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Sonderforschungsbereich 640: Repräsentationen sozialer Ordnungen im Wandel
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One Law for All? (Workshop)

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Titel
One Law for All? (Workshop)
Termin
29. - 30.10.10
Ort
HU Berlin, Friedrichstr. 191/193, R. 5008
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FRIDAY, 29th OCTOBER 2010   

 
9.30 Welcome and Introduction  
 
10.00-12.15 PANEL 1 (Chair: Stefan B. Kirmse) 
Developing a ‘New Cultural History of Law’? Perspectives, Methods, Claims
  • Daniel Siemens (University of Bielefeld): 
    What can be expected from a new ‘cultural history of law’? A plea for a comparative historical approach to legal cultures and practises 
  • Carlos Aguirre (University of Oregon): 
    Cultural approaches to legal history: The case of prisons and punishment in Latin America 
  • Miloš Vec (Max-Planck Institute Frankfurt): 
    Universalization, particularization and discrimination: A cultural history of 19th century international law 
  • Discussants: Jörg Baberowski; Vincent Houben 
 
12.15- 13.30 LUNCH 
   
13.30 - 15.30 PANEL 2 (Chair: Lena Priesmeier) 
Negotiating and Communicating Law: Intentions, Views, and Debates among Legislators 
  • Viktoria Draganova (Max Planck Institute Frankfurt):
    Help or harm? Legal transfer and the legal system in Bulgaria after 1878 
  • Benjamin Beuerle (Humboldt University):
    New law for the Russian Empire: Debates on political and social reform legislation in Russia, 1905-1917 
  • Benjamin Buchholz (Humboldt University):
    A new legal order under discussion: Strategies of the Afghan government to communicate its reform programme, 1919-1929 
  • Discussant: Jürgen Schriewer 
 
15.30 - 16.00 COFFEE BREAK 
   
16.00 - 18.00 PANEL 3 (Chair: Daniel Hedinger) 
‘Legal Pluralism’: Coexistence and Conflict between Legal Systems 
  • Manuel de los Reyes García Márkina (Humboldt University):
    De jure and de facto: The legal code of 1871 and legal culture in Mexico City 
  • Harald Sippel (University of Bayreuth):
    Each to his own: Legal pluralism in the German colonies (1884-1914) 
  • Ulrike Schaper (Free University of Berlin): 
    Entanglement and interaction within the plural legal order of the German colony Cameroon 
  • Discussant: Frederick Cooper 
  
20.00 DINNER 
 

SATURDAY, 30th October 2010 

 
10.00 - 12.00 PANEL 4 (Chair: Benjamin Beuerle) 
How Law Makes Practice: On the Social Effects of New Legislation 
  • Lena Priesmeier (Humboldt University):
    The Russian judicial reform of 1864 and the state’s new image of the individual 
  • Xiaoqun Xu (Christopher Newport University, Virginia):
    Marriage and divorce as customary and legal practices in Republican China, 1919-1949  
  • Stefan B. Kirmse (Humboldt University):
    Law and empire in late tsarist Russia: Russian Tatars go to court  
  • Discussant: Ingeborg Baldauf 
 
12.00 - 13.00 LUNCH 
 
13.00 - 15.00 PANEL 5 (Chair: Manuel de los Reyes García Márkina) 
Performing Law: Courtrooms and Legal Systems as Sites of Negotiation  
  • Daniel Hedinger (Humboldt University):
    Between the need for justice and the craving for sensation: public trials and their audience in Meiji Japan (1868-1912) 
  • Thomas Scheffer (Humboldt University):
    How courts know: politics of knowledge and criminal law suits 
  • Jane Burbank (New York University):
    The ties that bind: sovereignty and law in the late Russian Empire 
  • Discussant: Maren Klotz 
 
15.00 - 16.00 SHORT COFFEE BREAK FOLLOWED BY FINAL DISCUSSION  
 



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