(Source: Illinois College of Law)
We learned of a call for papers
for a conference on “Law, Theology, and the Moral Regulation of “Economy” in
the Early-Modern Atlantic World” in Chicago.
This is a call for papers in
anticipation of a one-day conference to be organized by Brian Owensby
(University of Virginia) and Richard Ross (University of Illinois) through the
Symposium on Comparative Early Modern Legal History [https://law.illinois.edu/faculty-research/specialty-programs/legal-history/]. The conference, to be held at the Newberry
Library in Chicago on Friday, April 23, 2021 is entitled, “Law, Theology, and
the Moral Regulation of ‘Economy’ in the Early-Modern Atlantic World.” The time is long past when the Western
world’s emergent commercial culture could be understood solely in terms of a
Protestant ethos or the division between commerce and social morality
occasioned by the Protestant Reformation. Scholarship has shown that “modern” ideas
regarding commerce and “economics” had their roots in late-medieval Catholic
thought and in neo-scholastic ideas that blended theology, justice, and law. It
is clear as well that the rise of commercial thinking was not a linear
intellectual development. Protestants and Catholics alike, facing the moral and
social implications of novel “economic” relations, undertook deep theological
and legal reflections regarding unbridled, competitive, exchange-oriented gain
seeking. Many of these concerns were raised in the context of Europe’s westward
expansion to the New World. Usury, just price, interest, legal personality,
slavery, reciprocity, property, cases of conscience, doubts regarding
self-regulating mechanisms, concerns for the poor—all figured in a vibrant
legal discourse that simultaneously elaborated and critiqued a set of ideas
regarding human economy that became dominant between the sixteenth and
nineteenth centuries. This conference will bring together historians, legal
scholars, and social scientists to investigate law’s historical role in
enabling and regulating behaviors now recognized as foundational to modern
economies.
Interested presenters should
submit an abstract of between 200 and 500 words and a c.v. by March 15,
2020. Please send submissions and
inquiries to Richard Ross [rjross@illinois.edu]; 217-244-7890. No previously published work will be
accepted. Applicants will be notified by email shortly after the submission
deadline. Accepted participants will be
required to submit a full paper of no more than 10,000 words by the end of
February 2021. Papers will be pre-circulated and read by all participants. The conference will pay for travel and hotel
expenses.
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