[We have the following call from Alexander Volokh.]
I’m running a panel on legal history at the 47th International Congress on Medieval Studies, May 10–13, 2012, in Kalamazoo, Michigan. The title of the panel is Law as Culture: Legal Development and Social Change. The general call for papers is here. The Law as Culture series has been going on at Kalamazoo most years since 1994, sponsored much of the time (including this time) by the Selden Society; for the last couple of years, I’ve been co-organizing these panels with medieval historian Paul Hyams of Cornell.
For this panel, I welcome any papers on medieval legal history.
English legal history is welcome; so is Continental legal history, canon law, or any other tradition practiced in the medieval West, e.g. Jewish or Islamic law.
The concept of “medieval” at Kalamazoo tends to be fairly broad, so you often find papers dealing with late Antiquity on one end, and the Renaissance on the other.
Especially, as the title “Law as Culture” hints, papers are encouraged that draw connections between law and other fields, especially in the humanities or economics (though doctrinal legal papers are also fine).
Those who are interested should send me an abstract at volokh at post dot harvard dot edu by September 15, 2011.