ESCLH 5th Biennial Conference, Paris, 28-30 June,
2018
|
Laws Across Codes and
Laws Decoded
|
Ecole normale
supérieure - Institut Universitaire de
France
|
Welcome to
the ESCLH 5th Biennial Conference
The 5th
Biennial Conference of the European Society for Comparative Legal History is
devoted to Laws Across Codes and Laws Decoded. In the country of the Napoleonic
Codes it is not the matter to eulogize codification, but to propose plural
analysis in legal history about the processes of codifying laws and the choices
not to codify or to decode laws. Beginning with the presentation of PhD
projects about this theme and an inaugural afternoon (with key notes by
Catharin MacMillan and Pedro Barbas Homem) three series of panels will deal
with Middle Ages, Early Modern Times, Modern Times, 19th and 20th
centuries, civil law, penal law, commercial law, public law, international law,
Asia, America, Overseas, Legal professions.
The Ecole normale
supérieure (ENS) and its small legal team directed by Jean-Louis Halpérin
(senior member of the Institut Universitaire de France) is happy to welcome
this event. Founded in 1794 the ENS has for mission to educate future teachers,
professors and researchers in natural sciences, humanities and social sciences.
Among the ENS well known alumni were Taine, Bergson, Durkheim, Jaurès, Péguy,
Giraudoux, Bloch, Aron, Sartre, Foucault, Derrida, 13 Nobel Prizes and 11
Fields Medals. The Conference will be supported by the International City
Campus of Paris (Cité internationale universitaire de Paris), which offers
kindly its hospitality in two venues in front of the ENS Campus Jourdan. Thank
you for participating in this Conference and following the detailed schedule. Enjoy your
staying in Paris!
Non-members of the ESCLH are also welcome, but
they need to use the "donate" page on the right hand side of the
website to pay a conference fee of 125 Euros before 15 June, and email jean-louis.halperin@ens.fr to
confirm that the payment has been made and to register. As membership of the
ESCLH for two years is only 100 Euros, and includes the conference, the
journal, members' information and other work on your behalf, we also take this
point to reaffirm invitation to join the society! If you're interested in our
conference, we're interested in having you as a member
Any members of the ESCLH not presenting
are very welcome at the
conference: email jean-louis.halperin@ens.fr to
register and include what days of the conference you will be attending.
La cinquième
conférence biennale de l’European Society for Comparative Legal History est
consacrée aux lois codifiées et décodées. Dans le pays de Codes Napoléoniens,
il ne s’agit pas de faire le panégyrique de la codification, mais de proposer
des analyses plurielles des différentes procédures de codification et des choix
de ne pas codifier ou de « décodifier ». Débutant avec la présentation des projets de
doctorat sur ce thème, puis une séance inaugurale la première après-midi (avec
les keynotes de Catharin MacMillan et de Pedro Barbas Homem), la conférence
s’articulera en trois sessions parallèles sur le Moyen Âge, les Temps modernes,
l’époque contemporaine, le droit civil, pénal, commercial, international,
l’Asie, l’Amérique, l’Outre-mer, les professions juridiques.
L’Ecole
normale supérieure (ENS) et sa petite équipe de droit dirigée par Jean-Louis
Halpérin (membre senior de l’Institut Universitaire de France) est heureuse
d’accueillir cet événement. Fondée en 1794, l’ENS a pour mission de former de
futurs enseignants, professeurs et chercheurs. Parmi ses anciens élèves, on
compte Taine, Bergson, Durkheim, Jaurès, Péguy, Giraudoux, Bloch, Aron, Sartre,
Foucault, Derrida, 13 Prix Nobel and 11 Médailles Fields. La
Conférence reçoit l’aide généreuse de la Cité internationale universitaire de
Paris qui met à sa disposition deux de ses salles prestigieuses en face du
campus Jourdan de l’ENS. Merci pour votre participation à cette Conférence,
pour respecter les horaires : excellent séjour à Paris !
Thursday, the 28th of June
1)
PhD reports:
Ecole normale supérieure, 48 Boulevard
Jourdan, PhD reports in two rooms (R1 07,
R2 02), 9h00-12h30
1) panel (Matt Dyson chairing)
-Tina Miletić (Split), Concept of
testamentum in Medieval Dalmatia
- Łukasz
Gołaszewski (Warsaw), Meandering way of
the change of the civil and canon laws in 16th – 17th century Poland – a case of tithes and significance of legal practice
- Kaat
Cappelle (Brussels), Married Women as
legal agents in sixteenth-century Antwerp and Leuven
- Przemysław
Gawron (Warsaw) and Jan Jerzy Sowa (Warsaw),
Military Law between Codes and Realities of Early Modern Warfare. Codification
and Decodification of Military Law in 17th Century England, Poland-Lithuania
and Sweden
- Juan
Manuel Hernandez-Velez (Paris), Emilien
Petit (1713-1780) : a comparatist of codification avant la lettre
- Rafal Kaczmarczyk
(Warsaw), The diverse model of
codification, establishment or recognition of criminal law in Muslim countries
- Piotr Alexandrowicz (Poznan), The
Code as an Instrument: the History of Canon Law and the Codification in the
Church
- Naveen Kanalu Ramamurthy (Los Angeles), The “Sublime”
Jurisprudence of Roman Law: British Jurists and the Codification of Islamic Law
in Eighteenth-Century Colonial India
2) panel (Aniceto Masferrer chairing)
- Payam Ahmadi-Rouzbahani (Paris), Between Islamic Law and Civilian Tradition: The
Particular Role of Codification in Making Iranian Civil Law through French
Transplants- Omer Aloni (Tel Aviv), Whales, high seas and the codification of international law: the League of Nations and the whaling dilemma, a case study in comparative legal history – 1919-1939
- Evlampia Tsolaki (Thessaloniki), The Paradigm of the Hellenic Civil Code
- Elisabeth Bruyère (Ghent), Civil Code and Nature Law
- Kellen Funk (Princeton), An Empire in itself: the Migration of New York’s Remedial Code
- Julie Rocheton (Paris), The 19th century American Definition of Civil Code
- Airton Ribeiro da Silva Junior (Firenze), Brazilian efforts on the codification of international law in the early twentieth century: the trajectory of the Epitácio Pessoa's draft code on public international law
- Sebastian L. Spitra (Vienna), Codifying World Cultural Heritage: The Quest for New Narratives of a Global Legal History
Thursday 28th
of June 14:00 – 19:00 PLENARY SESSION
Ecole normale
supérieure, 45, rue d’Ulm, 75005 Paris, Dussane Room (Enter the main building, take the corridor to the
left. The Dussane room is at the end on the left).
14h- 15h Registration and Greetings by the ESCLH President Aniceto
Masferrer
15H 16h 30 Key Notes:
Catharine MacMillan (King’s College, London):
Why English law is not codified: the
unsuccessful efforts of Victorian jurists
Pedro Barbas Homem (University of Lisbon):
Science of legislation and codification.
The preparation of codification by legal literature in Portugal and Brazil
16h30 coffee break
17h-18h 30 First panel (Jean-Louis
Halpérin chairing)
- Luigi
Lacché (Macerata), An impossible
codification? Drafting Principles
of Administrative Law: the Italian Experience in a Comparative perspective (19th-20th
centuries)
- Matt Dyson (Oxford), Legal Change
in Tort in the shadow of codification
- Dirk Heirbaut (Ghent), Past failures are no guarantee of a future flop: why
Belgium's dismal codification record may enable radical change today
18h30- 19h Legal education in Paris, Jean-Louis Halpérin
Friday 29th
of June, Beginning at 9h00 am, coffee break 10h30-11h, lunch buffet 12h30-13h30,
concert and dinner 19h00)
I)
Amphitheater
Jourdan, 48 boulevard Jourdan 75014 Paris
9h-10h30 Panel: Criminal Law and the Limits of
the State Power in the Era of Codification (Luigi Lacché chairing)
Karl Härter (Darmstadt), Criminal Codes and its Alternatives in
Juridical-Political and Popular Discourses in the Age of Enlightenment and
Revolution
Aniceto Masferrer (Valencia), The
Relationship between criminal law and morals in the 19th-century
criminal law discourse
Isabel Ramos-Vázquez (Jaén), Forbidden
associations at the beginning of the criminal codification: A comparative
approach
Juan B. Cañizares-Navarro (Jaén), The crimes of political corruption and the limits of
Spanish State Power in the Era of Codification: a Comparative analysis
11h-12h30 Why a Civil Code? (Dirk Heirbaut chairing)
Hans Schulte-Nölke (Osnabrück), On
the purposes of Civil Law Codification
Nir Kedar (Bar-Ilan), The Symbolic
Aspect of Civil Code
Constantin Willems (Marburg), Advocating
Codes – from Thibaut to European Contract Law
13h30 – 15h00 Panel Legal Practices and Legal Professions in the 19th Century
Japan, China, the Ottoman Empire, and England (Michal Galedek chairing)
Murat Burak Aydin (Frankfurt), Lena Foljanty (Frankfurt), Yu Wang
(Frankfurt), Zeynep Yazici Caglar (Frankfurt)
15h15-16h45 Panel Hungary Codification (Manuel Gutan chairing)
Judit Beke-Martos (Bochum), Zsuzsanna Peres (Budapest), Imre Képessy (Budapest), Modernization through Codification? External and Internal Comparison of
the Hungarian Codification History
17h00-18h30 Panel The
Codification of Unjustified Enrichment in French Law (Matt
Dyson chairing)
Eric
Descheemaeker (Melbourne), Jan Hallebeek (Amsterdam), Matthew Campbell
(Glasgow) and Pablo Letelier (Universidad de Chile)
II)
International
University City of Paris (Cité Internationale Universitaire de Paris, Maison
des Provinces de France, 59 boulevard Jourdan, salon Abreu)
9h-10h30 Medieval Law (Nir Kedar chairing)
Valerio Massimo Minale (Milano), Dušan's
Zakonik: Codification in
Maedieval Serbia and Byzantine Heritage
Andreja Katančević (Belgrade), The Mining Code of Despot Stefan
Helen
F. Leslie-Jacobsen (Bergen), How Innovative is
Innovative? Adaptations of Norwegian Law in New Law Codes in Iceland and Norway
from the Tenth to Thirteenth Centuries
Marek Stary (Prague), The Role of the Monarch on the Codifications
of Land Law in the Estates’ State
11h-12h30 Criminal Law (Aniceto Masferrer chairing)
Stefano Vinci (Bari), Criminal law
and Naples Supreme Court case law in the French decade Francesco
Mastroberti (Bari), The Part II of
the Code for the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies: an "excellent" criminal
code in a despotic state
Emmanuel
Berger (Paraiba), Le Code des délits et des peines du 3 brumaire an IV. Enquête sur les origines et les principes du
code de procédure pénale de la Révolution
13h30-15h00 16th
/17th centuries (Mia Korpiola chairing)
Adam Moniuszko (Warsaw), ‘Codification’ of Polish and
Lithuanian law in the 16th-17th centuries: successes,
failures and impact on legal systems.
Adolfo Giuliani (Helsinki), Codes without natural law. The case of Jacopo
Menochio's De praesumptionibus (1587)
Tomislav
Karlovic (Zagreb), et en fist assises et usages que
l’on deust tenir et maintenir et user el roiaume de Jerusalem « Decoding the Laws of the Kingdom of
Jerusalem »
15h15-16h45 Asia (Jan Hallebeek chairing)
Naoki Kanayama (Tokyo), Japan's
"Success" in Codification in the Late 19th Century: By Code, with
Code and beyond Code
Khohchahar E. Chuluu
(Tokyo), Laws of Different Levels:
Central and Regional Codification
in Early Modern Mongolia and Japan
Hiromi Sasamoto-Collins (Edinburgh), The Japanese Criminal
Code of 1880: Convergence and Resistance in Cultural Exchange
Guliyev Emin (Baku), Jar-Tala Code of law (decree
of the Agdam Majlis) as an act of systematization of the Islamic law and adats
Crime or Sin? Codification and secularisation of penal law Emilia Musumeci (Teramo)
The ambiguous legacy of Cesare Beccaria in Italian penal codification Monica Stronati (Macerata)
The Positivist School and the new horizons of criminal law Paolo Marchetti (Teramo)
The Italian legal socialism and the penal question Riccardo Cavallo (Firenze)
III)
International
University City of Paris, Maison de étudiants de l’Asie du Sud-Est (59 boulevard
Jourdan), Salon Asie du Sud-Est
9h-10h30 Rights (Agustin Parise chairing)
Ivan Kosnica (Zagreb), Yugoslav Citizenship Law (1918 – 1941):
Between Diversity and Unification
Marju Luts-Sootak, Hesi Siimets-Gross, Marelle Leppik (Tartu), Codification of basic rights in Estonian
Constitution (1920) compared with imperial Russian and German republican models
Thomas Mohr (Dublin), Codes of Rights in the British Empire,
1865-1939
11h-12h30 19th/20th
centuries (Eric Descheemaeker chairing)
Filippo Rossi (Milan), Dismissal
across codes and laws decodes.
Italian and European
legal science dealing with the termination of the employment relationship
(latter half of the 19 century-first years of the 20 century)
Frederik Dhondt (Brussels/Antwerp), Permanent Neutrality, Stepping-Stone for a Code of
Nations
Michal Galedek (Gdansk), Comparative analysis as the method of
building the Polish civil law from scratch in the interwar period
Dolores Freda (Napoli), The Italian “emigration code” of 1919
13h30-15h00 20th
century (Dolores Freda chairing)
Martin Sunnqvist (Lund), The “Rule of Life”. The Functions of
Legislation and Adjudication according to Wilhelm Sjögren in a Comparative
Historical Context
Fernando Gil González
(London), The theory of Cappelletti in
the review of comparative legal history systems in Europe
Hesi Siimets-Gross
and Katrin Kiirend-Pruuli (Tartu), Changes of Estonian and Latvian Divorce Law
after WWI: in Draft, in Civil Code and outside of them
15h15-16h45 America (Pedro Barbas Homem chairing)
Agustin Parise (Maastricht), Stepping Stones for Law and Society: An
Exploration of the Generations of Civil Codes in Latin America (19-21
Centuries)
Joshua Tate (Dallas), Codification
of Texas Trust Law, 1943-2017
Diego Nunes (Santa Catarina), Codification,
Recodification and Decodification of Law:a History of Legal Dimensions of
Justice in the Imperial Brazil by the “Codigo de Processo Criminal” of 1832
17h00-18h30 Civil Law (Martin Sunnqvist chairing)
Piotr Pomianowski
(Warsaw), The national
codification of civil law in Poland at the beginning of the 19th
century. Sources and inspirations
Manuel Gutan
(Sibiu), Codification as a Tool of Social
Engineering in Modern Romania (!?) The Case of Civil Code Alexandru Ioan
Emőd Veress (Cluj-Napoca), Abrogation of the 1887 Romanian commercial code and the survival of its
institutions and concepts, in the context of the new civil Code
Around 19h00/19h30 Piano
Concert by Fériel Kaddour, lecturer at the Ecole Normale Supérieure
Couperin, Debussy, Liszt, Chopin
Buffet in salon Abreu, Maison des Provinces
de France
Saturday the
30th of June, light buffet 12:30 to 13:30
I)
Amphitheater
Jourdan, 48 boulevard Jourdan 75014 Paris
9h-10h30 Codification Movement (Dirk
Heirbaut chairing)
Mingzhe Zhu (Pekin), Notions of
Law in the Era of Codification
Dmitry Poldnikov (Moscow), Codifying
the Laws of the Late Russian Empire: Legal Unification through Contested
Western Legal Tradition?
Valdis Blūzma (Turiba), History
of the Codification of Civil Law in Latvia (19th-20th centuries): Overcoming
the Territorial and Estate Particularism of Law
11h00-12h30 Legal
Periodicals Panel (Dave de Ruysscher chairing)
Marju Luts-Sootak, Merike Ristikivi (Tartu), Sebastiaan
Vandenbogaerde (Ghent), Legal Periodicals
as Alternative to Codes?
13h30-15h00
Commercial Law (Frederik Dhondt chairing)
Dave de Ruysscher
(Tilburg/Brussels), Pre-Insolvency Proceedings (France, Belgium
and the Netherlands, 1807-c 1910)
Annamaria
Monti (Milano), Commercial Codes: the
Italian Example in a comparative perspective
Efe
Antalyali (Istanbul), Ottoman
Jurisprudential Shift: Recpetion of French Commercial Law (1807)
15h
15-16h45 Final Plenary (for all participants)
II)
International
University City of Paris (Cité Internationale Universitaire de Paris, Maison
des Provinces de France, 59 boulevard Jourdan, salon Abreu)
9h-10h30 20th
century (Phillip Hellwege chairing)
Raffaella Bianchi Riva (Milano), Legal
Ethics in the 19th and 20th centuries: A code of conduct
for Italian and European lawyers?
Dalibor Cepulo (Zagreb), Local
court in Croatia: transplant and challenges of modernity
Marcin Lysko (Bialystok), Main problems of the codification works on substantive
misdemeanour law in People’s Poland
11h00-12h30 Overseas (Catharine MacMillan chairing)
Anna Taitslin and Murray Raff (Canberra), Codification or
Transplantation? The Case of Absolute Ownership
Ricardo Sontag (Minais Gerais), Models,
examples and antimodels: representations of foreign penal codes within the
Brazilian codification process (1928-1940)
Paul
Swanepoel (KwaZulu-Natal), Codifying
Criminal Law in East Africa, 1920-1945
13h30-15h 00 20th
century (Jean-Louis
Halpérin chairing)
Coding Authoritarianism: Law, State, Ideology
and World War 2
Cosmin Sebastian
Cercel (Nottingham), Discontinued
Dictatorships: (Re)Coding Authoritarianism in Antonescu's Romania; David Fraser (Nottingham), Decoding the Jew: Vichy's National Legal Revolution; Simon Lavis (Open University), Codes, Codification and Encoding Nazism in
the Legal System of the Third Reich; Stephen Skinner (Exeter), Central Authority in Codified and
Non-Codified Legal Systems: Law in the Shadow of the State, or the State in the
Shadow of the Law?
III)
Ecole normale supérieure, 48 boulevard Jourdan, R 3-46.
9h-10h30, 19th
and 20th centuries (Adolfo
Giuliani chairing)
Arthur Barrêtto de Almeido Costa and Ricardo Sontag (Minais Gerais), Change Through Mercy. Royal Pardon and
Criminal Law Reforms in Late 19th Century in Brazil and France
Anna Klimaszewska (Gdansk), Code de commerce of 1807 as an instrument
of transforming legal reality - the Polish point of view
Sara Pilloni (Trieste), “Roman
Legal Heritage and Codification Processes: the Role of Italian Roman Law
Scholars in the Codification of Civil Law”
11h00-12h30 Civil Law (Pim Oosterhuis chairing)
Asya Ostroukh (West Indies), An Unlimited Number of Limited Real Rights: A
Story of an Adaptation of French Property Law in Francophone Switzerland,
Quebec, and Louisiana in the Nineteenth Century
Katharina Kaesling (Bonn), Codified
Conditions vs. Judicial Discretion in Family Law: What codification means for
the adaptation of maintenance law to social change
Maria Lewandowicz
(Gdansk), How to make impossible possible? On the
unification of inheritance law in Switzerland in the 19th century
13h30-15h00
Comparisons (Anna Klimaszewska
chairing)
Marianna Muravyeva (Tampere), Gendering the Law or Codifying Gender: Family
Law in Early Modern Europe
Raphaël Cahen (Brussels), Joseph Marie Portalis (1778-1858): from comparatism
to the idea of a European code of Citizenship
Pim Oosterhuis (Maastricht), Is
there something like the ‘Great Litigation Increase’?
VENUES AND HOTELS
Ecole Normale Supérieure
Campus « Quartier latin », 45 rue d’Ulm, 75000 Paris (on the
28th of June, afternoon)
Campus Jourdan 48 boulevard Jourdan 75014 Paris
On the other side of Boulevard Jourdan (number 59), Cité Internationale
Universitaire de Paris
The two campus are linked through Underground RER B (stations Luxembourg
and Cité Universitaire)
Arrival from Paris airports: Stations Charles de Gaulle Etoile (RER A),
Montparnasse (Underground)
École normale supérieure
45, rue d’Ulm / 29 rue d’Ulm / 24 rue Lhomond
F-75230 Paris cedex 05
Tél. +33 (0)1 44 32 30 00 (standard)
Campus Jourdan
48, boulevard Jourdan
75014 Paris
Tél. +33 (0)1 43 13 61 00 (standard)
Campus Montrouge (with some possible rooms for PhD candidates)
1, rue Maurice Arnoux
92120 Montrouge
Tél. +33 (0)1 58 07 65 00 (standard)
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