Jurisdictional
Complexity
Workshop
Ghent University
(Belgium) -
6-7 July
2012
For additional information, contact Dr Seán Patrick Donlan (sean.donlan@ul.ie) or Dirk Heirbaut (Dirk.Heirbaut@UGent.be). Those interested in participating should contact Dr Donlan with a short abstract (approximately 250 words) and a curriculum vitae, ideally before 1 May 2012. Depending on the number of participants, presentations are likely to be approximately 15-20 minutes and should be in English.
As part of a
project on ‘jurisdictional
complexity’ in Western
legal history (c1600-1900), led by Dr Seán Patrick Donlan (Limerick) and Dirk Heirbaut (Ghent), a
workshop will be held in Ghent from 6-7 July 2012.
Participants in
the workshop need not be part of the project and are free to discuss other periods and places.
The workshop will focus
on the historiographical methods necessary for
the study of jurisdictional
complexity, the attempt to capture a sense of
the legal-normative whole in context studied.
As described in the project statement, to do this:
[t]hose working on the project
will be encouraged
to utilise a number of interdisciplinary methods—comparative, contemporary theories of
interpretation, as well as historical anthropology, geography, and sociology …. [The project] is, in
effect, an analysis of the both the
‘law in action’ (per Roscoe Pound) and the ‘living law’ (per Eugen Ehrlich) of the past. Concentrating on
limited geographical areas, its case studies
will investigate, in a form akin to modern comparative ‘country reports’, both the legal
and normative complexity of the past. It will do so, however, in
light of the realities
of the past, avoiding
the imposition of modern national and juridical boundaries [and will] serve as
instantiations of wider
intellectual and institutional developments….
For additional information, contact Dr Seán Patrick Donlan (sean.donlan@ul.ie) or Dirk Heirbaut (Dirk.Heirbaut@UGent.be). Those interested in participating should contact Dr Donlan with a short abstract (approximately 250 words) and a curriculum vitae, ideally before 1 May 2012. Depending on the number of participants, presentations are likely to be approximately 15-20 minutes and should be in English.
There is no fee for participation, but participants will be expected to cover their own travel, accomodation, and meal costs.
Finally,
note that this gathering immediately
precedes
the European Society for Comparative Legal History Conference to be held in Amsterdam (9-10 July 2012).
Participants in that conference might
consider visiting us in
advance of that event.
No comments:
Post a Comment