Don't be In(Visible)!
The call for papers for the 2016 Law and Culture Conference to be held at St. Mary's University September 5-6 of this year is still open but it ends April 30th. Here's the call.
The call for papers for the 2016 Law and Culture Conference to be held at St. Mary's University September 5-6 of this year is still open but it ends April 30th. Here's the call.
Law and Culture Conference 2016
‘(In)visibility’
Call for
papers
What does it
mean to be seen? What does it mean to see? What can and cannot, should and
should not, be visible? What are the limits of legal sight, and what lies
beyond? What can academic and critical study make visible to law? Can
(in)visibility produce (in)justice? The Law and Culture Conference 2016 aims
stimulate a wide ranging and in-depth discussion on the tensions, significance,
implications and critical dimensions of the open theme of ‘(In)visibility’.
Indicative
concerns include:
· political
and legal visibility/invisibility, including critical gender and race studies,
the legal and cultural responses to current migration crises, the protection
and rights of minorities
· the
visible/unseen dimensions of law and its institution, including legal
aesthetics, law and visuality
· law’s
regulation of visibility, including law and art, the regulation of culture,
illegitimate images
· law’s
(in)visibility within culture, including popular culture, film, comics,
literature and television
· legal
history, including seen/unseen histories,
· ‘hidden
victims’ in criminal and other contexts
· visible
and hidden voices in the legal academy
Please submit
abstracts (250 words), plus 3 keywords and a short biography (50 words), via
email by 30 April 2016. Papers will be 20 minutes in length, with additional
time for questions.
Confirmed Plenary Speakers:
Sionaidh Douglas-Scott (Anniversary Chair in Law, Queen Mary University of
London), Amanda Perry-Kessaris (Professor of Law, Kent Law School), Stuart
Toddington (Professor of Jurisprudence, University of Huddersfield)
About the
Centre for Law and Culture
Launched by Lady
Hale in 2014, the Centre for Law and Culture (CLC) is an interdisciplinary hub
for research at the intersections of law, justice, and the humanities. It is a
home for the cultural study of law, and as a rallying point for such culturally
enriched legal research, the Centre engages legal study that spans topics and
themes from across critical and cultural legal studies. It thereby aims to
incubate and promote critical research that crosses and challenges traditional
legal boundaries in a cultural context. For more information, visit www.stmarys.ac.uk/law-and-culture.
Location:
St Mary’s University, Twickenham, London TW1 4SX (www.stmarys.ac.uk/contact/location-maps.htm).
Registration:
There is an
anticipated £60 registration fee (plus booking), which will cover attendance,
refreshments and lunch for both days and the conference dinner. Reduced cost
packages will be available for single-day attendance.
Dr Thomas
Giddens
Lecturer in Law
Co-Director Centre for Law and Culture
Waldegrave Road, Twickenham, London TW1 4SX
Room G145 | +44 (0)20 8240 4371
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