Call for Abstracts
Law and Boundaries
is an interdisciplinary yearly conference that aims to discuss and
propose new perspectives on the challenges the legal discipline is
facing regarding its object, its function, its theoretical foundations
and its practical outcomes.
The focus of this year’s conference is the idea of “conflicts”
and the ways law and the neighboring disciplines account for the notion
and its manifestations, particularly when it comes to conflicts
embedded within the globalization processes.
We expect young scholars from all disciplines to submit their abstracts (250-300 words) before March 15th. Papers
(max. 7000 words) will be circulated among participants during the
conference and should be sent by May 5th. A limited number of papers
will be selected for publication.
To submit an abstract, click here
We are interested in receiving contributions from graduate students and young scholars that address the following topics:
Zooming In and Zooming Out: the Dynamics of the Local/Global Conundrum
In this stream, we would like to think anew the relationship between “the local” and “the global”.
What are the ways in which legal
arrangements frame the relationship between these two concepts? What is
the nature of the relationship between the two notions: is it
conflictual or dialectical? To what extent the “local” and the “global”
are only substitutes for the traditional classical concepts used in
legal theory or international law such as universalism and
particularism, universalism and relativism, international and
domestic? What are the implications for law of the impossibility to
reduce certain phenomena to the binary global/local distinction?
In this stream, we welcome papers that
explore the philosophical meaning of the distinction. We also welcome
contributions that consider the implications of this distinction within
European Union law, postcolonial studies, law and economic development
and migration law.
Sexy Legal Education: Undressing Hierarchies
In 1983, Duncan Kennedy published a
paper showing how law schools were an element in the reproduction of
social hierarchies. This stream aims to provide an opportunity to
revisit the notion of social hierarchical reproduction in legal
education and to assess the state of legal education some 30 years
later.
What is the relation between legal
education and the challenges faced by the legal discipline? What role
do law schools play in challenging or reproducing traditional conceptual
frameworks?
What are the conflicts that
underlie legal academia? Can we suggest a genealogy of such conflicts
and of their outcomes? More specifically, what historical, political or
other elements must be taken into account if one were to examine why
some approaches to law – certain ways of talking about law- have been
more enduring than others? Who are the heroes- the “winners”, who are
the “losers” and what are the elements constitutive of the struggle
within the legal academia?
Law in Wonderland: Challenging and Internalizing Violence
Violence takes a variety of forms and manifests itself on multiple platforms: it can be armed, economic, sexual, psychological…
What is the role of law in these
various contexts? Is law protecting from, regulating or reproducing –
for better or for worse– these various forms of violence? What kind of
violence is targeted, used or defined by law? How do the divides between
private/public, territoriality/extraterritoriality, jus ad bellum/jus in bello,
civil war/terrorism/international conflict/responsibility to protect
shape our legal imagination and our understanding of these phenomena?
Can and should legal discourse be subversive to violence? How is the law
and violence relationship transformed and reshuffled in the general
debate about globalization?
Here, we welcome papers in legal theory, international law, history of law, international economic law.
Regulating the Intimate: Thinking about Sex and its Politics
In this stream, we invite
contributions that reflect upon the discrepancy between the aseptic
nature of the legal language and the clashing desires and unsettled
self-representations that characterize the individuals’ everyday
experiences.
How does law represent and shape sexualities, constrain the erotic domain, and intervene in the relationships between bodies?
Traditionally, family law, human
rights or criminal law, constitutional law are referred to as the
disciplines that seek to wrestle with these kinds of questions. What
major transformations have been taking place within these fields?
What is the role of the
public/private and the economic/cultural divides? What bodies, relations
and spaces are made invisible by law? What are the taboos of our
discipline on this subject? Can law provide the appropriate conceptual
and practical tools needed for radical perspectives on sexuality?
For this discussion, we welcome
papers on legal history, political philosophy, contributions in queer
studies, feminist studies, criminal law, and economic law.
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