Friday, November 22, 2024

ASLH Max Planck Dissertation Prize for European Legal History in a Global Perspective to Aden Knaap

Continuing our round-up of the prizes and award announced at the recent meeting of the American Society for Legal History, we turn now to the Max Planck Dissertation Prize for European Legal History in a Global Perspective -- awarded for the first time this year. About the prize: 

The Max Planck-ASLH Dissertation Prize for European Legal History in a Global Perspective will honor exceptional dissertations on topics in European legal history in global perspective and presented for PhD or JSD degrees awarded in the previous calendar year. Topics may include European legal interactions with people or places outside Europe, legal processes spanning Europe and other world regions, and developments in legal theory closely related to imperial, transnational, or trans-regional trends.
This inaugural award went to Aden Knaap (Henry Chauncey ’57 Postdoctoral Fellow, Yale Jackson School of Global Affairs) for “Judging the World: International Courts and the Origins of Global Governance, 1899–1971” (Harvard University, 2023). The citation:

The 2023 Max Planck-ASLH Dissertation Prize is awarded to Aden Knaap for his dissertation “Judging the World: International Courts and the Origins of Global Governance, 1899–1971.” This deeply original, carefully researched study presents a sweeping history of world courts, from early initiatives in 1899 to the postwar origins of today’s international courts. The dissertation makes two key contributions. It emphasizes formative efforts to establish world courts in the first half of the twentieth century, an overlooked but important period, and places visions of world courts at the very center of the evolution of global governance. The dissertation reveals how plans for key international institutions, including the World Bank and the United Nations, imagined them initially as global courts. Knaap’s study is based on extensive research in multiple archives and is beautifully written. It brings together legal, diplomatic, and international history in exposing an understudied but important dimension of European and global legal history.
Congratulations to Aden Knaap!

-- Karen Tani