2. Call For Papers
==>
13-16 april 2011 - Maastricht:
XVIIth
European Forum of Young Legal Historians:
European traditions: integration or disintegration?
The international graduate and post-graduate conference ‘European
Traditions: Integration or Disintegration?’ of the European
Association of Young Legal Historians will take place at Maastricht
University in the Netherlands, from 13-16 April 2011,
Wednesday-Saturday (www.maastrichtuniversity.nl).
The European Forum of Young Legal Historians has grown into the
leading conference for young researchers in legal history in Europe
and the world. Maastricht University, a truly international
university at the heart of Europe, and currently celebrating its
VIIth Lustrum provides the perfect location for the XVIIth Forum.
European legal traditions have always known centralising and
de-centralising forces: Justinian’s Corpus iuris, the
Medieval ius commune of Roman and Canon law, the usus
modernus pandectarum, the current European harmonisation efforts
all have an integrative character to a certain extent.
Simultaneously the ius proprium, as in customary law,
including the English Common law, as well as, most particularly, the
national codifications of the 19th century, and the study
of these laws, demonstrates the diversity of European legal
traditions.
We are interested in papers and posters addressing these often
contrasting developments, including their religious, philosophical,
political, social or economic background. Interdisciplinary and
comparative approaches are therefore most welcome.
You are strongly encouraged to give your presentation in English, as
it is the current European lingua franca; French and German
are also accepted, but be aware that this will reduce your audience.
Apart from the regular presentations, we will again have a ‘poster
session’ or ‘poster walk’ during one of the afternoons: in several
rounds you will be able to present and discuss your poster with
various small groups of interested participants. Particularly
PhD-candidates just starting with their research are encouraged to
submit a poster outline, since the poster session will be a
wonderful opportunity to obtain feedback on your project at an early
stage.
Submissions with a close connection to the theme are preferred,
though traditional legal history subjects are also welcome,
especially in respect of the poster session.
Regular participation fee will be € 100; participants giving a paper
or presenting a poster pay € 75.
Please send your application (an abstract of max. 500 words and/or
an outline of a poster and a short academic CV) to forum2011@aylh.org
Deadline: 1 November 2010
Further information on the Association of Young Legal Historians and
past Forums is available on
www.aylh.org.
==> September 2011 - Brussel :
International Conference organised by the Centre for Historical
Research and Documentation on War and Contemporary Society (Cegesoma,
Brussels), IRHIS (Université de Lille 3), CHDJ (Université
catholique de Louvain) and Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Justice in Wartimes and Revolutions: Europe,
1795-1950
3-day conference, in English and French
Organising Committee
: D. Luyten (Cegesoma), S. Faber (VUAmsterdam), H. Leuwers
(Lille3), X. Rousseaux (UCL), M. De Koster (UCL/UGent/VUAmsterdam)
With the support of
the Interuniversity Attraction Pole “Justice & Society:
Socio-political History of Justice Administration in Belgium,
1795-2005” (Belgian Science Policy)
War and revolutions generate transformations of judicial
institutions and practices, and bring about shifts in the occupation
of positions within different sections of the judicial system, which
then often undergoes expansion. These transformations can either
have lasting effects or only be temporary, in which case the former
judicial system is restored. Such restauration can be complete, but
often the phase of war and occupation will remain to have an impact,
because certain changes are consolidated, because it is no longer
possible to simply restore the previous situation, or because new
elements are embedded into the former system. War and revolutions
are times and contexts of exception, that bring about exceptional
measures, or in other words: fundamental innovations. These
innovations can be import products from other countries or judicial
systems, or can spring from doctrines and ideologies that differ
drastically from, or even inverse formerly prevailing ideas and
values, in which case the question arises to what extent innovation
was merely a discursive shift.
This introductory sketch of the subject brings us to
the following subthemes, which will structure the conference:
1)
Changes in the judicial
system: The focus here is not that much on legal changes, but rather
on innovations reflecting fundamental shifts in the concept and
system of justice, and that have been imported from other systems,
states or ideologies. Central points of attention are the degree of
innovation, the process of transfer and circulation of models and
ideas, and the actors shaping and steering this process. One might
consider, for example, nationalization measures in Eastern Europe
and the appearance of various forms of patrimonial and fiscal
sanctions, which have recently been the object of a growing body of
research. Wars and revolutions also generate entirely new problems,
that are impossible or very difficult to solve with the ‘normal’
judicial instruments and instead demand original solutions that,
then, appear as ‘strange’ or external to the initial justice system.
Within the context of this conference, particular attention needs to
be paid to the heritage of the French Revolution.
2)
Changes in practices:
Here, the different institutional bodies making up the judicial
world and their actual practices are at the centre of the attention.
Did revolutions and wars bring about structural changes in the
organisation and functioning of the courts, the penitentiary sector
and crime control agencies? Or did other institutions or organs take
on tasks that under normal conditions are executed by the justice
system? On the other hand, questions should also concern the
subjects and clients of the different judicial bodies: how did the
context of judicial crisis and change alter their interactions with
the justice system? This point refers to the blurring of boundaries
between traditional categories of tolerable/intolerable,
legal/illegal and good/bad behaviour at times of occupation and war,
but also to possibly different uses of justice by civilians in such
contexts.
3)
Changes in judicial
personnel and judicial professions: here the question is raised
whether or not wars and revolutions brought about significant
lasting changes in the personnel structure of the justice system and
in the occupational position of the actors of justice (magistrates,
lawyers, ministers of Justice, police forces, pentitentiary
personnel, etc.). Which changes were aspired
(political-ideological, legal doctrines, democratization, gender-dvision…),
and which were actually translated into practice? Which mechanisms
were activated en which were the central dynamics of the process of
change? Here, the question of ‘purification’ initiatives and
mechanisms, for example, deserves particular attention.
In terms of geographical focus, the whole of Europe is
taken into consideration; papers on Eastern or Mediterranean Europe
are particularly welcome. All judicial domains can be treated, but
priority is given to the civil law domain (f.e. property law, civil
law policy) on the one hand, and to penal law, the criminal justice
sytem and all directly related and interdependent fields of justice
(fiscal law, juvenile justice system, etc.) on the other. As time
frames, the periods from 1795 to 1815, from 1914 to 1920, and from
1939 to 1950 have been chosen.
Proposals for papers (maximum 500 words, accompanied by a short CV)
are to be sent before 15 December 2010, via e-mail to
dirk.luyten@cegesoma.be &
margo.dekoster@uclouvain.be
The proceedings of the conference will be published.