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Showing posts from June, 2015

CALL FOR APPLICATIONs: Editorship of Legal Studies

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The Society of Legal Scholars invites applications from members for the editorship of its prestigious journal  Legal Studies . The Society is looking for an editorial team or individual editor who can build on the success of both the present and past editors. The editors are ex officio members of the Society’s Council and Executive Committee and are appointed for five years. The current editors, Professors Imelda Maher, Blanaid Clarke, Fiona de Londras and Colin Scott have indicated their wish to stand down by September 2016, allowing a handover period to ensure a smooth transition so the new editor or editorial team can take responsibility for the first issue of 2017. The journal is in a healthy position: competition for space in the journal is intense, with a large number of high quality submissions, and it has one of the biggest print-runs of UK academic law journals.  The Society is also well served by its current publishers, Wiley-Blackwell. It now has an  International Advisory B

Call for Papers: 'Urban Africa' - Turin, October 2015

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Turin, 16-17 October 2015 Urban Africa Economy, populations, cultures  Call for papers  The Centre for African Studies (CSA) and the Association for African Studies in Italy (ASAI), in collaboration with the Department of Cultures, Politics and Society of the University of Turin and the Department of Architecture and Design of the Polytechnic University of Turin, organize an interdisciplinary conference on “Urban Africa” See the call for papers at  http://urbanafrica.it  and download in English from this link . 

BOOK: Cairns on Codification, Transplants and History

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John Cairns (Edinburgh)'s  Codification, Transplants and History: Law Reform in Louisiana (1808) and Quebec (1866)  (The Lawbook Exchange, 2015) is now available: When Louisiana enacted its Digest of the Civil Laws in 1808 and Quebec its Civil Code of Lower Canada in 1866, both jurisdictions were in a period of transition economic, social and political. In both, the laws had originally been transplanted from European nations whose societies were in many ways different from theirs. This book offers the first systematic and detailed exploration of the two new codes in light of social and legal change. Cairns examines the rich, complex, and varying legal cultures French, Spanish, Civilian and Anglo-American on which the two sets of redactors drew in drafting their codes. He places this examination in the context surrounding each codification, and the legal history of both societies. Cairns offers a detailed analysis of family law and employment in the two codes, showing how their resp

CONFERENCE ANNOUNCEMENT: Annual International Conference on Comparative Law 2015 - Law of Obligations Surrounded by Other Normative Systems

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Subject areas: Morality, customs, praxeology and the content of an obligation. Agreements which are not contracts, relevant to the law of obligations.  Obligations of the creditor: are they just correlates of the obligations of the debtor, or do they constitute a functionally separate category? The history of the relationship of contract law and other normative systems.  Interpretation, law-making and science of law. "Socialist law" in the capitalist reality (and vice versa). Interaction of the legal system with the extra-legal environment. The impact of socio-political formations on the shape of state, the content and the evolution of the law. The future of the state law in terms of economic globalization. The nature of the obligations in terms of the various normative systems. Facts as obligations vs legal systems. Cultural diversity - a challenge to the law of obligations? Registration is open until June 30, 2015. Draft programme will be available on July 31, 2015. Click h

ANNUAL CONFERENCE LIMERICK 2015: ALBUM 2

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Credit photos: Prof. Olivier Moréteau