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25 February 2026

CALL FOR PAPERS: International Conference: Contested Seas. War, Commerce, and the Making of the Law of the Sea (c. 1400–1800) (Ostend: VUB/VLIZ, 19-20 NOV 2026) [DEADLINE 15 MAY 2026]

(Image source: VUB-CORE blog)

International Conference:

Contested Seas: War, Commerce, and the Making of the Law of the Sea (c. 1400–1800)


19-20 November 2026, Ostend, Belgium

Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB), Campus Ostend / Flanders Marine Institute (VLIZ)

Conveners:

Stefano Cattelan & Frederik Dhondt
(Vrije Universiteit Brussel – Faculty of Law and Criminology, Research Group CORE)

Keynote speakers

Surabhi Ranganathan (Lauterpacht Centre, University of Cambridge)
Indravati Félicité (Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg)


Concept and Rationale: The early modern law of the sea did not emerge as a coherent or pacified body of rules. Rather, it took shape as a fragmented and deeply contested legal regime. It was forged through recurrent warfare, commercial rivalry, and persistent struggles over jurisdiction and enforcement at sea. The pelagic arena was characterised by overlapping jurisdictions, uneven enforcement, and profound asymmetries of power (Benton, 2010). The freedom of the seas (‘Mare Liberum’) did not operate as a stable peacetime principle. It was repeatedly restricted, negotiated, and redefined in moments of conflict, particularly through disputes concerning maritime jurisdiction, economic warfare, neutral navigation, and prize-taking.

Hence, several methodological questions arise. Can we chart the deeper structures and long-term evolutions of the law of the sea and, at the same time, remain historically grounded and relevant to contemporary debates?

Recent scholarship has challenged the idea that the law of the sea gradually restrained violence at sea. Instead, norms were forged, tested, and transformed through concrete conflicts over sovereignty, jurisdiction, and neutral navigation (e.g. Steinberg, 2001; Benton, 2010; Schnakenbourg, 2015; Calafat, 2019; Cattelan, 2025). This perspective invites a rethinking of the law of the sea not as a dependent variable of early modern conflict, but as one of its crucial products. The present conference builds on this emerging insight and seeks to explore its broader implications across different regions, actors, and legal contexts.

This conference invites contributions that approach the law of the sea as a historically produced normative regime, examined as (1) a body of legal argument, a set of institutional (2) practices, and a (3) field of political struggle. It seeks to foster dialogue across legal history, international law and the histories of ideas, diplomacy, warfare, and empire, bringing together scholars attentive to different sources, actors and objects (doctrine, archives, institutions, legal reasoning, institutional practice, and material interests). The conference situates the law of the sea within broader processes of state formation, imperial competition, and global connectivity, including its interaction with commercial and maritime legal practices (Félicité, 2024).

This conference takes a broad analytical perspective, to seal a series of three encounters organised under the aegis of FWO Junior Fundamental Research Project G016122N. While earlier meetings in this series focused primarily on neutrality as a legal status, diplomatic strategy, and social practice —particularly from the perspective of small and medium powers— the present symposium shifts the analytical focus: recurrent conflicts over neutrality, belligerent rights, maritime jurisdiction, and enforcement mechanisms did not merely test existing norms. These instances were crucial to the historical formation of the law of the sea as a contested legal regime. In this sense, neutrality is approached as a formative force in the making of the law of the sea across judicial, diplomatic, and commercial arenas.

The conference aims to offer a synthetic reinterpretation of the relationship between mare liberum and mare clausum, peace and war, neutrality and coercion, situating the early modern law of the sea within the longer history of international law without assuming linear trajectories or teleological outcomes. It also invites reflection on the enduring legacies of early modern maritime practices for later codification efforts and contemporary debates on ocean governance in an increasingly polycentric world (Mawani, 2023; Ranganathan, 2016, 2020).

Finally, the conference welcomes contributions addressing different maritime regions and circuits, including —but not limited to— the Mediterranean, Atlantic, and Indian Ocean worlds, as well as interactions between different legal orders and actors (Anand, 1983; Khalilieh, 2019; Subrahmanyam, 2024; Po, 2018). We particularly welcome contributions on cross-cultural legal encounters and concrete sites of norm production, such as courts, diplomatic practices, commercial litigation, port regulations, and contractual arrangements.

 

Key Questions

The conference invites contributions addressing one or more of the following questions:

  • What kind of legal regime was the early modern law of the sea?
    How can it be understood as a historically contingent and contested normative order rather than a coherent or stabilised body of rules?
  • How did warfare shape the law of the sea?
    In what ways did recurring conflicts over maritime jurisdiction, belligerent rights, neutrality, blockade, contraband, and prize-taking contribute to the production and transformation of legal norms at sea?
  • How was the law of the sea articulated, applied, and contested in daily practice?
    What roles did courts, diplomatic channels, port authorities, consular institutions, and commercial actors play in the everyday functioning of this legal regime?
  • How did neutrality operate as a formative force within the law of the sea?
    How were legal boundaries between peace and war at sea shaped by disputes and agreements involving neutral navigation?
  • How did individuals and non-state actors exercise legal agency at sea?
    The mobilisation of multiple normative orders —public, commercial, and customary by merchants, shipmasters, insurers, chartered companies, or private entrepreneurs — to pursue commercial, political, or strategic objectives is central here.
  • How did different connected spaces and regions shape a distinct legal practice?
    How did practices take shape across and between different maritime regions and circuits, including interactions between European and extra-European legal orders?
  • What are the longer-term implications of early modern practices of the law of the sea?
    How did early modern solutions and conflicts inform later codification efforts and continue to resonate in contemporary debates on ocean governance?

 

Thematic Areas (Indicative)

The following thematic areas, which constitute the thematic translation of the questions highlighted above, articulate different dimensions of the early modern law of the sea as a contested legal regime produced through conflict, commerce, and legal practice. They are intended to be read as analytically connected rather than as parallel or autonomous agendas. They are indicative rather than exhaustive.

 

1. The sea as a legal and spatial order

Maritime jurisdiction; territorial waters; ports, straits, and littoral zones; sovereignty and access; legal pluralism at sea; competing claims to control, passage, and enforcement.

2. War, commerce, and neutrality in the law of the sea

Naval warfare and economic conflict; blockade, contraband, and continuous voyage; prize-taking and adjudication; neutrality as legal status, diplomatic strategy, and practical resource; coercion, enforcement, and asymmetries between belligerents and neutrals.

3. Institutions and practices producing the law of the sea

Courts (including admiralty and prize courts); diplomatic correspondence; consular jurisdictions; port authorities and regulatory regimes; chartered companies; litigation, arbitration, and everyday legal practice. Contributions grounded in specific sources or sites of norm production are particularly welcome.

4. Agency and normative pluralism within the law of the sea

The role of individuals and non-state actors —such as merchants, shipmasters, insurers, private entrepreneurs, and colonial intermediaries— in mobilising a plurality of normative orders, including the law of nations, domestic legislation, commercial and maritime law, urban statutes, customary norms, and private contracts.

5. The law of the sea across regions, empires, and legal encounters

Comparative and transregional perspectives; interactions between European and extra-European legal orders; cross-cultural legal encounters; circulation, translation, and contestation of norms governing maritime space in different oceanic worlds.

6. From early modern practice to modern/contemporary ocean governance

Long-term continuities and ruptures in the law of the sea; armed neutrality and collective enforcement; early modern legacies in later codification efforts and contemporary debates on ocean governance.

 

Disciplinary Scope: The conference welcomes contributions from legal history, the history of international law, maritime and naval history, diplomatic and political history, economic history, and international law scholarship with a historical or theoretical orientation. Interdisciplinary, critical, and transregional approaches are particularly encouraged. Early-career researchers are warmly invited to submit proposals.

Format: The conference is conceived as a focused, discussion-oriented event. Draft papers will be circulated in advance to facilitate in-depth exchange. Presentations will be kept at 20 minutes for each speaker in order to prioritise collective discussion and comparative discussion.

Submission Guidelines: please submit an abstract of no more than 350 words and a short biographical note of up to 150 words to: stefano.cattelan@vub.be.
Submission deadline: 15 May 2026
Notification of acceptance: 1 June 2026
Draft papers (for pre-circulation among participants): 20 October 2026


Publication: Following the conference, selected contributions will be submitted to a special issue in an international peer-reviewed journal (preferably open access).

Practical Information: The organisers aim to secure funding to cover organisational costs and, where possible, to offer limited support for travel and accommodation, particularly for early-career researchers and scholars without access to dedicated research funds. Further practical information will be communicated to accepted participants.

 

Indicative references:

Alimento, Antonella (ed.), War, Trade and Neutrality: Europe and the Mediterranean in the Seventeenth and Eighteen Centuries (Milano, 2011).

Id., and Stapelbroek, Koen (eds.), The Politics of Commercial Treaties in the Eighteenth Century (Cham, 2017).

Anand, Ram P., Origin and Development of the Law of the Sea. History of International Law Revisited (The Hague/Boston/London, 1983).

Benton, Lauren and Perl-Rosenthal, Nathan (eds.), A World at Sea: Maritime Practices and Global History (Philadelphia, 2020).

Benton, Lauren, A Search for Sovereignty. Law and Geography in European Empires, 1400-1900 (Cambridge, 2010).

Calafat, Guillaume, Une mer jalousée: contribution à l’histoire de la souveraineté (Méditerranée, XVIIe siècle) (Paris, 2019).

Cattelan, Stefano and Frederik Dhondt (eds.), Small Power Neutrality and the Law of the Sea in the Long Eighteenth Century (16501800). Law as Argument in the Pelagic Arena (Leiden/Boston, 2025).

Cattelan, Stefano and Louis Sicking. ‘The Coastal Seas in International Law: Contextualising Grotius’s De iure belli ac pacis’, Grotiana, 46(1) (2025), 43-65.

Cattelan, Stefano, Mare Clausum: The Formation of the Law of the Sea in Pre-modern State Practice and Legal Doctrine (c. 1350–1650) (Leiden/Boston, 2025).

Dhondt, Frederik, ‘“Arrestez et pillez contre toute sorte de droit”: Trade and the War of the Quadruple Alliance (1718-1720)’, Legatio: The Journal for Renaissance and Early Modern Diplomatic Studies, 1 (2017), 98-130.

Id., ‘Delenda est haec Carthago. The Ostend Company as a Problem of European Great Power Politics (1722-1727)’, Belgisch Tijdschrift voor Filologie en Geschiedenis/Revue Belge de Philologie et d’Histoire, 93 (2015), 397-437.

Félicité, Indravati, Le Saint-Empire face au monde. Contestations et redéfinitions de l’impérialité (XVe-XIXe siècle) (Paris, 2024).

Ford, John D., The Emergence of Privateering (Leiden/Boston, 2023).

Harding, Richard, Seapower and Naval Warfare, 1650–1830 (London, 2002).

Khalilieh, Hassan S., Islamic Law of the Sea: Freedom of Navigation and Passage Rights in Islamic Thought (Cambridge, 2019).

Mancke, Elizabeth, ‘Early Modern Expansion and the Politicization of Oceanic Space’, Geographical Review, 89(2), 225-36.

Mawani, Renisa, ‘The law of the sea’, in Peter D. Burdon and James Martel (eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Law and the Anthropocene (London, 2023), 115-29.

Müller, Leos, Neutrality in World History (New York, 2019).

Neff, Stephen C., The Rights and Duties of Neutrals: A General History (Manchester, 2000).

Po, Ronald C, The Blue Frontier: Maritime Vision and Power in the Qing Empire (Cambridge, 2018).

Ranganathan, Surabhi, ‘Decolonization and International Law: Putting the Ocean on the Map’, Journal of the History of International Law, 23(1) (2020), 161-83.

Id., ‘Global Commons’, European Journal of International Law, 27(3) (2016), 693-717.

Schnakenbourg, Éric, Entre la guerre et la paix: Neutralité et relations internationales, XVIIe–XVIIIe Siècles (Rennes, 2013).

Sicking, Louis, ‘The Pirate and the Admiral: Europeanisation and Globalisation of Maritime Conflict Management’, Journal of the History of International Law, 20(4) (2018), 429-70.

Stapelbroek, Koen (ed.), Trade and War: The Neutrality of Commerce in the Inter-State System (Helsinki, 2011).

Steinberg, Philip E., The Social Construction of the Ocean (Cambridge, 2001).

Strootman, Rolf, van den Eijnde, Floris, and van Wijk, Roy (eds.), Empires of the Sea. Maritime Power Networks in World History (Leiden, 2019).

Subrahmanyam, Sanjay, Across the Green Sea: Histories from the Western Indian Ocean, 1440–1640 (Austin, 2024).

Wani, Kentaro, Neutrality in International Law. From the Sixteenth Century to 1945 (London/New York, 2017).


24 February 2026

SEMINAR CYCLE: "La escuela de Salamanca: Actualidad, vigencia y legado" (Madrid: Real Academia de la Historia, FEB 2026)



(image source: RAH)


Abstract:

La Real Academia de la Historia organiza, junto a la Fundación Tatiana, la quinta edición del ciclo de conferencias “El Valor de la Historia”. Carmen Sanz Ayán, académica de número de la institución, es una vez más la coordinadora de este ciclo de conferencias, que se desarrollará en dos partes. La primera parte tendrá lugar en febrero de 2026 y la segunda se celebrará en los meses de octubre y noviembre de 2026. La Escuela de Salamanca es un movimiento intelectual y cultural desarrollado en los siglos XVI y XVII que, liderado por el teólogo, filósofo y jurista Francisco de Vitoria (1485-1546), tuvo una amplia proyección no solo en Europa sino en toda la extensión de la global Monarquía Hispánica. Su influencia interdisciplinar en universidades y pensadores coetáneos y posteriores fue tan amplia que con frecuencia sus miembros suelen ser considerados padres de la Modernidad. La transversalidad del enfoque humanista de sus presupuestos teológico-jurídicos manifestado en su revalorización del derecho natural y de gentes, en la defensa de la libertad individual frente a los posibles excesos del poder político y en su preocupación por el comercio justo o la ética económica, priorizó la defensa de la dignidad humana y la aplicación de la razón a la hora de dar respuesta a los problemas sociales y morales que surgieron en su tiempo y merece ser conocido por los ciudadanos y ciudadanas del siglo XXI que a pesar de los 500 años transcurridos desde su aparición, se enfrentan con desafíos de parecida naturaleza. La Fundación Tatiana y la Real Academia de la Historia, comprometidas desde 2019 en una alianza estratégica para visibilizar nuestra relación con el pasado de un modo dinámico y crítico, han promovido para 2026 dos ciclos de conferencias y mesas redondas centradas en la difusión del legado intelectual de la Escuela de Salamanca que en 2026 celebra su V Centenario al recordar la llegada de Francisco de Vitoria a la Universidad salmantina en 1526. Los dos ciclos de conferencias programados durante los meses de febrero, octubre y noviembre de 2026 en las sedes de la RAH y de la Fundación Tatiana, se ocuparán de analizar la naturaleza y el legado de este universal e influyente movimiento intelectual.

Program:

6 de febrero de 2026

Inauguración y presentación de los ciclos

La Escuela de Salamanca: Concepto y Evolución

Carmen Sanz Ayán

Académica de número de la Real Academia de la Historia y catedrática de Historia Moderna (UCM).

19:00h. Sede Real Academia de la HistoriaCalle Amor de Dios, 2, Madrid, 28014 Madrid

13 de febrero de 2026

Las ideas económicas de la Escuela de Salamanca y su praxis política
(Siglos XVI-XVII)

Agustín González Enciso

Académico correspondiente de la Real Academia de la Historia y catedrático emérito Universidad de Navarra.

19:00h. Sede Real Academia de la HistoriaCalle Amor de Dios, 2, Madrid, 28014 Madrid

25 de febrero de 2026

Mesa Redonda

La Escuela de Salamanca en clave humanística: Soberanía y legitimidad del poder

Con la participación

Sergio Bravo Sánchez

Universidad Complutense de Madrid (UCM)

Lorena Velasco Guerrero

Universidad Francisco de Vitoria (UFV)

Jaime Elipe Soriano

Universidad Autónoma de Madrid (UAM)

19:30h. Sede Fundación Tatiana en Madrid. Paseo del General Martínez Campos 25, Madrid


Read more here.

BOOK: Lars BEHRISCH, Democracy's Double Helix. Participation, Equality and Revolution in Early Modern Europe (Cambridge: CUP, 2025), ISBN 9781009029667

 (image source: CUP)

Abstract:

Where does our modern democracy come from? It is a composite of two very different things: a medieval tradition of political participation, pluralistic but highly elitist; and the notion of individual equality, emerging during the early modern period. These two things first converged in the American and French revolutions – a convergence that was not only unexpected and unplanned but has remained fragile to this day. Democracy's Double Helix does not simply project and trace our modern democracy back into history, assuming that it was bound to come about. It looks instead at the political practices and attitudes prevailing before its emergence. From this perspective, it becomes clear that there was little to predict the coming of democracy. It also becomes clear that the two historical trajectories that formed it obey very different logics and always remain in tension. From this genuinely historical vantage point, we can therefore better understand the nature of our democracy and its current crisis.

On the author:

Lars Behrisch, Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands 

Read more here: DOI 10.1017/9781009029667

23 February 2026

VACANCY: Assistant Professor in Early Modern British History (fulltime, tenure) (Warwick: University of Warwick, DEADLINE 8 MAR 2026)

(image source: Warwick)
 

Description:

Informal Queries For informal queries about the role, please contact Professor Tim Lockley at T.J.Lockley@warwick.ac.uk The Department of History seeks to appoint an Assistant Professor in Early Modern British History on a full-time and indefinite basis from 1 September 2026. You will be part of one of the largest History departments in the UK with a thriving community of teachers and researchers covering a range of disciplines and geographical areas.

Read more here

CALL FOR PAPERS: XXX Annual Forum of Young Legal Historians - 'Values in law through the ages' (Poznań: Adam Mickiewicz University, 23-26 SEPT 2026) [DEADLINE: 30 APR 2026]


(Budynek Collegium Minus w Poznaniu. Source: Wikipedia)


Introduction

Legal traditions, community, harmonization and integration have been the hallmarks of the Association's Annual Forums for 29 years. Values in law, which is the main topic of the 30th anniversary edition of the Meeting of Young Legal Historians, is an excellent opportunity to look at the issues discussed at previous forums from a wider perspective. The legal maxim Ubi societas ibi ius, which dates back to ancient times, is a simple affirmation of common sense: wherever there are people, wherever there is a community, wherever relationships and bonds are formed, there must be a certain order, which is referred to as ius — law. The conference “Values in law through the ages”, organized by the Faculty of Law and Administration and the Faculty of History of the Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań, will be a space for discussion on the transdisciplinary issues of axiological matters present in various cultures and legal systems.


Conference theme

We are planning to include various contexts for the use of the main topic at the conference. We invite you to submit proposals for papers from various fields of law and other fields related to law, clearly linked to historical and legal analysis and the topic of the conference. The proposed topics, which are not exhaustive, include in particular issues such as principles of law, rule of law, legal unlawfulness, revolutions in law, crises of values in law, inter-systemic and intra-systemic contrasts of values, history of human rights, theoretical concepts of values in law or constitutional protection of values.

Requirements for submitting abstracts

We invite submissions on essentially any aspect of the values in the legal history. Authors may approach the topic dogmatically, historically or comparatively, they may focus on a specific period and place or present general reflections on the axiology of law in a historical context. Authors are encouraged to use innovative approaches and transdisciplinary research.

If you would like to present a paper during the conference, please send an application including an abstract of not more than 300 words and your CV to aylhforum2026@amu.edu.pl before 30 April 2026. Acceptance letters will be sent out by the end of May. Please send documents in PDF format.

In justified individual cases, the forum's scientific committee may consider abstracts earlier. To do so, please contact the organizing committee, indicating “EARLY APPLICATION” in the subject line of your message.

Presentations have to be in English and should not exceed 15 minutes each. Since one of the primary goals of the conference is to allow young researchers to get to know each other personally, we only accept presentations in person.


Publication

We intend to publish the presented papers. The organizing committee intends to resume publication with Peter Lang Publishing, which was associated with the first editions of our forums. Depending on the number of interested parties and financial possibilities, we plan to publish another volume of the Yearbook of Young Legal History, or a monograph, or a special issue in a Polish academic journal. The related details will be sent in advance to the accepted participants.


Conference fee

Two types of conference fees are anticipated for this year's forum:

1. The conference fee without post-conference publication costs is 200 € and does not include travel or accommodation costs.

2. The conference fee including post-conference publication costs is 300 € and also does not include travel or accommodation costs.

After the announcement of the abstract selection results on May 31, 2026, the Organizing Committee will contact the selected participants with further information on registration by paying the conference fee.


Other information

The Forum will be in English, and each paper presentation should not exceed 15 minutes, so there is time for discussions in the last part of each panel. 

The submission deadline is 30th April 2026. Abstracts received after the submission deadline will be declined. Please indicate in your application the type of participation (without publication or with publication).

Keep in mind that registration is limited to a number of people. Therefore, early registration is strongly recommended!


Event organization

The forum will last four days: the first day will be a welcome day with the participation of keynote speakers and a special guest, the next two days will feature many parallel sessions, and on the last day we are planning a jubilee meeting on organizational matters of the Association for Young Legal Historians.

Our meeting will take place in Poznań, the capital of Greater Poland. The city can be reached by plane or other means of transport (train, bus). We recommend planning your travel and accommodation in advance. The organizing committee will provide recommendations in this regard at a later date.

We look forward to receiving your abstracts and we will uncompromisingly endeavor to provide a conference that is both academically and socially fulfilling. We wish you all the best for this time!


Organizing Committee:

Dawid Szulc, MA, Department of Government Systems Studies and Political and Legal Thought – Committee Chair

Patryk Maćkowiak, MA, Department of Source Analysis and Auxiliary Historical Sciences – Vice Committee Chair

Fatma Mejri, MA, Department of Government Systems Studies and Political and Legal Thought

Maria Kola, MA, Department of Roman Law, Legal Traditions and Cultural Heritage Law

Szymon Siuda, MA, Department of Public Economic Law

Kamil Gaweł, MA, Department of Medical and Pharmaceutical Law at the Poznań University of Medical Sciences

CALL FOR PAPERS: Forum on International Legal History & Philosophy (Patna: Chanakya National University, 15 APR 2026) [DEADLINE 15 MAR 2026]

(image source: Legal History Blog)


Description:

This Call for ideas (in the form of detailed abstracts) invites scholars working in International Law, Constitutional Law, and Legal Philosophy, whether individually or through interdisciplinary approaches. The contours of the forum are outlined below in two overlapping and porous themes.


Aims
.  We intend to stimulate discourse on international legal history and theory employing regional and archival lens. We expect a rough sketch of your clearly formulated idea to make such stimulations. We aim to discuss the vitality of your research ideas for them to be transformed into future research (beyond this forum). 

Thematic Background: Legal History
.  The word 'civilization' has re-entered academic discourse, only this time it is the East which is assertive of it. India is asserting its civilizational heritage by calling itself the 'mother of democracy'. However, the evidence of it (for example, Sangha) points more towards democratic values, like public participation, than a political system of democracy. Alongside this civilizational assertion is a renewed emphasis on "decolonizing" India, including in the field of law, though both the efficacy of these efforts and the normative framework of "decolonization" itself remain contested. While these debates have gained traction in International Relations (see the March 2023 issue of International Affairs on "India as a 'civilizational state'"), their implications for international law, legal history, and legal philosophy remain underexplored.

This Call invites scholars of international law, legal history, and legal philosophy to intervene in this debate through a focused regional and archival lens. While earlier works, such as C. H. Alexandrowicz's discussion of the Mandala system situating Kautilya within the Law of Nations (1965), have addressed cognate themes, this project concentrates specifically on Bihar and Uttar Pradesh, including their pre-modern formations. Thus, Pataliputra, Azimabad, and Patna, while essentially the same site, retain their individuality and continuity across time and space. Contributions on neglected princely states and provinces such as Arah, Awadh, Benaras, Baksar, Betiyah, Champaran, Darbhanga, Sasaram, Sagauli, among others, are especially welcome. 

Many of these entities were classified as "Zemindari estates" rather than "Princely states." Colonial Bihar thus reveals how international law sustained empire not by outright denial of sovereignty, but by withholding international legal personality from polities that governed in every meaningful sense. The contemporary relevance of these discriminatory practices persists, as illustrated by the 1st and the 26th Amendment to the Indian Constitution, land reform Act of Bihar and U.P. 1950, State of Bihar v Radha Krishna Singh & Ors (1983) and The Vesting of Bettiah Raj Properties Act, 2024.

The Call also encourages works on figures such as Veer Kunwar Singh and Begum Hazrat Mahal, particularly research drawing on archives from the National Archives of India, Uttar Pradesh State Archives, and the Khuda Baksh Oriental Library (Patna). Finally, it seeks renewed readings of colonial constitutional instruments, such as the Pitt's India Act (1784) and the Government of India Act (1833), and the constitution-like document drafted during the early days of the 1857 revolt.

The Call, therefore, asks: How does colonial legal invisibility structure postcolonial international law? What legal techniques differentiated Zemindari estates and Princely states? How do colonial legal categories shape postcolonial constitutional disputes? What do colonial legislations tell us about the constitutional origins of international law? How did British colonial rule transform indigenous sovereignty into quasi-sovereign authority without formal annexation (of places like Betiyah-Raj and Darbhanga-Raj)? 
           
Thematic Background: Indian Legal Philosophy.  A related interest of this call is Indian (legal) philosophy. While no Indian philosophical school explicitly identifies itself as "legal", the Nyaya tradition, through its sustained engagement with Pramana, Prameya, Tarka, Nirnaya, Sabda, Artha etc., offers a systematic framework grounded in logic and epistemology.

This project is interested in works exploring the connections between the Nyaya school and decolonization and retains the regional focus. Gotama (or Aksapada Gautama) who composed Nyaya Sutras, Panini (composer of Astadhyayi), Gangesa (pioneer of Navya-Nyaya branch), Udayanacarya (defended Nyaya school against Buddhist critiques), Vachaspati Misra (Critique of Nyaya school), Kautilya (whose thoughts on Anviksiki was used by Gotama for Nyaya school) were all either based in the Bihar region or wrote their works here. 

We, therefore, encourage scholars to explore the fields of Nyaya, Vaisesika, Navya- Nyaya (through works of Gangesa), and of Panini's Astadhyay1. While Panini tells us how reasoning works Nyaya explains why reasoning works. Scholars working exclusively in the field of philosophy, and those working on legal philosophy are welcome to respond to this call.





Practical:


Participation details.  If your research aligns with either of these themes or questions, we invite you to participate in this Forum, as:


1.    Presenters.  If you would like to present your research, you are requested to submit a 500-word abstract, clearly setting out

  • the central theme(s) of your research, 
  • your core research question(s),  
  • three to five literatures you are engaging with,
  • your name, position and affiliation. 

We will select abstracts based upon the novelty, strength and coherence. The selected participants will then be required to submit a preliminary draft of not more than 1500 words one week before the Forum, i.e. on 8th April 2026 for thorough academic engagement with your research. Participants will have ten minutes to present their work at the forum. 

There will be no sections or panels at the forum. Each participant will be expected to attend all the presentations. This is aimed at breaking departmental barriers and fostering interdisciplinary engagements from which both lawyers, historians and philosophers can gain.

2.    Engaged Listeners.  Scholars from the field of law, history and philosophy (including teachers, PhD Scholars) and students (including graduate and post graduate students) who are interested in understanding and potentially developing future work on these themes with us are invited to join the forum as Engaged Listeners. Engaged listeners will have access to all presentations at the forum and will have chance to interact with the presenters within and outside the forum, providing an opportunity to refine their research interests and to contribute to the project in the future.

For participating as engaged listeners, individuals are requested to submit a 200-word statement outlining their reasons and motivations for participating, and their primary areas of interest (identifying two to three such areas), and their name, position and affiliation. 

Presenters and Engaged Listeners should send their abstracts to ilhilpf@gmail.com.

Date and Venue.  10 AM to 5 PM, 15 April 2026 at Chanakya National Law University, Patna, Bihar, India.

Key dates:
15 March 2026.  Submission of abstracts (by presenters) & interests (by engaged listeners)   
25 March 2026   Communication of selection (for presenters & listeners)   
5 April 2026       Registration   
8 April 2026       Research outline submission (by presenters)  
 

Registration details:  
For presenters:

  • For undergraduate, postgraduate students and PhD scholars: Rs. 500/- 
  • For teachers and practitioners: Rs. 1000/- 

There is no participation fee for the engaged listeners.

The Project is being led by Aman Kumar, PhD Candidate at the Australian National University, Canberra. The Forum is convened by Dr Swati Singh Parmar (DNLU, Jabalpur) and Dr Aditya Roy (CNLU, Patna).

(source: Legal History Blog

BOOK: J. Jarpa DUWINI, Nienke GROSSMAN, Jaya RAMJI-NOGALES & Hélène RUIZ FABRI (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Women and International Law [Oxford Handbooks] (Oxford: OUP, 2026), 618 p. ISBN 9780197653647, 143 GBP

 

(image source: OUP)


On the editors:
J. Jarpa Dawuni is an Associate Professor of Political Science at Howard University and the Executive Director of the Institute for African Women in Law. She is the Founding Director of the Howard University Center for Women, Gender, and Global Leadership and Program Director for the Minor in Women, Gender, and Sexualities Studies. Professor Dawuni has held several prestigious fellowships, including two Fulbright Specialist Scholarships, the Carnegie African Diaspora Fellowship, and a Salzburg Global Fellowship. Nienke Grossman, a Professor of Law at the University of Baltimore School of Law, co-directs its Center for International and Comparative Law and serves on the OAS Inter-American Juridical Committee. She has held leadership roles at the American Society of International Law, served on an independent panel evaluating candidates for the Inter-American Human Rights System, and advised the UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights in the DPRK and states litigating before the ICJ. Grossman has published widely on feminist approaches to international law. Jaya Ramji-Nogales is Associate Dean for Research and the I. Herman Stern Research Professor at Temple Law School. Professor Ramji-Nogales is a Counsellor of the American Society of International Law and a member of the Board of Editors of the American Journal of International Law. She has published extensively on global migration law. Hélène Ruiz Fabri is a Professor at the Sorbonne Law School, returning after a nine-year secondment as Director of the Max Planck Institute Luxembourg for Procedural Law. She is a Member of the Institute of International Law, former General Editor of the Max Planck Encyclopedia of International Procedural Law (OUP), and a former President of the European Society of International Law. Professor Ruiz Fabri holds the CNRS Silver Medal for excellence in scientific research. She also has experience in legal practice.
Contributors:
Diane Marie Amann Ruth Aura-Odhiambo Amrita Bahri Lina M. Céspedes-Báez Hilary Charlesworth Christine Chinkin J. Jarpa Dawuni Margaret M. deGuzman Alicia Ely Yamin Mtendere Mute Gondwe Nienke Grossman 'Ofakilevuka ('Ofa) Guttenbeil-Likiliki Andrea Harrington Dr. Stacey Henderson Stéphanie Hennette-Vauchez Dr. IvanaIsailović Patricia Kameri-Mbote Machiko Kanetake Viviana Krsticevic Judge Liesbeth Lijnzaad Rachel E. López Frédéric Mégret Dr. Eva Nanopoulos Ambassador Dr. Namira Negm Vasuki Nesiah Fionnuala Ní Aoláin Dr. Eki Yemisi Omorogbe Valerie Oosterveld Dr. Nilüfer Oral Tamsin Phillipa Paige Irini Papanicolopulu Mónica Pinto Mark A. Pollack Enrique Prieto-Ríos Jaya Ramji-Nogales Camille Robcis Hélène Ruiz Fabri Susana SáCouto Judge Julia Sebutinde Joanne Stagg Edoardo Stoppioni Yusra Suedi Immi Tallgren Leila Ullrich Yvonne Underhill-Sem René Urueña Dr. Patricia Viseur Sellers Adrien Katherine Wing Natasha Yacoub
Table of contents:
1) Why Women and International Law? - J. Jarpa Dawuni, Nienke Grossman, Jaya Ramji Nogales, Hélène Ruiz Fabri
2) The Woman in International Law: Centering Global Critical Race Feminism - Adrien Katherine Wing
3) A Century and More of Feminist Architects - Christine Chinkin and Patricia Viseur Sellers
4) A Look Back at the Women's Hague Peace Conference: What Contribution to International Law Today? - Frédéric Mégret
5) Absented at the Creation: Nuremberg Women and International Criminal Justice - Diane Marie Amann
6) Gender-Sensitive Adjudication in International Courts - Julia Sebutinde and Yusra Suedi
7) The 'Invisible Court': A First Look at Gender and Nationality in Registries and Secretariats - Nienke Grossman
8) Women as Highly Qualified or 'Renowned' Publicists in International Law - Nilufer Oral
9) The Legal Adviser: Gatekeeper and Torchbearer?- Liesbeth Lijnzaad
10) Women in International Organizations: Particular Focus on the United Nations and African Union - Namira Negm and Mtendere Mute Gondwe
11) Lightning in the Night/Un Relámpago en la Noche: On Women's Contributions to the Jurisprudence and Institutions of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights - Viviana Krsticevic
12) Lessons in Visibility: Victim Participation in Guatemalan Prosecutions of Conflict-Based Sexual and Gender Violence - Susan SáCouto
13) Human Rights and Women's Rights - Mónica Pinto
14) Constructing Maternal Mortality as A Human Rights Issue: Lessons for Using International Law to Advance Women's Health and Rights - Alicia Ely Yamin
15) Populism and Gender Ideology - Stéphanie Hennette Vauchez and Camille Robcis
16) Gender and Conflict of Laws: Enabling Violence - Ivana Isailovic
17) Is International Criminal Law Feminist? - Margaret M. deGuzman and Rachel López
18) The African Union and the Rights of Women in Non-international Armed Conflicts in Africa - Eki Yemisi Omorogbe
19) Women, Peace, and Security: Getting Women in the Room Is a Start Not an End Goal - Tamsin Phillipa Paige, Stacey Henderson, and Joanne Stagg
20) Where are the Women? The Law and Practice of Global Counter-terrorism - Fionnuala Ní Aoláin
21) Artificial Intelligence-Enabled Autonomous Weapon Systems: Feminist Perspectives on Meaningful Human Control - Machiko Kanetake
22) Feminist Approaches to Space Law and Governance - Andrea Harrington and Valerie Oosterveld
23) Women and Law of the Sea - Irini Papanicolopulu
24) Feminist Approaches to Recenter Humanity in International Migration Law - Natasha Yacoub
25) Women's Agency in Addressing the Crisis of Climate Change: The Missing Link - Patricia Kameri-Mbote and Ruth Aura
26) Challenging Colonialism and Patriarchy: Oceanic Pacific Feminists on Development, Women, and International Law - Yvonne Underhill-Sem and 'Ofa-Ki-Levuka Guttenbeil-Likiliki
27) Women's Empowerment and International Trade: The Same Side of the Same Coin? - Amrita Bahri
28) Women and International Investment Law - Lina M. Céspedes-Báez, Enrique Prieto-Ríos, and René Urueña
29) Feminist Approaches to International Law and International Law Approaches to Feminism: An Overview - Hilary Charlesworth and Christine Chinkin
30) Feminism and the Mainstream in International Law and International Relations - Mark Pollack
31) 'Re-enchanting the World': Feminist Critiques of Liberal Theories of International Law - Vasuki Nesiah
32) Feminizing Third World Approaches to International Law: A New Agenda for TWAIL - J. Jarpa Dawuni
33) Toward a Marxist Feminist Approach to International Law - Eva Nanopoulos and Leila Ullrich
34) Queer Approaches - Edoardo Stoppioni
35) Women and the (Hi)story of International Law: What Does Everyone Need to Know? - Immi Tallgren

Read more here.

BOOK: Amedeo ARENA (ed.), Cittadino di tutti i luoghi, contemporaneo di tutte le età: l’universalità del pensiero di Gaetano Filangieri (Napoli: Editoriale Scientifica, 2024). ISBN 979-12-235-0082-8, 387 p. [OPEN ACCESS]

 

(Source: ES)

Abstract:

Il presente volume, rientrante nella Collana del Dipartimento di Giurisprudenza dell’Università degli Studi di Napoli Federico II e pubblicato in occasione degli 800 anni dalla fondazione dell’Ateneo napoletano, si divide in due parti. La prima, denominata Cittadino di tutti i luoghi, raccoglie dei saggi che esaminano la rilevanza che il pensiero filangieriano ha assunto, già alla fine del Settecento, in una pluralità di ambiti geografici: da Napoli a Milano, dalla Francia alla Prussia, dalla Gran Bretagna agli Stati Uniti d’America. La seconda parte, intitolata Contemporaneo di tutte l’età, comprende dei contributi che si soffermano sulla valenza delle riflessioni di Filangieri in diverse epoche storiche, dall’Ottocento ai giorni nostri. L’opera intende evidenziare l’universalità del pensiero di Filangieri, nella convinzione che le sue idee possano ancora offrire utili spunti per «conciliare in un codice la libertà, la pace, e la ragione» e per «compire l’opera» della «felicità de’ popoli».

About the author:

Amedeo Arena è professore ordinario di Diritto dell’Unione Europea presso il Dipartimento di Giurisprudenza dell’Università degli Studi di Napoli Federico II e Senior Fellow presso l’Institute of European Studies della University of California, Berkeley. È referente scientifico dell’Accademia Filangieri di Partenope, nell’ambito della quale ha promosso l’istituzione del Premio Filangieri per giovani giuristi. Ha tenuto diverse lezioni e relazioni a convegni, presso università italiane e statunitensi, sulla corrispondenza tra Gaetano Filangieri e Benjamin Franklin ed è stato curatore della mostra pannellare che ha riunito per la prima volta le lettere dei due illuministi, esposta presso il Consolato generale d’Italia a Filadelfia e presso l’Istituto italiano di cultura a San Francisco. Le sue ricerche d’archivio hanno condotto al riconoscimento di Domenico Cirillo come primo socio italiano della American Philosophical Society di Filadelfia, attraverso la correzione di un errore avvenuto nel 1768. È stato, inoltre, nominato membro del comitato istituito dalla American Philosophical Society per le celebrazioni del 250º anniversario della Dichiarazione di indipendenza.


More information with the publisher.