Pepperdine University School of Law will host the third Religious Legal Theory conference: “The Competing Claims of Law & Religion: Who Should Influence Whom?” Feb. 23-25, 2012 in Malibu, CA. This conference is sponsored by the Nootbaar Institute on Law, Religion, and Ethics and co-sponsored by the Glazer Institute for Jewish Studies.
If you would like to speak at the conference or organize a panel, we welcome paper and panel proposals on any law and religion topic. Please submit proposals by September 15, 2011 to: lauren.hartley@pepperdine.edu.
The conference will be the basis of a spring 2012 Pepperdine Law Review symposium edition. Papers submitted by January 7, 2012 will be considered by the law review for publication. Submission of presentations is optional and publication is not guaranteed. Jump to full post
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on August 18th, 2011
| EVENTS |
no comments
| February 23, 2012 | to | February 25, 2012 |
Pepperdine University School of Law will host the third Religious Legal Theory conference: “The Competing Claims of Law & Religion: Who Should Influence Whom?” Feb. 23-25, 2012 in Malibu, CA. This conference is sponsored by the Nootbaar Institute on Law, Religion, and Ethics and co-sponsored by the Glazer Institute for Jewish Studies.
If you would like to speak at the conference or organize a panel, we welcome paper and panel proposals on any law and religion topic. Please submit proposals by September 15, 2011 to: lauren.hartley@pepperdine.edu.
The conference will be the basis of a spring 2012 Pepperdine Law Review symposium edition. Papers submitted by January 7, 2012 will be considered by the law review for publication. Submission of presentations is optional and publication is not guaranteed. Jump to full post
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on August 18th, 2011
| EVENTS |
no comments
Pepperdine University School of Law will host the third Religious Legal Theory conference: “The Competing Claims of Law & Religion: Who Should Influence Whom?” Feb. 23-25, 2012 in Malibu, CA. This conference is sponsored by the Nootbaar Institute on Law, Religion, and Ethics and co-sponsored by the Glazer Institute for Jewish Studies.
If you would like to speak at the conference or organize a panel, we welcome paper and panel proposals on any law and religion topic. Please submit proposals by September 15, 2011 to: lauren.hartley@pepperdine.edu.
The conference will be the basis of a spring 2012 Pepperdine Law Review symposium edition. Papers submitted by January 7, 2012 will be considered by the law review for publication. Submission of presentations is optional and publication is not guaranteed. Jump to full post
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on August 18th, 2011
| CALLS FOR PAPERS, CONFERENCES, Law and Religion |
no comments
Papers are now being sought for the volume to pay tribute to a colleague and mentor, William A. Schabas, whose lengthy title reflects Bill’s many areas of expertise: Public International Law, International Criminal Law & International Human Rights Law: A Critical Evaluation of the Scholarship of Professor William Schabas. Anyone wishing to be considered for publication should submit — either to Kathleen.Cavanaugh@nuigalway.ie or to J.Castellino@mdx.ac.uk — a 500-word abstract. It should outline the general thrust of the proposed contribution and also highlight the aspect of Schabas’ scholarship that would be engaged. Abstracts must be submitted no later than October 1, 2011. Jump to full post
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on August 18th, 2011
| EVENTS |
no comments
Papers are now being sought for the volume to pay tribute to a colleague and mentor, William A. Schabas, whose lengthy title reflects Bill’s many areas of expertise: Public International Law, International Criminal Law & International Human Rights Law: A Critical Evaluation of the Scholarship of Professor William Schabas. Anyone wishing to be considered for publication should submit — either to Kathleen.Cavanaugh@nuigalway.ie or to J.Castellino@mdx.ac.uk — a 500-word abstract. It should outline the general thrust of the proposed contribution and also highlight the aspect of Schabas’ scholarship that would be engaged. Abstracts must be submitted no later than October 1, 2011. Jump to full post
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on August 18th, 2011
| CALLS FOR PAPERS, Criminal Law, Human Rights Law, International Law |
no comments
St. John’s University School of Law will host The Retributivist Tradition and Its Future, a conference considering Retributivism: Essays on Theory and Policy (Mark D. White ed. 2011) on Nov. 4, 2011 in New York. sr
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on August 18th, 2011
| EVENTS |
no comments
St. John’s University School of Law will host The Retributivist Tradition and Its Future, a conference considering Retributivism: Essays on Theory and Policy (Mark D. White ed. 2011) on Nov. 4, 2011 in New York. sr
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on August 18th, 2011
| CONFERENCES, Criminal Law |
no comments
| November 25, 2011 | to | November 26, 2011 |
The Julius Stone Institute of Jurisprudence and the Sydney Centre for International Law are pleased to announce a major conference, Human Rights: Old Dichotomies Revisited, being held Nov. 25-26, 2011 at the University of Sydney Law School in Sydney, Australia. sr
Posted by uwlegalscholarship on August 18th, 2011
| EVENTS |
no comments