CONFERENCE
We
are pleased to announce that the Twenty-Third Annual Meeting of the Association
for the Study of Law, Culture and the Humanities will be held
at Quinnipiac University School of Law in North Haven, Connecticut,
on March 7-8, 2020.
Proposals
Proposals
As always, we welcome well-constructed proposals on any topic related to law and legal studies. In addition, our theme this year is: Projections: Imagining Legal Futurity. We now seemingly inhabit a moment of multiple thresholds and must engage a future that urgently demands our attention. Climate change, challenges to democratic governance, new modes of communication, mass migration, quickening temporalities, the very boundaries of the human – all of these and more constitute a new and shifting landscape of materiality, epistemology, and social relations. How do and should we imagine the place of law in such a future?
We invite proposals taking up that question from a variety of humanities-oriented perspectives. Among many other questions, one might ask: As we increasingly negotiate digitally-connected webs of relations, what relevance does the concept of rights retain? How is authority articulated and disarticulated in a lightning-paced, image-saturated world? In what ways do historical modes of thinking remain relevant to future-oriented legal argument and legitimation? How might the power and reach of law be reconfigured by seemingly unprecedented challenges to human flourishing such as climate change and artificial intelligence? How do speculative fiction and imaginative culture, post-apocalyptic or otherwise, renew and/or create new principles, standards, prescriptions, and prohibitions that regulate our everyday practices? Does the future we imagine call for new ways to think about law itself?
All proposals are due Friday, November 1, 2019, midnight Eastern Standard Time.
Submission Instructions
Individual proposals should include a title and an abstract of no more than 250 words. We also welcome proposals for panels, round-tables, and streams (two panels on one theme). Panels should include three papers (or, exceptionally, four papers). Please specify a title and designate a chair for your panel. The panel chair may also be a panel presenter. It is not necessary to write an abstract or proposal for the panel itself. To indicate your pre-constituted panel, round-table, or stream, please ensure that individual registrants provide the name of the panel and the chair in their individual submissions on the registration site. All panel, round-table, or stream participants must make an individual submission on the registration site.
All proposals must be submitted on this site.
The
Association for the Study of Law, Culture and the Humanities is
an organization of scholars engaged in
interdisciplinary, humanistically-oriented legal scholarship. The
Association brings together a wide range of people engaged in
scholarship on legal history, legal theory and jurisprudence, politics,
cultural studies, anthropology, literature, the performing arts, media
studies, and legal hermeneutics. We encourage dialogue across and among
these fields about issues of interpretation, identity, and values, about
authority, obligation, and justice, and about law's role as a
constituent part of cultures and communities. If you have any general
questions about the conference, please do not hesitate to contact us
at law.culture.humanities@gmail.com.
GRADUATE
STUDENT WORKSHOP
The Annual Association for the Study of Law,
Culture, and the Humanities Graduate Student Workshop will be held on Friday,
March 6, 2020 (the day before the annual meeting begins). Applications
are due November 15, 2019.
The workshop is designed for graduate students who are
undertaking research that cuts across law, cultural studies, literature,
philosophy, legal studies, anthropology, political science, and history, among
others. The workshop is designed to afford graduate students the opportunity to
experience the LCH community in a smaller venue with more sustained contact
with one another and some faculty. The workshop also provides graduate students
with an opportunity to discuss their research projects in a small group setting
in anticipation of such things as job talks and publication.
APPLICATION
INSTRUCTIONS
Applications to the workshop should consist of a current
curriculum vitae (5-page maximum), an abstract of a current project not
exceeding 700 words, as well as a short (5- page maximum) text relating to that
project. This “text” could be a case, literary work, a time-line, a photo, a
sound or video file, or some other relevant text. The text you choose should be
something that helps you reflect on the subject of your work and your methods
of analysis. Please use your judgment and best guess in deciding how audio,
visual, or audio-visual materials "translate" into pages of text.
Applicants whose proposals are accepted will receive some
support towards an extra night's accommodation from ASLCH as well as some
support (varying, depending on distance traveled) towards the cost of
transportation to the conference site. While those who participated in a previous
workshop may re-apply and participate again, should space and/or funds be
limited, we will prioritize new participants.
Please email your applications to law.culture.humanities@gmail.com
by Friday November 15,
2019 by midnight Eastern Standard Time. Please include the
subject line: ASLCH Grad Workshop Application. Please name your file(s) using
your lastname first, e.g. “Miller_application” or “Miller_cv”. Please remind us
if you applied for or participated in a previous workshop and, if so, which
one(s).
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