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06 May 2026

BOOK: Mark PETERSON, The Making and Breaking of the American Constitution: A Thousand-Year History (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2026), 408 p. ISBN 9780691180014, 25 GBP

 

(image source: Princeton)

Abstract:
The American Revolution occurred at a time when Britain’s constitutional order failed to adapt to the extraordinary growth of its colonies. The framers designed an American constitution to succeed where Britain’s had faltered, planning for continuous population and territorial expansion that would eventually cross the continent. Yet by the end of the nineteenth century, it was already ill-suited for an increasingly urban, industrialized society, and the transformations of the twentieth century have pushed it to a breaking point. This book charts the history and aims of the American constitution from its origins in an agrarian past to the grave crisis we face today. Mark Peterson traces the American constitutional tradition to the control of land in medieval England, showing how the founders incorporated the aspirations of Magna Carta with the administrative principles of the Domesday Book, a meticulous survey and valuation of landed property commissioned by William the Conqueror. This framework encouraged the growth of democratic self-government in a young nation. It also institutionalized the colonization of territory and the expulsion of Indigenous peoples, establishing a legal blueprint for transforming tribal lands into revenue-yielding real estate for settlers. Peterson’s riveting narrative paints an arresting picture of a dynamic republic whose frame of government has changed enormously to meet the challenges of the modern age but whose written constitution has changed very little. Marking the 250th anniversary of American independence, The Making and Breaking of the American Constitution reveals how this widening disconnect threatens the very existence of our democracy. It calls for a constitution that sustains the ideals developed over the past thousand years while meeting the challenges of the future.

 On the author:

Mark Peterson is the Edmund S. Morgan Professor of History at Yale University. He is the author of The City-State of Boston: The Rise and Fall of an Atlantic Power, 1630–1865 (Princeton) and The Price of Redemption: The Spiritual Economy of Puritan New England.

Read more here

05 May 2026

PODCAST: Wim DECOCK, "Le marché du mérite: la morale du capitalisme" (France Culture: Entendez-vous l'éco, 6 APR 2026)

 

(image: Illustration du jésuite allemand Athanasius Kircher (1601/1602–1680) datant de 1667. ©Getty; source: France Culture)

Abstract:

Justifier les profits à l'heure où le commerce fait la richesse des nations a constitué, à la fin du XVIème siècle, une petite révolution juridique et théologique. A la tête de ce renversement intellectuel, on trouve le théologien jésuite Leonardus Lessius (1554-1623). S'il n'est pas économiste à proprement parler, la tâche principale de Lessius "en tant que théologien et en tant que prêtre" est finalement d'"accompagner les individus, d'accompagner les âmes. Il va essayer de donner des conseils à des individus par rapport à des transactions, des contrats particuliers", explique Wim Decock. Ainsi, "il va régulièrement faire le lien entre son approbation de certains contrats et le bien-être général de l'économie, le bien commun, l'utilité publique de certaines pratiques individuelles. Donc même s'il ne résonne pas comme un Antoine de Montchrestien ou autres premiers protoéconomistes qui pensent vraiment à développer et accroître la richesse nationale, (..) il va indirectement essayer de penser la prospérité à l'échelle de la société dans son entièreté". Historien du droit, Wim Decock nous emmène au cœur des Pays-Bas, à une époque où marchands, hommes d'affaires et jésuites posent les bases mêmes de notre économie actuelle.

 Listen to the conversation here.

BOOK: Ari Z. BRYEN, The Judgment of the Provinces: The Roman Empire and the Origins of Law and Society (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2026), 450 p., ISBN 978-1-009-73037-2

 

(image source: CUP)

Abstract:

Roman law is justly famous, but what was its relationship to governing an empire? In this book, Ari Z. Bryen argues that law, as the learned practice that we know today, emerged from the challenge of governing a diverse and fractious set of imperial subjects. Through analysis of these subjects' political and legal ideologies, Bryen reveals how law became the central topic of political contest in the Roman Empire. Law offered a means of testing legitimacy and evaluating government, as well as a language for asking fundamental political questions. But these political claims did not go unchallenged. Elites resisted them, and jurists, in collaboration with emperors, reimagined law as a system that excluded the voices of the governed. The result was to separate, for the first time, 'law' from 'society' more broadly, and to define law as a primarily literate and learned practice, rather than the stuff of everyday life.

Table of contents:

The Rhetoric of Inclusion
     Part 1: Law as Documents
          2. Becoming the Roman Provinces
          3. Arguing from Archives
     Part 2: Law as Dialogue
          4. Criminal Justice and the Challenge of Logos
          5. Law among the Degraded
The Practices of Exclusion
     Part 3: Law as Ecstasy
          6. The Transcendent Body Politic
          7. The Politics of Amazement
     Part 4: Law as Books
          8. Writing about Governance, from Cicero to Ulpian
          9. Radical Bureaucracy 
Epilogue: Why Premodernity?

Find more on CUP.  

BOOK: David SCHNEIDERMAN, A Sociology of International Investment Law. Themes from Max Weber [The History and Theory of International Law, eds. Anthony PAGDEN, Francesca IURLARO, Nehal BHUTA & Benjamin STRAUMANN] (Oxford: OUP, 2026), 240 p. ISBN 9780198982708, 105 GBP [OPEN ACCESS]

 

(image source: OUP)

Abstract:
A Sociology of International Investment Law applies methods associated with the sociologist Max Weber to illuminate aspects of international investment law - a regime made up of thousands of treaties that protect foreign investors from state action diminishing the value of their investments. By applying many of Weber's key themes associated with legal modernity - legitimacy, rationality, domination, bureaucracy, and charisma - the book conscripts tools of analysis that enable the testing of many of investment law's operating assumptions. A Sociology of International Investment Law Law is premised on the belief that theory informs practice and that enlisting aspects of Weber's work illuminates the contemporary practice of, and debates over, international investment law. Utilizing Weber's themes and methods, results in a deeper appreciation of the connections of international investment law has with classical social theory. The book also reveals how the field fails to measure up to many of the analytical challenges that Weber's sociological interventions provoke. This book offers an exploration of the commonalities, differences, and blind spots shared by this relatively new international legal field with one of the most influential theorists of modernity.

On the author:

David Schneiderman is Professor of Law and Political Science (courtesy) at the University of Toronto where he teaches courses on Canadian and US constitutional law, comparative constitutional law, and international investment law. He is a prolific author of articles, book chapters and books, including, Constitutional Review and International Investment Law: Deference or Defiance? 

Read more here.


04 May 2026

SEMINAR: Il corpo nel processo penale tra Roma e Ragusa (Padova: Università di Padova, 6 MAY 2026)

(image source: RLW)

Il corpo nel processo penale tra Roma e Ragusa

 Università di Padova: Dipartimento di Diritto privato e Critica del Diritto

Seminario: In presenza (Università di Padova, Palazzo del Bo - Aula Mocenigo)

Mercoledì, 6 maggio 2026, dalle ore 14:30

Relatori: Miriam Padovan (Università degli Studi di Udine), e Mirza Hebib (Università di Sarajevo)

Seminario organizzato nell’ambito dell’insegnamento di Diritto penale romano (prof. Marco Falconi)

BOOK LAUNCH: Bill DAVIES & Morten RASMUSSEN (eds.), The History of European Union Law: Constitutional Practice, 1950 to 1993 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2026) (London: UCL Laws, 24 FEB 2026) [RECORDING]

 

Abstract:

On Tuesday, 24 February 2026, the Global Centre for Democratic Constitutionalism (GCDC), along with the European Institute, organised a panel event to celebrate the launch of The History of European Union Law: Constitutional Practice, 1950 to 1993 (Cambridge University Press), edited by Dr Bill Davies (American University, Washington DC) and Dr Morten Rasmussen (University of Copenhagen). Following introductory remarks by the event chair, Dr Megan Donaldson (UCL Laws, GCDC), Dr Rasmussen provided an overview of the book. He explained that the book – the first of its kind – is grounded in extensive archival research and traces the historical development of EU law, with a focus on constitutional practice. The book’s rich empirical basis enables the identification of key actors and provides insight into the inner workings of EU institutions, allowing the authors to trace the complex and multifaceted processes that contributed to the development of EU law. According to Dr Rasmussen, the picture presented decentres the position of the Court of Justice of the EU (CJEU), as the Court was surrounded by a wide range of institutions and actors – including European and national institutions, lawyers, and academics – all of whom shaped the trajectory of EU law. Dr Rasmussen further described the book as offering a revisionist account that complicates the core narratives of the discipline of EU law. It argues that an uneasy standoff was negotiated between a rejection of European constitutionalism and an acceptance of the legal order developed by the CJEU. This implies that European constitutionalism has not yet become the foundational legitimating principle of the EU. The historical analysis also shows that while constitutional practice has led to a relatively effectual and coherent legal order, it rests on a politically fragile basis.

Panel:

Professor Erin Delaney (UCL Laws, GCDC) then remarked that one of the book’s great strengths is in its methodology, as its extensive and impressive use of archival material advances a thick account of the historical development of European law. She highlighted the value of this historical approach, but wondered whether a wider interdisciplinary lens might further enrich the analysis. Additionally, she contended that the book’s method invites further inquiry as to what the historical account tells us about (i) the range and depth of constitutional practices and their relationship to federalism, and (ii) what constitutes a process of constitutionalisation. Broader questions, she suggested, include whether the EU represents a failed process of federalisation or constitutionalisation, how these two processes interact, and what to expect about an ongoing dialectic of constructed constitutionalism through a document/convention-based process. Professor Piet Eeckhout (UCL Laws, European Institute) commented that the book’s chapters on the role of the CJEU and other institutions were particularly interesting and prompt reflection on the pivotal moments of Van Gend en Loos and Costa – two cases that provided the tools needed to facilitate European integration. Professor Eeckhout suggested that the key point for EU lawyers is the divergence between two paradigms. One group of scholars seeks to frame EU law in constitutional terms, while another views the EU as transcending the nation state (including constitutions) and creating a ‘new legal order’, as reflected in the language used in Van Gend en Loos and Costa. Professor Nicola Countouris (UCL Laws) emphasised the importance of historical research to understand European integration. He found Chapter 9 of the book to be particularly useful to understand the growing Euroscepticism of Scandinavian countries with regard to social integration. In particular, Professor Countouris highlighted the uniqueness of the Scandinavian social democratic model and the role of state administration in preserving this model against some of the challenges posed by EU integration. This was illustrated through two examples from Denmark: the introduction of the AMBI levy and equal pay legislation, with the Danish civil service playing a crucial role in managing and accompanying their implementation. In this light, Professor Countouris suggested that resistance to labour law directives may be rooted just as much in the Scandinavian model that allows bureaucracy to perform certain types of economic tasks as in a deeper ideological adversity towards European integration. Responding to the comments, Dr Rasmussen made some reflections. First, he clarified that the concept of constitutional practice used in the book is not intended to contribute to legal scholarship on constitutional theory. Rather, it is simply a descriptive concept of the practice and opinions of a broad range of actors. Second, on the relationship between federalisation and constitutionalisation, he posited that while the CJEU may have pursued a form of judicial constitutionalism, other actors such as the European Commission and a majority of the European Parliament were seeking to advance a gradual federalisation through the Treaty of Rome, which would lay the groundwork for a federal European union. Finally, he observed that the Danish case exemplified broader trends across Member States, where governments often found ways to adapt or circumvent EU law before 1986. After the Single European Act that launched the Single European Market, Member States had to come to terms with the legal order the CJEU had built.


PROGRAMME: "The Making of Law: Perspectives and Methods of Comparative Legal History" [Sixth ESCLH Postgraduate Conference in Comparative Legal History] (Valencia: Valencia University, 3-5 MAY 2026)

   


 

Sixth Postgraduate Conference in Comparative Legal History:

“The Making of Law: Perspectives and Methods of Comparative Legal History”

3–5 May 2026, Valencia University, Spain
Call for Papers

The European Society for Comparative Legal History (ESCLH) is pleased to announce its Sixth Postgraduate Conference. The conference will be held from 3 to 5 May 2026 at Valencia University, Spain. The ESCLH wants to overcome the narrow nationalism and geographical segregation of legal history in contemporary European scholarship and professional organisations. The society, thus, aims to promote comparative legal history, the explicit comparison of legal ideas and institutions in two or more legal traditions. The Postgraduate Conferences of the ESCLH give advanced PhD students and post-doctoral-researchers who work in the field of comparative legal history the opportunity to present their research to a panel of experts. Furthermore, the conference will give all participants the opportunity to build academic networks.

This conference is organized by Aniceto Masferrer on behalf of the European Society for Comparative Legal History (ESCLH), with the support of the The Alan Watson Group: The Making of the Western Law, the Institute for Social, Political and Legal Studies, and the research project entitled “Tradición e influencias extranjeras en la Codificación penal española: contribución de la jurisprudencia en la evolución de la Parte General (1870-1995)” (PID2023-148177NB-I00) (funded by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation.

Sunday Dinner, at 20:45: Restaurante Santa Rita, c/ Zurradores 10 46001 Valencia

Monday 4 May 2026

9:00 Opening of the conference Prof. Dr. Matthew Dyson (Univ. Oxford, England; European Society for Comparative Legal History, Former President)

Chair: Prof. Dr. Matthew Dyson (Univ. Oxford, England)

9:10 Julia (Weiyao Han) (Univ. Cambridge) A Constitution for the Oceans? Prize Courts and the Divided Origins of Maritime Legal Order 

9:50 Wojciech Wydmański (Univ. Varsaw – Silesia) The codification of arbitration law in Poland during the Second Polish Republic (1918–1939): A Comparative Approach 

10:30 Emmanuel Leroux (Univ. Paris Panthéon-Assas) How did the Congress of Vienna establish a new European legal order? (1814-1815) 

11:10 Coffee break

Chair: Prof. Dr. Alessia Di Stefano (Univ. Catania, Italy)

11:30 Inés García Barrachina (Univ. Valencia) University as a Forum or an Ideological Actor? A Historical-Comparative Study of Political Struggles over University Autonomy (France, the United States and Spain) 

12:10 Matthew Parish (Univ. Cambridge) The European and Civilian Influence on English Law’s Turn to Systematisation in the Eighteenth Century 

12:50 Helene Hu (Univ. Lille) The legal aspects of the French concession in Shanghai

13:30 Lunch break (Restaurante Galileo Club Gastronómico, Avda. de los Naranjos s/n, Valencia)

Chair: Prof. Dr. Janwillem (Pim) Oosterhuis (Univ. Maastricht, The Netherlands) 

15:30 Giulio Biaggini (Univ. Zurich) Redefining Normativity: The Making of International Law in the Swiss-Allied Washington Accord of 1946 

16:10 Francesco Fonte (Univ. Macerata) Uncovering Hidden Vectors in Science and Practice. A Bibliometric analysis of ‘La Rivista del diritto commerciale e del diritto generale delle obbligazioni’ and its transnational influences in Liberal Italy (1903-1922) 

16:50 Umberto De Luca (Univ. Macerata) Who Makes the Court? Legal Transfer and the Contested Making of Juvenile Justice in Italy (1890 - 1922)

20:15 Dinner (Restaurante Casa Eulogio, c/ Cerrajeros 3, 46001 Valencia

Tuesday 5 May 2026

Chair: Prof. Dr. Aniceto Masferrer (Univ. Valencia) 

9:00 Marie De Beul (Univ. Ghent) The Justice of the Peace as a Proximity Judge: Past, Present and Future 

9:40 Benedek Varga (Univ. Szeged) From Market Freedom to State Intervention: A Comparative Doctrinal and Case-Law Analysis of Overpricing Misdemeanors 

10:20 Pawel Kazmierski (Univ. Krakow – Jena) Anti-religiosity in the first instance? Religious issues in the divorce jurisprudence in the German Democratic Republic and People’s Poland on the example of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern (1945-1958) and Pomorze Zachodnie (1945-1956) 

11:00 Coffee break

Chair: Prof. Dr. Varga Norbert (Univ. Szeged, Hungary) 

11:20 Giorgia Bucaria (Univ. Cambridge) The Toolbox of English Lawyers: Res Corporales and Res Incorporales in Late Medieval Land Law

 2:00 Błażej Bawolik (Univ. Varsaw) The Doctrine of Statism in the Practice of Law-Making and Law Application in Central and Eastern Europe (1935–1939): The Case of the Second Polish Republic and the Kingdom of Romania 

12:40 Mathias Boussemart (Univ. Paris-Nanterre) Printed Knowledge and the Making of Law: Parliamentary Libraries in Revolutionary and Post-Revolutionary Europe

13:20 Closure of the conference
13:30 Lunch (Restaurant, Faculty of Law)

BOOK: Bastiaan D. VAN DER VELDEN, The Legal Framework of Slavery in the Dutch Republic and Its Colonies (London: Routledge, 2026), 622 p. ISBN 9781003706755[OPEN ACCESS]

 


Abstract:

This open-access monograph addresses in a comparative way one of the central questions in legal history: how did law structure and condition the lives of enslaved people in the Dutch Republic between 1579 and 1794? By exploring Roman-Dutch law and its transregional applications, the study foregrounds the normative framework that sustained systems of unfreedom across metropolitan and colonial settings.

The book investigates the influence of Roman law on slavery in the Dutch Republic and in territories administered by the Dutch West India Company, the Society of Suriname, and the Dutch East India Company. 

Methodologically, the study draws on the Bellagio-Harvard Guidelines on the Legal Parameters of Slavery to construct a systematic analytical framework. These Guidelines serve as an instrument for identifying the legal powers constitutive of slavery and the private-law mechanisms through which they could be exercised and enforced. On this basis, the book develops a structured questionnaire to facilitate an interregional comparison, enabling an in-depth analysis of similarities and divergences across the four jurisdictions under consideration: Curacao, the Netherlands, Suriname, and The Cape.

The project thus constitutes a form of internal, or more precisely interregional, comparative legal history. By tracing how Roman law functioned as both a foundational and adaptable source within distinct local configurations, the study illuminates the dynamic interplay between learned law and local legislation. In doing so, it contributes to broader debates on legal pluralism, imperial governance, and the juridical construction of slavery in the early modern world.

Read the whole book for free here: DOI 10.4324/9781003706755.


BLOG TEAM: New Composition as of 4 May 2026

Pursuant to our most recent call for bloggers, the ESCLH Blog Team has been extended.

We are happy to welcome as new bloggers:

  • Fuad-Meša Čičić: graduated in law (LL.B.) summa cum laude and is currently completing his LL.M. in Civil law (legal-historical focus) at the University of Pristina (Kosovo). His master's thesis examines the transfer of risk in the contract of sale in classical Roman law (periculum rei venditae), approaching from legal-historical and legal-theoretical perspectives. His research interests include ancient legal history, the historical development of private law (partic. the law of obligations), as well as customary law in the Balkan context. Professionally, he serves as a Judicial Clerk at the Constitutional Court of Kosovo. He is also a member of several scholarly associations dedicated to legal history and related fields (incl. ASLH, ESHL, and the AIP)
  • Paweł Kaźmierski, LL.M.: doctoral candidate at the Doctoral School in the Social Sciences of the Jagiellonian University in Kraków and at the Faculty of Law of the University of Jena (cotutelle). He holds MA in Polish law and LL.M. in German law. His research interests focus on the comparative legal history, history of Socialist law, history of Family law and law and religion.
  • Benedict Vanlanduyt: doctoral researcher affiliated with KU Leuven and KU Leuven Campus Kortrijk (Belgium). She holds degrees in Medieval and Ancient Philosophy and in Law from KU Leuven, where she completed the Research Master Programme in Law, graduating magna cum laude. Her master’s dissertation examined the role of auxiliary states in the War of the Austrian Succession (1740–1748) within the broader history of public and international law. She currently investigates the restitution of private property seized or confiscated in the Low Countries between 1550 and 1750 during times of war. The project focusses on the relation between legal doctrine and practice, by conducting archival research, analyzing treaties and investigating negotiation history. 
The other members of the current team remain on board, save for Marco Castelli, who has decided to focus on the peer reviewed journal Comparative Legal History. We are grateful for Marco’s loyal service and commitment to the blog. Over the past five years, he contributed over 340 posts (ergo 1,44 a week, if one discounts the Winter and Summer blogging breaks).

We kindly remind our readership that proposals for contributions can be submitted to esclhblog@gmail.com. We only publish suggestions in MS Word or RTF format, with an image. PDFs or formatted documents will be returned to the sender. Please be patient: blog posts are usually scheduled well in advance, only calls for paper or vacancies with a fixed term limit have priority. Publications of books or journals are spread out across time. 

REMINDER 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).


01 May 2026

BOOK: Bram VAN HOFSTRAETEN, Het vennootschapswezen in vroegmodern Antwerpen (1480-1620) [Iuris Scripta Historica; 33] (Leuven: Peeters, 2025), VIII + 480 p. ISBN 9789042955356, € 85

(image source: Peeters)

Abstract:
In 1608 werd in Antwerpen de Consuetudines compilatae voltooid. Deze vierde en laatste redactiepoging van het Antwerpse gewoonterecht bevat maar liefst 27 artikels van vennootschapsrechtelijke aard. Kort na het verschijnen van de compilatie weerklonk echter de kritiek dat de redacteuren tal van nieuwe, niet-costumiere normen hadden ingevoerd. Dit boek onderzoekt de houdbaarheid van deze kritiek, in het bijzonder met betrekking tot het geredigeerde vennootschapsrecht. Enerzijds wordt de juridische oorsprong van de vennootschapsrechtelijke bepalingen in de Consuetudines compilatae onderzocht; anderzijds wordt hun inhoud getoetst aan de vennootschappelijke gebruiken zoals die in de zestiende-eeuwse handelspraktijk geobserveerd werden. Als dusdanig zal blijken dat de redacteuren in de eerste plaats remedies wensten te formuleren voor de meest voorkomende oorzaken van vennootschapsgerelateerde onenigheden. Dat zij zich hierbij vaak lieten inspireren door niet-Antwerpse en niet-costumiere rechtsbronnen beïnvloedde de verhouding tussen het geredigeerde vennootschapsrecht en de Antwerpse ondernemers. Men had immers een juridisch kader gecreëerd dat niet noodzakelijk strookte met de gangbare zestiende-eeuwse vennootschappelijke gebruiken in de Scheldestad.

See table of contents here.

More information with the publisher.


 

30 April 2026

WORKSHOP: Saskia LETTMAIER, "Marriage and Madness: The Origins of the Marriage of Lunatics Act of 1742" [Stanford Center for Law and History Workshop] (Stanford: Stanford University, 5 MAY 2026) (9:45 PM - 10:45 PM CET) [HYBRID]


Saskia Lettmaier, Professor of Law and Global Legal History at the University of Hamburg, will present her paper, "Marriage and Madness: The Origins of the Marriage of Lunatics Act of 1742"

Abstract:

In 2021, the Parliament of the Irish Republic—as the last legislature in Great Britain and Ireland—abolished an Act to Prevent the Marriage of Lunatics. This Act had its origins in a British statute of 1742, which was subsequently extended to Ireland and was in force in all parts of the British isles from 1811 until 1959, when it was abolished for England and Wales. The Act has been almost completely ignored by (legal) history. Quite undeservedly so, for it may claim to be the first English general act since the Elizabethan settlement to interfere with the traditional canon law of marriage, predating the much more famous Hardwicke Marriage Act by more than a decade. It rendered absolutely void the marriages of persons who had been found lunatic by commission under the Great Seal or whose persons and estates had been placed under trustees by Act of Parliament. Such persons could no longer contract a valid marriage after 24 June 1742, not even during a lucid interval, unless they had first been declared of sound mind by the Lord Chancellor or other competent authority. Yet there is little evidence to suggest that unsuitable marriages by lunatics constituted a widespread social problem in mid-eighteenth-century England. Given the English reluctance to pass general acts in this period, why was the esoteric topic of lunatics’ marriage singled out for general legislative treatment, rather than being dealt with—like the thorny issue of divorce—through private acts on a case-by-case basis? This paper seeks to answer that puzzle. In doing so, it explores the intersection of marriage law, property protection, elite family strategy, and parliamentary power, taking us into the worlds of high society and high politics in eighteenth-century Britain.

 Pratical information:

                             Tuesday, May 5
                         12:45-1:45 PM (PT)
          Room 320D, Stanford Law School
                              and via Zoom 

To RSVP, click here. 

SEMINAR: Disabilities and Women in Ancient Rome: Legal, social and cultural perspectives (Helsinki: University of Helsinki, 4 MAY 2026) [HYBRID]

 

(image source: UH)

Disabilities and Women in Ancient Rome: Legal, social and cultural perspectives 
 University of Helsinki

Workshop: In-person&Online

In person participation: University of Helsinki, Main Building (Unioninkatu 34), Room U3039 (3rd floor)

Registration through this form

Remote participation: via Zoom (https://helsinki.zoom.us/j/69089076203)

 Monday, 4 May 2026, from 10:00 to 17:30 EEST


Program:

10:0011:15 keynote: Prof. Christian Laes: Women and disabilities in Antiquity: between presentism and daily life 

11:3013:00 session 1: Disabled Women in the Roman Narratives 

Sofia Vierula: The case of Harpaste: Lived experience of disability in Seneca’s letter to Lucilius 

Mathilde Chartrand: The Daily Life of a Furiosa: On the Gendered Consequences of Mental Illness

Fran Geldard: Enslavement and Disability in Eusebian Martyr Narrative

[Lunch] 

14:0015:30 session 2: Women, Disability and Roman Law

Arnaud Paturet: Some Reflections on the Status of Deaf People by Roman Jurists 

Kaius Tuori: Infirmity and monstrosity: on the legal construction of female disability in law

Jana Mauri Marlborough: Against All Odds: The Legal Position of Wet Nurses in Roman Law

[Coffee]

16:0017:30 session 3: Intersections of Gender and Disability in Late Antiquity 

Gaetana Balestra: Muta puella fuit: The Mute Woman between tutela mulierum and Justinian's Legislation.

Elena Pezzato Heck: Mental Illness as Grounds for Repudiation in Late Antiquity and the Justinian Era

Arttu Alaranta: Vulnerable Life-Cycle Moments and Disabilities in Women’s Asceticism during Late Antiquity 

More information is available on UH website. 


 

BOOK: Violet SOEN, Wouter DRUWÉ, Wim FRANCOIS & Ralph DECONINCK (eds.), Innovationes Lovanienses: Arts, Law and Theology at the University of Louvain (1425–1797) [Lectio; 18] (Turnhout: Brepols, 2026)

 

(image source: TRN)

Abstract:

Throughout the first centuries of its existence, the University of Louvain functioned as a crossroads for the transmission of texts, ideas, and even images from Antiquity, across the Middle Ages, and through the Renaissance. From its foundational bulls between 1425 and 1432, the university was established as a prototypical studium generale, drawing inspiration from earlier institutions in Paris and Cologne and adopting elements from contemporary universities like Rostock and Geneva. Situated at the heart of Europe, the University of Louvain quickly became a pivotal center for the reception and dissemination of both ancient and contemporary knowledge across the continent, and later, the Habsburg Empire. This volume examines how teachers and students examined old and innovative ideas across various constituent bodies of the university, including the Faculty of Arts or the College of the Three Tongues, or neighboring institutions, like the Jesuit College. Contributions span the Faculties of Law, adopting insights on the newly promulgated Tridentine decrees or novel moral economies, to the Faculty of Theology, a hotbed of the controversies surrounding grace, free will, and salvation in post-Tridentine Catholicism. Of the many scholars that were active in Louvain, special attention is devoted to the philologist Petrus Nannius, the theologians Michael Baius and Jacobus Janssonius, the lawyers Petrus Peckius and Johannes Wamesius, and the Jesuits Robertus Bellarminus and Leonardus Lessius, along with the lectures they gave at the Louvain house of their Order.

Table of contents: 

Introduction
Innovationes Lovanienses: What Is New about the ‘Old’ University of Louvain (1425–1797)? (Violet Soen)
Part I. The Faculty of Arts and the Collegium Trilingue
The Old and the New: Scholastic Elements in the Works of Petrus Nannius (1496–1557), Professor of the Collegium Trilingue in the First Half of the Sixteenth Century (Aline Smeesters)
Diagrammatic Innovations in Louvain Logic Notebooks (Seventeenth-Eighteenth Centuries) (Lorenz Demey)
Part II. The Faculties of Canon and Civil Law
The Role of Legal Practice in Louvain’s Legal Education (c. 1550–1650) (Wouter Druwé)
What Makes a Legal Commentary? Louvain Professors on Liber extra and Liber sextus (Sixteenth-Eighteenth Centuries) (Piotr Alexandrowicz)
Teaching Canon Law after Trent: Mapping Juridical Sources in the Lectures of Petrus Peckius (1529–1589) (Ana Luiza Ferreira Gomes Silva)
When the Sun Stopped Setting: Louvain Lawyers and Theologians on Issues of Monopolies and Competition (1500–1670) (Wout Vandermeulen)
Part III. The Faculty of Theology and the Jesuit College
Knowledge of Nature and Scripture at the Threshold of Modernity: Michael Baius’s (1513–1589) Louvain Lecture on Romans 1 (Jarrik Van Der Biest)
The Internal Act of Faith in the Commentaries on the Summa theologiae Produced in Sixteenth- and Seventeenth-century Louvain (with a Comparison with Previous Iberian Commentators) (Lidia Lanza)
The Jesuit College and Knowledge Transmission: Robert Bellarmine’s Lectiones Lovanienses (1570–1576) and the Spanish Scholastic Legal-Economic Thought (Shiri Roelofs)
Ex nudo Dei beneplacito: On Concord and Discord between Luis de Molina’s Concordia (1588) and Leonardus Lessius’ De gratia efficaci (1610) (C. J. (Niels) de Bruijn)
Vision, Love, and Joy: The Louvain Jesuit Leonard Lessius (1554–1623) on Beatitude (Patrícia Calvário)
Index

(source: Theology Research News)