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Call for Papers

Theme: Change
Type: Law and Culture Conference 2015
Institution: Centre for Law and Culture, St Mary's University
Location: London (United Kingdom)
Date: 10.–11.9.2015
Deadline: 30.6.2015

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Law and culture are two significant forces in human life, both
shaping and influencing the conduct of individuals, communities and
societies, and the values they develop. The emergence of values and
norms, of traditions and beliefs — of laws — is a chronological
phenomenon, taking place through the evolution of history and the
influential forces of the present. But these laws are not static:
change is an on-going process: a restless development and dynamic
interaction of legal, cultural, social, and human reality.

Beyond the multifaceted avenues of change that traverse the history
of law and its relationship(s) with culture (changing laws, values
and practices; the changing presence and visibility of law in
mainstream society and culture; the changing presence of women and
others in law; changes in the philosophical grounding of justice),
there are also widespread changes afoot in the present of 2015. In
Europe, for example, there is the possibility of enormous political
change with general elections, with the ebb and flow of the corporate
giant, and with the EU facing challenges that may result in its
reconfiguration. Beyond politics, present life is also bringing fresh
challenges for law and culture globally, such as: the increased use
of technology in law and human life (including amongst other
challenges the darknet, and the integration of our online and
physical selves); the shifting authority of law’s cultural presence
and its increasingly complex relationships with science, religion,
and society; the challenges of globalisation and transnational crime;
the blurring of the first, second and third world; the fluidity of
values as our relationship with modernity becomes ever more strained.

The Law and Culture Conference 2015 will engage with this question of
change: of how law and value have developed and changed in the
cultures of the past; of how it might develop in the future; of the
forces and changes acting and taking place in the cultures and
societies around law today (locally, globally; nationally,
transnationally); of how representations of law and justice in
culture (television, film, literature, comics, newsmedia) might be
evolving today, yesterday, tomorrow; of how law might respond to or
encounter change or changing cultures, or challenges to its authority
from other sources of value and justice; of how change might be
effected within law, intentionally or otherwise, for good or for bad;
of how law and culture could change one another, for better, for
worse, or for something else…

These are but indicative examples of the on-going process of change,
all of which require fresh perspectives to decipher and understand its
significance for law, and for law’s place in contemporary culture.
Such questioning also provides new opportunities to visualise and
explore the frontiers and changing dynamics of law and culture.
Submissions are thus sought from all areas of law and cultural legal
studies, engaging in some way with this broad and open question of
‘change’.

Please submit (abstract 300 words plus 3 keywords) by email, no later
than 30 June 2015.

The organisers are happy to discuss potential ideas in advance of
submission.

Organisers’ contact details:

[email protected]
[email protected]
[email protected]

There is an anticipated registration fee for the conference of £100,
plus booking.


Contact:

Dr Thomas Giddens
Centre for Law and Culture
St Mary’s University
Waldegrave Road
Twickenham
London, TW1 4SX
United Kingdom
Phone: +44 (0)20 8240 4371
Email: [email protected]




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