(Source: LPIL.org)
Melbourne Law
School’s Laureate Program in International Law is hosting an international
conference on the League of Nations next month. The draft programme is now
available.
Conveners: Luís Bogliolo, Kathryn Greenman, Anne Orford,
and Ntina Tzouvala.
Confirmed Keynote Speakers: Professor Fleur Johns (University
of New South Wales Faculty of Law); Professor Balakrishnan Rajagopal
(Department of Urban Studies and Planning, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology)
Almost a hundred years after the creation of
the League of Nations, it is still commonly remembered as a failure in a period
of chaos and disorder. Recently, however, a growing literature has begun a
reappraisal of this historiography, looking at the role of the League of
Nations beyond its frustrations and disillusionments in collective security.
This new surge of critical studies has led to a more complex and multifaceted
understanding of the League, exploring its legacies and impacts at a time of
renewed economic crises and of deepening conflicting visions of international
order. On the centenary of its foundation, we are taking this further by
looking at the League of Nations with a view from the South. Our aim is to
decentre the League and to explore competing visions of international order,
law and institutions that resonate in our contemporary world.
This conference will bring together scholars
working in law, history, international relations, and political theory to think
critically about the League of Nations, law, institutions, practices,
ideologies and technologies in relation to or with a view from the South. Themes for discussion include:
- The
League of Nations and the regulation of international violence
- Sovereignty,
empires, and the shifting boundaries of international authority
- Intervention
(military, economic, political) in the context of the League
- Anti-colonialism,
the rise of transnational social movements (socialism, feminism, national
liberation)
- Competing
internationalisms and visions of international order
- The
rise of fascism and Nazism
- Petitioning,
oversight, publicity and new arenas of international politics
- Humanitarianism,
humanitarian assistance and governance
- Adjudication,
arbitration, and the Permanent Court of International Justice
- The
relationship between the League of Nations and contemporary or succeeding
international institutions
- The Mandates
system
- Indigenous
peoples and the League of Nations
- Codification
and the role of international law
- Major
crises of the League of Nations (eg Ethiopia, Manchuria)
- Economic
and social regulation and authority
All info can be found here
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