English Law and
Colonial Connections
Histories,
Parallels, and Influences
26th-27th
January 2021
(All times are GMT)
Tuesday, 26th January
2021
3.00-3.15 PM – Introduction
Panel 1
3.15-3.35 PM
Richard Ireland
(Aberystwyth University)
“It seems
history is to blame”: Imagination and the Colonial Challenge to English Legal History.
3.35-3.55 PM
Matilde Cazzola (Max Planck
Institute for European Legal History)
To
Remake Britain in the Image of the Raj: James Fitzjames Stephen and India as a Legal
Model.
3.55-4.15 PM
Justine
K. Collins (Max Planck Institute for European Legal History)
The Role of Legislation
in Racial Identities within the English Atlantic 1640s-1700s
4.15-4.45 PM
Discussion
Panel 2
5.15-5.35 PM
Sally Hadden
(Western Michigan University)
London’s
Middle Temple and Law Students from the New World
5.35-5.55 PM
Łukasz J.
Korporowicz (University of Lodz)
Sir James
Mackintosh – Barrister, Judge, Law Professor
5.55-6.15 PM
Discussion
Wednesday, 27th
January 2021
Panel 3
3.00-3.20 PM
Cerian Griffiths
(Northumbria University)
Fraud and the
City of London: Global Opportunities in the Eighteenth-Century
3.20-3.40 PM
Michael
Lobban (London School of Economics and Political Science)
Authority
and Subjecthood at the Margins of Empire: the Case of Sekgoma Letsholathibe
3.40-4.00 PM
Discussion
Panel 4
4.30-4.50 PM
Julia Rudolph (North Carolina State
University)
The Last Will and Testament of John
Gardner Kemeys: Jamaican Mortgages and English Inheritance
Disputes
4.50-5.10 PM
Stefan
Vogenauer (Max Planck Institute for European Legal History)
Influences of English Law on Asian Contract
Laws: Contractual Interpretation
5.10-5.30 PM
Jan Halberda,
Jagiellonian University
The Principle
of Good Faith and Fair Dealing in Anglo-American Contract Law
5.30-6.00 PM
Discussion
6.00-6.20 PM – Closing Remarks
More infomation on the conference website.
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