We received the following call from the ESIL's Interest Group "History of International Law":
Dreaming of the International Rule of Law – A History of International Courts and Tribunals
(image, "Los caprichos de Goya - "The dream of Reason Creates Monsters" (Google Art Project) source: Wikimedia Commons)
On the occasion of The ESIL 11th Annual Conference, to be held in Oslo, 10 – 12 September 2015.
The Judicialization of International Law – A Mixed Blessing? The ESIL’s
interest group on the History of International Law
http://esilhil.blogspot.co.uk/ invites submissions, in English or French.
For
all the current anxiety surrounding the judicialization of
international politics, the contemporary growth of international courts
and tribunals, which shows the continuing appeal of the “domestic
analogy” in shaping the intellectual imagination of the discipline, may
arguably be considered a dream made true for the long-standing
aspirations of professional relevance of international lawyers. The
promise of a more perfected international rule of law is among the
factors that account for the fact that the establishment of new
international courts and tribunals has accompanied the proliferation of
international institutions and the diversification of international law
for the last 25 years’-long post-cold war period.
Against
this background, submissions are welcomed in two interdependent
categories. On the first hand, the IGHIL invites submissions addressed
to examine the histories of the creation of “successful” international
courts and tribunals, in the sense of institutionally established and
operative ones. On the other, the IGHIL welcomes submissions addressed
to examine the histories of short-lived, aborted or failed international
courts and tribunals as well as the history of projects for
international courts of tribunals that remained “dead letter” and/or are
still “in nuce".
Authors are invited to consider
factors of failure/success in the creation, disappearance or non-
emergence of international courts and tribunals in light of their
legitimacy of origin and exercise as well as other factors. These may
include, but are not limited to e.g. the role of particularly
inspirational figures or social movements, the contextual-historical
relevance of different international legal philosophies or the impact of
context-breaking events in the history of international law.
Each submission should include:
– An abstract of no more than 400 words
– The intended language of presentation
– A short curriculum vitae containing the author’s name, institutional affiliation, contact information and e-mail address.
Applications should be submitted to both Ignacio de la Rasilla del Moral and Randall Lesaffer by 15th February 2015. All applicants will be notified of the outcome of the selection process by 15th March 2015.
Selection
will be based on scholarly merit and with regard to producing an
engaging workshop, without prejudice to gender, seniority, language or
geographical location. Please note that the ESIL Interest Group on the
History of International Law is unable to provide funds to cover the conference registration fee or related transport and accommodation costs.
The best papers would be eligible for publication in a
"symposium" of the Journal of the History of International Law (Brill/Martinus Nijhoff).
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