__________________________________________________

Call for Papers

Theme: Grasping 'Everyday Justice'
Subtitle: An Ethnographic Approach
Type: International Conference
Institution: Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences and
Humanities (CRASSH), University of Cambridge
Location: Cambridge (United Kingdom)
Date: 6.–7.2.2015
Deadline: 24.10.2014

__________________________________________________


Just as the effects of the law do not belong to any specific
institutional space or domain, but manifest themselves in everyday
life, so too does justice permeate the everyday (e.g., Merry 1990;
Greenhouse, Yngvesson, & Engel 1994; Ewick & Silbey 1998; Sarat &
Kearns 2009). Justice is woven into the fabric of everyday existence
at different levels and in manifold ways. People understand,
perceive, receive, experience and accomplish justice in many forms,
either by themselves or through the mediation of other actors.
Justice is plural in its meanings and expressions, while regimes of
justice range in scale from family arbitration and indigenous forms
of justice, to the International Criminal Court. It therefore seems
inevitable that justice will remain both a familiar ideal or norm,
and a difficult concept to specify.

This conference aims to generate a cumulative account of the
'everyday nature of justice'. We invite theoretically grounded papers
offering ethnographic insights into the plural nature of 'everyday
justice' across the globe. By bringing together scholars whose work
teases out the multiple locations and layers of 'everyday justices',
our goal is to spotlight the process of everyday justice formation in
all its ambiguity, complexity and plurality.

We encourage papers addressing any of the following broadly defined
lines of inquiry: 

- Contributions that explore the intersection of institutionalized
forms of justice and the everyday. The aim here is to link key actors
– such as judges, lawyers, leaders and mediators who have dealings
with formal or informal justice in both their institutionalized
professional practice and their daily lives – to more 'ordinary'
actors who experience justice from an day-to-day perspective, in
typically less institutionally specific, yet often more pervasive
ways.

- Contributions that document 'justice pluralism' (Brunnegger &
Faulk n.d.), i.e., the plurality of meanings and experiences that
people attach to justice, including but not limited to
'institutional/non-institutional' interfaces. For example, papers on
this theme might explore how people understand justice (as an idea or
norm) in their daily lives, or investigate how justice interventions
unfold or otherwise make their presence felt in daily contexts, such
as the operations of 'transitional justice' mechanisms. 

- Contributions that highlight or complicate our understanding of
'everyday justices' by exploring, what Clarke and Goodale (2010)'s
label 'the constitution of everyday justice,' where justice is
understood as a constitutively ingrained grid. This theme explores
how justice and concepts of ethics, morality, peoples' rights, the
law and other forms of political discourses intersect in everyday and
institutionalized ways.

In soliciting work at the junction of 'justice' and the 'everyday',
we intend to provoke a reconceptualization of justice across multiple
settings, one that brings a wider and more plural range of
scholarship to bear on currently intractable social conflicts. Papers
should lend ethnographic substance to our understandings of the
multiform ways in which everyday notions of justice are rooted in
social processes of meaning-making.

Please send abstracts of up to 500 words along with a brief
biographical statement to Sandra Brunnegger <[email protected]> by
October 24, 2014. Decisions will be made by October 31, 2014.

Confirmed invited speakers include Susan Hirsch (George Mason
University), Ronald Niezen (McGill University) and Fernanda Pirie
(University of Oxford).

Further information can be found at:
http://www.crassh.cam.ac.uk/events/25658


Contact:

Dr Sandra Brunnegger
St Edmund's College
University of Cambridge
Cambridge CB3 0BN
United Kingdom
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.crassh.cam.ac.uk/events/25658




__________________________________________________


InterPhil List Administration:
http://interphil.polylog.org

Intercultural Philosophy Calendar:
http://cal.polylog.org

__________________________________________________

 

Reply via email to