:The 3rd Islamicate Digital Humanities Network Conference is coming up on Wednesday\, April 29th\, 2020.\nThe IDHN is now calling for contributions from both members and guests developing or employing digital methods in their research within the Islamicate Studies and related fields in the Humanities\, as well as from our colleagues in Linguistics and Computer Science. Master’s and PhD students are encouraged to share their work.\nIf you wish to contribute\, please send an email to info@idhn.org with the preliminary title and a description of your presentation.\nWe will have four to six presentations of 20 minutes each in which you can share your expertise and questions with the network.\nWe will hold the meeting online on ZOOM; the access code and link will be send to you in the network’s newsletter. In order to accommodate all of our members in all time zones\, we will hold the meeting in the North American morning and the European and Middle Eastern evening hours. We hope that everybody can join this way.
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/call-for-submissions-3rd-islamicate-digital-humanities-network-conference-29-apr-remote/
LOCATION:Remote
CATEGORIES:Call for papers,conferences and workshops,Due dates,Opportunities
ORGANIZER;CN="Digital Islamicate Humanities":MAILTO:info@idhn.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20200508T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20200508T170000
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20200423T054454Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200423T054454Z
UID:10001242-1588957200-1588957200@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Call for Submissions: Undergraduate Essay Prize\, The Committee on Medieval Studies\, Harvard University
DESCRIPTION:The Committee on Medieval Studies Undergraduate Essay Prize\nThe Committee on Medieval Studies will award one prize of $250 for the best paper on any topic in Medieval Studies by a student in Harvard College. Students in all concentrations are eligible for consideration.\nApplicants should submit the following materials by 5:00 on Friday\, 8 May 2020:\n1. The student information form (available at the “Undergraduate Program” page of the Medieval Studies Committee website\, or from the Program office);\n2. two double-sided copies of the paper\, including any images or apparatus; and\n3. one letter of nomination\, normally submitted by the faculty member for whom the paper was written.\nAll materials should be submitted electronically\, in PDF format\, to the Medieval Studies Committee (medieval@fas.harvard.edu).
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/call-for-submissions-undergraduate-essay-prize-the-committee-on-medieval-studies-harvard-university/
CATEGORIES:Call for papers,Due dates,Opportunities
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200511
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200512
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20200423T054454Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200423T054454Z
UID:10001244-1589155200-1589241599@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Call for Papers: "Graduate Student Paper Prize\," Association of Middle East Children’s and Youth Studies
DESCRIPTION:AMECYS Call for Papers: Graduate Student Paper Prize\nSubmissions deadline: Friday\, May 1\, 2020\nThe Association of Middle East Children’s and Youth Studies (AMECYS) calls graduate students engaged in the study of children and youth in the region to submit their papers to the AMECYS graduate student paper prize. A cash prize of $100 will be awarded to the winner at the Middle East Studies Association (MESA) of North America’s annual meeting in Washington\, D.C.\, October 10-13\, 2020.\nPapers can be submitted in any capacity that aligns with AMECYS’ mission statement:\nThe AMECYS is a private\, non-profit\, international association for scholars with an interest in the study of children and youth in the Middle East\, North Africa and their diasporic communities. Through interdisciplinary programs\, publications\, and services\, AMECYS promotes innovative scholarship\, facilitates global academic exchange\, and enhances public understanding about Middle Eastern children and youth in diverse times and places.\nRequirements for submission:\nPapers should not exceed 7\,500 (excluding bibliographies and endnotes)\nThe paper should never have been submitted for publication\nThe format needs to include: Standard font\, Double-spaced\, 1” margins\, IJMES standards for endnotes and transliteration\nRegistered member of AMECYS\nProof of registered graduate student enrollment for the 2019-2020 academic year may be requested at a later date\nSend submissions as a pdf or word doc to Dylan.baun@uah.edu.\nThe AMECYS program chair and one other AMECYS board member will review all papers submitted by members of AMECYS that are received by the deadline of Friday\, May 1.\nFor any queries\, email AMECYS program chair at dylan.baun@uah.edu.
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/call-for-papers-graduate-student-paper-prize-association-of-middle-east-childrens-and-youth-studies/
CATEGORIES:Call for papers,Due dates,Opportunities
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200531
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200601
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20200423T054454Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200423T054454Z
UID:10000969-1590883200-1590969599@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Call for Proposals: Khātima Conference (4-6 Jun 2021 | Beirut\, Lebanon)
DESCRIPTION:Khātima Conference 4.-6. June 2021\nHow to End Things in Arabic Literature\nEvery text or\, to be more precise\, every reading of a text\, has a beginning and an end. While one could call into question this linear perception in times of textual linkage and seemingly never-ending writing and reading processes\, the end is a hermeneutic category that affects our processes of understanding.\nThe beginning of books and texts\, prefaces and introductions in particular\, has been a research interest for some time. The end\, on the other hand\, is still a quite unknown territory in Arabic studies although authors apparently took great care in shaping the final passage of their works. At the same time\, the end of any text is the starting point of a hermeneutic process with many open questions. It is the last chance to silence potential criticism\, to guide the reader\, to create a certain image of the author\, to suggest possible readings. The end can be testament\, justification\, and instruction; it can provide guidance\, perspective and closure; it can give assurance and sow the seeds of doubt; it can bring conclusion and hold a promise for further readings.\nThis conference aims at discussing literary phenomena with regard to endings\, finality\, and closure from different perspectives\, starting with the question where the end of a given text even begins.\nWe hope to encourage a discussion across boundaries of genres and times and therefore would like to invite you to suggest possible papers for our conference in consideration of the following sections and key points:\n1. Manifestations of endings a. Conflict and resolution b. Goals\, targets\, objectives and their fulfilment c. Events and incidents d. Acts and practices 2. Semantics\, Lexis\, Rhetoric a. Placement and markers of endings b. Terms and phrases c. Rhetorical patterns d. Stylistic characteristics\n3. Guidance and Authority a. Addressing the reader b. Self-reference c. Importance of endings d. Responsibility and effects 4. Reflections on endings a. Rites de passage b. Finality c. Closure d. Endings as beginning\nThe conference is a co-operation between the American University of Beirut (Lebanon) and the University of Bamberg (Germany) and will take place in June 2021 in Beirut.\nConference languages are English and Arabic.\nThe Sheikh Zayed Chair for Arabic and Islamic Studies at AUB will sponsor parts of the conference and the planned publication of the proceedings.\nWe are looking forward to receiving your title and abstract before May 31\, 2020.\nLale Behzadi lale.behzadi@uni-bamberg.de\nBilal Orfali bo00@aub.edu.lb\nFurther reading:\nBehzadi\, Lale; Hämeen-Anttila\, Jaakko (eds.). Concepts of Authorship in Pre-Modern Arabic Texts. (Bamberger Orientstudien 7) Bamberg: University of Bamberg Press\, 2015.\nFowler\, Don P. “First Thoughts on Closure: Problems and Prospects.” Materiali e discussion per l’analisi dei testi classici 22 (1989): 75-122. http://www.jstor.org/stable/40235930\nGrewing\, Farouk F. et al. (ed.). The Door Ajar. False Closure in Greek and Roman Literature and Art.\nHeidelberg: Universitätsverlag Winter\, 2013.\nKermode\, Frank. The Sense of an Ending. Studies in the Theory of Fiction with a New Epilogue.\nOxford: Oxford University Press\, 20003.\nKhamīs\, ʿAbd al-Raḥmān ibn Ṣālīh al-. Khātimat al-qaṣīda fī-l-qarn al-rābiʿ al-hijrī – fī-l-ʿirāq wa-l-shām. al-Riyāḍ: al-Nādī al-ʿarabī fī-l-Riyāḍ 2014.\nRoberts\, Deborah H. et al. (ed.). Classical Closure. Reading the End in Greek and Latin Literature.\nPrinceton\, New Jersey: Princeton University Press\, 1997.
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/call-for-proposals-khatima-conference-4-6-jun-2021-beirut-lebanon/
LOCATION:American University of Beirut\, Beirut\, Lebanon
CATEGORIES:Call for papers,conferences and workshops,Due dates,Opportunities
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200531
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200601
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20200423T054454Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200423T054454Z
UID:10000971-1590883200-1590969599@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Call for Contributions: “Marginal Matters: Explorations into Commenting and Glossing Techniques in Arabic Manuscript Cultures\,” (31 May | University of Leipzig)
DESCRIPTION:Call for contributions:\n“Marginal Matters: Explorations into Commenting and Glossing Techniques in Arabic Manuscript Cultures”\nThe Bibliotheca Arabica Project (2018-2035) based at the Saxon Academy of Sciences and Humanities in Leipzig\, Germany\, is dedicated to charting the production\, transmission\, and reception of Arabic literatures in the period from 1150 to 1850 CE. The principal investigator is Prof. Dr. Verena Klemm (University of Leipzig). Focusing on the material transmission of texts through manuscripts and the systematic collection of manuscript notes as core source material\, the project’s main approaches are material philology and Überlieferungsgeschichte.\nThe project will publish its findings in a homonymous series with Brill Publishers (editor: Prof. Dr. Verena Klemm) that encompasses monographs as well as edited volumes. We now invite contributions to the first edited volume within the series\, provisionally entitled “Marginal Matters: Explorations into Commenting and Glossing Techniques in Arabic Manuscript Cultures”. The focus of this volume will be the ‘margin’\, understood here not strictly as a spatial but as an intellectual category\, a room for readers or transmitters to interact with\, structure\, and communicate around a given text.\nManuscripts usually serve an approach to the history of literature that concentrates on the main\, or primary text. Marginalia and interlinear annotations\, on the other hand\, have often been neglected although they reflect and embody a wealth of information for historical interactions with those texts: they may show an evolving text production through drafts and notes; they can be crucial for the partial or complete transmission of texts\, and indeed might preserve traces of works that are otherwise lost; and they hint at a work’s reception by showing how people read and studied the primary text. Thus\, the margin can contain evidence for the spatial and temporal distribution of a text\, spell out the intertextual connections readers envisioned\, and possibly give clues as to the relative popularity of a particular work. Within the context of learning and teaching\, they reflect which works were part of a curriculum as well as how texts were studied and taught. In some cases\, marginalia may reveal personal and professional reflections of identifiable readers\, while in others they can capture ongoing intellectual debates. Given the multi-religious\, multi-lingual\, and multi-ethnic Islamicate world\, it is no surprise that margins can also mirror interactions between diverse groups and different manuscript cultures. This applies\, too\, to marginal commentaries reflecting specific political and/or social contexts. Regarding the sciences in particular\, marginalia can reveal the state of knowledge at a given place and time. The extent to which images\, illustrations\, graphs\, and maps comment on a text is another intriguing question for discussion.\nWhile some academic disciplines have seen efforts to understand and categorise such paratextual elements\, Arabic and Islamic Studies so far have produced very little research on this complex subject. The proposed volume of the Bibliotheca Arabica series thus represents a first systematic approach to this material. The volume will compare glosses and marginal commentaries in different genres\, regions and periods\, and it will encompass the following subjects:\n● the content and scribal practices of glosses and marginal commentaries (including images/illustrations);\n● the reflection of political\, social\, or cultural events and developments in marginal commentaries;\n● the terminology applied in Arabic and Islamic Studies (e.g. glosses\, marginal commentaries\, scholia\, and so forth) and (attempts at) its systematisation;\n● the Arabic terminology (e.g. ḥāšiya\, hāmiš\, šarḥ) in historical perspective;\n● and approaches to this often non-documentary material\, e.g. regarding dating difficulties.\nContributions to the volume may offer broad theoretical reflections on whole genres\, works or particular phenomena\, or take the form of case studies of single manuscripts. The main categories of paratextual elements to be included in the volume are marginal and interlinear commentaries\, glosses\, text variants\, images\, illustrations\, maps\, supplements and additions\, and various scribal practices such as signes de renvoi or sigla. We are open to further suggestions\, however. All listed elements illustrate interactions with or comments on the primary text. The volume is not dedicated to documentary manuscript notes such as samāʿāt\, readers’ or owners’ notes (which\, though\, can be part of your line of argument).\nContributions will have to be submitted in English\, at a length of up to 8000 words excluding the bibliography. Please e-mail your CV (max. 100 words) and an abstract of your planned article (max. 600 words) to the editors by 31 May 2020. The submission deadline for full final versions of the accepted articles is 1 March 2021. The volume is scheduled for publication in 2022.\nEditors: Stefanie Brinkmann (brinkmann@saw-leipzig.de)\nBoris Liebrenz (liebrenz@saw-leipzig.de)
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/call-for-contributions-marginal-matters-explorations-into-commenting-and-glossing-techniques-in-arabic-manuscript-cultures-31-may-university-of-leipzig/
CATEGORIES:Call for papers,Due dates,Opportunities
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200601
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200602
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20200423T054455Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200423T054455Z
UID:10000983-1590969600-1591055999@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Call for Submissions: "John Phillip Reid Book Award\," American Society for Legal History
DESCRIPTION:JOHN PHILLIP REID BOOK AWARD\nCRITERIA\nBest monograph by a mid-career or senior scholar\, published in English in Anglo-American legal history.\nAMOUNT\nTBD\nDEADLINE\nJune 1\, 2020\nThe John Phillip Reid Book Award is awarded annually for the best monograph by a mid-career or senior scholar\, published in English in any of the fields defined broadly as Anglo-American legal history. The prize is named for John Phillip Reid\, the prolific legal historian and founding member of the Society\, and made possible by the generous contributions of his friends and colleagues. When awarding this prize\, preference is given to work that falls within Reid’s own interests in seventeenth- through nineteenth-century Anglo-America and Native American law.\nThe award is given on the recommendation of the Society’s Committee on the John Phillip Reid Book Award. (First books\, written wholly or primarily while the author was untenured\, should be sent to the Cromwell Book Prize committee of the William Nelson Cromwell Foundation. The Reid Award and the Cromwell Book Prize are mutually exclusive.)\nFor the 2019 prize\, the Reid Award Committee will accept nominations from authors\, presses\, or anyone else\, of any book that bears a copyright date in 2019. Nominations for the Reid Award should be submitted by June 1\, 2020\, by sending a curriculum vitae of the author and one copy of the book to each member of the committee.\nCommittee Members\nRichard Ross (chair)\n312 W. Nevada Street\nUrbana\, IL 61801\nMargot Canaday\n6922 Prince Georges Ave.\nTakoma Park\, MD 20912\nDeborah Rosen\n70 Lake Road\nBasking Ridge\, NJ 07920\nSteven Wilf\n93 Mumford Road\nNew Haven\, CT 06515\nJohn Witt\n271 Park Street\nNew Haven\, CT 06511
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/call-for-submissions-john-phillip-reid-book-award-american-society-for-legal-history/
CATEGORIES:Applications,Call for papers,Due dates,Opportunities,prizes and nominations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200601
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200602
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20200423T054455Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200423T054455Z
UID:10000985-1590969600-1591055999@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Call for Submissions: "Sutherland Prize\," American Society for Legal History
DESCRIPTION:SUTHERLAND PRIZE\nCRITERIA\nBest article on British legal history published in the previous year.\nAMOUNT\nTBD\nDEADLINE\nJune 1\, 2020\nThe Sutherland Prize\, named in honor of the late Donald W. Sutherland\, a distinguished historian of the law of medieval England and a mentor of many students\, is awarded annually\, on the recommendation of the Sutherland Prize Committee\, to the person or persons who wrote the best article on the legal history of Britain and/or the British Empire published in the previous year.\nTo ensure consideration\, authors are invited to nominate an article by sending an electronic copy to committee chair Michael Lobban at sutherlandprize@aslh.net by June 1\, 2020. In keeping with past practice\, the committee may also consider eligible articles nominated by the chair.\nCommittee Members\nMichael Lobban (chair)\nLondon School of Economics\, University of London\nPaul Halliday\nUniversity of Virginia\nAllyson May\nUniversity of Western Ontario\nP.G. McHugh\nUniversity of Cambridge\nPhilip Stern\nDuke University
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/call-for-submissions-sutherland-prize-american-society-for-legal-history/
CATEGORIES:Applications,Call for papers,Due dates,Opportunities,prizes and nominations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200601
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200602
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20200423T054454Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200423T054454Z
UID:10000975-1590969600-1591055999@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Call for Submissions: "Cromwell Article Prize\," American Society for Legal History
DESCRIPTION:CROMWELL ARTICLE PRIZE\nCRITERIA\nBest article in American legal history published by an early career scholar.\nAMOUNT\n$5\,000\nDEADLINE\nJune 1\, 2020\nThe William Nelson Cromwell Foundation Article Prize is awarded annually to the best article in American legal history published by an early career scholar. Articles published in the field of American legal history\, broadly conceived\, will be considered. There is a preference for articles in the colonial and early National periods. Articles published in the Law and History Review are eligible for the Surrency Prize and will not be considered for the Cromwell Article Prize.\nThe author of the winning article receives a prize of $5\,000. The Foundation awards the prize after a review of the recommendation of the Cromwell Prize Advisory Committee of the American Society for Legal History.\nThe Cromwell Foundation makes the final award\, in consultation with a subcommittee from the American Society for Legal History. This subcommittee invites nominations for the article prize. Authors are invited to nominate themselves or others may nominate works meeting the criteria that they have read and enjoyed. Please send a brief letter of nomination\, no longer than a page\, along with an electronic copy (or URL of the publication site) of the article\, by June 1\, 2020\, to the subcommittee chair\, Prof. David Konig\, at cromwellarticleprize@aslh.net.\nCommittee Members\nDavid Konig (chair)\nWashington University\nDeborah Dinner\nEmory University\nH. Tomas Gomez-Arostegui\nLewis and Clark\nLaura Edwards\nDuke University
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/call-for-submissions-cromwell-article-prize-american-society-for-legal-history/
CATEGORIES:Applications,Call for papers,Due dates,Opportunities,prizes and nominations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200601
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200602
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20200423T054454Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200423T054454Z
UID:10000977-1590969600-1591055999@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Call for Submissions: "Cromwell Book Prize\," American Society for Legal History
DESCRIPTION:CROMWELL BOOK PRIZE\nCRITERIA\nExcellence in scholarship in the field of American legal history by an early career scholar.\nAMOUNT\n$5\,000\nDEADLINE\nJune 1\, 2020\nThe William Nelson Cromwell Foundation Book Prize is awarded annually to the best book in the field of American legal history by an early career scholar. The prize is designed to recognize and promote new work in the field by graduate students\, law students\, post-doctoral fellows and faculty not yet tenured. The work may be in any area of American legal history\, including constitutional and comparative studies\, but scholarship in the colonial and early national periods will receive some preference. The prize is limited to a first book\, wholly or primarily written while the author was untenured. Submission of a book by an author who has previously been awarded a Cromwell Foundation Prize for a dissertation or article must be accompanied by a showing that the book enhances\, or differs in subject from\, the previous work.\nThe author of the winning book receives a prize of $5\,000. The Foundation awards the prize after a review of the recommendation of the Cromwell Prize Advisory Committee of the American Society for Legal History. The Committee shall consider a book in the year of its copyright date or of its actual publication. However\, no book shall be considered for the prize more than once.\nTo nominate a book\, please send copies of it and the curriculum vitae of its author to John D. Gordan\, III\, Chair of the Cromwell Prize Advisory Committee\, and to each member of the Cromwell Book Prize Advisory Committee with a postmark no later than June 1\, 2020.\nCommittee Members\nJohn D. Gordan\, III\nSecretary of the Cromwell Foundation\n1133 Park Avenue\nNew York\, NY 10128\nCatherine Fisk (chair)\n6069 Buena Vista Avenue\nOakland\, CA 94618\nSusanna L. Blumenthal\n100 3rd Ave. So. #1605\nMinneapolis\, MN 55401\nDaniel Hulsebosch\n147 Central Ave.\nGreenport\, NY 11944\nSerena Mayeri\n31 West Rock Trail\nStamford\, CT 06902
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/call-for-submissions-cromwell-book-prize-american-society-for-legal-history/
CATEGORIES:Applications,Call for papers,Due dates,Opportunities,prizes and nominations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200601
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200602
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20200423T054454Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200423T054454Z
UID:10000979-1590969600-1591055999@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Call for Submissions: "Cromwell Dissertation Prize\," American Society for Legal History
DESCRIPTION:CROMWELL DISSERTATION PRIZE\nCRITERIA\nBest dissertation in American legal history completed in the past year.\nAMOUNT\n$5\,000\nDEADLINE\nJune 1\, 2020\nThe William Nelson Cromwell Foundation Dissertation Prize is awarded annually to the best dissertation in any area of American legal history\, including constitutional and comparative studies\, although topics dealing with the colonial and early national periods will receive some preference.\nThe author of the winning dissertation receives $5\,000. Anyone who received a Ph.D. in 2019 will be eligible for this year’s prize\, which is awarded by the Foundation after a review of the recommendation of the Cromwell Prize Advisory Committee of the American Society for Legal History.\nSubmissions should be made by the author including only (1) the dissertation as submitted to the university for the degree and (2) a curriculum vitae.\nTo be considered for this year’s prize\, the author should EITHER\n1. Send a hard copy of the dissertation and author curriculum vitae to all committee members and John Gordan listed below OR\n2. E-mail a PDF electronic copy of the dissertation and author curriculum vitae to John Gordan (johngordan3@gmail.com) and the prize committee chair\, Mary Sarah Bilder (cromwelldissertationprize@aslh.net) with the subject heading: CROMWELL DISSERTATION PRIZE SUBMISSION no later than June 1\, 2020.  Please title the PDF as “author last name” and “short title”.pdf  (e.g.: Thompson Whigs and Hunters).\nCommittee Members\nJohn D. Gordan\, III\nSecretary of the Cromwell Foundation\n1133 Park Avenue\nNew York\, NY\, 10128\nMary Sarah Bilder (chair)\nBoston College Law School\nTimothy Lovelace\nIndiana University\nAnne Kornhauser\nCity College of New York\nDylan Penningroth\nUniversity of California\, Berkeley\nSarah Seo\nUniversity of Iowa College of Law
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/call-for-submissions-cromwell-dissertation-prize-american-society-for-legal-history/
CATEGORIES:Applications,Call for papers,Due dates,Opportunities,prizes and nominations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200601
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200602
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20200423T054454Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200423T054454Z
UID:10000981-1590969600-1591055999@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Call for Submissions: "Mary L. Dudziak Digital Legal History Prize\," American Society for Legal History
DESCRIPTION:MARY L. DUDZIAK DIGITAL LEGAL HISTORY PRIZE\nCRITERIA\nExcellence in digital legal history.\nAMOUNT\n$250\nDEADLINE\nJune 1\, 2020\nThe Dudziak Prize\, named in honor of Mary L. Dudziak\, a leading scholar of twentieth century U.S. legal history and international relations as well as a digital history pioneer\, is awarded annually to an outstanding digital legal history project. These projects may take the form of either traditionally published peer reviewed scholarship or born-digital projects of equivalent depth and scope.\nPreference will be given to projects that either (1) have a published component in 2019\, (2) have gone live online in 2019\, or (3) have implemented major updates or upgrades in 2019. The cover letter should highlight significant developments in the project during 2019.\nNominations or self-nominations for the Dudziak Prize should be submitted by June 1\, 2020. They should include (1) a cover letter that explains the nature and significance of the work for the field of legal history; (2) the nominated work\, including (if relevant) information about how to access the work online; and (3) a curriculum vitae of the author/creator (including e-mail address).\nPlease email nominations and self nominations to dudziakprize@aslh.net. You may also email any questions to the prize chair at this same address.\nCommittee Members\nDavid Tanenhaus (chair)\nUniversity of Nevada\, Las Vegas\nDeborah Dinner\nEmory University School of Law\nKellan Funk\nColumbia Law School\nMichael Willrich\nex officio\, President-elect\nBrandeis School of Law
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/call-for-submissions-mary-l-dudziak-digital-legal-history-prize-american-society-for-legal-history/
CATEGORIES:Applications,Call for papers,Due dates,Opportunities,prizes and nominations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200615
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200616
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20200423T054455Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200423T054455Z
UID:10000987-1592179200-1592265599@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Call for Papers: "Catastrophes and Memory (500-1500 CE)\," 4th Edinburgh Conference in Late Antique\, Islamic\, and Byzantine Studies (19-20 Nov 2020 | Edinburgh)
DESCRIPTION:CFP: Catastrophes and Memory (500-1500 CE)\, 4th Edinburgh Conference in Late Antique\, Islamic\, and Byzantine Studies 19-20 November 2020\n \nDisasters (natural\, manmade or “supernatural”) shape historical memory and our understanding of the past. This conference focuses on the problematic relations between catastrophes and memory in Late Antique\, Islamic and Byzantine societies. Memory plays a crucial role in the way events are perceived\, understood and narrated by different groups and elites: locals might see the conquest of their city as a catastrophe\, while the conquerors portray the same as glorious or divinely inspired.We invite papers and posters that address issues and questions including\, but not limited to:\n•Natural/environmental: Plagues\, earthquakes\, famines/droughts\, floods\, fires\, climate change\n•Socio-cultural/linguistic: Iconoclasm\, artistic and urban disruption/renewal\, cultural vandalism\, translation movements\, language death and breaks in literary tradition\n•Political/military: Conquests\, coups\, sieges\, wars\, revolts\, revolutions\, civil wars\, usurpations\, succession crises and religious/ “holy” wars (Crusade/Jihad)\n•Religious: Heresies\, schisms\, theological or dogmatic conflict\, new religions\, apocalyptic traditions and eschatology\n•Memory “devices” and strategies:How do memories of catastrophes manifest themselves in material culture\, texts\, images and other different sources? Where do we see evidence of intentional forgetting?\n•Comparative/Interdisciplinary: Elites versus non-elite memory of catastrophes; geographical (Mediterranean and Eurasia); temporal (500-1500CE)\n•The role of the 21st century cultural historian: What is and should be modern scholars’ role in situating catastrophe?\nThis conference will be hosted by the Late Antique\, Islamic and Byzantine Society of the University of Edinburgh on November 19-20\, 2020 in Edinburgh.We welcome papers and posters from postgraduate students and early career researchers from all disciplines with an interest in Late Antique\, Islamic or Byzantine studies.\nPapers: Presentation is 20 minutes in length\, delivered in English.\nPosters:Participants will present their research at a poster session. Dimensions should not exceed 70cm (width) x 100cm (height) and posters must be printed and brought by the author.We strongly encourage undergraduate\, masters and first-year PhD students to summit posters of their dissertations or research.\nTo apply\, please respond with an e-mail including whether you hope to present a paper or poster\, an abstract of no more than 300 words\, and a small academic biography of no more than 120 words to edibyzpg@ed.ac.uk. The deadline for submitting papers and posters is June 15\, 2020.\nRegistration Fees:\nStudents speakers: £15 before September 15\, 2020; £20 after\nNon-Students speakers: £35 before September 15\, 2020; £40 after\n(fee includes lunchboth days)\nWe will publish a selection of the papers in a peer-reviewed volume that will bring together the strongest contributions in each area to produce an edited volume of high-quality\, deep coherence and rich variety.\nAny questions please address to edibyzpg@ed.ac.uk\nContact Info:\nedibyzpg@ed.ac.uk\nConference Organization Committee\, Late Antique\, Islamic and Byzantine Society\, University of Edinburgh\nContact Email:\nedibyzpg@ed.ac.uk
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/call-for-papers-catastrophes-and-memory-500-1500-ce-4th-edinburgh-conference-in-late-antique-islamic-and-byzantine-studies-19-20-nov-2020-edinburgh/
CATEGORIES:Call for papers,Due dates,Opportunities
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20210527
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20210531
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20210516T030305Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210527T035009Z
UID:10001271-1622073600-1622419199@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Call for Papers: Law and Society Association Annual Meeting\, May 27-30\, 2021
DESCRIPTION:CRISIS\, HEALING\, RE-IMAGINING We are excited to announce the theme of the 2021 Annual Meeting that will take place in Chicago from May 27-30! Please keep an eye out for the official Call for Papers later this fall. Ours is an era of multiple and overlapping crises. Climate\, democracy\, economy and health are newly unstable throughout the … Continue reading Conference: 2021 Law and Society Association Annual Meeting\, 27-30 May
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/call-for-papers-law-and-society-association-annual-meeting-may-27-30-2021/
CATEGORIES:Applications,Blog,Call for papers,conferences and workshops,Due dates,Opportunities
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20210801
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20210802
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20210721T082124Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210731T083329Z
UID:10001005-1627776000-1627862399@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Call for Nominations: The Association for Middle East Children and Youth Studies' 2021 AMECYS Early Career Article Award
DESCRIPTION:Digital Islamicate Paleography and Codicology Summer School June 1-August 20\, 2021 The Roshan Institute for Persian Studies at the University of Maryland (Roshan Institute-UMD) is offering a free\, stipend-supported twelve-week online summer course on digital Islamicate paleography and codicology. We are seeking graduate students interested in the intersection of Arabic-script paleography and codicology with digital … Continue reading Digital Islamicate Paleography and Codicology Summer School\, The Roshan Institute for Persian Studies at the University of Maryland\, June 1-August 20\, 2021
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/call-for-nominations-the-association-for-middle-east-children-and-youth-studies-2021-amecys-early-career-article-award/
CATEGORIES:Applications,Blog,Call for papers,Due dates,Grants,Opportunities,prizes and nominations
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20210806
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20210810
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20210516T030306Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210805T090339Z
UID:10001003-1628208000-1628553599@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Conference: Third International Ismaili Studies Conference: Histories\, Philosophies & Communities\, Leiden University Shii Studies Initiative\, August 6-9\, 2021
DESCRIPTION:Digital Islamicate Paleography and Codicology Summer School June 1-August 20\, 2021 The Roshan Institute for Persian Studies at the University of Maryland (Roshan Institute-UMD) is offering a free\, stipend-supported twelve-week online summer course on digital Islamicate paleography and codicology. We are seeking graduate students interested in the intersection of Arabic-script paleography and codicology with digital … Continue reading Digital Islamicate Paleography and Codicology Summer School\, The Roshan Institute for Persian Studies at the University of Maryland\, June 1-August 20\, 2021
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/conference-third-international-ismaili-studies-conference-histories-philosophies-communities-leiden-university-shii-studies-initiative-august-6-9-2021/
CATEGORIES:Applications,Blog,Call for papers,conferences and workshops
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20210909
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20210912
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20210611T044817Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210908T120524Z
UID:10001282-1631145600-1631404799@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Call for Papers: Interest Group on the International Law of Culture\, Stockholm\, 9-11 September
DESCRIPTION:The University of Hamburg is hosting a four-day summer course on Islamicate Digital Humanities from August 30th to September 10th for graduate students and researchers who work with manuscript materials in Arabic script. Please\, find the information below: Third Summer School in Islamicate Digital Humanities for Scholars in Manuscript Studies Date: 30 August – 10 … Continue reading Third Summer School in Islamicate Digital Humanities for Scholars in Manuscript Studies\, August 30 – September 10\, 2021
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/call-for-papers-interest-group-on-the-international-law-of-culture-stockholm-9-11-september/
CATEGORIES:Applications,Blog,Call for papers,conferences and workshops,Due dates,Opportunities
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20211007
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20211009
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20210709T073303Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211007T152006Z
UID:10001284-1633564800-1633737599@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Call for Papers: Arabic Pasts: Histories and Historiographies\, Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations\, October 7-8\, 2021
DESCRIPTION:From the organizers: This annual exploratory and informal workshop offers the opportunity to reflect on history writing in Arabic. We encourage contributions focused on methodologies\, research agendas\, and case studies that investigate history writing in the Middle East and North Africa in any period from the seventh century to the present. We are interested in … Continue reading Call for Papers: Arabic Pasts: Histories and Historiographies\, Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations\, October 7-8\, 2021
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/call-for-papers-arabic-pasts-histories-and-historiographies-institute-for-the-study-of-muslim-civilisations-october-7-8-2021/
CATEGORIES:Applications,Blog,Call for papers,conferences and workshops,Due dates,Opportunities
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20211015
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20211016
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20211008T151807Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211014T160311Z
UID:10001317-1634256000-1634342399@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Call for Abstracts: 6th IDHN Conference\, November 17\, 2021
DESCRIPTION:Duke Law seeks to fill a Clinical Fellow position in its International Human Rights Clinic beginning in January 2022. Duke Law has deep faculty\, student and institutional engagement in human rights and international law. The Clinical Fellow will work closely with the two faculty in the International Human Rights Clinic-its Director and Supervising Attorney/Clinical Professor … Continue reading Clinical Fellow: International Human Rights Clinic\, Duke University School of Law\, January 2022
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/call-for-abstracts-6th-idhn-conference-november-17-2021/
CATEGORIES:Applications,Blog,Call for papers,Due dates,Opportunities
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20211028
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20211101
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20210730T083333Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211027T180403Z
UID:10001006-1635379200-1635724799@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Call for Papers: Middle East Studies Association's 55th Annual Meeting\, October 28-31\, 2021
DESCRIPTION:From the organizers\, including\, among others\, PIL book series editor Abigail Krasner Balbale: Dr Rocio Daga Portillo First session: Monday\, Oct. 18\, 2021 – 6.15 to 7.45 pm (CET) Last session: Monday\, Feb. 07\, 2022 – 6.15 to 7.45 pm (CET) This webinar is part of the “Webinar Initiative in Islamic Material Culture” jointly organized … Continue reading Lecture Series: A Society in Transition: Property and Law in Arabic Documents from Toledo (11th-14th Centuries) (Winter term 2021/22)\, Hamburg University\, October 18\, 2021 – February 7\, 2022
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/call-for-papers-middle-east-studies-associations-55th-annual-meeting-october-28-31-2021/
CATEGORIES:Applications,Blog,Call for papers,conferences and workshops,Due dates,Opportunities
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20211031
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20211101
DTSTAMP:20260404T040327
CREATED:20211008T151807Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211030T180449Z
UID:10001319-1635638400-1635724799@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Call for Papers: The X Islamic Legal Studies Conference convened by the International Society of Islamic Legal Studies (ISILS) under the auspices of the Governance Programme at the Aga Khan University - Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations (AKU-ISMC)\, London May 19-21\, 2022
DESCRIPTION:From the organizers\, including\, among others\, PIL book series editor Abigail Krasner Balbale: Dr Rocio Daga Portillo First session: Monday\, Oct. 18\, 2021 – 6.15 to 7.45 pm (CET) Last session: Monday\, Feb. 07\, 2022 – 6.15 to 7.45 pm (CET) This webinar is part of the “Webinar Initiative in Islamic Material Culture” jointly organized … Continue reading Lecture Series: A Society in Transition: Property and Law in Arabic Documents from Toledo (11th-14th Centuries) (Winter term 2021/22)\, Hamburg University\, October 18\, 2021 – February 7\, 2022
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/call-for-papers-the-x-islamic-legal-studies-conference-convened-by-the-international-society-of-islamic-legal-studies-isils-under-the-auspices-of-the-governance-programme-at-the-aga-khan-university/
CATEGORIES:Applications,Blog,Call for papers,conferences and workshops,Due dates,events in Islamic legal studies,Opportunities
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR