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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20180921
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20180923
DTSTAMP:20260717T085026
CREATED:20180813T000656Z
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UID:10000827-1537488000-1537660799@pil.law.harvard.edu
SUMMARY:Conference: Historiography/Ideology/Law II
DESCRIPTION:This conference is a follow-up to a series of conversations on the relations between historiography\, ideology\, and law that took place at the University of Helsinki in March 2018. Among other things\, the Boston College conference will take up a set of questions about the recent trajectory of critical legal history\, as well as about what scholars familiar with cognate debates (notably\, in intellectual history and in general theories of legal change) might add to the discussion. \nFor more information\, please contact Paulo Barrozo (617-792-9475; barrozo@bc.edu). \nClick here for discounted reservations at the Crowne Plaza Boston-Newton. For those who wish\, a shuttle will take participants to the Law School campus (1.5 miles away) in the morning and back to the hotel at the end of the day. \n**Dr. Nahed Samour\, SHARIAsource Early Abbasid Iraq and Iran Editor\, will be presenting on Islamic international law.** \n  \nAgenda: \nFriday\, Sept. 21 \n9-9:15\nWelcome: Paulo Barrozo\nIntroductory Remarks: Justin Desautels-Stein & Sam Moyn \n9:15-10:45\nPanel I: Method Madness I\nBernie Meyler\, Stanford University\n– Aesthetic Historiography\nSimon Stern\, University of Toronto\n– The Roots of Legal Thought: Notes Toward a Methodology\nPaulo Barrozo\, Boston College\n– History of Law in the Evolution of Law\nJustin Desautels-Stein\, University of Colorado\n– Ideology in Context \n10:45-11\nBreak \n11-12:15\nPanel II: Method Madness II\nNahed Samour\, University of Berlin\n– The Dark Entanglement: Islamic International Law and Legal Historiography\nSamuli Seppanen\, University of Hong Kong\n– Ideology and Historiographic License in Chinese Legal Scholarship\nNatasha Wheatley\, Princeton University\n– Law and the Time of Angels: International Law’s Method Wars and the Temporal Properties of Normativity \n12:15-1:15\nLunch \n1:15-2:30\nPanel III: Left Legal History\nAnthony Farley\, Albany\n– A General Theory of Law and Marxism\, or\, History as Race Consciousness\nNtina Tzouvala\, University of Melbourne\n– Provincializing Europe-not Capital-in the History of International Law\nRob Hunter\, Independent Scholar\n– Marxism and Legal Change\nAkbar Rasulov\, University of Glasgow\n– Taking Hohfeld Seriously: Marxist Legal Historiography Post-CLS \n2:30-2:45\nBreak \n2:45-4:15\nRoundtable Discussion I: What is Left?\nKarl Klare\, Umut Ozsu\, Duncan Kennedy \nSaturday\, Sept. 22 \n9-10:30\nPanel IV: Constitutional Change in Brazil & India\nBreno Baia Magalhaes\, Universidade da Amazônia\n– Subnational Constitutionalism and Constitutional Change in Brazil: The Impact of Federalism in Constitutional Stability\nAna Beatriz Robalinho\, University of Sao Paulo\n– Constitutional Mutation and Democratic Legitimacy in Brazil\nLeonardo Barbosa\, Brazilian Chamber of Deputies\n– Legislative Process and Constitutional Change in Brazil: On the Pathologies of the Procedure for Amending the 1988 Constitution\nRohit De\, Yale University\n– The Jurisprudence of Decolonization: Transregional Legal Geographies and Rebellious Lawyering in Asia and Africa \n10:30–10:45\nBreak \n10:45-12:15\nPanel V: Histories of Rights\nMaeve Glass\, Columbia University\n– America’s Unwritten Constitutional History\nDan Edelstein\, Stanford University\n– Revolutionary Rights\nElizabeth Anker\, Cornell University\n– The Right Paradox\nAmy Cohen\, Ohio State University\n– Critical Historiographies and the Legal Imagination: Reshaping the Human Rights Discourses \n12:15-1:15\nLunch \n1:15-2:45\nPanel VI: History\, for Real\nBen Levin\, University of Colorado\n– Critical Criminal Legal Histories (Or Their Absence)\nDan Priel\, Osgoode Hall\n– Where Realism Really Was\nJohn Henry Schlegel\, Buffalo\n– Perhaps the Third Turtle Down\nChuck Colman\, University of Hawaii\n– The Elephant in the Room \n2:45-3\nBreak \n3-4:30\nRoundtable Discussion II: Critical Historicism Today\nNathaniel Berman\, Laura Weinrib\, Judith Surkis\, Anna di Robilant
URL:https://pil.law.harvard.edu/event/conference-historiography-ideology-law-ii/
LOCATION:Boston College Law School\, Faculty Lounge\, Stuart Hall\, 4th Floor\, 885 Centre St.\, Newton Center\, MA\, 02459
CATEGORIES:conferences and workshops,events in Islamic legal studies
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