(Source: University of Helsinki)
We learned of a call for papers
for an international conference in Helsinki on “Legal Diversity and Regional
Encounters: Plural Understandings of Law in Localised Contexts”. Here the call:
The Faculty of Law in cooperation
with Aleksanteri Institute of the University of Helsinki is pleased to announce
the annual conference under the Development of Russian Law research project,
which will take place in Helsinki on October 19-20, 2020. This
conference continues the series of workshops, seminars, and conferences
originated in legal scholarship on Russian law, organized by the Faculty of Law
since 2008.
Current debates around legal
pluralism focus on a variety of legal issues. The nexus of international,
transnational, regional, domestic, or local levels of legal regulation
questions the clearly defined spaces of law. The conception of domestic law or
international law as a single realm has long been challenged in legal and
transdisciplinary scholarship due to multiple and constantly incoming and
outcoming influences. Law becomes a mixture of many things; it becomes a fluid
institution that counter-intuitively changes as it is being practiced and
rarely remains set in stone.
Legal diversity refers to the
idea that in any one space of law there is more than one regulation or even
more than just one legal system. The conference will explore legal pluralism by
discussing factors that lead to legal diversity and plural sites of
norm-production. It follows in the lengthy tradition of law/society relation
and reconceptualization and examines several aspects of legal diversity
focusing on the relationship between the empirical facts of pluralism and its
conceptual foundations. Furthermore, we plan to define how international
comparative experiences are relevant to legal-societal analysis and discuss in
detail the multiple possible connections among different sites of law-making,
practice, and experience.
A point of departure for this
conference is its previous focus on Russia and the Russian law. As we intend to
broaden the scope of the conference, we look at geographical location as one
possible way to approach diversity. How does space define law? How does
international community “view” certain spaces? What are the venues of legal
diversity when we concentrate our attention on a geographical location? How
does the very notion of space is also re-defined by diverse practices of law?
In these endeavours we open the debates about legal pluralism beyond
geopolitical space of Russia and invite scholars who work in other regions
across the Globe from South and Eastern Europe to the Americas, from South-East
Asia to Africa.
Legal systems are constantly
interacting with each another, and in so doing, re-defining each other. Various
schools of thought on legal diversity have studied such interactions under the
banner of legal anthropology, systems theory, global legal pluralism, and
others. Their commonality is the identification of legal practice as a procedure
shaped through interactions among multiple legal orders. In the current moment
of increased populist tendencies and re-emergent nationalisms, it is even more
salient to re-visit the question of legal diversity.
We encourage submissions of individual
papers and full panels in the following themes
and beyond:
· legal
diversity as representing a multitude of differences that exists at the micro
and macro levels to make social, cultural and legal models heterogeneous;
· political
and legal geographies;
· postcolonial/colonial
spaces;
· topics
that focus on and encompass different characteristics such as race, age, creed,
national origin, religion, ethnicity, sexual orientation and so on;
· plurality
of legal ontologies and resulting traditions/cultures;
· comparative
legal practice, legal transplants or legal ‘borrowing’ and hybrids;
· comparative
studies of law in diverse societies;
· plural
legal systems in same localities;
· studies
of resistance to international human rights norms;
· mobilisation
against equality;
· local
traditions vs legal norms;
· queering
law / queering legal studies;
· legal
pluralism and marriage equality;
· asylum
process and legal diversity;
· race,
ethnicity and law.
We welcome legal researchers from
across disciplines to join our discussions of current issues in legal studies
and law. We especially encourage younger scholars and graduate students to
apply.
The working language of the
conference is English. All presentations and discussions are held
in this language.
The proposals shall be submitted
by 15 April 2020 via online submission system: https://elomake.helsinki.fi/lomakkeet/103572/lomake.html
If you have any questions, please
contact Dr. Elena Cirkovic (elena.cirkovic@helsinki.fi)
or Prof. Marianna Muravyeva (marianna.muravyeva@helsinki.fi).
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