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Call for Papers

Theme: Memories of Struggles, Struggles of Memories
Type: 2nd International Workshop on Law and Ideology
Institution: Faculty of Political Sciences, University of Sarajevo
   Centre for Legal Education and Social Theory, University of Wroclaw
Location: Sarajevo (Bosnia and Herzegovina)
Date: 28.–29.5.2015
Deadline: 15.2.2015

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From Rafal Manko <[email protected]>

In his "L'histoire comme champ de bataille" Enzo Traverso points out
that memory as a socially relevant phenomenon appeared widely after
1989. The fall of the Soviet empire and the ensuing defragmentation
of the world led to a situation in which a multitude of
recollections, hitherto retained only in private, could enter the
public space. Social memory became an element of identity and
simultaneously an instrument of politics, increasingly encroaching
upon the domain of legal discourse. This happens not only in the form
of preambles to various legal acts, in particular constitutions, but
also in the form of special state institutions charged with
cataloguing the past and making it legally accountable.

According to Maurice Halbwachs, any individual memory functions
exclusively in a certain environment and social group. The aim of
this Workshop is to explore the relationship between collective
memory and legal discourse. In particular, we are interested in the
antagonistic, traumatic and political dimension of collective memory.
This is because social memory above all records recollections of
struggles: wars, revolutions, exclusion, repression, colonization and
genocide. Psychoanalysis teaches us that trauma appears in a moment
in which an event cannot be simply included within the symbolic
order. This leads to the emergence of a gap which cannot be overcome.
Memory can then become an emancipatory tool, a motivation and
mobilisation for rebuilding the entire political and social order.
However, memory can also be appropriated and become a tool of
ideological legitimisation of those in power. Furthermore, especially
following a transformation (e.g. from actually existing socialism to
democracy and a market economy), society (including the legal
community) may develop a tendency to repress the past, either denying
completely its legality or dismissing it as a ‘blackout’ or ‘legal
black hole’. However, the traumatic past and the involvement of the
legal community in it returns in the form of symptoms which, as Žižek
characterizes them, are ‘a point of breakdown heterogeneous to a
given ideological field and at the same time necessary for that field
to achieve its closure, its accomplished form’. The traumatic past of
actually existing socialism is, therefore, simultaneously repressed
and necessary, impure and inalienable, dirty and indispensable.

Memory is not something constant and immutable. To the contrary, it
is subject to reinterpretation and is necessarily linked with the
future. As Walter Benjamin pointed out, ‘memory is not an instrument
for exploring the past but its theatre. It is the medium of past
experience, as the ground is the medium in which dead cities lie
interred’. Memory remains within a dialectical relationship with
forgetting. The latter should not be confused with repression, that
is a purposeful attempt to remove a traumatic experience from the
scope of remembering. Forgetting is a process which occurs over time,
obscuring the origin of legal institutions, especially their foreign
origin as legal transfers or their accidental appearance as a result
of a temporary conjecture.

Methodologically relationships between collective memory and legal
discourse can be analysed either following a genealogical or
structuralist approach. The first perspective focuses on the events
which led to the emergence of given legal institutions. What
victories do they embody and what failures are disavowed. In other
words, how does social memory impact the legal discourse. The second,
structuralist perspective, focuses on the productive aspect of law.
It describes how the legal discourse, by resorting to appropriate
institutions, imposes upon the legal subjects a certain vision of the
past, in other words, how does the legal discourse shape memory. The
genealogical and structural perspectives are neither disjunctive nor
exhaustive. Between them, there is plenty of space for critical legal
theory, critical discourse analysis, psychoanalysis, Marxism or
history of ideas.

Possible topics that might be explored by workshop participants
include, but are not limited to the following:

- coming to terms with memories of conflicts in a transitional
  justice perspective
- state-sponsored institutions dealing with accountability for the
  past in the former Soviet bloc (‘instititutes of national memory’
  and the like)
- lustration, decommunisation and other forms of remembering the
  authoritarian past
- memory and utopia
- mythopoesis of law
- memory as an instrument of identity politics
- the place of legal history in legal education and legal
  argumentation
- idealised visions of the past embodied in legal proxemics and legal
  rhetoric
- use of criminal law to impose a certain vision of collective
  memory, criminalisation of attempts to recount an alternative vision
  of the past
- (disappearing) memory of legal transfers which, after some time,
  begin to be considered as natural and domesticated
- the role of precedent, especially dated, in legal argumentation
- visions of national past in constitutional preambles and their
  practical role in constituitonal adjudication
- admissibility of arguments based on travaux préparatoires and
  previous legal practice in legal argumentation

Submission of Abstracts

Abstracts of 300 words should be submitted to [email protected]
by 15 February 2015. The conveners will inform about the acceptance
of abstracts on 1 March 2015. Participants will be requested to
submitted working drafts (2,000 – 5,000 words) by 1 May 2015.

Following the Workshop, selected participants will be invited to
submit full papers to an edited volume which will appear with a
respected academic publisher.

Workshop Conveners

Samir Forić, University of Sarajevo
[email protected]

Rafał Mańko, University of Amsterdam
[email protected]

Michał Stambulski, University of Wrocław
[email protected]

The 2nd International Workshop on Law and Ideology is jointly
co-organised by the Faculty of Political Sciences of the University
of Sarajevo (Bosnia and Herzegovina) and the Centre for Legal
Education and Social Theory of the Faculty of Law, Administration and
Economics of the University of Wrocław (Poland) with the generous
support of the Embassy of the Republic of Poland in Sarajevo.


Contact:

2nd International Workshop on Law and Ideology
Organising Committee
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://lawideology.wordpress.com




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