Land Air Water, a student group at the Oregon Law, presents the 29th Annual Public Interest Environmental Law Conference, Turning the Tides: Creating a Green and Clean Future, March 3-6, 2011. The organizers invite proposals for panelists and topics.
The priority deadline for suggestions is December 18, 2010. However, we will continue to accept suggestions until January 22, 2011, based on availability. Please submit suggestions early to increase your panel’s likelihood of consideration. We welcome all suggestions and value diversity in panelists and topics.
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on October 27th, 2010
| EVENTS |
no comments
Land Air Water, a student group at the Oregon Law, presents the 29th Annual Public Interest Environmental Law Conference, Turning the Tides: Creating a Green and Clean Future, March 3-6, 2011. The organizers invite proposals for panelists and topics.
The priority deadline for suggestions is December 18, 2010. However, we will continue to accept suggestions until January 22, 2011, based on availability. Please submit suggestions early to increase your panel’s likelihood of consideration. We welcome all suggestions and value diversity in panelists and topics.
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on October 27th, 2010
| EVENTS |
no comments
| March 3, 2011 | to | March 6, 2011 |
Land Air Water, a student group at the Oregon Law, presents the 29th Annual Public Interest Environmental Law Conference, Turning the Tides: Creating a Green and Clean Future, March 3-6, 2011. The organizers invite proposals for panelists and topics.
The priority deadline for suggestions is December 18, 2010. However, we will continue to accept suggestions until January 22, 2011, based on availability. Please submit suggestions early to increase your panel’s likelihood of consideration. We welcome all suggestions and value diversity in panelists and topics.
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on October 27th, 2010
| EVENTS |
no comments
Land Air Water, a student group at the Oregon Law, presents the 29th Annual Public Interest Environmental Law Conference, Turning the Tides: Creating a Green and Clean Future, March 3-6, 2011. The organizers invite proposals for panelists and topics.
The priority deadline for suggestions is December 18, 2010. However, we will continue to accept suggestions until January 22, 2011, based on availability. Please submit suggestions early to increase your panel’s likelihood of consideration. We welcome all suggestions and value diversity in panelists and topics.
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on October 27th, 2010
| CALLS FOR PAPERS, CONFERENCES, Environmental Law |
no comments
The Asian Society of International Law invites submissions for its Third Biennial Conference, Asia and International Law: A New Era, which will take place Aug. 27-28, 2011, in Beijing, China. The submission deadline is Dec. 1, 2010.
The organizers welcome papers dealing with the following topics for consideration:
1. Law of the Sea
2. Climate Change and Development
3. Disaster Management and International Law
4. Human Rights, Sovereignty, and Asia (including regional human rights mechanisms, Asian developments, etc.)
5. Developments in International Criminal Law: Peace and Justice, the International Criminal Court, Issues of Universal Jurisdiction
6. Migration and Dislocation: Refugees, Migrant Workers, Internally Displaced Persons
7. Armed Conflict, International Law, and Human Rights
8. Asia, Regional Arrangements and Free Trade Agreements (including comparative studies of
regionalism, regionalism and security arrangements)
9. Transnational Litigation and Arbitration in Asia
10. Intellectual Property and International Law
11. The Effect of Treaties and Foreign Law in Domestic Courts in Asia
12. The Contribution of Asian Judges and Jurists to International Law
13. Asia and Third World Approaches to International Law
14. International Law Education and Research in Asia
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on October 27th, 2010
| EVENTS |
no comments
| August 27, 2011 | to | August 28, 2011 |
The Asian Society of International Law invites submissions for its Third Biennial Conference, Asia and International Law: A New Era, which will take place Aug. 27-28, 2011, in Beijing, China. The submission deadline is Dec. 1, 2010.
The organizers welcome papers dealing with the following topics for consideration:
1. Law of the Sea
2. Climate Change and Development
3. Disaster Management and International Law
4. Human Rights, Sovereignty, and Asia (including regional human rights mechanisms, Asian developments, etc.)
5. Developments in International Criminal Law: Peace and Justice, the International Criminal Court, Issues of Universal Jurisdiction
6. Migration and Dislocation: Refugees, Migrant Workers, Internally Displaced Persons
7. Armed Conflict, International Law, and Human Rights
8. Asia, Regional Arrangements and Free Trade Agreements (including comparative studies of
regionalism, regionalism and security arrangements)
9. Transnational Litigation and Arbitration in Asia
10. Intellectual Property and International Law
11. The Effect of Treaties and Foreign Law in Domestic Courts in Asia
12. The Contribution of Asian Judges and Jurists to International Law
13. Asia and Third World Approaches to International Law
14. International Law Education and Research in Asia
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on October 27th, 2010
| EVENTS |
no comments
The Asian Society of International Law invites submissions for its Third Biennial Conference, Asia and International Law: A New Era, which will take place Aug. 27-28, 2011, in Beijing, China. The submission deadline is Dec. 1, 2010.
The organizers welcome papers dealing with the following topics for consideration:
1. Law of the Sea
2. Climate Change and Development
3. Disaster Management and International Law
4. Human Rights, Sovereignty, and Asia (including regional human rights mechanisms, Asian developments, etc.)
5. Developments in International Criminal Law: Peace and Justice, the International Criminal Court, Issues of Universal Jurisdiction
6. Migration and Dislocation: Refugees, Migrant Workers, Internally Displaced Persons
7. Armed Conflict, International Law, and Human Rights
8. Asia, Regional Arrangements and Free Trade Agreements (including comparative studies of regionalism, regionalism and security arrangements)
9. Transnational Litigation and Arbitration in Asia
10. Intellectual Property and International Law
11. The Effect of Treaties and Foreign Law in Domestic Courts in Asia
12. The Contribution of Asian Judges and Jurists to International Law
13. Asia and Third World Approaches to International Law
14. International Law Education and Research in Asia
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on October 27th, 2010
| CALLS FOR PAPERS, Comparative Law, CONFERENCES, Criminal Law, Environmental Law, Human Rights Law, Intellectual Property, International Law, Legal Education, National Security Law |
no comments
Griffith Law Review – Law Theory Society invites proposals for symposiums for vol. 21 (2012).
Opportunities exist for committed scholars to organise symposiums and/or special issues to be published in 2012. The Academic Editors will approve proposals on a first come basis. In considering proposals the Academic Editors will consider whether the proposal fits with the Review’s publication policy and strategic direction, quality of proposed manuscripts, and the proponent’s willingness, and past successes in editing.
Expressions of interest and more information concerning 2012 to:
Kieran Tranter, Managing Editor
Griffith Law Review
Email: k.tranter@griffith.edu.au
Fax +61 (0) 7 5552 8161
Griffith Law School, Griffith University
Gold Coast QLD, 4222, Australia
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on October 27th, 2010
| CALLS FOR PAPERS, Law and Philosophy, Law and Society |
no comments
Griffith Law Review – Law Theory Society invites submissions for its symposium, South of International Law.
Symposium Editors – Sundhya Pahuja and Shaun McVeigh.
Deadline for Manuscripts – January 2012.
How might a concept of the ‘South’ be understood in terms of a pattern of (international) legal relations? Jump to full post
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on October 27th, 2010
| EVENTS |
no comments
Griffith Law Review – Law Theory Society invites submissions for its symposium, South of International Law.
Symposium Editors – Sundhya Pahuja and Shaun McVeigh.
Deadline for Manuscripts – January 2012.
How might a concept of the ‘South’ be understood in terms of a pattern of (international) legal relations? Jump to full post
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on October 27th, 2010
| CALLS FOR PAPERS, Human Rights Law, International Law, Law and Society |
no comments
Griffith Law Review – Law Theory Society invites submissions for its symposium, Law and The Modalities of Nostalgia.
Symposium Editor – Rob McQueen.
Deadline for Manuscripts – 28 January 2011.
This symposium will focus on issues raised by, amongst others, Paul Gilroy in Colonial Melancholia (2005) and Svetlana Boym in The Future of Nostalgia (2002) regarding the ambivalent and often conflictual nature of social memory both in colonising and colonised states.
Jump to full post
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on October 27th, 2010
| EVENTS |
no comments
Griffith Law Review – Law Theory Society invites submissions for its symposium, Law and The Modalities of Nostalgia.
Symposium Editor – Rob McQueen.
Deadline for Manuscripts – 28 January 2011.
This symposium will focus on issues raised by, amongst others, Paul Gilroy in Colonial Melancholia (2005) and Svetlana Boym in The Future of Nostalgia (2002) regarding the ambivalent and often conflictual nature of social memory both in colonising and colonised states.
Jump to full post
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on October 27th, 2010
| CALLS FOR PAPERS, Human Rights Law, Law and Society |
no comments
Emory
Adam Moline from the Emory Law Journal, Flora Manship from the Emory International Law Review, and Vinay Chipra of the Emory Bankruptcy Developments Journal will present their award winning comments in their respective student-run journals.
University of Georgia
Lawrence B. Solum (Illinois Law)
Miami
Martha Mahoney (Miami Law)
NYU Legal History
Nick Pedersen (NYU Law) presents “James Wilson: The Lost Founder.“
This paper is not publicly available.
Pace
Jamal Greene (Columbia Law) presents “Profiling Originalism.“
This paper is not publicly available.
San Diego
George Mundstock (Miami Law)
SMU Dedman
Orin S. Kerr (GW Law)
USC
Martha Jones (University of Michigan Law) presents “Bearing Arms in Baltimore City: From Claims-Making to Citizenship in the Era of Dred Scott.“
This paper is not publicly available.
Wisconsin
Yochai Benkler (Harvard Law) presents “From Free Software and Wikipedia to a Field of Cooperative Human Systems Design.“
This paper is not publicly available.
Posted by pittlegalscholarship on October 27th, 2010
| COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS, EVENTS, LECTURES |
no comments
Emory
Adam Moline from the Emory Law Journal, Flora Manship from the Emory International Law Review, and Vinay Chipra of the Emory Bankruptcy Developments Journal will present their award winning comments in their respective student-run journals.
University of Georgia
Lawrence B. Solum (Illinois Law)
Miami
Martha Mahoney (Miami Law)
NYU Legal History
Nick Pedersen (NYU Law) presents “James Wilson: The Lost Founder.“
This paper is not publicly available.
Pace
Jamal Greene (Columbia Law) presents “Profiling Originalism.“
This paper is not publicly available.
San Diego
George Mundstock (Miami Law)
SMU Dedman
Orin S. Kerr (GW Law)
USC
Martha Jones (University of Michigan Law) presents “Bearing Arms in Baltimore City: From Claims-Making to Citizenship in the Era of Dred Scott.“
This paper is not publicly available.
Wisconsin
Yochai Benkler (Harvard Law) presents “From Free Software and Wikipedia to a Field of Cooperative Human Systems Design.“
This paper is not publicly available.
Posted by pittlegalscholarship on October 27th, 2010
| COLLOQUIA/ WORKSHOPS, LECTURES |
no comments