News from Paolo Davide Farah, University of Tulsa College of Law:
The webinar Indigenous Legal Orders, Legal Pluralism, and the Coloniality of Method Across Comparative Law, International Law, IP, and Trade Governance.
The webinar brought together an outstanding group of scholars to explore how Indigenous legal orders challenge dominant legal epistemologies and invite us to rethink foundational assumptions embedded within international law, comparative law, intellectual property, cultural heritage governance, technology governance, development, and global governance more broadly.I was happy to moderate and contribute to the discussion featuring:
• Professor Chidi Oguamanam (University of Ottawa)
• Professor Elena Baylis (University of Pittsburgh School of Law)
• Professor Sergio Alberto Gramitto Ricci (Hofstra University School of Law)
• Professor Dana G. Jones (North Carolina Central University School of Law)The conversation addressed a range of interconnected themes, including Indigenous knowledge systems, legal pluralism, cultural heritage and repatriation, intellectual property, governance theory, artificial intelligence, structural bias, epistemic governance, and the future of global governance in an increasingly multipolar world.
Watch the Webinar Recording
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r-DGGXPwRZI
Read the Full Post-Webinar Reflection
Additional Information, Speaker Biographies, and Suggested Readings
I hope these materials will be of interest to those working on Indigenous rights, legal pluralism, international law, comparative law, intellectual property, cultural heritage, governance, artificial intelligence, and related fields.
With best wishes,
Paolo
https://paolofarah.wordpress.com/
papers.ssrn.com/sol3/cf_dev/AbsByAuth.cfm?per_id=629289
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