Information transmise par D. Deroussin:
Inaugural Conference
Law and Historical Development from a Comparative Perspective
University of Valencia
Valencia, Spain
5-6 July 2010
Valencia, Spain
5-6 July 2010
Program (general)
http://esclh.blogspot.com/ - (Further information: aniceto.masferrer@uv.es)
Monday, 5 July
(at “La Nau” Building, Univ. Valencia)
9 am-12 pm. - 1st Optional Tour: "Ciudad de las Artes y de las Ciencias”, from the Hotel Inglés, at 9 am (Coordinator: Vicente Serra) 10 am-13 pm. - Executive Committee Meeting (at C.M.U. Rector Peset) 1.30-2.30 pm. - Registration Conference (at “La Nau” building)
2.30-2.45 pm. - Inaugural Speech, by Chancellor of the Univ. Valencia
2.45-3.30 pm. - Plenary Session: Presentation ESCLH / WLT Project 3.30-4 pm. - Coffee Break 4-5.45 pm. - Session One 5.45-6.00 pm. - Break 6-7.45 pm. - Session Two 8 pm. - Dinner
Tuesday, 6 July
(at the Faculty of Law, Univ. Valencia)
8.30-10 am. - Session Three 10-10.30 am. - Break /Coffee 10.30 am-12 pm. - Session Four 12.15-13.30 pm. - Session Five
13.30-14 pm. - General Closing Session (at Salón de Grados, Ground Floor)
14.30-16.30 pm. - Lunch
16.30-19 pm. - 2nd Optional Tour: the Old City, from both the Faculty of law and Hotel Inglés (Coordinators: Pilar González and Laura Pividal) 16-19 pm. - WLT Project Meeting (at Law School, 4P03 Room)
(Speakers are encouraged to present their papers in 15 minutes and no longer than 20 minutes)
At “La Nau” Building, Univ. Valencia
At “La Nau” Building, Univ. Valencia
Sessions
Session One (Monday, 4.00 pm - 5.45 pm)
1st Panel
(Room A)
Law, Justice and Legal Terminology
Chair: Olivier Moréteau Law, Justice and Legal Terminology
Speakers:
- Pia Letto-Vanamo, University of Helsinki, pia.letto-vanamo@helsinki.fi, Some Remarks on the History of Legal Argumentation.
- Anthony Musson, Exeter University, A.J.Musson@exeter.ac.uk, Common legal heritage? Visual Representations of Law and Justice in Medieval Europe.
- Lara Magnusdottir, University of Iceland, larama@gmail.com, How to understand a Concordat when you don‘t know what the word means.
- Merike Ristikivi, University of Tartu, merike.ristikivi@gmail.com, Terminological turn as a turn of legal culture.
2nd Panel
(Room B)
Legal Transplants, Comparative Legal History and Legal Education
Chair: Remco van Rhee Speakers: Legal Transplants, Comparative Legal History and Legal Education
- Nir Kedar, Bar-Ilan University, kedarn@mail.biu.ac.il , Transplanted Law v. Transplanted Culture: The Unique Case of Israeli Legal History.
- Andreas Thier,University of Zurich, lst.thier@rwi.uzh.ch, Legal Transplants, Legal Transfers and Comparative Legal History.
- Ditlev Tamm, University of Copenhagen, Ditlev.Tamm@jur.ku.dk, From a European to a Global Approach. Some Reflections on the Utility of Comparative law for Legal Education.
- Paul J. du Plessis, Edinburgh University, p.duplessis@ed.ac.uk, Law, modernity and the place of European legal history.
1st Panel
(Room A)
Social Context, Legal Culture and Comparative Legal History
Chair: Dirk Heirbaut Speakers: Social Context, Legal Culture and Comparative Legal History
- Serge Dauchy, University of Lille–Nord de France, Serge.Dauchy@univ-lille2.fr, A comparative study of legal culture in early Modern Europe.
- Adolfo Giuliani, University of Cambridge, agg21@cam.ac.uk, Two models of fact-finding.
- Matt Dyson, University of Cambridge, mnd21@cam.ac.uk, Comparative Legal History: methodology for morphology.
- David Ibbetson, University of Cambridge, dji22@cam.ac.uk, Comparative Legal History: A Methodology.
2nd Panel
(Room B)
Executive and Legislative Powers in Comparative Perspective (18th and 19th Centuries)
Chair: Jan Hallebeek Speakers: Executive and Legislative Powers in Comparative Perspective (18th and 19th Centuries)
- Louis Berkvens, Maastricht University, louis.berkvens@maastrichtuniversity.nl, An Approach of comparative history of legislation.
- Eduardo Galván, University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, egalvan@dcjb.ulpgc.es, How to govern an archipelago? The Channel Islands and the Canary Islands.
- Michael L Nash, Les Roches/Gruyères University of Applied Sciences, michael.nash@glion.edu, A contrast in evolution: the legal framework of the British and Continental monarchies.
- Graziella Romeo, L. Bocconi University, graziella.romeo@unibocconi.it, The development of the idea of social citizenship in a comparative perspective.
Session Three (Tuesday, 8.30 am - 10.00 am) At the Faculty of Law, Univ. Valencia
1st Panel
(Room: Aula Tomás S. Vives Antón, 4th Floor)
Western Legal Traditions and Comparative Legal History
Chair: Dirk Heirbaut Speakers: Western Legal Traditions and Comparative Legal History
- Seán Donlan, University of Limerick, sean.donlan@ul.ie, World is crazier and more of it than we think”: histories of legal and normative hybridity.
- Heikki Pihlajamäki, University of Helsinki, Heikki.pihlajamaki@helsinki.fi, The Need of Comparative Legal History in the Nordic Countries: The Case of Early Modern Sweden.
- Olivier Moréteau, Louisiana State University, Olivier.Moreteau@law.lsu.edu, The ethnocentrism of French legal culture: origins and effects of a superiority complex.
- Aniceto Masferrer, University of Valencia, aniceto.masferrer@uv.es, The French Codification and the Western Legal Traditions.
2nd Panel
(Room: Sala d’Actes, Dep. Filosofia del Dret, 4th Floor)
Social Control, Criminal Law and Civil Rights in the 20th Century
Chair: Simon Bronitt Speakers: Social Control, Criminal Law and Civil Rights in the 20th Century
- Henry Yeomans, University of Plymouth, henry.yeomans@plymouth.ac.uk, Moderate Measures in Alcohol Policy: British Attitudes and Victorian Hangovers, 1914-1921.
- Michael A Livingston, Rutgers School of Law, weissliv@comcast.net, One Hatred, Many Laws: The Evolution of Antisemitic Laws in Germany, France, and Italy in Comparative Historical Perspective.
- Francesca Galli, Institut d’Etudes Européennes, Section Juridique, ULB, Brussels, fg267@cam.ac.uk, British, French and Italian measures to deal with terrorism: a comparative study.
- Stephen Skinner, University of Exeter, S.J.Skinner@exeter.ac.uk, “Tainted Law: Critical Legal History and the Italian Penal Code
1st Panel
(Room: Aula Tomás S. Vives Antón, 4th Floor)
Legal Institutions in the Middle Ages from a Comparative Perspective
Chair: Remco van Rhee Speakers: Legal Institutions in the Middle Ages from a Comparative Perspective
- Jan Hallebeek, VU University Amsterdam,j.j.hallebeek@rechten.vu.nl, Some Remarks on the Direct Enforcement of Obligations to Do in the Continental Legal Tradition.
- Dirk Heirbaut, Ghent University, dirk.heirbaut@UGent.be, Feudal law in Flanders and the Lotharingian principalities: a comparison.
- Jonathan Rose, Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law, JONATHAN.ROSE@asu.edu, Advocatorum Militia: The Chivalric Ethos of the Legal Profession--Loyalty and Honor.
- Nikitas Hatzimihail, University of Cyprus, nhatzimi@ucy.ac.cy Pre-Historical Private International Law: A Study in Conflicts Historiography.
2nd Panel
(Room: Sala d’Actes, Dep. Filosofia del Dret, 4th Floor)
Codification of Private Law
Chair: David Ibbetson Codification of Private Law
Speakers:
- Jean-François Gerkens, University of Liège, JF.Gerkens@ulg.ac.be, The Liberation of the Debtor in mora by vis maior, or the Incredible Success Story of a Non Roman Rule.
- Matthew Mirow, FIU College of Law, Miami, mirowm@fiu.edu Codification and the Constitution of Cádiz.
- Judit Valls, University of Girona, judit.valls@udg.edu, The Spanish Commercial Code of 1829.
- R Jovita Baber, University of Illinois, jbaber@illinois.edu, Multiplicity of Meanings: Legal Pluralism and the Layer Legality of Land in Sixteenth-century Andes.
Session Five (Tuesday, 12.15 pm - 13.30 pm)
1st Panel
(Room: Aula Tomás S. Vives Antón, 4th Floor)
Criminal Justice and Prosecution in the Modern Age
Chair: Simon Bronitt Panelists: Criminal Justice and Prosecution in the Modern Age
- Karl Härter, MPIER, Frankfurt/M, haerter@mpier.uni-frankfurt.de, The Emergence of the International Order of Criminal Prosecution in the Modern Age: Extradition, Asylum and Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters.
- Juan B. Cañizares, University of Valencia / MPIER, Frankfurt/M, jbcanizaresnavarro@googlemail.com, The notion of honour in the injury and slander offences. Normative and scholarly legal comparative approach between Spain and France, late 18th century-late 19th century.
- Judith Rowbotham, Nottingham Trent University, jrowbotham@gmail.com, Narrating Crime: Nineteenth Century Media Depictions of Crime.
2nd Panel
(Room: Sala d’Actes, Dep. Filosofia del Dret, 4th Floor)
Constitutionalism from a Comparative Perspective
Chair: Heikki Pihlajamäki Speakers: - Marcelo Lacombe, NYU, marcelolacombe@yahoo.com, Constitutionalism , liberalism and militarism. A comparative approach on the evolution of constitutional systems in Europe and Latin America, during the nineteenth century?
- Chao-ju Chen, National Taiwan University, cjtan@ntu.edu.tw , In the Name of the Mother: A Feminist Legal History of Naming in Taiwan.
- Thomas Mohr, University College Dublin, thomas.mohr@ucd.ie, The Constitution of the Irish Free State in Inter-War Europe.
http://esclh.blogspot.com/
Contact et renseignements
(inclus renseignements pratiques: réservations, logements, etc.): Dr Seán Patrick Donlan (sean.donlan@ul.ie)
Inscription nécessaire