(Source: MPI for European Legal History)
The Max Planck Institute for European Legal
History has a call for papers for a special issue of Administory. Here the
call:
Which normative standards are able to guide
administrative action? Irrespective of the era or administrative culture under
analysis, it should be clear that administration is not merely a dispassionate
enforcer of legal norms or an executor of political programmes. Rather,
administrations operate within a network of different normativities. Neither a
law-like, differentiated programme of norms nor a binding force that derives
its strength from judicial enforceability or from the authority of higher
political instances are necessary features thereof; it can be the case that
normativities only are diffuse and informal; sometimes they first become
visible when conflicts over norms erupt.
Contributions mapping out this landscape are
now being collected for the special issue of Administory:
'Administrative Multinormativity', edited by Peter Becker (Vienna) and Peter
Collin (Frankfurt am Main). Case studies involving 19th- and 20th-century
administration should show how cooperation and conflict between different
normativities were carried out, how new normative arrangements emerged, and how
normative conflicts were made manageable.
First versions of the texts will be discussed
at an author workshop to be held on 27-28 September 2019 at the Max Planck
Institute for European Legal History, Frankfurt am Main; travel and
accommodation costs will be covered. We invite historians, jurists,
sociologists and cultural and political scientists to submit contributions (in
German or English). Proposals (maximum 500 words) should be submitted to collin@rg.mpg.de or peter.becker@univie.ac.at by 15 May 2019.
All information here
No comments:
Post a Comment