Printed Program PDF - Law and Society Association

Transcription

Printed Program PDF - Law and Society Association
Thursday
Thursday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.
T h u rsd ay Ju n e 2
8 :1 5 a . m . - 1 0 : 0 0 a . m .
All in the Family: Family Law, Wealth Management, and
Corporate Order
CRN: 7
Paper Session
Room: Studio 9
Chair: Jill Hasday, University of Minnesota Law School
Disc:
June Carbone, University of Minnesota
Presentations:
How Family Law Incentivizes Entrepreneurs
Benjamin Means, University of South Carolina School
of Law
Marriage as a Redistributor of Wealth
Erez Aloni, Whittier law school
The Corporate Family
Allison Tait, University of Richmond School of Law
The Wrongs (and Rights) of Intimate Association
Sarah Swan, Columbia University
Primary Keyword: Family and Youth
AMR Salon Session: Amanda Hollis-Brusky - “Ideas
With Consequences: The Federalist Society and the
Conservative Counterrevolution”
CRN: 21
Author Meets Reader (AMR) Session
Room: Carondelet - Table 2
Author: Amanda Hollis-Brusky, Pomona College
Chair: Joshua Wilson, University of Denver
Readers:
Charles Epp, University of Kansas
Laura Nielsen, American Bar Foundation/
Northwestern U
Gerald Rosenberg, University of Chicago
Christopher Schmidt, Chicago-Kent College of Law
Emily Zackin, Johns Hopkins University
There are few intellectual movements in modern America in
political history more successful than the Federalist Society.
Created in 1982 to counterbalance what its founders considered
a liberal legal establishment, the organization gradually evolved
into the conservative legal establishment, and membership is
1 all but required for any conservative lawyer who hopes to enter
politics or the judiciary. It claims 40,000 members, including
four Supreme Court Justices, dozens of federal judges, and
every Republican attorney general since its inception. But its
power goes even deeper.
In Ideas with Consequences, Amanda Hollis-Brusky provides
the first comprehensive account of how the Federalist Society
exerts its influence. Drawing from a huge trove of documents,
transcripts, and interviews, she explains how the Federalist
Society managed to revolutionize the jurisprudence for a wide
variety of important legal issues. Many of these
issues-including the extent of federal government power,
the scope of the right to bear arms, and the parameters of
corporate political speech-had long been considered settled.
But the Federalist Society was able to upend the existing
conventional wisdom, promoting constitutional theories that
had previously been dismissed as ludicrously radical.
As Hollis-Brusky shows, the Federalist Society provided
several of the crucial ingredients needed to accomplish this
constitutional revolution. It serves as a credentialing institution
for conservative lawyers and judges and legitimizes novel
interpretations of the constitution that employ a conservative
framework. It also provides a judicial audience of like-minded
peers, which prevents the well-documented phenomenon of
conservative judges turning moderate after years on the bench.
As a consequence, it is able to exercise enormous influence
on important cases at every level. The book’s contributions to
social scientific and Sociolegal thought are far-reaching. On a
broad level, the book analyses some of the most controversial
political and legal issues of our
time. It is also the essential guide to the Federalist Society at a
time when the organization’s power has broader implications
than ever. More directly related to Sociolegal studies, Ideas
with Consequences is a book examining the dynamics of
constitutional change and the roles that “support structures”
(Epp 1998) play in that process.
In the course of her analysis, Hollis-Brusky creates and deploys
a novel and innovative Sociolegal framework for understanding
the influence of the Federalist Society and for similar legal
interest groups. Drawing on insights from the sociology of
knowledge and interpretive social science, she argues that the
Federalist Society should be understood as a political epistemic
network – a variation on the epistemic community model that is
more suited to groups with authoritative knowledge claims that
involve law and politics. Ideas with Consequences shows how
this novel framework can and ought to be applied to understand
the influence of groups like the Federalist Society – past,
present, and future. In doing so, it makes valuable contributions
to how Sociolegal scholars understand and think about the
dynamics and dimensions of influence.
Given the above, the significance of the book for the Sociolegal
community, as well as for the general understanding of
contemporary law and politics, is clear. Beyond this, the book’s
importance is reflected in those who have eagerly agreed to
Thursday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m. serve as the readers in the proposed Author Meet’s Reader
session.
AMR Salon Session: Dimitri Vanoverbeke -- “Juries in
the Japanese Legal System: The Continuing Struggle for
Citizen Participation and Democracy”
CRN: 33, 4, 44
Author Meets Reader (AMR) Session
Room: Carondelet - Table 1
Author: Dimitri Vanoverbeke. University of Leuven (KU Leuven)
Readers:
Daniel H. Foote, The University of Tokyo
Hiroshi Fukurai, University of California Santa Cruz
Sanja Kutnjak Ivkovich, Michigan State University
Matthew Wilson, University of Akron School of Law
This panel then takes the first monograph in English on Japan’s
2009 “lay judge” or “mixed jury” system (Saiban-in Seido)
that places citizen participation at the center of Japanese
criminal trials as a stepping stone for discussing the socio-legal
implications of Japan’s earlier experiences with the trial by
jury, the political process of legal reform and the unexpected
consequences of the practice of the trial by jury. One of aims
of this book is to investigate the prevailing myth that the trial
by jury is unheard of in Japan. Not only did Japan experience
twice a trial by jury since it started to transplant judicial
institutions in the 19th Century and even once after the Second
World War in Okinawa, the current political process and
socio-legal function of the Saiban-in citizen participation in the
criminal trials shows striking similarities to Japan’s previous
experiences with the trial by jury. Vanoverbeke applies sociolegal methodology to historical, primary sources to retrace
the institutional path that Japan has embarked upon since it
adopted law and judicial institutions from Europe and from
the US. While transplanting those institutions, the legislative
process and the implementation of the institutions – the trial by
jury being a case in point – resulted in functional divergences
and unexpected consequences. It is important to debate the
genesis, content and evolution of the implementation of the
trial by jury at different stages of Japan’s history to understand
the legal transformations that the Japanese criminal justice
system experiences today. Vanoverbeke’s earlier research on
mediation of civil disputes, the death penalty and the judicial
reform process in Japan of the 1990s among others topics, goes
beyond the importance of law in Japan. It also provides a view
on how law and judicial reform happens or fails to happen in
a political context at a certain time and how this carries on its
legacy towards later attempts to reform.
Primary Keyword: East Asia
CRN: 23
Author Meets Reader (AMR) Session
Room: Carondelet - Table 3
Author: Sumudu Atapattu, University of Wisconsin Law School
Carmen Gonzalez, Seattle University School of Law
Chair: Sara Seck, Western University
Readers:
Rebecca Bratspies, CUNY School of Law
Sheila Foster, Fordham Law School
Erika George, University of Utah School of Law
Usha Natarajan, The American University in Cairo
A decade after Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans,
conflicts between rich and poor nations (the North-South
divide) continue to compromise efforts to protect the global
environment, leading to deadlocks in environmental treaty
negotiations and non-compliance with existing agreements.
International Environmental Law and the Global South examines
both the historical origins of the North-South divide in European
colonialism as well as its contemporary manifestations in a
range of issues, including food justice, energy justice, indigenous
rights, trade, investment, extractive industries, human rights,
land grabs, natural disasters, hazardous waste, and climate
change. Born out of the recognition that global inequality
and profligate consumerism present threats to a sustainable
planet, this book makes a unique contribution to international
environmental law by emphasizing the priorities and concerns
of the states and peoples of the global South. The readers
for this book will address its contributions to several distinct
areas of law, including environmental law, human rights law,
environmental justice, international economic law, and Third
World and post-colonial approaches to international law.
Primary Keyword: International Law and Politics
AMR Salon Session: Paul Nolette - “Federalism on Trial”
Author Meets Reader (AMR) Session
Room: Carondelet - Table 4
Author: Paul Nolette, Marquette University
Primary Keyword: Social Movements and Legal Mobilization
Chair: Thomas Burke, Wellesley College
Readers:
Catherine Albiston, University of California, Berkeley
Jeb Barnes, USC
Thomas Burke, Wellesley College
Gordon Silverstein, Yale
2 Thursday
Primary Keyword: Constitutional Law and Constitutionalism
AMR Salon Session: International Environmental Law
and the Global South
Thursday
Thursday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.
“It is one of the happy incidents of the federal system,” Justice
Louis Brandeis wrote in 1932, “that a single courageous state
may, if its citizens choose, serve as a laboratory, and try novel
social and economic experiments without risk to the rest of
the country.” It is one of the features of federalism in our day,
Paul Nolette counters, that these “laboratories of democracy,”
under the guidance of state attorneys general, are more apt
to be dictating national policy than conducting contained
experiments. In Federalism on Trial (University of Kansas
Press, 2015), Nolette presents the first broad examination
of the increasingly nationalized political activism of state
attorneys general. Focusing on coordinated state litigation as
a form of national policymaking, his book challenges common
assumptions about the contemporary nature of American
federalism.
Federalism on Trial shows how new social policy regimes
of the 1960s and 70s-adopting national objectives such as
cleaner air, wider access to health care, and greater consumer
protections-promoted both “adversarial legalism” and new
forms of “cooperative federalism” that enhanced the powers
of state attorneys general. Nolette traces case studies involving
state attorney general lawsuits on tobacco injuries, drug pricing,
environmental policy, and health care reform. The form of
federalism exercised by state attorneys general, Nolette argues,
frequently complicates national regulatory regimes and creates
both greater policy centralization and a more extensive reach of
the American regulatory state.
AMR Salon Session: Pooja Parmar - ‘Indigeneity and
Legal Pluralism in India: Claims, Histories, Meanings’
(Cambridge University Press, 2015)
CRN: 22, 15
Author Meets Reader (AMR) Session
Room: Carondelet - Table 5
Author: Pooja Parmar, University of Victoria
Chair: Balakrishnan Rajagopal, MIT
Readers:
Eve Darian-Smith, UC Santa Barbara
Jonathan Goldberg-Hiller, University of Hawai`i
Jayanth Krishnan, Indiana University, Bloomington
Sanghamitra Padhy, Ramapo College
Justin Richland, University of Chicago
This panel explores the diverse and nuanced ways in which
Indigeneity and Legal Pluralism in India: Claims, Histories,
Meanings (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2015)
engages with concerns taken up in multiple fields of socio-legal
study. The book focuses on a dispute that began with protests
over excessive extraction of groundwater by a Coca-Cola
bottling facility in India, and highlights critical issues of access
to justice and Indigeneity in places with complex, contested
and layered histories of dispossession and exclusion. Based on
3 interviews with Adivasis, lawyers, activists, judges, bureaucrats
and politicians, as well as original legal and archival research,
this book juxtaposes the various accounts of the dispute in
order to trace the gains and loss in meaning as Adivasi claims
are translated into the languages of social movements, media
and the formal legal system. This panel brings together scholars
working on a number of issues this book engages with, including
legal pluralism, indigeneity, social movements, water rights, the
legal profession and formal legal system in India, ethnography,
legal discourse and epistemology. The purpose of this panel
is to reflect on the ways in which the book draws upon and
contributes to law and society scholarship generally, as well
explore possibilities for critical interdisciplinary conversations
between the more specific fields of socio-legal scholarship.
Primary Keyword: Colonialism and Post-Colonialism
AMR Salon Session: Wadie Said - “Crimes of Terror: The
Legal and Political Implications of Federal Terrorism
Prosecutions”
Author Meets Reader (AMR) Session
Room: Carondelet - Table 6
Author: Wadie Said, University of South Carolina School of Law
Chair: Ramzi Kassem, CUNY School of Law
Readers:
Asli Bali, UCLA School of Law
Ramzi Kassem, CUNY School of Law
Aziz Rana, Cornell Law School
The U.S. government’s power to categorize individuals
as terrorist suspects and therefore ineligible for certain
long-standing constitutional protections has expanded
exponentially since 9/11, all the while remaining resistant to
oversight. Professor Wadie Said’s Crimes of Terror: The Legal
and Political Implications of Federal Terrorism Prosecutions
provides a comprehensive and uniquely up-to-date dissection
of the government’s advantages over suspects in criminal
prosecutions of terrorism, which are driven by a preventive
mindset that purports to stop plots before they can come to
fruition. It establishes the background for these controversial
policies and practices and then demonstrates how they have
impeded the normal goals of criminal prosecution, even in
light of a competing military tribunal model. Proceeding in a
linear manner from the investigatory stage of a prosecution on
through to sentencing, the book documents the emergence
of a “terrorist exceptionalism” to normal rules of criminal
law and procedure and questions whether the government
has overstated the threat posed by the individuals it charges
with these crimes. Included is a discussion of the large-scale
spying and use of informants rooted in the questionable
“radicalization” theory; the material support statute--the
government’s chief legal tool in bringing criminal prosecutions;
the new rules regarding generation of evidence and the broad
Thursday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m. Primary Keyword: War and Law including Security and
Terrorism
AMR: Srimati Basu - “The Trouble With Marriage:
Feminists Confront Law and Violence in India”, University
of California Press, 2015.
CRN: 7, 22, 3
Author Meets Reader (AMR) Session
Room: Salon E
Author: Srimati Basu, University of Kentucky
Chair: Srimati Basu, University of Kentucky
Readers:
Amy Cohen, Ohio State University
Clare Huntington, Fordham Law School
Saptarshi Mandal, Jindal Global Law School
Sally Engle Merry, New York University
Mitra Sharafi, University of Wisconsin-Madison
As an ethnographic portrait of alternative dispute resolution,
an evaluation of feminist legal reform projects on marriage
and gendered violence, and an account of negotiations of
kinship with law in the postcolonial Indian state, The Trouble
with Marriage addresses several critical fields of sociolegal
studies, and is thus jointly proposed as a session for the CRNs
Ethnography, Law and Society, Feminist Legal Theory and South
Asia. The book poses fundamental concerns about feminist
legal reform and the difficult processes involved in seeking
accountability for gender-based violence: how do feministinspired laws work after they are institutionalized? Do they
subvert gender justice in the ways they begin to be used?
The Trouble with Marriage considers the legacies of legal
reforms around marriage and gendered violence in India in
the 1980’s which were strongly influenced by demands of the
women’s movement, tracing what happens to demands for legal
change as they pass through legislatures, become institutions
and are folded into everyday life. The primary focus is on legal
sites of marital trouble, based on ethnographic observation
of Family Courts, police cells for women, and mediation
organizations. Based on fieldwork in Kolkata (India), it provides
a portrait of marriage and domestic violence as observed
through new feminist interventions: lawyer-free Family Courts,
the criminal prosecution of domestic violence, rape law reform,
and the promotion of alternate dispute resolution as a mode
of better gendered access. It follows the ways in which people
bargain in the shadow of these laws, creating new subjectivities
and strategies, while dwelling on the methodological difficulties
of determining culture through law.
Through life stories of litigants and mediators, media
representations of marriage and violence, legislative histories
and puzzles of case law, the book leads readers to consider
theoretical questions related to the nature of marriage, the
efficacy of law, and the limits of feminist jurisprudence. It
demonstrates that some laws become popular in ways not
imagined as part of their feminist scope: Family Courts proffer
reconciliation, rape law secures marriage; domestic violence
claims help with economic settlements. That is, such laws begin
to be used in ways that subvert the feminist goals of violence
prevention, sexual agency and economic well-being. ADR,
imagined as informal justice which would ensure easier access
to legal process, is often unable to work outside the forms of
power inculcated within law, and may minimize violence against
women in concentrating on financial agreements
Reviewers have praised the book for its readability, rich
ethnographic material, and analyses of feminist theoretical
questions related to marriage, law, and the limits of feminist
jurisprudence, Historian Mrinalini Sinha describes it as an
“empirically rich, theoretically sophisticated, and beautifully
written book [which] deserves to be read very widely”; legal
scholar Prabha Kotiswaran as “a riveting feminist ethnography
of the new legal frontiers of marriage in India.”
Primary Keyword: South Asia
Bridging the Gap Between Individual and Global: Legal
Mobilization in Communities and Organizations
CRN: 21
Paper Session
Room: Studio 6
Chair: Janice Gallagher, Watson Institute, Brown University
Disc: Anna-Maria Marshall, University of Illinois, Urbana-
Champaign
Primary Keyword: Social Movements and Legal Mobilization
Presentations:
Collective Litigation and the Constitutional Challenges
to Decriminalize Homosexuality in Singapore.
Lynette Chua, National University of Singapore
From Individual Resistance to Collective Mobilization
around Rights: Filipino Migrant Workers in the Colonial
Era
4 Thursday
construction of that evidence as relevant at trial; and a look
at the special sentencing and confinement regimes for those
convicted of terrorist crimes. In this critical examination of
terrorism prosecutions in federal court, Professor Said reveals
a phenomenon at odds with basic constitutional protections
for criminal defendants. This group of readers will bring their
various areas of expertise on matters of national security,
constitutional law, criminal law, rule of law, and critical race
theory, to discuss Professor Said’s engaging and groundbreaking work and consider implications for the future of
terrorism and criminal prosecutions alike.
Thursday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.
Thursday
Michael McCann, University of Washington
George Lovell, University of Washington
Legal Framing as a Mechanism for Producing Collective
Action: Evidence from Community Opposition to
Sexually Violent Predators
Monica Williams, Weber State University
Mapping Legal Mobilization from the Grassroots to
the International Level: Trade Unions at the European
Court of Human Rights
Filiz Kahraman, University of Washington
Queering Rights: How Rights Episodes Impact
Intersectional Coalition-Building in LGBTQ, Latin@, and
Immigrant Communities
Erin Adam, University of Washington, Political Science
Disc:
Manoj Mate, Whittier Law School
Primary Keyword: South Asia
Presentations:
Islamic Judicial Review: Law, Politics and Finance in
Pakistan between Pragmatism and Idealism
Shoaib Ghias, University of California, Berkeley
Legal Actors as Archivists of Memory: Militarization,
Mobilization, and Memorialization in Kashmir
Haley Duschinski, Ohio University
Pardoning the Executioner: Litigating Extrajudicial
Killing in India
Surabhi Chopra, Chinese University of Hong Kong
Citizenship and Immigration in Canada
Return of the “Moral Law”
Ahmed Ibrahim, Graduate Center, City University of
New York
Room: Galerie 1
The Jurisprudence of “Judicial Independence” in
Pakistan
Anil Kalhan, Drexel University
CRN: 2
Paper Session
Primary Keyword: Citizenship, Migration, Immigration and
Nation
Presentations:
Revocation of Citizenship as a weapon in the War
Against Terror: Examining Canada’s immigration reform
with Bill C-24, Strengthening Canadian Citizenship Act
Tanja Juric, York University
Stateless Nationals, Obscure Violence: The Question of
Canadianness During the Second World War
Darren Tanaka, University of British Columbia
Okanagan
The Extraordinary Statelessness of Deepan Budlakoti:
The Erosion of Canadian Citizenship through Citizenship
Deprivation
Daiva Stasiulis, Carleton University, Department of
Sociology and Anthropology
The Invisible Women: Migrant Sex Workers in the
Shadows of Bedford, Bill C-36 and Canadian Law
Jamie Liew, University of Ottawa
Contesting Legitimacy: Legal Mobilization, Political
Power, and Moral Order in Comparative Contexts
CRN: 22
Paper Session
Room: Studio 4
Chair:
5 Terence Halliday, American Bar Foundation
‘Rule of Law’ for All: Legal and Political Mobilization in
the Lawyers’ Movement for Restoration of Judiciary
and Democracy (2007-09) in Pakistan
Salman Hussain, The Graduate Center, CUNY
Constitutional Law and Legal Culture in Comparative
Perspectives: Asia and the Americas
CRN: 1
Paper Session
Room: Studio 3
Chair: Edna Raquel Hogemann, UNESA
Disc: Denis De Castro Halis, Faculty of Law / University of Macau
Primary Keyword: Constitutional Law and Constitutionalism
Presentations:
The meanings of the Due Process of Law Clause in
Brazil and in the United States of America.
Rafael Mario Iorio Filho, Universidade Estácio de Sá e
INCT-InEAC
Fernanda Duarte, UNESA e INCT/InEAC/PROPPI/UFF
Efficacy and Global Constitutionalism: the case of the
Inter-American Court of Human Rights
Carina Calábria, Manchester University
Rhetoric of Global Constitutional Law
Octaviano Arruda, Hamburg Universität
Thursday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m. Disaster and Law in the Pacific Rim Region
CRN:33 and IRC: 15
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 5
Chair: Takayuki Ii, Senshu University
Disc:
Eric Feldman, University of Pennsylvania Law School
Bank Fraud Crimes under China’s Criminal Law –
Lessons to Learn from the United States
Yuan Qiao, Shenzhen University Law School
Yueyi Chen, Shenzhen University
Tales From Another Delta: The Case of Individual
Choice in Insolvency Law in 18th Century Guangzhou
Neil Andrews, College of Law and Justice, Victoria
University
Fairness of Trials
Paper Session
Room: Balcony J
Chair/Disc: Hadar Aviram, UC Hastings College of the Law
Primary Keyword: Disasters
Primary Keyword: Courts And Trials
Presentations:
Litigation for Disaster Justice: Post-disaster Recovery of
3/11 victims
Eri Osaka, Toyo University
Presentations:
Diversionary Pathways for Indigenous Young People
with Foetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders in Western
Australia: Mentally Impaired Accused Legislation and
the Need for ‘Decolonising’ Alternatives
Tamara Tulich, Law School, University of Western
Australia
Harry Blagg, Law School, University of Western
Australia
Zoe Bush, Univeristy of Western Australia Law School
National Mechanism for Loss and Damage (L&D) from
Climate Change: Rapid Assessment of the Legal and
Institutional Frameworks for Determining L&D in the
Philippines
Ebinezer Florano, University of the Philippines
Norm Conflicts in Disaster Recovery: Case Studies from
Asia Including East Japan
Yuka Kaneko, Kobe University
Post Disaster Situation in Nepal ~Necessary Legal
Systems to Tackle Their Disaster Related Issues~
Satoko Tomita, Japan International Coorperation
Agency
Rabin Subedi, JICA Legal Support Adviser ’s Office
The Legal Impact of the Great East Japan Earthquake
and Tsunami
Takayuki Ii, Senshu University
Economy, Business and Law in East Asia
CRN: 33
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 6
Primary Keyword: Economy, Business and Society
Presentations:
Auditor’s Litigation Risk, Organizational Form and
Liability Regimes: An Empirical Legal Study of China
Chun-Yaun Chen, National Chiao Tung University
Serving Justice: Exploring the Challenges facing US
Courts and the Potential of Socio-Legal Research to
Help Address Them
Keith Guzik, University of Colorado Denver
The Effect of Open File Criminal Discovery
Ben Grunwald, University of Chicago
The Right to a Fair Trial- Court Interpreters and Their
Possibilities of Competent Interpretations: A Sociolegal Approach to Interpreted Criminal Court Cases in
Sweden.
Annika Staaf, Dep of Criminology
“If You Don’t Put in Your Buck Oh-Five, Who Will?”:
Legal Standards, Litigant Choice, and Judicial
Characteristics
Matthew Krell, University of Alabama
Family Law and Social Change in Latin America: Where
do Feminists Belong?
Paper Session
Room: Balcony K
Chair: Isabel C Jaramillo Sierra, Universidad de los Andes
6 Thursday
The Comparative Study of Constitutional Interpretation
Theory between U.S.A. Supreme Court and East Asian
Constitutional Court (Korea & Japan) : Changing a
Constitutional Culture for 19-21C
Younghoa Jung, School of Law, Chonbuk National
University
Thursday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.
Thursday
Disc:
Francisca Pou Gimenez, ITAM
Primary Keyword: Feminist Jurisprudence
Presentations:
Alimony Obligations Between Spouses After Divorce:
Towards Recognition of Care and Domestic Labors in
Colombia
Mariana Garcia-Jimeno, Universidad de los Andes
Feminism and the Family: The Case of Latin America
Isabel C Jaramillo Sierra, Universidad de los Andes
Matrimonial Property System and Feminist
Movements: Historical Social, Political and Legal
Context Surrounding the Enactment of the Law 328 of
1925 in Chile
Marcela Gomez, University of Los andes
The De Facto Marital Union or ‘Cohabiting Union’ in
Colombia: A Historical Analysis of the Legal Regulation
to Protect Cohabiting Women and the Role of Women’s
Movements
Mariana Castrellon, Stanford University
Where are the Feminists? Reconnecting Family Law
and Social Change in Latin America
Alma Beltran y Puga, University of Los Andes
Ferguson’s Fault Lines Transcend Ferguson
Roundtable Session
Room: Balcony L
Chair: Kimberly Norwood, Washington University School of Law
Participants:
Kimberly Norwood, Washington University School of
Law
L. Song Richardson, University of California, Irvine
School of Law
Brendan Roediger, Saint Louis University School of Law
Vetta Thompson, Washington University School of
Social Work
Howard Wasserman, FIU College of Law
This Roundtable will explore the legal, historical and social ills
that gave rise to the eruption in Ferguson, Missouri after the
shooting death of Michael Brown on August 9, 2014 by police
officer Darren Wilson. The session will discuss the history
of police violence against black bodies, the history of racial
segregation based on housing and education, and it will explore
the ways in which various courts and police in the region
worked in tandem to systemically violate the constitutional
rights of poor and Black people while generating revenue (and
profits) for municipalities. We will also explore the psychological
7 effects of continued and systemic stresses on communities,
explore how systematic and predictable decision-making errors
produce racial disparities in police use of force cases and will
look at the efficacy of body cameras. Because these problems
transcend Ferguson--existing nationwide--solutions that look
more broadly than Ferguson will be discussed.
Primary Keyword: Class and Inequality
From Questions of Belonging to Questions of Excess:
Unveiling the Place of Law in Spaces of Social Change
CRN: 3
Paper Session
Room: Balcony M
Chair/Disc: Kathryn Henne, Australian National University
Primary Keyword: Geographies of Law
Presentations:
American Think Tanks, Foreign Policy Elites, and Spaces
of Exception
Negar Razavi, University of Pennsylvania
Prison Healthcare and the Legal Economy of Suffering
Nicholas Iacobelli, University of Pennsylvania
The Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill: Considering Race and
Collective Meaning in Legal Consciousness
Jamila Loud, University of Maryland College Park
Human Rights: Discourses, Policies, Politics
Paper Session
Room: Balcony N
Chair/Disc: Ben Golder, UNSW
Primary Keyword: Human Rights
Presentations:
A treaty on Business & Human Rights: do the processes
towards the UN Framework and UN Guiding Principles
hold any lessons?
Karin Buhmann, Copenhagen Business School
Human Rights, Corruption Talk, and the Imagined State
in Ghana
Catherine Buerger, University of Connecticut
Human Rights: From Legal Transplants to Fair
Translation
James Donovan, University of Kentucky
The Social Responsibility of Home States to Protect
from Extraterritorial Human Rights Violations by
Companies: Exploring the Emergence of a New
Thursday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m. Institutional Experimentation and Legal and
Constitutional Decision-Making
Paper Session
Room: Bonaparte
Chair/Disc: Jedidiah Kroncke, FGV Sao Paulo
Primary Keyword: Constitutional Law and Constitutionalism
Presentations:
Glass Walls between the Society and the Public
Administration? From Administrative Transparency
towards Administrative Democracy
Tiago Fidalgo de Freitas, European University Institute
& University of Lisbon
Information and Communication Technologies
for Improving the Legislative Process: Towards an
Interactive Legislative Process
Joao Longhi, Federal University of Uberlandia
Rubens Becak, University of Sao Paulo
Polycentric Disputes in Public Law litigation; Thirdparty Standing and Third-party Intervention in Judicial
Review of Administrative Action
Francisco Paes Marques, University of Lisbon
Unconstitutional Actions in the Mexican Democracy: A
Way to Defend Political Minorities
María Amparo Hernández Chong Cuy, Federal
Electoral Tribunal
Theodicy of Modernity through the United Nations
Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, 1961
Kojo Koram, Birkbeck College, University of London
Travancore’s Challenge to British Extraterritoriality:
Sovereignty and International Law in NineteenthCentury South Asia
Priyasha Saksena, Harvard Law School
Lives After Prison I: The Challenges of Reentry
CRN: 27
Paper Session
Room: Studio 7
Chair/Disc: Paula Maurutto, University of Toronto
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
Presentations:
Criminal Justice and the Community: the Micro Politics
of Problem Solving around Risk
Marianne Quirouette, University of Toronto
Relying on Other Ex-Offenders during the Transition
from Prison to Community: Implications for Association
Provisions in New York State Parole Policy
Robert Riggs, New York University
The Vulnerability of Formerly Incarcerated Populations:
The Perpetuation of a “Rabble” Class
Andrea Leverentz, University of Massachusetts Boston
Women’s Reintegration Employment: Perspectives
from Community Organizations and Frontline Workers
Anita Grace, Carleton University
Legacies of An Other: The “Development” of the Modern
International System
Negotiating Executive/Judicial Boundaries In (Trans)
National Legal Orders
Room: Galvez
Room:Jackson
Chair/Disc: Jhuma Sen, O. P. Jindal Global University
Chair/Disc: Basak Cali, Koc University
Primary Keyword: International Law and Politics
Primary Keyword: Transnational Legal Orders, International and
Regional Institutions
Paper Session
Presentations:
Combating Proliferation of Weapons of Mass
Destruction: Law, Politics and Institutional Design of
the UN Security Council Resolution 1540.
Sarah Shirazyan, Stanford Law School
Comparative Animal Law and Human Development
Steven Tauber, University of South Florida
Paper Session
Presentations:
Consolidating Regulatory Authority through
Cooperation – A Case Study of the ISO 26000 Standard
Setting Process
Rebecca Schmidt, SUNY Buffalo; York University
(Canada)
Legislating the Zone of Non-Being: Race and the
8 Thursday
International Norm
Andreas Graf, Swiss Peace Foundation swisspeace,
University of Basel
Thursday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.
Thursday
Democratic legitimacy of the Inter-American Court of
Human Rights as ground of its competence to control
the national legislation of Latin-American States
Natalia Torres Zuniga, University of Oslo
Narrating The Nature of International Commercial
Arbitration: The Primacy of State Courts as ‘Storyteller’
Cornelis Baaij, Yale Law School
The (D)Evolving Meanings of ‘Judicial Activism’: A
Comparative Analysis of the Terminology in Several
Common Law Jurisdictions
Tanya Josev, University of Melbourne
The Complexity of Unifying Varied Data Protection
Policies in the European Union
Susanna Southworth, The University of Utah
John Francis, The University of Utah
Trade Associations as Market Makers and Regulators
Sarah Dadush, Rutgers School of Law, Newark
New Legal Realism 1: Unifying Concept - Science in Court
CRN: 28
Paper Session
Room: Salon H-G
Primary Keyword: New Legal Realism
Presentations:
Anthropology on Trial: Exploring the Laws of
Anthropological Expertise
Olaf Zenker, Freie Universität Berlin
Asylum decision making across the U.S. Courts of
Appeals
B. Robert Owens, University of Chicago
Managing Diversity in the Americas: The Use of
Cultural Expert Witnesses in Legal Proceedings
Leila Rodriguez, University of Cincinnati
Social Science and the Courts: The Case of Affirmative
Action
Karen Miksch, University of Minnesota
Pedagogies of Place and Space: Emotion and Language in
the Law School Classroom
Roundtable Session
Room:Iberville
Chair: Sharon Cowan, university of edinburgh
Participants:
Gavin Anderson, University of Glasgow
9 Gillian Calder, University of Victoria
Kate Sutherland, Osgoode Hall Law School, York
University
Feminist scholars have long challenged the notion that legal
reasoning is separable from or oppositional to human emotion
(Bandes 2001: Abrahms 2010). This roundtable explores
the challenges of provoking and navigating emotions in the
law school classroom. Many legal topics prompt emotional
responses, both positive and negative, from teachers and
students. Informed by the work of Paulo Freire and Augusto
Boal, we will discuss how to integrate the use of affectively
imbued materials in the classroom, and the kinds of pedagogical
methods that can be used to challenge text-based learning
(Del Mar and Bankowski 2013), without reproducing gendered,
racialized or other hierarchies (Leo Moore 2008). Looking across
various subjects in the law school curriculum – for example,
criminal law, business associations, medical law and human
rights – we show how the use of visual, audio and theatre
techniques can highlight the importance and difficulty of
‘managing’ our emotions in teaching and learning law.
Primary Keyword: Teaching Law and Society
Policing in American Cities
Paper Session
Room: Salon B
Chair: Forrest Stuart, University of Chicago
Disc: Issa Kohler-Hausmann, Yale Law School
Primary Keyword: Policing
Presentations:
“Consensual” Police Searches in Los Angeles
David Greenberg, New York University
Lily Khadjavi, Loyola Marymount University
An Audit Model of Policing
Kathie Barnes, University of Arizona
Race and Policing: How to Make Sense of the Numbers
(And How Not To)
Sonja Starr, Michigan Law School
The Impact of COMPSTAT on Homicide Rates in New
York City: A Synthetic Control Approach
Tomislav Kovandzic, University of Texas at Dallas
Lynne Vieraitis, University of Texas at Dallas
The Racialization of Broken Windows
Jessica Kalbfeld, New York University
Thursday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m. Regulating Biotechnology
Chair: Browne Lewis, Cleveland Marshall College of Law
Disc:
Imogen Goold, University of Oxford
Primary Keyword: Bioethics, Biotechnology and the Law
Presentations:
From Millenium to Sustainable Development Goals
(MDGs to SDGs): Enforcement and Compliance in the
New Strategies of Environmental Regulation
Rafael Diniz Pucci, USP UNIVERSITY OF SÃO PAULO
Inconsistent Visions of Public Participation in the
European Union’s Regulation of Synthetic Biology
Olivia Hamlyn, University College London
Issues in the Regulation of Genome Editing: Bridging
the Gap between Science and Socio-Economic
Considerations
Artem Anyshchenko, University of Copenhagen
Religion, Law and Culture
Paper Session
Primary Keyword: Economy, Global Economy and Law
Presentations:
Consumers’ Behaviors and Information Disclosure in
Energy Markets
Carlotta GO Frattari, Yale University
Governance in the International Seabed
Area: Oversight for Sustainable Development
Yao Zhou, University of Wisconsin Law School
Pilar Ossorio, University of Wisconsin Law School
Lawyering in new developmentalism: legal
professionals and the construction of the Telecom
sector in the emerging Brazil (1980s–2010s)
Fabio de Sa e Silva, Institute of Applied Economic
Research (Ipea); Harvard Law School’s Center on the
Legal Profession
David Trubek, University of Wisconsin, Madison
The Post-2015 Sustainable Development Agenda
and Corporate Social Responsibility: Whither Human
Rights?
Megan McCloskey, Lotus Circle
Tax Session 1: Business Taxes
Room:Regent
CRN: 31
Paper Session
Chair/Disc: Jason Whitehead, CSU, Long Beach
Room: Galerie 3
Primary Keyword: Religion and Law
Chair/Disc: Diane Ring, Boston College Law School
Presentations:
Encountering the Other: The Sharia/Secularism
Discourse in Nigeria
Rabiat Akande, Harvard Law School
Primary Keyword: Taxation
Liberalism, Marriage, and the Polygyny Question
Ronald Den Otter, Cal Poly San Luis Obispo
Transnational impact of Religious law developments
Lisbet Christoffersen, Roskilde University
Bettina Lemann Kristiansen, Åarhus University
Women’s Bodies, Women’s Souls: Judaism and
Autonomy
Betina Appel Kuzmarov, Carleton University
Sustainable Development and Trade
Paper Session
Presentations:
A Conceptual Framework for Capital Gains
Calvin Johnson, University of Texas
Corporate Social Responsibility and Taxation: The Next
Step of the Evolution
Doron Narotzki, The University of Akron
The Conceptual Incompatibility of Corporate Tax
Avoidance with CSR and Stakeholder Theory
Karie Davis-Nozemack, Georgia Tech
An empirical analysis of the Allowance for Corporate
Equity (ACE) system in Brazil
Melina Rocha Lukic, Fundacao Getulio Vargas - Direito
Rio
José Roberto Afonso, Fundacao Getulio Vargas - IBRE
Room: Balcony I
Chair/Disc: Joseph Conti, University of Wisconsin, Madison
10 Thursday
Paper Session
Room: Salon C
Thursday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.
Elizabeth Chambliss, University of South Carolina
School of Law
Dana Remus, University of North Carolina School of
Law
Thursday
The Punitive State I: Pre-Trial Detention and Bail
CRN: 27
Paper Session
Room: Studio 2
Public-Private Lawyering
Zachary Clopton, Cornell Law School
Chair/Disc: Joshua Kaiser, Northwestern University/American Bar Foundation
What Deference Demands: Agencies’ Duty to Interpret
When Subject to Deferential Judicial Review
Aaron Saiger, Fordham Law School
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
Presentations:
Beyond Retribution: Early Understandings of the
Functions of Punishment
Jessica Bregant, University of Chicago
Katherine Kinzler, Cornell University
Alex Shaw, University of Chicago
Danger: Bail Reform and the Challenge of Predictive
Restraint
Sandy Mayson, University of Pennsylvania Law School
Restoring Dignity and Reputation
Jamila Jefferson-Jones, University of Missouri Kansas
City
The Relationship Between Undergraduate Legal Studies
and Law School Education, a Perspective from Undergrad
Professors
Professional Development Panel
Room: Salon D
Chair: Renee Cramer, Drake University
Participants:
Daniel LaChance, Emory University
Jinee Lokaneeta, Drew University
Aaron Lorenz, Ramapo College
Jamie Rowen, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Who Are the Lawyers of the Government Client?
Paper Session
Room: Studio 5
Chair: Elizabeth Chambliss, University of South Carolina School of Law
Disc: Margaret Lemos, Duke Law School
Who Belongs? Who Doesn’t? Legal Education: Plus Ca
Change?
Paper Session
Room: Studio 1
Chair: Carole Silver, Northwestern University Law School
Disc:
Stephen Daniels, American Bar Foundation
Primary Keyword: Professional Education
Presentations:
“BARBRI on Steroids?” Teaching (International) Lawyers
How to Think, Speak, and Act like (US) Lawyers
Mindie Lazarus-Black, Temple University
A Faustian Bargain? The Role of Debt in Law Students’
Career Choices
Anna Raup-Kounovsky, University of California, Irvine
Carroll Seron, University of California, Irvine
Steven Boutcher, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
Building Teacher Awareness of Student Learning
Approaches and Issues: Reflections from the Smart
Casual Online Initiative
Alex Steel, University of New South Wales
Mark Israel, University of Western Australia
Mary Heath, Flinders Law School
Anne Hewitt, Adelaide Law School
Kate Galloway, Bond University
Natalie Skead, University of Western Australia
Legal Training and the Reshaping of French Law
Rachel Vanneuville, CNRS
Liora Israël, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences
Sociales, Paris
Primary Keyword: Regulation & Governance
Outisders in the U.S. Legal Professoriate
Elizabeth Mertz, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Presentations:
Nothing Could Be Finer? The Role of Agency General
Counsel in North and South Carolina
Mind Your Language
Carole Silver, Northwestern University Law School
Swethaa S. Ballakrishnen, NYU Abu Dhabi
11 Thursday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. Who Made International Justice?
Room: Studio 10
Chair: Sara Dezalay, Goethe University
Disc:
Ron Levi, University of Toronto
Primary Keyword: Transnational Legal Orders, International and
Regional Institutions
Presentations:
Beyond Diffusion of European-Style ICs: the Local
Origins of the East African and Central American Courts
of Justice
Salvatore Caserta, iCourts- Center of Excellence for
International Courts
Mihreteab Taye, iCourts, Faculty of Law, University of
Copenhagen
scholarship in the service of conceptual innovation in the
analysis of law and the history of law. As its title suggests, this
project is of particular interest to socio-legal scholars. “Law
As…” positions itself as a challenge to the particular mode of
legal interdisciplinarity (‘Law and…Development / Economics /
Literature…” etc.) which seeks to understand more about “law”
by juxtaposing it against a context perceived as external, more
in touch with “reality”, and therefore potentially enlightening.
“Law and Society” is, of course, one of the most important and
productive example of this approach.
Primary Keyword: Legal History
Th u rsd ay Ju n e 2
10: 15 a.m. – 12: 00 p .m .
Revisiting Law’s Boundaries
Salon Session
Room: Carondelet - Table 1
Challenging Impunity or ‘Chasing Africans’? Discourses
of Justice in The Trial of Chad’s Hissène Habré in
Senegal
Kerstin Carlson, The American University of Paris
Chair/Disc: John Acevedo, Barry University Dwayne O. Andreas
School of Law
Competing to define international crimes: Elites of
core crimes and corruption in the field of international
criminal law
Mikkel Christensen, iCourts, Faculty of Law, University
of Copenhagen
Presentations:
A Washington Killing: An Early Case of Justification,
Insanity or Jury Nullification?
Al Lawrence, Empire State College
Transnational Legal Power Networks: Human Rights
NGOs in International Criminal Justice
Kjersti Lohne, University of Oslo
“Law As…”: Law, Method, History.
CRN: 23
Roundtable Session
Room: Galerie 2
Chair: Marianne Constable, UC Berkeley
Sundhya Pahuja, University of Melbourne
Participants:
Luis Eslava, Kent Law School
Genevieve Painter, UC Berkeley
Rose Parfitt, Melbourne Law School
Kunal Parker, University of Miami School of Law
Christopher Tomlins, University of California, Berkeley
“Law As …” is the umbrella title for a biennial symposium
initiated by Professor Christopher Tomlins in 2010. Over the
past five years, its participants have worked to assemble original
configurations of historical, social scientific, literary, and legal
Primary Keyword: Legal History
Shocks the Conscience: A Legal Test from the Margin
Carol Pauli, Texas A&M University School of Law
“Law and Disorder in the Postcolony”: Celebrating Ten
Years in Print and Practice.
CRN: 23
Roundtable Session
Room: Galerie 2
Chair: Eve Darian-Smith, UC Santa Barbara
Participants:
John Comaroff, Harvard
Sally Engle Merry, New York University
Lisa Wedeen, University of Chicago
Published in 2006 by University of Chicago Press, and edited
by Jean Comaroff and John Comaroff, Law and Disorder in
the Postcolony began with a problem, a presumption and a
paradox. Its problem concerned the ubiquitous use of law in
the postcolonies of Africa, Asia, Europe, and Latin America all
said then to be increasingly “disordered.” Its presumption was
that “something [new] may be at issue” in the effervescence
of their different deployments of, and challenges to, the law –
12 Thursday
CRN: 36
Paper Session
Thursday
Thursday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
something residing at the core of these “hypen-nated” nations
that signalled a [new] conjuncture of “violence, sovereignty, il/
legality [and] modernity”. That these postcolonies seemed to
be making “a fetish of the rule of law, of its languages and its
practices, its ways and means” even as they continually mocked,
mimicked, suspended, and sequestered the law was the
paradox at the core of the book.
The Philippines and the Emergence of the Creedal
Constitution
Aziz Rana, Cornell Law School
The Role of Federal Torts in the Conquest of America
K-Sue Park, Texas RioGrande Legal Aid
Primary Keyword: Ethnography
AMR: Christopher N. J. Roberts - Human Rights Struggles,
Contentious Histories, and Sociolegal Scholarship
(Human) Rights, Justice and Courts in North and South
East Asia
Room: Salon E
CRN: 33
Paper Session
Author Meets Reader (AMR) Session
Author: Christopher Roberts, Univ. of Minnesota Law School
Room: Galerie 6
Chair: Christopher Roberts, Univ. of Minnesota Law School
Chair/Disc: David Engel, University at Buffalo, SUNY
Readers:
Mark Goodale, University of Lausanne
Christopher Roberts, Univ. of Minnesota Law School
Christopher Tomlins, University of California, Berkeley
Richard Ashby Wilson, University of Connecticut School
of Law
Primary Keyword: Courts And Trials
Presentations:
Amos Yee, Free Speech, and Maintaining “Religious
Harmony” in Singapore
Yee Suan Poon, National University of Singapore
George Radics, National University of Singapore
How Movement Activists Mobilize the Law: Lessons
from Taiwan’s Evironmental Litigation
Yu-Hsien Sung, University of South Carolina
Chin-shou Wang, National Chenk Kung University
Litigating the Vietnam War: The (Un)making of Victims
and Crimes in the United States and South Korea
Justine Guichard, Sciences Po Paris
Today, the idea of human rights enjoys near-universal support;
yet, there is deep disagreement about what human rights
actually are – their true source of origin, how to study them,
and how best to address their deficits. Are human rights truly
universal or do they represent Western interests? Can human
rights overcome state sovereignty or do they simply reinforce
it? Are human rights prizes to be fought for or utopian myths?
What categories of rights have priority over others?
CRN: 39
Paper Session
In his sweeping exploration of how the modern international
human rights system came into being, Christopher N. J. Roberts
traces these contemporary questions and conflicts back to
their moments of inception. He shows how more than a half
century ago, a series of contradictions worked their way into
the foundation of the modern system of human rights. By
viewing human rights as representations of human relations
that emerge from struggle, this book charts a new path into
the subject of human rights and offers a novel approach for
sociolegal scholars who wish to address some of the most
challenging contemporary human rights issues.
Room: Riverview I
Primary Keyword: Human Rights
Chair/Disc: Aziz Rana, Cornell Law School
Cause Lawyering and Social Movements
South Korean Courts on Sex Trade Law: Conflicting
Movements & Contested Meanings
Chelle Jones, University of Michigan
American Colonialism, Memory, and Alternative Legal
Histories
Primary Keyword: Colonialism and Post-Colonialism
Presentations:
Establishing order, excluding Englishmen, and
incorporating Indians: The structure of authority in the
Massachusetts Bay Colony
Daragh Grant, Harvard University
13 CRN: 21
Paper Session
Room: Studio 6
Chair/Disc: Corey Shdaimah, University of Maryland
Primary Keyword: Social Movements and Legal Mobilization
Thursday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. Collective Goods without Collective Action? Foundation
Funding of Civil Rights Litigation Firms: The Case of the
Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund
Devin Fernandes, Johns Hopkins University
Primary Keyword: Constitutional Law and Constitutionalism
Presentations:
Brazil’s Never Ending Hunger for Amendments
Bruno Silva, UNESA
Decolonial Thought and the Citizenship Model of the
New Latin American Constitutionalism
Enzo Bello, Universidade Federal Fluminense &
Universidade Estácio de Sá
Movements in Progressive Legal Thought
Scott Cummings, University of California, Los Angeles
Ecuador’s Constitutional Culture through the Discourse
of Rights
Gabriela Espinoza, Yale Law School
Citizenship and Immigration: Engaging Local Contexts
CRN: 2
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 1
Chair: Jamie Longazel, University of Dayton
Primary Keyword: Citizenship, Migration, Immigration and
Nation
Presentations:
Globally Competitive, Locally Contradictory: An
Analysis of International Students Migration Flows in
the United States
Jasmine Trang Ha, University of Minnesota
The DREAM ACT, Concepts of Citizenship, and the
Politics of Patriotism
Deenesh Sohoni, College of William and Mary
Conundrums and Contradictions: Legal and Political
Strategies in the Social Movement to Increase
Employment Access for People With Criminal Convictions
Paper Session
Room: Studio 10
Chair/Disc: Laura McTighe, Columbia University
Primary Keyword: Social Movements and Legal Mobilization
Presentations:
Help Me Help Myself: Promoting Entrepreneurship as
a Strategy to Improve Economic Security for Formerly
Incarcerated People
Kelly Orians, RisingFoundations
Legal versus Just: Employers’ Consideration of Criminal
History in the Hiring Process
Melissa Burch, University of Texas at Austin
To Naturalize or Not: How the State Legal Context
Influences Hispanic Immigrants’ Decisions
Linda Williams, Arizona State University
Unauthorized Legal Practice Meets Unauthorized
Immigration: An Analysis of ‘Notario’ Fraud in the U.S.
Juan Pedroza, Stanford University
Undocumented Mexicans’ Political Engagement: The
Role of Local Immigration Laws
Angela S. Garcia, University of Chicago
Constitutional Theory Development in Asia and in the
Americas
CRN: 1
Paper Session
Room: Studio 3
Chair: Younghoa Jung, Chonbuk National University
David S Law, Washington University
Disc:
Springing the Candor Trap: Addressing and Combating
the Use of Applicant-Supplied Information About Past
Convictions as a Test of Rehabilitation
CT Turney-Lewis, A New Way of Life Reentry Project
Corporate Law Enforcement and Dispute Resolution
Paper Session
Room: Salon B
Disc
Brett McDonnell, University of Minnesota Law School
Primary Keyword: Corporate and Securities Law
Presentations:
Something to Hide? Empirical Challenges of
Researching Foreign Corruption Enforcement
Friederycke Haijer, Utrecht University
Fernanda Duarte, UNESA e INCT/InEAC/PROPPI/UFF
14 Thursday
Presentations:
Cause Lawyering against Sexual Violence: Forgotten
Histories, New Developments, and Enduring Conflicts
Rose Corrigan, Drexel University
Thursday
Thursday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
The GFC and Beyond- How Do We Deal With Corporate
Misconduct?
Vicky Comino, University of Queensland
The Need for Speed: Delaware’s Experiment in Bringing
Business Arbitration Back to its Roots via the Delaware
Rapid Arbitration Act
Peter Reilly, Texas A&M School of Law
Primary Keyword: Crime and Victims
Presentations:
Chemical Detectives in Colonial India
Mitra Sharafi, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Crime Television in India: The Visual Politics of Gender,
Violence and Detection
Inderpal Grewal, Yale Univ
Critical Perspectives on Reproductive Justice: From
Activism to the Academy
Unlocking the Mysteries of the Past: Alfred Lucas and
the Archeology of Crime Scene Investigation
Binyamin Blum, Hebrew University
CRN: 7
Roundtable Session
Room: Studio 9
Urban Imaginaries: The City, the Emergency, and the
Heyday of the Hindi Jasoosi Novel 1975-1995
Laura Brueck, Northwestern University
Chair: Rachel Rebouche, Temple University Law School
Participants:
Aziza Ahmed, Northeastern University School of Law
Lisa Kelly, Columbia Law School & Center for
Reproductive Rights
Elizabeth Kukura, Temple University Beasley School of
Law
Stu Marvel, Emory Law School
Seema Mohapatra, Barry University Dwayne O.
Andreas School of Law
Advocates and academics increasingly recognize the limitations
of reproductive rights discourses in addressing the practical
realities of reproductive health care delivery. The reproductive
justice movement has helped foment this recognition by
emphasizing how racism and poverty shape reproduction and
engaging with the spectrum of reproductive healthcare and
choices throughout an individual’s life.
This roundtable has three goals. First, participants will focus
on the emergence of the reproductive justice movement and
current topics that absorb its supporters’ attention. Each
roundtable participant will focus on a different aspect of
reproductive justice advocacy. Second, the purpose of this
roundtable is not just to celebrate reproductive justice, but also
to develop a critical framework for assessing the movement’s
successes and failures. Finally, the roundtable will include a
conversation about tools and methods for teaching classes and
producing scholarly work in the area.
Primary Keyword: Gender and Sexuality
Detections: Categorizing Crime, Order and Technique
CRN: 15, 22
Paper Session
Room: Studio 4
Chair/Disc: Jinee Lokaneeta, Drew University
15 ‘The Indian Vidocq’: Robert Reid’s Physiognomy of the
Mind and Criminal Humanism
Projit Mukharji, University of Pennsylvania
“Armless and Harmless”: The Private Detective, Family
and the State in Contemporary India
Srimati Basu, University of Kentucky
Fiduciary Theories of Public Authority
Paper Session
Room: Balcony L
Chair: Evan Criddle, William & Mary Law School
Disc:
Andrew Gold, DePaul University College of Law
Primary Keyword: International Law and Politics
Presentations:
Fiduciary Political Theory and its Alternatives
Stephen Galoob, University of Tulsa College of Law
International Institutions as Trustees of Humanity
Evan Fox-Decent, McGill University Faculty of Law
Re-imagining a Dignified Life in Exile: Fiduciary Duty,
Human Rights-based Capabilities and Protracted
Refugee Situations
Anna Purkey, Human Rights Research and Education
Centre, University of Ottawa
Reorienting the Relationship between Rights, Choice
and Freedom under a Fiduciary Theory of the State:
Advancing Legal and Social Belonging for Non-Citizens
Bethany Hastie, UBC Faculty of Law
Thursday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. Global Perspectives on Human Rights and Access to
Justice
Room: Balcony K
Chair/Disc: Bettina Lemann Kristiansen, Åarhus University
Primary Keyword: Access to Justice
Presentations:
Access to Higher Education: The Case of Young
Undocumented Migrants in the Mission District
Paola Suarez, UC Berkeley
Accessing Justice Post-Kiobel: A Study of Corporate
Human Rights Litigation
Tanesha A Thomas, CUNY Graduate Center
Forced Disappearances: Cases in the Inter-American
Court of Human Right
Franz Erwin Oberarzbacher, Stanford Law School
Globalising a Guardian Institution: Ombudsmen in
Developing Countries
Adriaan Bedner, Leiden University
Globalization and Its Consequences in Regard to Legal
Aid
Bettina Lemann Kristiansen, Åarhus University
The Social Role of Property in Brazil- The Long Path
from the Legislative Amendment to the Modification of
Social Reality
Alexandra Fuchs de Araujo, University of São Paulo
Mariana de Araujo Mendes Lima, University of São
Paulo
How to Fund Sociolegal Research
Professional Development Panel
Room: Salon D
Participants:
Rachel Bernard, American Council of Learned Societies
Jon Gould, National Science Foundation
Thomas M Keck, Syracuse University
Helena Silverstein, National Science Foundation
In this panel, program officers from the National Science
Foundation’s Law and Social Sciences Program and the
American Council of Learned Societies will discuss grants and
fellowships for sociolegal research and provide tips on the grantand fellowship application- writing process. NSF grant recipient,
Tom Keck, will discuss the process from a grantee’s perspective.
Roundtable Session
Room: Balcony N
Chair: Patrick File, University of Nevada, Reno
Primary Keyword: Non-State Legal Actors
Participants:
Eric Easton, University of Baltimore School of Law
Emily Erickson, California State University, Fullerton
Patrick File, University of Nevada, Reno
Dean Smith, High Point University
The American press embraces impartiality as a core professional
value, yet it benefits when special legal protections and
privileges are maintained or expanded. How has the press
grappled with this awkward legal and political role? When
have efforts to influence debate over the regulation of speech
succeeded and failed? How is the press’ role changing as it
evolves and fractures as an institution? Recent scholarship
has examined these questions from the late 19th century
onward: in the press’ attempts to secure shield laws and libel
retraction statutes (Smith, File), efforts to expand access to
public records (Erickson), and strategic litigation in U.S. Supreme
Court cases (Easton). These studies rely on an interdisciplinary
cross section of theory and illuminate an aspect of the press’
role in democracy that is understudied and bucks conventional
wisdom. Scholars who study the press’ relationship to legal
rights and social change will benefit from this discussion of new
scholarship.
Crime, Public Security, and Human Rights in Comparative
Perspective: From Palestine to the Americas
IRC: 6
Paper Session
Room: Bacchus
Chair: Roberto Kant de Lima, Federal University of Fluminense
Disc: George Bisharat, UC Hastings College of the Law
Primary Keyword: Colonialism and Post-Colonialism
Presentations:
From Occupation to Warfare: Israel Expands the
Permissible Use of Force and Extinguishes Palestinian
Militant Resistance
Noura Erakat, George Mason University
Police or peacemaker? identitaries controversy and
conflict management in Rio de Janeiro
Lenin Pires, Federal Fluminense University
16 Thursday
Paper Session
Impartial Observers? Embedded Activists? Recent
Scholarship Examines the Press As a Political Interest
Group in Law and History
Thursday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
Thursday
The Making and the Unmaking of the Palestinian
Criminal system within the Colonised Palestinian
Context.
Reem Al-Botmeh, Birzeit University
Human Rights, Conceptions of Equality and Equal
Treatment in Brazil”
Luis Roberto Cardoso de Oliveira, University of Brasilia
Primary Keyword: Ethnography
Presentations:
Ethnographic Research of Recovery Program for Young
Drug User “Proyecto Hombre” in Spain
Masayoshi Koga, Chuo University
Neutralizing the Rival: Situated Practice of Violence and
Legitimacy in Medellín, Colombia
Jonathan Gordon, New York University
“I Will Never Be the Same”: Arrested Palestinian
Children Challenging Settler-Colonial Legislative
Violence”
Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian, Hebrew University
“Police violence”: rights and moralities abou police
action in Rio de Janeiro
Lucia Eilbaum, Universidade Federal Fluminense
Judicial Politics in Plural (Trans)national Legal Orders
Policing Sex: Researching The Policing of Sex Workers in
Johannesburg, South Africa
I. India Thusi, University of Witwatersrand and The
Opportunity Agenda
Law and Religion
Paper Session
Paper Session
Room: Balcony J
Room: Balcony I
Chair/Disc: Mark C. Modak-Truran, Mississippi College School Of Law
Chair/Disc: Moritz Baumgärtel, Université libre de Bruxelles
Primary Keyword: Legal Pluralism, Mixed Legal Systems, and
Non-State Law
Presentations:
Between Anarchy and World State: the Changing
Character of State Sovereignty and International Legal
Authority.
Joseph Conti, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Primary Keyword: Religion and Law
Presentations:
Defining Religion and Secularity for a Post-Secular
Understanding of Religious Liberty
Mark C. Modak-Truran, Mississippi College School Of
Law
Is There a Religious Freedom Right to Join the Islamic
State?
M. Christian Green, Center for the Study of Law and
Religion
Human Rights in Contractual Relationships
Sacharias Votinius, Faculty of Law, Lund University
International Investment Law as Formally Rational Law:
A Weberian Analysis
David Schneiderman, Faculty of Law, University of
Toronto
International Law in Domestic Courts: The Argument
for a Shift from the Contested Realm of Interpretation
to the Accepted Realm of Application in Adjudication
Rupert Dunbar, Kingston Univerity
Eric Jeanpierre, Kingston University
Languages and Practices of Legality
CRN: 3
Paper Session
Room: Balcony M
Chair: Luis Daniel Gascón, University of San Francisco |
Disc:
17 Jessica Cooper, Princeton University
Religious Exemptions to Title IX
Kif Augustine, J. Reuben Clark Law School, Brigham
Young University
Searching for the Secular: Exploring the Argument for
Traditional Marriage in Obergefell v. Hodges
Jenna Reinbold, Colgate University
Lives After Prison II: Criminal Records and Big Data
CRN: 27
Paper Session
Room: Studio 7
Chair: Marianne Quirouette, University of Toronto
Disc:
Hadar Aviram, UC Hastings College of the Law
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
Thursday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. Governing Through Prisoner Release?
Leslie Sebba, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Public Conviction Records and the Overreach of
Punishment: A Distinctive Facet of American Penal
Excess
Alessandro Corda, University of Minnesota Law
School
Records, Race, and Risk: The Proliferation of Criminal
History Information in the Era of Mass Incarceration
David McElhattan, Northwestern University
Media Renderings of Identities and Institutions:
Lawyers,Gender, and Courts
CRN: 45
Paper Session
Room: Studio 8
Chair/Disc: Itay Ravid, Stanford Law School
Primary Keyword: Popular Culture, Media, Finance, and The
Arts
Presentations:
Critical Coverage: An Empirical Study of Press Criticism
of Israel’s Supreme Court
Bryna Bogoch, Bar Ilan University
Yifat Holzman - Gazit, College of Management School
of Law
Primary Keyword: Technology
Presentations:
Fracking: Do We Need to Bridge the Public-Science
Divide?
Joanne Hawkins, University of Leeds
In It to Win It: Prize Competitions and the Regulation of
Negative Emissions Innovation
Janine Sargoni, University of Bristol Law School
Subsidising Technology: A Study from the Energy Sector
Robert Lee, Birmingham Law School
Elen Stokes, Cardiff Law School
New Legal Realism 2 - Unifying Concept - Law School
Empiricism
CRN: 28
Paper Session
Room: Salon H-G
Chair/Disc: Edward Rubin, Vanderbilt
Primary Keyword: New Legal Realism
Presentations:
Lawyering in the Twenty-First Century: Student
Experiences in a Non-Traditional Law Course
Katie Sykes, Thompson Rivers University Faculty of
Law
Legal and Pedagogical Contexts of English Learners:
Judicial Views of Linguistic Isolation and Developmental
Needs
Douglas Reed, Georgetown University
Republican Schoolmasters Indeed: How Justices of the
U. S. Supreme Court Mystify Mass Media, Attentive
Citizens, and Other Pupils
William (Bill) Haltom, University of Puget Sound
Student Evaluation and Academic Misconduct in Indian
Law Schools
Jonathan Gingerich, UCLA
Aditya Singh, White & Case LLP
The Tragic Vulnerability of the Rogue Lawyer
Lucy Jewel, University of Tennessee
The Change of State’s Role and Legal Strategy of High
School Textbook Regulation : Some Reflections from
the Anti-Curriculum Adjustment Movement in Taiwan
Yu-Yin Tu, Tamkang University
Twitter as Virtual Delta: Legal Scripting of GenderBased Violence on the Social Networking Site
Francine Banner, University of Michigan-Dearborn
New Frontiers, Old Divides and the Regulation of TechnoScientific Change
Paper Session
Room:Regent
Chair/Disc: Steven Vaughan, Birmingham Law School
Opening Moments of Criminalization
Paper Session
Room:Iberville
Chair: Renisa Mawani, University of British Columbia
Primary Keyword: Social Theory and Law
Presentations:
18 Thursday
Presentations:
Big Data and the Production of the Risky Subject
Paula Maurutto, University of Toronto
Kelly Hannah-Moffat, University of Toronto
Thursday
Thursday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
Criminal Prosecutions of HIV Non-disclosure in Canada:
Epidemiological Information at the Threshold of
Criminalisation
Amy Swiffen, Concordia University
citizenship with myriad cultural and constitutional dimensions
that do not always harmonize with received dogma and
discourse premised on narrowly drawn cultural entitlements to
full constitutional citizenship.
How She Appears: Demeanor, Domestic Violence and
the Police
Marcus Sibley, Carleton University
Dawn Moore, Carleton University
Rashmee Singh, University of Waterloo
Political Leaders, Public Opinion and Courts
The Hostilities of Criminal Accusation
George Pavlich, University of Alberta
The Human ‘Right’ to Psychoanalysis: A Different
Entryway?
Catherine Kellogg, University of Alberta
The Probability of Accusation: An Examination of
Offender Management Programs
Dale Ballucci, Western University
“A Most Mysterious Affair”: The Murder of Thomas
Poole and The Aesthetics of Accusation in early
Canadian Law
Matthew Unger, University of Alberta
Personhood, Dignity, and Citizenship: Inclusion, Exclusion
and Constitutional Belonging
CRN: 2
Roundtable Session
Room: Galerie 4
Chair: Saru Matambanadzo, Tulane University Law School
Frank Valdes, University of Miami
Primary Keyword: Constitutional Law and Constitutionalism
Participants:
Atiba Ellis, West Virginia University
Alana Klein, McGill University School of Law
Saru Matambanadzo, Tulane University Law School
William Merkel, Charleston School of Law
Jorge Roig, Charleston School of Law
This Roundtable will explore in further detail themes joined in
the plenary sessions on belonging and race and the constitution
of society. Participants will apply critical race theory, feminist
scholarship, gay and lesbian discourse, legal history, linguistics,
as well as multi-lingual and multi-disciplinary perspectives
to interrogate the meaning of inclusion and exclusion from
constitutional culture, civil society, and the political process.
Inspired in part by leading Lat Crit scholar Francisco Valdes
and joined by cross-disciplinary scholars including Atiba Eliis,
Alana Klein, Bill Merkel, Saru Matambanadzo, and Jorge Roig,
participants will articulate challenging and inclusive views of
19 Paper Session
Room: Salon C
Chair/Disc: Jennifer Balint, The University of Melbourne
Primary Keyword: Courts And Trials
Presentations:
A Historical Investigation of Presidential Speeches on
Supreme Court Decisions
Paul Collins, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Matthew Eshbaugh-Soha, University of North Texas
Changing the Courts: A Case Study of the
Implementation of Quality Management Systems in
Colombia
Alberto Nieto, Stanford University
Diffusion of Precedent in the American State Courts
Abigail Rury, University of Iowa
The Racial Narrative of Federal Courts Law
Charlton Copeland, University of Miami
The Role of the Expert Witness in Influencing and
Educating Societal Perceptions of Autistic Spectrum
Disorders (ASDs)
Colleen Berryessa, University of Pennsylvania
Rights and Liberal Legality in the Global Context
Paper Session
Room:Jackson
Chair/Disc: Zachary Kaufman, Harvard University
Primary Keyword: Constitutional Law and Constitutionalism
Presentations:
International Human Rights Law in a Transitional
Majoritarian Regime
Chris Kendall, University of Puget Sound
Liberalism, Neo-liberalism and the Rule of Law
Martin Krygier, University of New South Wales
The Constitutional Right to Health: Post-Neoliberal
Institution or False Promise? Evidence from Southern
Africa
Matthew Kavanagh, University of Pennsylvania
Thursday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. Roundtable Session
Room: Carondelet - Table 2
Participants:
Katja Gillander-Gadin, Mid-Sweden University
Nan Stein, Wellesley College
Primary Keyword: Social Movements and Legal Mobilization
Studies in Legal Culture
The Negative Capital Account Maze
Walter Schwidetzky, University of Baltimore
The Tax Lives of Uber Drivers: Evidence from Internet
Discussion Forums
Diane Ring, Boston College Law School
Shu-Yi Oei, Tulane Law School
Why We Need to Re-Examine ADR Methods
Toni Robinson, Quinnipiac University School of Law
The Construction of the Public/Private Distinction
Paper Session
Paper Session
Room: Studio 1
Room: Studio 5
Chair/Disc: Tamara Piety, University of Tulsa College of Law
Chair/Disc: Jona Goldschmidt, Loyola University Chicago
Primary Keyword: Public-Private Dichotomy
Primary Keyword: Legal Culture
Presentations:
A Thin Line Between Private Law and Public Law – Tort
Law As Policy Maker
Tamas Fezer, University of Debrecen
Presentations:
Mud Wrestling of Justice: Rights Consciousness and
Law in Everyday Practices in Taiwan
Hsiao-Tan Wang, National Chengchi University, Taipei,
Taiwan (NCCU)
Should Academic Work Seek to Achieve Political Goals?
Michael Robertson, Faculty of Law, University of
Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand
The Wedding Party as a Binding Contract: A
Comparative Look into the Relationship between Hosts
and Guests
Zvi Triger, Striks School of Law, The College of
Management Academic Studies
What’s Your Motivation? An Analysis of Career
Motivations of Students Who Plan to Pursue Law
School
Daryl Mcadoo, UCLA
Tax Session 2: Controversies in Theory and Practice
CRN: 31
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 3
Chair/Disc: Philip Hackney, LSU Paul M. Hebert Law Center
Primary Keyword: Taxation
Presentations:
Collaboration Theory: A Theory of the Charitable Tax
Exempt Nonprofit Corporation
Eric Chaffee, The University of Toledo College of Law
Estimating the Ideal Points of Organized Interests in
Legal Policy Space
Thomas Hansford, UC Merced
Sarah Depaoli, UC Merced
Parking: From Quarters to Apps - An Inquiry about
Public Property, Personal Rights, Transaction Costs,
Commodification and Inalienability
Vanessa Casado Perez, Stanford Law School
The Lived Experience of the Law: Rights, Changing
Perceptions, and Equal Access to the Law
Paper Session
Room: Galvez
Primary Keyword: Access to Justice
Presentations:
20-Week Abortion Bans and The Viability Standard
Kelsey Grimes, Temple University, Beasley School of
Law
Interdisciplinary Clinical Education- On Empowerment,
Women, and a Unique Clinical Model
Ruthy Lowenstein Lazar, Law school, Academic College
of Management, Israel
Networking in the Shadow of the Law: Informal Access
to Legal Expertise through Personal Network Ties
Erin York Cornwell, Cornell University
Megan Doherty Bea, Cornell University
Emily Taylor Poppe, Cornell University
20 Thursday
Teenage Girls Learn Their Rights About Sexual
Harassment in Schools: Case Studies from Sweden and
the USA
Thursday
Thursday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
The Jimmy Savile Affair and the Politics of Paedophilia
in Britain: Revisiting the Past
Bill Hebenton, University of Manchester UK
Terry Thomas, Leeds University, UK
From the Streets Into the Courts: Legal Opportunity
Structure and the Fight Against Femicide
Veronica Michel, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
When do Leftist Governments Promote Abortion Law
Reform? The Politics of Abortion in Latin America.
Cora Fernandez Anderson, Hampshire College
Alba Ruibal, CONICET-UNC
The Politics and Theory of Transition
Paper Session
Room: Bonaparte
Who Pays for Rights in the Argentine Provinces? The
Case of Domestic Violence Laws
Catalina Smulovitz, Universidad Torcuato Di Tella
Chair/Disc: Boris Mamlyuk, University of Memphis, School of Law
Primary Keyword: Democracy, Governance and State Theory;
Transitions to Democracy and Revolutions
Presentations:
From Ferguson to Flint: In Search of an AntiSubordination Principle for Local Government Law.
Christopher J. Tyson, Louisiana State University, Paul
M. Hebert Law Center
Democratizing Punishment in Times of Political
Transition: Moral Ambitions, International
Interventions and Security Impasses in PostRevolutionary Tunisia
Yasmine Bouagga, CNRS- Triangle
The Integrity of Accountability and Transitional Justice
James Gallen, Dublin City University
Feminist Legal Mobilization and Federalism in Latin
America: Insights from Argentinean Subnational Cases
Alba Ruibal, CONICET-UNC
The Punitive State II: Prisoner Treatment
CRN: 27
Paper Session
Room: Studio 2
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
Presentations:
Challenging the Treatment of Senior Prisoners in
Canadian Penitentiaries
Adelina Iftene, Osgoode Hall Law School, York
University
Women Empowerment and Representation in Local
Government under a Transitional Democracy
Rokhsana Khondker, Bangladesh Supreme Court &
Khan Foundation
Nausheen Khan, Georgetown University
The Impact of Crime and Arrest on Self-Esteem: A
Longitudinal Analysis
Veronica Horowitz, University of Minnesota Minneapolis
The Politics of Women’s Legal Mobilization and Access to
Justice in Latin America
The Limits of the Medical Model in Research on Crime
and Justice
Johann Koehler, University of California, Berkeley
Tobias Smith, University of California, Berkeley
Room: Salon F
‘Madness and Civilization’ Revisited: Punishment,
Psychological Evaluations, and Colonizing the Body
Elizabeth Brown, San Francisco State University
IRC: 31
Paper Session
Chair: Alba Ruibal, CONICET-UNC
Catalina Smulovitz, Universidad Torcuato Di Tella
Disc:
Tamara Amoroso Gonçalves, University of Victoria
Primary Keyword: Social Movements and Legal Mobilization
Presentations:
From Femicide to Generalized Violence: Civil Society
Mobilization, External Intervention, and the Provision
of Justice in Northern Mexico
Janice Gallagher, Watson Institute, Brown University
21 Who Belongs, Who Doesn’t -- Law, Citizenship and
Political Economy in the 21st Century Asia
CRN: 33
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 5
Chair: Hiroshi Fukurai, University of California Santa Cruz
Disc:
Daniel H. Foote, The University of Tokyo
Primary Keyword: East Asia
Thursday 12:45 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. Hate Speech in Japan
Junko Kotani, Shizuoka University
Law and Citizenship in Contemporary Japan: The
Experience of Newcomer “Immigrants”, Especially
Filipina and JFCs
Takeshi Akiba, Akita International University
Not the Terror but the Fallout: Soft Law, Norms and
Trust in Counter-Terrorism Effort
Eugene K B Tan, Singapore Management University
The Iridescence of Japanese Patient Safety Reforms
Rob Leflar, University of Arkansas School of Law
The Puzzling Imprecision of Publicity Rights in Japan
Daniel Rosen, Chuo University Law School
T h u rsd ay Ju n e 2
1 2 :4 5 p . m . – 2 : 3 0 p . m .
After Marriage Equality: What Is Next for the LGBT
Movement?
CRN: 7
Roundtable Session
same-sex couples across the country. With that victory in hand,
those who care about LGBT rights must now struggle with how
best to promote the interests of sexual and gender-identity
minorities in a post-marriage equality society. This roundtable
will bring together an interdisciplinary group of experts to
address one of the most important questions facing the LGBT
movement today: What does marriage equality mean for the
future of LGBT rights? The participants are all contributors to a
forthcoming book titled “After Marriage Equality: The Future of
LGBT Rights” (NYU Press, 2016).
Participants will discuss the difficulties faced by the LGBT
movement in moving in new directions and addressing new
challenges; what marriage equality means for LGBT people living
in conservative or “red” states; what marital rights for same-sex
couple mean for children and parental rights; whether marriage
equality will end most prejudice against sexual minorities or
whether that prejudice will manifest itself in different ways; and
whether the recognition of marital rights will encourage greater
acknowledgment of the differences between lesbians and gay
men in matters of relationships and monogamy. The discussion
will also touch upon LGBT rights issues in other countries,
including the likelihood that U.S. LGBT organizations will
become more involved with LGBT issues in other nations and
the state of LGBT rights in France following marriage equality in
that country.
Primary Keyword: Gender and Sexuality
Cold War Histories of International Law
Room: Studio 10
CRN: 23
Roundtable Session
Chair: Carlos Ball, Rutgers Law School
Room: Galerie 2
Participants:
Gary Mucciaroni, Temple University
Bruno Perreau, MIT
Nancy Polikoff, American University Washington
College of Law
Russell Robinson, UC Berkeley Law
Clifford Rosky, College Of Law, University of Utah
Chair: Sundhya Pahuja, University of Melbourne
The Supreme Court’s decision in Obergefell v. Hodges does
not represent the end of the struggle for LGBT equality in
this country. It does not minimize or trivialize the importance
of nationwide marriage equality to note, for example, that
LGBT individuals continue to be the subjects of violence and
harassment in places ranging from schools to streets; that
denying jobs, housing, and goods and services to sexual and
gender-identity minorities remains legal in most states; and that
both houses of Congress (as well as most state legislatures) are
controlled by the GOP, a political party that has traditionally
been unsupportive of LGBT equality measures.
For the last few decades, the LGBT rights movement’s most
important objective has been to win marriage equality for
Participants:
Matt Craven, SOAS
Ben Golder, UNSW
Richard Joyce, Monash University
Boris Mamlyuk, University of Memphis, School of Law
Gerry Simpson, LSE
The Cold War is the most invoked,least theorised of
international law’s historical foundations and intellectual
obsessions. The Cold War and ‘Cold War thinking’ have
bequeathed the conditions in which we live, yet in most
international law literature, the Cold War appears as a
marker whose provenance or nature is rarely examined. This
Roundtable will stage a conversation based on a project being
led by Pahuja, Simpson and Craven aiming to correct this gap in
our understandings of the history and nature of international
law. Drawing together a range of scholars, they are crafting a
new research agenda in the field which outlines a coherent
history and conceptualisation of the relationship between
international law and the Cold War. Their hypothesis is that
22 Thursday
Presentations:
Dignity, Life, and Capital Punishment
Jimmy Chia-Shin Hsu, Academia Sinica
Thursday
Thursday 12:45 p.m. - 2:30 p.m.
international law and the Cold War were ‘co-produced’ such
that the “Cold War” was key to the formation of international
law, and international law was central to ‘actualising’ the CW as
a juridical object. We will discuss this idea
Primary Keyword: International Law and Politics
Primary Keyword: Human Rights
Presentations:
Brazil, Haiti and the United Nations: the MINUSTAH
case
Ronaldo Lucas da Silva, Estácio de Sá University
East Asian Court Reform on Trial
Custody/Access Dispute in the Brazilian Judicial System:
The Space of Juvenile in the Decision-Making
Carolina Freitas, Universidade Estácio De Sá
Room: Galerie 5
Global Governance, Local Feminisms: A Case Study of
Legislating Domestic Violence in India
Saptarshi Mandal, Jindal Global Law School
CRN: 33
Roundtable Session
Chair: Setsuo Miyazawa, University of California Hastings School of Law; Aoyama Gakuin University Law School
Participants:
Malcolm Feeley, University of California-Berkeley
Daniel H. Foote, The University of Tokyo
Erik Herber, Leiden University
Mari Hirayama, Hakuoh University
Matthew Wilson, University of Akron School of Law
Margaret Woo, Northeastern University School of Law
Malcolm M. Feeley of UC Berkeley (a former President of LSA)
wrote a seminal book on court reform, Court Reform on Trial,
in 1983. He analyzed four cases of criminal justice reforms in
the United States. On the basis of four cases of criminal justice
reform in the US, he argued that perspectives and expectations
on criminal justice are so fragmented in the US that an idealistic
reform conceived and initiated according to one perspective
may be transformed by other perspectives in implementation,
particularly by those of players embedded in the status quo,
and routinization of reform may produce a result that can be
evaluated as a failure from the initial perspective. He concluded
that it would better to introduce reforms with more realistic
expectations. This roundtable session discusses selected cases
of court reform in Japan and Taiwan and will analyze whether,
to what extent, and how the process of policy making and
policy implementation in East Asian countries differ from that
described by Feeley. It may be the case in East Asian countries,
for instance, that the process of policy making and policy
implementation is strongly controlled by the players in the
status quo from the very beginning, so that only those reforms
which are acceptable to such players is likely to be introduced,
implementation is tightly and carefully managed by them, and
the introduced reform becomes highly routinized with a result
that can be evaluated by the status quo as a success. A lively
discussion is expected.
Primary Keyword: Courts And Trials
Current Legal Issues in Asia and the Americas I
CRN: 1
Paper Session
Room: Studio 3
23 The Eurocentric Construction of Human Rights and the
Crisis of Modernity
Edna Raquel Hogemann, UNESA
The Racial Relations in the Legal Order After Slavery
Abolition: A Study in Comparative Perspective between
Brazil and the United States.
Carlos Alberto Lima de Almeida, Universidade Estácio
de Sá
Matheus de Almeida, Universidade Federal
Fluminense
Decolonizing Indigeneity: Resistance, Rights,
Relationships and Reefer
CRN: 34
Paper Session
Room: Studio 5
Chair/Disc: L. Jane McMillan, St. Francis Xavier
Primary Keyword: Indigeneity and First Peoples
Presentations:
Cannabis in Indian Country
William Wood, Southwestern Law School
Featherless Indigenes: Decolonizing Indigeneity in Peru
Alvaro Cordova Flores, McGill University
Narratives of Resistance?: Aboriginal gangs and their
use of social media
Kelsi Barkway, University of Alberta
Jana Grekul, University of Alberta
The Double Bind of Culturally Based Rights: Indigeneity
and Bedouin Resistance to Settler Colonialism
Lana Tatour, University of Warwick
Thursday 12:45 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. Dimensions of Inequality
Room: Galerie 6
Chair: Catherine Albiston, University of California, Berkeley
Disc:
Kaaryn Gustafson, UC Irvine
Trial by jury, rights and legal identities in Colonial South
Asia
Sandra den Otter, Queen’s University
Ethnographic Explorations of Illegalities, Penality, and
Risk/Security (Part I)
CRN: 3, 27
Paper Session
Room: Balcony M
Primary Keyword: Class and Inequality
Chair/Disc: Phil Goodman, University of Toronto
Presentations:
A Dangerous Drive: The Neoliberal Work-Ethic, MicroEntrepreneurship, and New Collectivities in the San
Francisco Bay Area Taxi and “TNC” Industries
Veena Dubal, University Of California, Hastings
Primary Keyword: Ethnography
Institutional Legacies: Public Interest Law Organizations
and the Two-Tiered System of Access to Justice in the
United States
Catherine Albiston, University of California, Berkeley
Su Li, UC Berkeley
Laura Nielsen, American Bar Foundation/
Northwestern U
Producing Justice in a Morally Ambiguous Legal Terrain:
Three Typologies of Legal Actors
Tonya Brito, University of Wisconsin Law School
Empire and Law in Modern India
CRN: 22
Paper Session
Room: Studio 4
Chair: Srimati Basu, University of Kentucky
Disc: Mithi Mukherjee, University of Colorado-Boulder
Presentations:
Criminal Behavior as Local Resistance: The Sociolegal
Significance of the Hawaiian Cockfight
Kathryne Young, Stanford University
Explorations of Ethnographic and Legal Engagements
Véronique Fortin, Universite de Sherbrooke
Police Liability Insurance, Grassroots Activism, and the
Limits of Police Reform
Stephen Wulff, University of Minnesota
Risking Justice: Causality and Conviction in California’s
Mental Health Courts
Jessica Cooper, Princeton University
Thinking Inside the Box: The Development, Meaning,
and Implications of Washington DC’s “Ban the Box”
Legislation
Brandon Hunter, Princeton University
Executive Relief and the Roles of Mediating Institutions
in Immigration Law and Policy
CRN: 2
Roundtable Session
Primary Keyword: South Asia
Room: Galerie 1
Presentations:
Empire, Law, and Political Freedom In India: The
Sedition Trial of Bal Gangadhar Tilak (1908)
Mithi Mukherjee, University of Colorado-Boulder
Chair: Stephen Lee, UC Irvine School of Law
Law and ‘tribal’ subjects: British colonial experiments
in the Bengal Presidency
Sanjukta Das Gupta, Sapienza University of Rome
The Strange Legal Trajectory of Elections in Colonial
India
David Gilmartin, North Carolina State University
Participants:
Susan Coutin, University of California, Irvine
Cecilia Menjivar, University of Kansas
Hiroshi Motomura, UCLA School of Law
This roundtable session will focus on three types of questions
related to DAPA and DACA programs. First, how do prospective
applicants and recipients of deferred action experience the
uncertainty, first of litigation-induced delays in implementation
of the program, and second, of possessing a form of temporary
and contingent status in the United States? Second, which
civil society organizations and third parties are working in
immigrant communities to interpret legal developments and
24 Thursday
CRN: 29
Paper Session
Thursday
Thursday 12:45 p.m. - 2:30 p.m.
facilitate applications for deferred action? What constraints and
incentives do they face in educating immigrant communities
and mediating implementation of these programs? Finally, how
have these unconventional legal benefits changed the meaning
and terms of membership? To what extent does this new
category of ambiguous legal status enable individuals to assert
rights and hold state actors accountable?
Primary Keyword: Citizenship, Migration, Immigration and
Nation
Gender Issues in Law: Past, Present and Future
Paper Session
Room: Balcony L
Chair: Rosemary Auchmuty, University of Reading
Disc:
Tamara Piety, University of Tulsa College of Law
Primary Keyword: Feminist Jurisprudence
Presentations:
Abortion and the Law: Fixing the Undue Burden
Standard
Vicki Toscano, Nova Southeastern University
Female Lawyers in Conflict & Transition; Obstacles,
Opportunities and Obduracy
Anna Bryson, Queens University Belfast
Kieran McEvoy, Queens University Belfast
Punishing Violence Against Women: Seeking the Right
Balance.
Arnold Loewy, Texas Tech School of Law
The Children and Families Act 2014 and Shared
Parental Leave: Supporting the Changing Family or
Reinforcing the Sexual Family?
Gemma Mitchell, University of Birmingham
The Paradox of ‘Good Motherhood’ in an era of Formal
Equality
Danielle McKenzie, York University
Human Rights and War: The Legalities of Armed Conflict
and Their Afternathds
Paper Session
Room: Balcony K
Chair/Disc: Ron Levi, University of Toronto
Primary Keyword: Human Rights
Presentations:
Accounting for the (Almost Complete) Failure of the
25 Entrapment Defense in Post-9/11 Terrorism Cases: An
Empirical Analysis
Jesse Norris, State University of New York at Fredonia
Courts and Coups: Military Legal Prerogatives across
the Globe
Brett Kyle, University of Nebraska Omaha
Andrew Reiter, Mount Holyoke College
Reparations, Assistance, and the Experience of Justice:
Lessons from Colombia and the Congo
Peter Dixon, Harvard University
The International Criminal Court and Civilian Violence:
Probing the Compellence Logic of ICC Intervention in
Civil Wars
David Mendeloff, Norman Paterson School of
International Affairs, Carleton University
Sean Winchester, Norman Paterson School of
International Affairs, Carleton University
Unbalanced Scales: Damage Claims in the War on
Terror
Rick Abel, UCLA School of Law
International Responses to Institutional and Religious
Child Abuse
Paper Session
Room: Balcony N
Chair/Disc: Aleardo Zanghellini, University of Reading
Primary Keyword: Access to Justice
Presentations:
An Unexpected Path: Bankruptcy, Justice, and
Intersecting Identities in the Catholic Sexual Abuse
Scandals
Meredith Edelman, Australian National University
Justice Denied: What America Must Do to Protect Its
Children
Marci Hamilton, Univ. of Pennsylvania and Benjamin
N. Cardozo School of Law
Prosecuting Desire, Protecting Innocence: How
American Prosecutors Make Sense of Child Sexual
Abuse Allegations
Jamie Small, University of Dayton
When the sex exception meets religious exemptions:
Obstacles to suing the Catholic Church for child sexual
abuse in Ireland and Australia
Kate Gleeson, Macquarie University
Thursday 12:45 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. The Future of Comparative Legal History
Room: Bacchus
Chair: Joshua Tate, SMU Dedman School of Law
Participants:
Mia Korpiola, University of Turku
Catharine MacMillan, University of Reading
Polly Price, Emory University School of Law
Rafael Mafei R. Queiroz, University of São Paulo, Law
School
Mario Alberto Cajas Sarria, Universidad ICESI
This roundtable session is sponsored by the International
Research Collaborative on Comparative Legal History. The
panelists, who represent three different continents (Europe
and North and South America), will discuss the advantages
to be gained by approaching legal history from a comparative
perspective, as well as the special challenges posed by
comparative research. In keeping with one of the four main
themes of the 2016 meeting, special attention will be given
to the historical role of empires in creating and shaping legal
pluralism. At the conclusion of the session, members of the
IRC will be invited to discuss our future plans, including our
contribution to the 2017 meeting in Mexico City.
Chair/Disc: John Strawson, University of East London
Primary Keyword: Legal Culture
Presentations:
About “Revolutions” in Private Law
Pablo Lerner, College of Law and Business
Anti-abortion Politics via (Labor) Law: A Discursive
Opportunity Structure in the ‘Woman friendly’ Welfare
State?
Rebecca Selberg, Lund University Department of
Gender Studies
Niklas Selberg, Lund University Faculty of Law
From Civil Law to Common Law in a Sleight of Hand?
The New Brazilian Civil Procedure Code and the Need
to Search for a New Decision-Making Model
Erik Wolkart, Columbia Law School
Kaleidoscopes of Knowledge: Reflections on Processes
of Injustice and (Re)colonization Produced by Legal
Education, and Strategies for Resistance
Preeti Dhaliwal, University of Victoria
Lives After Prison III: The Possibilities of Penal Change
CRN: 27
Paper Session
Primary Keyword: Legal History
Room: Studio 7
Judicial Reform: Design, Discipline and Resistance
Paper Session
Chair/Disc: Andrea Leverentz, University of Massachusetts Boston
Room: Salon C
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
Chair/Disc: Onur Bakiner, Seattle University
Presentations:
In Katrina’s Wake: Dismantling Mass Incarceration in
New Orleans Ten Years After the Storm
Jill McCorkel, Villanova University
Ashley Bell, Villanova University
Kenya Mack, Villanova University
Primary Keyword: Human Rights
Presentations:
A test for political maturity: The 2014 election to High
Council of Judges and Prosecutors in Turkey
Idil Elveris, Istanbul Bilgi University
The Police Ombudsman in Recife, Brazil: Accountability
for the Swedish to See?
Anthony Pereira, King’s College London
Turkey’s Judiciary and the Question of Impunity
Onur Bakiner, Seattle University
Legal Change and Legal Culture
Penal Change and Fiscal Crisis: An Analysis of State
Level Developments in New Jersey Since 2000
Michael Campbell, University of Missouri, St. Louis
Heather Schoenfeld, Northwestern University
Self-Improvement vs. Job Skills: Gender Differences
in the Perception of Help Among Male and Female
Inmates
Rebecca Trammell, Metropolitan State University of
Denver
Paper Session
Room: Galvez
26 Thursday
IRC: 41
Roundtable Session
Thursday 12:45 p.m. - 2:30 p.m.
New Approaches to Comparative Constitutionalism
Thursday
Paper Session
Room: Jackson
Chair/Disc: Angela Maria Paez Murcia, Universidad de La Sabana
Primary Keyword: Constitutional Law and Constitutionalism
Presentations:
Constitutional Archetypes
David S Law, Washington University
Structural Safeguards and Judicial Review: A
Comparative Perspective
David Landau, Florida State University College of Law
Studying “Second Generation” Constitutional Courts:
After the Heroes Have Left
Mark Tushnet, Harvard University
Why a Written Constitution Two Conceptions of
Constitutionalism
Miguel Schor, Drake University Law School
One Toke Over the (State) Line: The HorizontalFederalism Implications of Marijuana Legalization
Roundtable Session
Room: Salon E
Chair: Jessica Berch, Concordia University School of Law
Chad DeVeaux, Concordia University School of Law
Participants:
W. David Ball, Santa Clara University School of Law
Jessica Berch, Concordia University School of Law
Seth Davis, University of California, Irvine School of Law
Brannon Denning, Samford University Cumberland
School of Law
Chad DeVeaux, Concordia University School of Law
As Erwin Chemerinsky recently observed, “the struggle over
marijuana regulation is one of the most important federalism
conflicts in a generation.” The shifting legal status of marijuanafrom a banned “hippy” psychoactive drug, to a semi-licit
medical treatment, to a recreational drug-has occurred despite
the existence of federal laws prohibiting the possession, sale,
and transportation of marijuana. The horizontal-federalism
(e.g., comity) implications of piecemeal marijuana legalization
have received little scholarly attention. Unlike other state vicelegalization experiments such as gambling and prostitutionwhich involve actions undertaken at a fixed location-marijuana
legalization involves the trafficking of goods that can easily cross
state lines inside luggage, through the mail, or in the trunks of
cars. It causes problems in other ways as well. For example, the
27 effects of marijuana use in pot-friendly states can spillover into
their prohibitionist neighbors when impaired users drive their
cars across state lines.
The inevitable conflicts engendered by state-by-state pot
legalization came into sharp focus last December when
Nebraska and Oklahoma sought to invoke the Supreme
Court’s original jurisdiction to enjoin marijuana legalization in
Colorado. Their Complaint contends that “Colorado has created
a dangerous gap in the federal drug control system” enabling
marijuana to “flow . . . into neighboring states, undermining
[their] own marijuana bans, draining their treasuries, and
placing stress on their criminal justice systems.” The Court
has deferred deciding whether it will hear the case until the
upcoming term. But whatever the outcome, the suit is likely a
harbinger of future interstate conflict.
The patchwork of laws and their competing policies creates
confusion and is so divisive that it may open the door to
“rivalries and reprisals” of the sort that the Constitution was
designed to avert. Drivers from marijuana-friendly states may be
subjected to pre-textual stops. The Supreme Court unanimously
held that such stops are virtually immune from Fourth
Amendment scrutiny so long as they are precipitated by even
the slightest infraction-or even no infraction at all if an officer in
good faith believes that an infraction has occurred.
Many difficult issues may soon surface. First, prohibitionist
states, like Nebraska and Oklahoma, which share borders with
states that have decriminalized marijuana, like Colorado, may
increase penalties for marijuana possession and use. Such a
move will exacerbate the U.S.’s already epidemic-incarceration
rate by stepping up the penalties for marijuana possession. “The
normal method of deterring unlawful conduct,” the Supreme
Court has noted, “is to impose an appropriate punishment on
the person who engages in it. If the sanctions that presently
attach to a violation . . . do not provide sufficient deterrence,”
ordinarily lawmakers will conclude that “those sanctions should
be made more severe.”
Second, prohibitionist States may enact laws that, in essence,
reach into the territory of their pot-friendly neighbors to impose
liability on those who provide marijuana that later causes
transboundary harm.
The temperature on this second situation rose substantially
in July 2015 when the 10th Circuit held that the Constitution
permits a State to directly regulate activities beyond its borders
that produce substantial effects within the state. The court
concluded that Supreme Court precedents positing that the
dormant Commerce Clause “precludes the application of a
state statute to commerce that takes place wholly outside the
State’s borders, whether or not the commerce has effects within
the state” are no longer good law. Because the 10th Circuit’s
holding conflicts with those in other circuits, the Supreme
Court will likely need to step in to resolve the circuit split.
Moreover, the decision came on the heels of Justice Scalia’s
recent characterization of the entire dormant Commerce Clause
Thursday 12:45 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. jurisprudence as “a judicial fraud.”
Primary Keyword: Constitutional Law and Constitutionalism
Parents, Children, and Identities
CRN: 7
Paper Session
Room: Studio 9
Chair: Seema Mohapatra, Barry University Dwayne O. Andreas School of Law
Disc: Clare Huntington, Fordham Law School
Primary Keyword: Family and Youth
Presentations:
Identity Building
Kim Pearson, Gonzaga University School of Law
Non-Exclusive Adoption
Amy Mulzer, New York University School of Law
The Citational Life of Zalba et al.: Maternal
Incarceration and the Evolution of Feminist Legal
Advocacy in the 1970s and 1980s
Sara Matthiesen, Brown University
Transgender Children, the Heckler’s Veto, and Teaching
Early Acceptance
Dara Purvis, Penn State Dickinson School of Law
Trust and the Project of Informed Consent in IVF
Jody Madeira, Indiana University Maurer School of
Law
Paper Session
Room: Salon B
Chair/Disc: Shlomit Azgad-Tromer, UC Berkeley
Primary Keyword: Economy, Business and Society
Presentations:
A Car is a Computer Network and Other Lessons from
General Motors’ delayed recall of a Defective Ignition
Switch
Robert Rosen, University of Miami
BP and Deep Water Horizon: Implications for Mass
Torts, Sustainable Development and the Power of the
Media
Ciara Hackett, Queen’s University Belfast
Getting More than Justice on Paper – An Insurance
Based Model to Replace the Bankruptcy Priority as a
Solution for the Crisis of Unpaid Wages
Omer Kimhi, Haifa University Faculty of Law
The Restatement (Second) of Contracts §211:
Unfulfilled Expectations and the Future of Modern
Standardized Consumer Contracts
Eric Zacks, Wayne State University Law School
Realist and Empirical Methods for Law: A Collaborative
Research Network
CRN: 28
Roundtable Session
Room: Galerie 3
Chair: Meredith Rountree, Northwestern Law
Participants:
Mario Barnes, University of California-Irvine
Elizabeth Mertz, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Meredith Rountree, Northwestern Law
Shauhin Talesh, University of California, Irvine
In recent decades, the legal academy has begun to incorporate
forms of empirical scholarship and even training. In this open
roundtable, we invite members of CRN 28 and others interested
in the topic to join with us in contemplating how and whether
translation of social science for legal scholars and for law
students works. What should the goal of such translations
be? What contributes to success and failure (once we have
defined what success and failure mean in this context)? Can
the legal academy act as an incubator for innovative forms
of collaboration or hybrid methods -- and what about the
law’s own epistemological and normative specializations?
Roundtable speakers will kick off the discussion by considering
28 Thursday
If the 10th Circuit’s construction-which enjoys wide-spread
support in the academic community-is affirmed, it will
have enormous implications for state marijuana regimes.
Prohibitionist States may attempt to apply their own laws to
marijuana sales in neighboring jurisdictions. Such extraterritorial
application is not without precedent. In Bernhard v. Harrah’s
Club, the California Supreme Court applied the State’s dramshop law to a Nevada defendant in contravention of Nevada’s
own law, which exempted sellers from such liability. More
recently, in Shaw v. LDC Enterprises, Inc., the Indiana Court
of Appeals affirmed the application of Indiana’s common law
of nuisance to an Illinois bar suspected of serving underage
Hoosiers in contravention of contrary Illinois policy.
Our panelists will tackle thorny constitutional issues raised by
the confluence of marijuana decriminalization and the apparent
demise of the extraterritoriality principle.
Power, Business and Legal Practice
Thursday 12:45 p.m. - 2:30 p.m.
Thursday
the languages of law and of social science in terms of these
questions.
Primary Keyword: New Legal Realism
Religious Freedom: Problems of Association, Community,
and Pluralism in Canadian and US Law
Paper Session
Room:Regent
science community and the NSF have pushed back against the
threat to social science funding when they have found criticism
of social science funding unjustified. UK social science has been
under similar pressures since the 1980s and has developed
considerable experience with more proactive approaches to
legislators and other stakeholders. However, this is a source
of tension among social scientists over the balance between
‘constructive engagement’ and outright confrontation.
Public Outreach Session
This panel features four people who have been in the forefront
of these efforts. Wendy Naus is the Executive Director of the
Consortium of Social Science Associations (COSSA), of which
LSA is a governing member. COSSA lobbies for more adequate
social science funding on behalf of its member organizations
and seeks to better communicate the value of social science
research to relevant publics. Felice Levine, a past president
of LSA, is the Executive Director of the American Educational
Research Association and the current Chair of COSSA’s Board of
Directors. In both capacities she has been a leader in increasing
understanding of and generating support for the social and
behavioral science. Neil Canfield works in NSF’s Office of
Legislative and Public Affairs, where he communicates on behalf
of NSF the value of the SBE sciences, including coordinating
the agency’s response when projects funded by NSF’s SBE
directorate are criticized as wasteful. Robert Dingwall, longtime
LSA member, is a Fellow and Council member of the Academy
of Social Sciences in the UK, which oversees the Campaign for
Social Science. All four have fascinating stories to tell. Richard
Lempert, another past president of LSA and moderator of this
session, is LSA’s COSSA representative and has also played a
role in these activities. Come learn more about ongoing threats
to the social and behavioral sciences and ways that audience
members can assist in countering unwarranted criticisms.
Room: Salon D
Tax Session 3: Comparative Tax Issues
Primary Keyword: Religion and Law
Presentations:
Religious Associations in a Democratic Society: A
Political Theology
Victor M. Muniz-Fraticelli, McGill University
The New Religious Freedom, Corporate Religion, and
Sovereignty: A View from Hosanna-Tabor and Hobby
Lobby
Matthew Scherer, George Mason University
The Trinity Western University Law School Proposal
– Exploring the Relationship between TWU and the
Law Societies of Canada as an Interaction between
Communities
Blair Major, McGill University
Representing Social Science to Government and the
Public
Chair: Richard Lempert, University of Michigan
Participants:
Neil Canfield, National Science Foundation (NSF)
Robert Dingwall, Academy of Social Sciences (UK)
Wendy Naus, Consortium of Social Science Assns
(COSSA)
Felice Levine, American Educational Research
Association (AERA) / Consortium of Social Science
Assns (COSSA)
Even in the best of times the social and behavioral sciences
compete with natural sciences and applied disciplines for public
resources. What has changed in recent years is that some in
the U.S. Congress have attempted to drastically reduce the
capacity of the National Science Foundation to fund social and
behavioral science research and have also threatened social
science funding by other agencies. Coupled with this has been
a proliferation of government “wastebooks” which invariably
single out some social research projects as exemplars of work
the government should not be supporting. Both the social
29 CRN: 31
Paper Session
Room: Salon H-G
Chair/Disc: Danshera Cords, Albany Law School
Primary Keyword: Taxation
Presentations:
A Tale of Four Chinese Law Firms: Invoice-Collection
and Collaborated Tax Evasion
Huina Xiao, City University of Hong Kong
Does One Size Really Fit All? A Comparative Study of
the Transfer Pricing Frameworks of Brazil, India, and
South Africa
Marcelo Ilarraz, Institute of Advanced Legal Studies,
University of London
Taxing Social Change in New Zealand
Lisa Marriott, Victoria University of Wellington
Thursday 12:45 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. The Future of Law and Society in Latin America
IRC: 8
Paper Session
Room: Salon F
Chair: Rachel Sieder, CIESAS
Disc: Javier Couso, University Diego Portales/Utrecht University
Primary Keyword: Legal Pluralism, Mixed Legal Systems, and
Non-State Law
Presentations:
Disobeying the Law in Latin America
Mauricio Garcia Villegas, Universidad Nacional de
Colombia
Human Rights and Legal Institutions in Latin America
Karina Mariela Ansolabehere, FLACSO-Mexico
Indigenous Struggles, Legal Pluralities and Fragmented
Sovereignties: Reflections on Law, Illegality and the
State in Latin America
Rachel Sieder, CIESAS
Supreme and Constitutional Courts in Latin America:
Directions in Constitutional Justice
Francisca Pou Gimenez, ITAM
The Armed Forces, Civil-Military Relations, and the Rule
of Law in Latin American Third Wave Democracies
Julio Rios-Figueroa, CIDE, Mexico City
The Politics of Respectability and Immigrants
CRN: 2
Roundtable Session
Room: Galerie 4
Chair: Angela Banks, William and Mary
Participants:
Muneer Ahmed, Yale University
Elizabeth Keyes, University of Baltimore School of Law
Jennifer Lee, Temple University Beasley School of Law
Mariela Olivares, Howard University School of Law
Jayesh Rathod, American University Washington
College of Law
Social scientists have thoroughly interrogated the politics of
respectability as a strategy for responding to marginalization.
The majority of this scholarship has focused on African
Americans, but it is equally applicable to any social group
facing marginalization. The legalist strand of the politics of
respectability argues for equal rights based on the marginalized
group having the same values, norms, and practices as
mainstream society. Legal scholars have been slow to examine
the existence of a politics of respectability within immigrant
communities. This roundtable will feature legal scholars whose
research examines how immigrants are framed within American
society, the impact framing has on immigrants’ legal rights,
and framing strategies. The participants will explore whether
these framing strategies qualify as the politics of respectability,
challenges with successfully deploying these strategies, and
the broader, perhaps unintentional, consequences of these
strategies.
Primary Keyword: Citizenship, Migration, Immigration and
Nation
The Punitive State III: Death Penalty, Wrongful
Convictions, and Punishing Violent Crimes
CRN: 27
Paper Session
Room: Studio 2
Chair/Disc: Natalie A. Pifer, University of California, Irvine
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
Presentations:
Examining the Accumulation of Racial Disparities within
Death Penalty Institutions: A Multi-stage Analysis of
Case-Processing Outcomes
Nick Petersen, University of Miami
From Death Row to ‘Official’ Innocence -How
Wrongfully Convicted Capital Prisoners are Exonerated
in China
Michelle Miao, University of Nottingham
From Pervert to Predator: Defining and Regulating the
Sexually Violent Predator in California
Rebecca DiBennardo, UCLA
The American Adversarial System and Wrongful
Convictions
Myeonki Kim, University of Wisonsin Law School
The Continued Punitive Turn for Violent Crimes
Nazgol Ghandnoosh, The Sentencing Project
Ashley Nellis, The Sentencing Project
30 Thursday
The Major Problems of the Current Chinese Individual
Income Taxation and Its Possible Reform
ZHIGANG HONG, Shanghai University of International
Business & Economics, School of Law
Thursday 12:45 p.m. - 2:30 p.m.
Thursday
The Role of Law and Policies for Environment and
Humanities At Risk
Paper Session
Room: Riverview I
Chair: Myanna Dellinger, University of South Dakota School of Law
Disc: Vasuki Nesiah, NYU Gallatin
Primary Keyword: Disasters
Presentations:
An “Act of God”? Rethinking Contractual
Impracticability in an Era of Anthropogenic Climate
Change
Myanna Dellinger, University of South Dakota School
of Law
Emergencies, Crises, and Social Change: PreservativeTransformative Tensions and the Purpose(s) of
Governance
Andrew Brighten, U.C. Berkeley
International Response to Natural Disasters: Challenges
and Opportunities
Chien-yu Liu, Georgetown University Law Center
“A Decade After Devastation: A Critique of New
Orleans’ Rebuilding Process”
Cassandra Shepard, Northwestern University
Undocumented Immigrant Youth Mobilization in the
Formation of a National Social Movement
CRN: 21
Paper Session
Room: Studio 6
Chair/Disc: Sheri-Lynn Kurisu, University of Illinois at Urbana-
Champaign
Primary Keyword: Social Movements and Legal Mobilization
Presentations:
Civil Disobedience as a Cross-Generational Social
Movement Strategy: The Case of Undocumented
Immigrant Youth Activism
Kevin Escudero, Brown University
Deconstructing Illegality: Latino Undocuactivists
Mobilizing for Change in the U.S.
Joanna Perez, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign
Threats and Opportunities: Undocu/DACAmented and
Unafraid in California and Georgia
Edelina Burciaga, University of California, Irvine
What Is Newsworthy and of Public Interest: A World
View
CRN: 45
Roundtable Session
Room: Studio 8
Chair: Bryna Bogoch, Bar Ilan University
Amy Gajda, Tulane University
Participants:
RonNell Andersen Jones, Brigham Young University
Andras Koltay, Pazmany Peter Catholic University
Lyrissa Lidsky, University of Florida
Mary-Rose Papandrea, University of North Carolina
David Rolph, University of Sydney
Sonja West, University of Georgia
News organizations and other media have long defended their
right to determine what news or information should be made
available to the public, and freedom of expression has often
been used to bolster the claims by these organizations to
publish information that they deem to be newsworthy, despite
potentially harmful effects on individuals. The question is
whether the publication of emotionally harmful but truthful
information that is merely in the public interest and not
necessarily of public concern should be protected; the answerto protect the media’s judgment or to protect the individual-has
a profound impact on media and journalism around the world,
especially in light of the increasing concern about media ethics
in the digital age. This roundtable of experts on media law
from different countries will explore the issue globally, looking
at incidents of perceived privacy and other harmful personal
invasions and how courts internationally have responded.
Primary Keyword: Popular Culture, Media, Finance, and The
Arts
When The Bullet Hits The Road: Understanding Illicit Gun
Behavior and Perceptions of Legal Fairness Among Active
and Detained Gun Offenders
Paper Session
Room: Balcony J
Chair/Disc: Jennifer Carlson, University of Toronto
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
Presentations:
31 Thursday 2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Th u rsd ay Ju n e 2
2: 45 p .m. - 4: 30 p .m .
Prohibited Persons and the Law: Interrogating how
felons experience the label “prohibited person,” and
how it impacts their perception of the efficacy and
legitimacy of the Law.
Kelsie Chesnut, University of California, Irvine
AMR: Intisar Rabb - “Doubt in Islamic Law: A History of
Legal Maxims, Interpretation, and Islamic Criminal Law”
(Cambridge University Press, 2015)
Self-Control Measurement and Men’s Use of Guns
Carol Newark, UC Irvine
Room: Salon E
35-Years Later, What Have We Learned About ‘Language,
Audience, and the Transformation of Disputes’?
Roundtable Session
Room: Bonaparte
Chair: Christine Harrington, New York University
Participants:
Matthew Canfield, New York University, Department of
Anthropology
David Engel, University at Buffalo, SUNY, School of Law
Carol Greenhouse, Princeton
Anna-Maria Marshall, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign
2016 marks the 35th year anniversary of Lynn Mather and
Barbara Yngvesson’s now classic article, “Language, Audience,
and the Transformation of Disputes,” published in the Law &
Society Reveiw. This roundtable examines dispute processing
theory and empirical research in the Law & Society field since
1980, when their article appeared. Specifically, what larger
social forces (i.e., cultural, economic, political, and legal) play a
significant role in the framing of particular grievances as “legal
disputes”? What affect do legal institutions and actors have on
expanding or reducing “access to justice,” and for whom? How
do participants in these processes perceptive law in terms of
redressing or exacerbating social inequalities? Participants will
formally respond to these questions, as well as those presented
by the discussant and the audience.
Primary Keyword: Social Movements and Legal Mobilization
CRN: 30
Author Meets Reader (AMR) Session
Author: Intisar Rabb, Harvard University
Chair: Tamir Moustafa, Simon Fraser University
Readers:
Dan Smail, Harvard University
Nurfadzilah Yahaya, National University of Singapore
Adnan Zulfiqar, University of Pennsylvania
Jedidiah Kroncke, FGV Sao Paulo
The importance of Islamic criminal law to the sociolegal
community has increased in recent years, as applications of
that system of law has spread in the past decade together with
attempts to understand its origins and impact. This authormeets-reader panel will explore the book Doubt in Islamic
Law (2015) by Intisar Rabb. The panel brings together leading
scholars of both Islamic and other types of criminal law from
both medieval and modern periods. Each will help contextualize
the new versions of Islamic criminal law and the related rules
of reasonable doubt that have emerged in the past decade in
the Muslim world. It turns out that doubt is centrally important
to Islamic law of any era, according to the author, and it is thus
worth teasing out whether and how doubt helps construct
systems of law in response to societal pressures as the author
argues in her book.
In the book, the author uncovers the lost history of doubt.
This history calls into question a popular notion about Islamic
law – which some have upheld and promoted and others have
criticized and opposed. The notion is that Islamic law is a divine
legal tradition that has little room for discretion or doubt,
particularly in Islamic criminal law.
Primary Keyword: Islamic Law and Society
Consumers’ Reactions to Financial Problems: MultiNational Perspectives
CRN: 25
Paper Session
Room: Studio 10
Chair/Disc: Edward Janger, Brooklyn Law School
32 Thursday
Guns and inequality: Perceptions of disparate
treatment and outcomes among detained gun
offenders
Melissa Barragan, University of California, Irvine
Thursday 2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Thursday
Primary Keyword: Household Finance
Brazilian Legal System Against the New Civil Procedure
Code
Maria Carolina Amorim, UNESA - Universidade Estácio
de Sá
Presentations:
Creative families: coping strategies to navigate through
a sea of financial distress
Catarina Frade, Faculty of Economics - University of
Coimbra
Lina Coelho, Faculty of Economics - University of
Coimbra
Exploring a gender dimension in household financial
negotiation processes
Miguel Oliveira, Centro de Estudos Sociais - University
of Coimbra
Fernanda Jesus, Center for Social Studies - University
of Coimbra
Catarina Frade, Faculty of Economics - University of
Coimbra
Raquel Ribeiro, Center for Social Studies - University
of Coimbra
Healthy financial behavior and it’s influential factors
Tamara Madern, Amsterdam University of Applied
Sciences
Nadja Jungmann, Hogeschool Utrecht
Ownership flats – an unsure investment in an overindebted Sweden
Karin Lundström Florin, Örebro University
Karin Blad, Örebro University
Current Legal Issues in Asia and the Americas II: Access
to Justice.
CRN: 1
Paper Session
Room: Studio 3
Disc:
Fernanda Duarte, UNESA e INCT/InEAC/PROPPI/UFF
Rafael Mario Iorio Filho, Universidade Estácio de Sá e INCT-InEAC
Primary Keyword: Access to Justice
Presentations:
Access to Justice in Asia and in Latin America:
Comparative Perspectives on Japanese and Brazilian
Legal Aid Services
Cleber Alves, Universidade Federal Fluminense
Diogo Esteves, Universidade Federal Fluminense
Evolution of Class Actions for a Balanced Environment
and Animal Rights
Lucia Frota Pestana de Aguiar Silva, Universidade
Estácio de Sá
The Application of Judicial Precedents System in the
33 The Impact of Simplification of Judicial Procedures
on Access to Judicial Systems: The Case of Colombian
Abstract Judicial Review
Hernan Correa-Cardozo, Universidad de los Andes
The National Council of Justice and its role in the
Brazilian Judiciary Branch
Shirley Santos, Estácio de Sá
The Procedure in the North American and in the
Brazilian Systems - A Brief Comparative Analysis
Carlos Nascimento, Universidade Estácio de Sá
Ethnographic Explorations of Illegalities, Penality, and
Risk/Security (Part II)
CRN: 3, 27
Paper Session
Room: Balcony M
Chair: Robert Werth, Rice University
Disc:
William Garriott, Drake University
Primary Keyword: Ethnography
Presentations:
Addicted to Punishment: Racialized Drug Rehabilitation
and the Governance of Inequality
Allison McKim, Bard College
Beyond the Actuarial and Asymmetric: Considering
Affect, Rapport and Intimacy within Parole
Robert Werth, Rice University
Doing Innocence, Doing Gender: Criminal Masculinities,
Accountability, and the Gender Consequences of
Aggressive Policing
Forrest Stuart, University of Chicago
Reentry to Nothing: Urban Marginality in the Shadows
of Mass Incarceration
Alessandro De Giorgi, Department of Justice Studies,
San Jose State University
Risk/Averse: Pretrial Risk and Pretrial Incarceration in
New Orleans, Louisiana
Kaya Williams, University of Chicago
Thursday 2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Formal Institutions As Instruments of Social Movements
Room: Studio 6
Chair: Lynette Chua, National University of Singapore
Disc:
Michael McCann, University of Washington
Primary Keyword: Social Movements and Legal Mobilization
Presentations:
Public Law, Democratisation and Protest – The Case of
Occupy Boise
Glenn Patmore, Melbourne Law School, The
University of Melbourne
The Dance of Policy Argumentation: Framing Marriage
for Different Policy Venues
Shauna Fisher, West Virginia University
The Second Phase: Positioning the LGBT Rights
Movement to Bridge the Gap between Formal and
Lived Equality
Leonore Carpenter, Temple University Beasley School
of Law
What a Long, Strange Trip it’s Been: The U.S. Supreme
Court and Marriage Equality
Gerald Rosenberg, University of Chicago
Gender and Judging in Muslim Courts
CRN: 32 and IRC: 20
Paper Session
Room: Studio 8
Chair/Disc: Monika Lindbekk, University of Oslo
Primary Keyword: Gender and Judging
Presentations:
Bordering on Emotional: Evaluating ‘Gender’, ‘Religious
Identity’ and ‘Citizenship’ during Parental Claims of
Transnational Child Abduction in Egypt and Morocco
Jessica Carlisle, University of Manchester
Inscribing Islamic Shari‘a in Egyptian State Law: The
Case of Divorce
Monika Lindbekk, University of Oslo
Muslim Judges at the Road of Intersection
Nahda Shehada, Institute of Social Studies
The Moroccan Women’s Judges Club: To What Extent
has it Shaped the Application of the 2004 Family Law?
Dörthe Kirsten Engelcke, University of Göttingen
What Do Sulh (Mediation) Sessions Tell Us About
Gender and the Management of Disputes in Islamic
Judiciaries? Some Ethnographic Perspectives from
Malaysia
Michael Peletz, Emory University
Gender, War, and Peacebuilding
Roundtable Session
Room: Balcony K
Chair: Valorie Vojdik, University of Tennessee College of Law
Participants:
Halla Shoaibi, Birzeit University
Valorie Vojdik, University of Tennessee College of Law
This roundtable will explore new and emerging theory and
research regarding the role of gender in conflict and peace
building. Over the past twenty years, feminist theorists and
activists have made visible the role of gender in conflict and
peace building, leading to legal and policy reforms that seek
to address the ways in which women experience the burdens
and costs of conflict. Global advocacy by feminist scholars,
for example, has resulted in reforms in international criminal
law aimed at eliminating impunity for sexual violence against
women in war. More recently, social and legal theorists have
moved beyond stereotypical conceptions of women as victims,
recognizing the more complex and varied roles that women
occupy during and after armed conflict. In recent conflicts,
for example, women have been participants in war, in regular
armed forces, as guerillas and freedom fighters, and often as
child soldiers.
This roundtable will identify the ways in which the role of
women in war is being reconceptualized, both by scholars
and international legal systems. What do recent conflicts tell
us about the contemporary roles of women in and at war?
How have recent conflicts informed our understandings of
the gendered aspects of conflict and peace building? What
legal changes need to be implemented to address the needs
of female combatants, including girl soldiers? How can various
stakeholders engaged in peace building better address the
needs and roles of women to promote gender equality while
facilitating peace and stability?
The roundtable participants include legal scholars on gender,
conflict, and international law, as well an international expert
in gender and conflict who has worked with numerous NGOs
in Afghanistan and Iraq. Participants and attendees will work
together, building on their research and experience on the
ground, to identify and explore emerging new theories of
gender and conflict in scholarship, law, and peace building
efforts.
Primary Keyword: War and Law including Security and
Terrorism
34 Thursday
CRN: 21
Paper Session
Thursday
Thursday 2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Human Rights in Regional and National High Courts:
Studies of Doctrinal Development in Europe and the
Americas
The Benefits & Burdens of Prosecutorial Discretion:
How to Fully Effectuate the Exercise of Prosecutorial
Discretion in a Broken Immigration System
Lilah Thompson, Temple University Beasley School of
Law
Paper Session
Room: Balcony L
Primary Keyword: Human Rights
Presentations:
Evolving Patterns of Judicial Activism in Brazil and
Colombia
Sandra Botero, Willamette University
Rodrigo Nunes, St. Edward’s University
Guilty of Complicity: Strengthening Accountability for
Extraordinary Renditions on European Soil
Gabriele Marino, Bocconi University - Milan (Italy)
Arianna Vedaschi, Bocconi University - Milan (Italy)
Religious Freedom, Equality and Social Change: What
is the Role of Discrimination Law? Insights from the
European Court of Human Rights
Ilias Trispiotis, University of Leeds
What Could Make the Inter-American Commission on
Human Rights Decisions More Effective? The Search for
a Greater Influence from the Inter-American Human
Rights System
Danielle Anne Pamplona, Puc-PR, Brazil
Institutional Injustices: Discretion and Detention in
Immigration Enforcement
CRN: 2
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 1
Primary Keyword: Citizenship, Migration, Immigration and
Nation
Presentations:
A Need for more Balanced Immigration Enforcement:
Moving Away from Mass Detention Policies
Sel Cowger, Temple Beasley School of Law
A Reciprocal Theory of Legal Consciousness and
Procedural Justice: Central American Experiences in
Immigration Court
Maya Barak, American University
Justice Delayed: Immigrant Incarceration & Detention
Hillary Mellinger, American University
Interface of Law and Economy in East Asia
CRN: 33
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 5
Chair: Eri Osaka, Toyo University
Disc:
Annelise Riles, Cornell Law School
Primary Keyword: Economy, Business and Society
Presentations:
A Tale of Two Organizational Forms – A Review of the
Introduction of Japanese Limited Liability Company
(J-LLC) and Japanese Limited Liability Partnership
(J-LLP)
Takashi Shimizu, The University of Tokyo
Challenges of an Aging Japan: How to Maintain the
Working Force?
Caslav Pejovic, Kyushu University
Labor Arbitration Theory and Practice in China During
Period of 2007-2010
Jianyong Li, Shanghai University
Race and Ethnicity as Seen in Okinawa’s Jury Trials
under the US Occupation
Anna Dobrovolskaia, Independent Scholar
Welcome Economics, Goodbye Foreign Laws? :
Assessing Trends in Corporate Law Research in Japan
using Citation Data
Manabu Matsunaka, Graduate School of Law, Nagoya
University
International Law and Environmental Justice: The
Intersections of Race, Gender, Poverty and Indigeneity
CRN: 23
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 2
Chair/Disc: Sheila Foster, Fordham Law School
Primary Keyword: International Law and Politics
Presentations:
“Sacrifice Zones” in the Green Energy Economy
Dayna Nadine Scott, Osgoode Hall Law School
35 Thursday 2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. International Law, Environmental Justice, and the
Rights of Women and Girls in Mining
Sara Seck, Western University
Climate Justice and Vulnerable Groups: Synergies,
Strategies and Challenges
Sumudu Atapattu, University of Wisconsin Law School
Disc:
Rick Abel, UCLA School of Law
Primary Keyword: Legal Professions and Other Legal Services
Providers
Presentations:
Judges in Society
Rosemary Hunter, Queen Mary University of London
Intimate Ordering After Obergefell
Present and Future - A Revised Sociological Portrait of
the Indian Legal Profession
Swethaa S. Ballakrishnen, New York University Abu
Dhabi
Room: Studio 9
Redress for Lawyers’ Professional Negligence:
Insurance, Claims, and Resolution across Countries
Herbert Kritzer, University of Minnesota Law School
Chair: Elizabeth Kukura, Temple University Beasley School of Law
Disc: Michael Boucai, SUNY Buffalo Law School
The Changing Legal Services Landscape in England &
Wales
Steven Vaughan, Birmingham Law School
Primary Keyword: Family and Youth
When and Why do Legal Professions Seek to Influence
Law?
Lynn Mather, SUNY Buffalo Law School
Leslie Levin, University of Connecticut Law School
CRN: 7
Paper Session
Presentations:
Consideration of Genetic Connections in Child Custody
Disputes between Same-Sex Parents: Fair or Foul?
Jessica Feinberg, Mercer University School of Law
Marital Status Nondiscrimination and Its Relationship
to Marriage
Courtney Joslin, UC Davis School of Law
Law, Society, and Psychological Science, Part 1
IRC: 29
Paper Session
Room: Bacchus
Second Order Questions About Marital Choice
Kaiponanea Matsumura, Arizona State University Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law
Chair: Victor Quintanilla, Indiana University
The Fear of Foreign Husbands;The Gendered Aspects of
US Marital Immigration Law
Marcia Zug, University of South Carolina School of
Law
Primary Keyword: Civil Justice and Disputing
Unbundling and Decoupling Marital Rights
Albertina Antognini, University of Kentucky College of
Law
Andrew Woods, University of Kentucky College of Law
Comparing Legal Professions 30 Years After “Lawyers in
Society”
IRC: 41
Paper Session
Room: Balcony J
Chair: Ole Hammerslev, University of Southern Denmark, Department of Law
Hilary Sommerlad, University of Leeds
Disc:
Richard Wiener, University of Nebraska
Presentations:
An Experimental Investigation of the Contexts and
Mechanisms Shaping the Procedural Preferences of
Judges When Triaging Family Law Disputes.
Victor Quintanilla, Indiana University
Amy Applegate, Indiana University, Maurer School of
Law
Mary Murphy, Indiana University
Jim Sherman, Indiana University, Department of
Psychological and Brain Sciences
Diversity Policies and Discrimination Claims: Evidence
from Social Psychology
Tessa Dover, University of California, Santa Barbara
Cheryl Kaiser, University of Washington
Brenda Major, UC Santa Barbara
Victor Quintanilla, Indiana University
36 Thursday
Environmental Racism, American Exceptionalism, and
International Law
Carmen Gonzalez, Seattle University School of Law
Thursday 2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Thursday
System Justification and Housing Bias Against Sexual
Minorities
Jordan Blenner, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Richard Wiener, University of Nebraska
Understanding Judgments of Racial Discrimination: The
Role of Intent and Harm and Anti-discrimination Law
Aaron Moss, Tulane University
Meagan Magaldi, Tulane University
Laurie O’Brien, Tulane University
Stefanie Simon, Carleton College
Judicial Decision-Making
Paper Session
Room: Balcony I
Chair/Disc: Charlton Copeland, University of Miami
Primary Keyword: Judges and Judging
Presentations:
Can You Bury Ideology? An Empirical Analysis of Policy
Preferences at One of the World’s Most Overworked
Apex Courts
Alexander Hudson, University of Texas at Austin, and
FGV Law School Rio de Janeiro
Ivar A. Hartmann, FGV Law School Rio de Janeiro
Lawmaking, Legitimacy, and Legislative Commentary
Missy Lonegrass, LSU Law Center
The Racialized Consequences of Compliance on Mental
Health Court Completion
Lindsey Beach, University of Washington
Using Risk and Needs Assessment Information at
Sentencing: Observations from Ten Jurisdictions
Jennifer Elek, National Center for State Courts
Penal Law in Mandate Palestine: A Question of
Interpretation and Negotiation
Ran A. Levy, Tel Aviv University
What Did Law Do to Colonial Domination and
Violence ? A Reflection Based on the Case of Colonial
Algeria
Laure Blevis, Université Paris Ouest / ISP
Legal Culture and Change
Paper Session
Room: Galvez
Chair/Disc: Malcolm Feeley, University of California-Berkeley
Primary Keyword: Legal Culture
Presentations:
Constitutive Legal Change: Recognizing State Harms
through Activating the Record of Law
Jennifer Balint, The University of Melbourne
Images of Cosmopolitan Law
Antonios E. Platsas, Higher School of Economics National Research University
Law and Social Change Beyond Institutionalism:
Pakistan
muhammad azeem, lahore university of management
sciences
Reassembling Law and Unveiling a Legal Concept of
‘Culture’: Indigenous Perspectives on the Construction
of Cultural Difference in Sentencing Law
Mary Spiers Williams, Australian National University
The Law of the Jungle: Hobo Courts in Prewar America
Brian Frye, University of Kentucky College of Law
Law and Violence in the Colonial State: Boundaries and
Legacies
Legal Temporalities in Colonial Contexts
Paper Session
CRN: 22
Paper Session
Room: Studio 1
Room: Studio 4
Chair/Disc: Sara Dezalay, Goethe University
Chair/Disc: Pooja Parmar, University of Victoria
Primary Keyword: Colonialism and Post-Colonialism
Primary Keyword: British Colonialism
Presentations:
Lawyers for Slaves: The North Carolina Bar, 1830-1861
Barbara Fedders, University of North Carolina School
of Law
Alfred Brophy, University of North Carolina School of
Law
Presentations:
Before and After the Invention: Temporalities in Patent
Law and their Effects
Hyo Yoon Kang, University of Kent, UK
37 Thursday 2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Criminal Accusation, Colonial Governance, and the
Disjointed Times of Law: The Case of Gurdit Singh,
1859-1922
Renisa Mawani, University of British Columbia
Perspectives on Affirmative Action & Diversity
Law and Anachronistic Space on the Northwest
Frontier of Colonial India
Elizabeth Kolsky, Villanova University
Chair/Disc: Karen Miksch, University of Minnesota
Legal Time and Colonial Continuities: The Case of the
Madras Maintenance of Public Order Act in India
Kalyani Ramnath, Princeton University
Presentations:
Celebrating Difference; Mandating Color Blindness
– Why Ethnic Studies Programs are Constitutionally
Sound and Good Public Policy – The Journey
from Milliken v. Bradley (II) to Parents Involved in
Community Schools v. Seattle School District No. 1 and
Arizona’s Prohibition of Ethnic Studies
M. Isabel Medina, Loyola University New Orleans
College of Law
New Developments in Access to Justice Research
Paper Session
Room:Regent
Chair/Disc: Rebecca Sandefur, University of Illinois, Urbana-
Champaign
Primary Keyword: Access to Justice
Presentations:
Analyzing the Role of Judges
Anna Carpenter, University of Tulsa College of Law
Alyx Mark, North Central College
Colleen Shanahan, Temple University Beasley School
of Law
How Does Law Matter?: Exploring How Substantive
Law Shapes How People Handle Their Justice Problems
Rebecca Sandefur, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign
Implications of the Justice Index, www.justiceindex.org
David Udell, National Center for Access to Justice at
Cardozo Law School
Status, Networks, and Conformity: Corporate Law Firms
and Isomorphism in Pro Bono Ties
Steven Boutcher, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
The Effectiveness and Sustainability of Low Bono
Practice
Tanina Rostain, Georgetown
Alyse Bertenthal, University of California - Irvine
Room:Iberville
Primary Keyword: Race and Ethnicity
De Facto Segregation, Diversity, and Disparities: Fisher
v. Texas, the Remix
Vinay Harpalani, Savannah Law School
Shakira Pleasant, Savannah Law School
How Can the Language of Equality Favor One Race
Over Another: How Did Affirmative Action Gain its
Prominence as a Key Policy Strategy?
Tamar Hofnung, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
The Impacts of Affirmative Action on Employment
Disparities in the United States and India
Samuel Myers, Jr., University of Minnesota
Vanishree Radhakrishna, High Court of Karnataka
Why Malia and Sasha Obama Need Affirmative Action
Sheldon Bernard Lyke, Whittier Law School
Publishing in the Law & Society Review
Professional Development Panel
Room: Salon D
Participants:
Jeannine Bell, Indiana University Maurer School of Law
— Bloomington
Susan Sterett, Virginia Tech NCR
Margot Young, University of British Columbia
Susan Sterett, Jeannine Bell, and Margot Young, the new editors
of the Law and Society Review, will speak about their editing
philosophy and experiences from their first several months of
reviewing and selecting manuscripts for the journal and will
answer questions from the audience.
Primary Keyword: Professional Education
38 Thursday
Revisiting Lord Dalhousie’s “Doctrine of Lapse”:
Statutes of Limitation and Temporal Duration in East
India Company’s Policy toward Hereditary Succession in
Native Princely States in mid-19th Century British India
Sudipta Sen, University of California, Davis
Paper Session
Thursday 2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Thursday
Reconciliation and Regulation: Indigenous Law, Rule of
Law, and International Law
CRN: 34
Paper Session
Room: Studio 5
Chair/Disc: L. Jane McMillan, St. Francis Xavier
White Supremacy as Terrorism: Matching the
Resources to the Reality
Melissa Castillo, Temple University, Beasley School of
Law
Reimagining Boundaries of Class, Inequality and Social
Services
Paper Session
Primary Keyword: Indigeneity and First Peoples
Room: Bonaparte
Presentations:
Complex System Methodology for Gender Justice
Research in Liberia and Australia
Veronica Fynn Bruey, Australian National University
Chair/Disc: Leslie Garfield, Pace Law School
Reconciliation Without Justice: Competing Timelines in
Indigenous Land Claims
Lindsey Bell, Royal Holloway, University of London
Presentations:
Lawyering for Child Victims – Swedish Gaps and Gains
Maria Forsman, Umeå Forum for Studies on Law and
Society
The Irony of Extinguishment Principles: Fragility and
Indigneous Property Rights in Australia
David Yarrow, Victorian Bar
Listening and learning: Intersectional challenges during
courtroom observations
Torun Elsrud, Dept of media and journalism
Working with Indigenous Legal Traditions: Reflections
on Approaches to Maori Law in Aotearoa - New
Zealand
Carwyn Jones, Victoria University of Wellington
The European Approach to Age Discrimination
Protection: Fit for Purpose?
Mark Butler, Lancaster University
Redefining the War(s) on Terror: Agency, Resilience,
Resistance
Paper Session
Room: Salon C
Chair/Disc: Tugba Basaran, University of Kent
Primary Keyword: War and Law including Security and
Terrorism
Presentations:
Educational Institutions and Their Critical Role in the
Fight Against Terror
Maureen Duffy, University of Calgary
International Obligations and National Legislation: The
Development of the Canadian Anti-Money Laundering
and Counter-Terrorist Financing Complex
Vanessa Iafolla, University of Alberta
The War Against Boko Haram: the U.S. Role in
Countering the Spread of Terrorism in Africa
Miriam Abaya, Temple University Beasley School of
Law
39 Primary Keyword: Class and Inequality
Rights, Identities, and Political Cultures
Paper Session
Room: Salon B
Chair/Disc: Laura Zlotowski, University of California-Irvine
Primary Keyword: Rights and Identities
Presentations:
Procedural Justice: Why Popular Beliefs Matter
Denise Meyerson, Macquarie University
Public Discourse, Meaning-Making and the Failure to
Protect Transgender Workers
Sarah Hampson, University of Washington Tacoma
Brian McQuay, University of Washington Tacoma
Race, Religion, and Political Community in Public
Schools
Stuart Chinn, University of Oregon School of Law
Role Conflict and Justice Dissonance: Prisoner Re-Entry
Service Providers’ Perceptions of Law, Justice and
Fairness
Tanya Whittle, University of Delaware
Thursday 2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Session I: Rights Making and Taking in the World of Work
Room: Studio 7
The Dilemmas of Party Politics in Hong Kong: How does
Law Lead and Response to Social Change
Haibo Ye, Shenzhen University Law School
Chair: Diane Frey, Murphy Institute, CUNY
Disc:
Nantiya Ruan, University of Denver
The Forms and Meanings of Sovereignty: US Subic
Bay Naval Base and the Subic Bay Freeport Zone,
Philippines
Victoria Reyes, Bryn Mawr College
Primary Keyword: Economic and Social Rights
Presentations:
Defensible Decisions: An Examination of Formalized
Criminal Background Checks in Employment Practice
Megan Kurlychek, University at Albany
Shawn Bushway, University at Albany
Megan Denver, University at Albany
Garima Siwach, University at Albany
Talking Law and Politics
Paper Session
Room: Balcony N
Rana Plaza, Global Supply Chains and Offshore
Manufacturing: Gender Issues
Nabila Khan, International Women’s Rights Project
Chair: Jeffrey Dudas, University of Connecticut
The Workers’ Republic: Rights-Making and the Creation
of the National State
Luke Norris, Columbia Law School
Primary Keyword: Rights and Identities
Workers’ Rights and Wage Theft: The Practical
Application of California’s “Employee-Friendly” Laws
Matthew Fritz-Mauer, University of California, Irvine
Disc:
Rose Corrigan, Drexel University
Presentations:
A Socio-Legal Examination of The Right to Die: A CrossCountry Comparison
Jill Weinberg, Northwestern University
Sovereignty, Colonialism and Post-Colonial (Political)
Developments in East Asia
Higher Counsel: Training the Conservative Christian
Legal Movement
Joshua Wilson, University of Denver
Amanda Hollis-Brusky, Pomona College
Room: Galerie 4
The Radical and the Righteous: Discourses of AntiProfessionalism in Homebirth Midwifery
Renee Cramer, Drake University
CRN: 33
Paper Session
Chair/Disc: Eugene K B Tan, Singapore Management University
Primary Keyword: Colonialism and Post-Colonialism
Presentations:
Cultural decolonization and restitution of plundered
cultural property to its country of origin
Yue Zhang, University of Wisconsin-Madison Law
School
From Colony to SAR: The Evolution of Rule of Law
Discourse in Hong Kong’s Democratic Development
Stuart Hargreaves, Faculty of Law, the Chinese
University of Hong Kong
The Thin White Duke of Death & The Spider at the
Center of a Web: The Joker, Moriarty, and Law and
Order in Contemporary America
Jeffrey Dudas, University of Connecticut
Tax Session 4: Evasion and Compliance
CRN: 31
Paper Session
Room: Salon H-G
Chair/Disc: Goldburn Maynard, University of Louisville Brandeis School of Law
Primary Keyword: Taxation
40 Thursday
Money in Taiwanese Politics – A Historical Analysis of
Taiwanese Congressional Elections and the Campaign
Finance Law (From 1935 to 2016)
Po Liang Chen, University of Washington School of
Law
CRN: 8, 47
Paper Session
Thursday
Thursday 2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Presentations:
Demolition Blues: Anti-Tax Avoidance Measures against
a Backdrop of Strong and Weak Purposivism
Steven Dean, Brooklyn Law School
Lawrence Solan, Brooklyn Law School
Dream or Nightmare? Securities and Tax Law
Compliance for Crowdfunded For-Profit Businesses
Relying on the JOBS Act of 2012
Danshera Cords, Albany Law School
Regulating Offshore Tax Evasion: A Theoretical
Framework
Shu-Yi Oei, Tulane Law School
Taxpayer Voice
Adam Thimmesch, University of Nebraska College of
Law
The Punitive State IV: The State of Criminal Justice
Reform
CRN: 27
Paper Session
Room: Studio 2
Chair/Disc: Mona Lynch, University of California, Irvine
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
Presentations:
Penal Reform in Light of America’s Broader, Hidden
Penal State
Joshua Kaiser, Northwestern University and American
Bar Foundation
Sara Wakefield, Rutgers University
The Boundaries of Rights and Identities
The Contradictions of Criminal Justice Reform
Katherine Beckett, University of Washington
Room: Salon F
The Hinterland of Sentencing Reform
Christopher Seeds, New York University
Paper Session
Primary Keyword: Rights and Identities
Presentations:
Guidelines for Communicating Rights to Non-native
Speakers of English in Australia, England and Wales,
and the USA
Margaret van Naerssen, Immaculata University
Hate Speech Ain’t Free: U.S. and international
Perspectives on the Right to be Free from Hatred
Robert Zarnetske, University of Massachusetts,
Boston
Repairing the Migrant ‘Crisis’: Rights as Friendship
Bal Sokhi-Bulley, Queen’s University Belfast
Rethinking Rights, Care, and Justice: Lessons From the
Disability Movement
Laura Back, University of Washington
Theorizing Law on the Ground: A Comparison of the
Implementation of Anti-Bullying Legislation
Hana Shepherd, Rutgers Sociology
Idit Fast, Rutgers University
When “Laws Are Important, But Not That Much”:
Rights in Conflict in Reproductive Healthcare in
Contemporary Turkey
Ayse Toksoz, University of Washington
41 The Prison Boom as an Impediment to the Roll Back of
Mass Imprisonment
John Eason, Texas A&M University
The State of Rights Scholarship in Law and Society
Paper Session
Room: Riverview I
Chair: Jeb Barnes, USC
Disc:
Jeffrey Dudas, University of Connecticut
Jonathan Goldberg-Hiller, University of Hawai`i
Primary Keyword: Rights and Identities
Presentations:
Generalizing Rights Construction and Deployment
Scott Barclay, Drexel University
Andrew Flores, UCLA School of Law
Pitting “Rights” against “Rights”: Organization Practices
in Response to Stepped-up Civil Rights Enforcement
and Guidance Letters
Kristin Bumiller, Amherst College
Rights as Regulation: Organizations as Interpreters of
Rights
Thomas Burke, Wellesley College
Susan Silbey, MIT
Thursday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m. Presentations:
Elections as Sacred Rituals
Gilad Abiri, Yale Law School
We Need to Talk About “Transitional Justice”: Idealism
Or Imperialism? Towards A Neo-Colonial Critique of PostConflict Trendy Ideology
Judicial Decisions and Everyday Life: The Case of
Church Closures
Kevin McMahon, Trinity College
John R. Reitemeyer, Trinity College
Room: Galerie 3
“The Trumpet That Shall Never Sound Retreat?”:
Assessing the Christian Conservative Legal Worldview
After Obergefell
Jason Whitehead, California State University, Long
Beach
Paper Session
Chair: Mikkel Christensen, iCourts, Faculty of Law, University of Copenhagen
Disc:
Mark Goodale, University of Lausanne
Primary Keyword: Colonialism and Post-Colonialism
Presentations:
Coming to Terms with the Past in a Global Age: A
Genealogy of Transitional Justice
Ernesto Fabian Mieles Gonzalez, Free University of
Berlin
Narrative Politics of Transitional Justice: Tracing
Discursive Fault Lines
Leslie Dwyer, George Mason University, School for
Conflict Analysis & Resolution
Alison Castel, George Mason University
Sara Cobb, George Mason University
The Transitional Justice Toolkit Approach in Burundi:
Practitioners Implementing a Fruitless Agenda?
Astrid Jamar, University of Edinburgh
The “Ideal Perpetrator” Considering the Socialconstruction and Politics of Accountability: A Study of
the French National Railroad (SNCF)
Sarah Federman, George Mason University, School of
Conflict Analysis and Resolution
T h u rsd ay Ju n e 2
4 :4 5 p . m . – 6 : 3 0 p . m .
“You, Judge, Are Not Willing to Obey and Follow
the True and Real Law”: Sovereign Citizen Legal
Performance as Expressions of Sovereign Religious
Conceptions of the Law
Spencer Dew, Centenary College of Louisiana
Jamie Wright, Centenary College of Louisiana
A Study of the Child Right in the Context of Law and
Society of East Asia: An Experiment of Cross-Cultural
Collaboration in Comparative Law
CRN: 33
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 6
Chair: Amy Huey-Ling Shee, National Chung Cheng University
Disc: Yoshiharu Matsuura, Graduate School of Law, Nagoya University
Primary Keyword: East Asia
Presentations:
A Method of Collaborative Communication for a
Comparison of Law and Society in a Glocalized Context
Yoshiharu Matsuura, Graduate School of Law, Nagoya
University
Religion and Decision-Making
Children’s Voice in Healthcare Decision-making: A
Comparison between China and Taiwan
Wei Ouyang, National Chung Cheng University
Room: Salon C
Juvenile Justice in Taiwan
Kuo-hsing Hsieh, National Chung Cheng University
Paper Session
Chair/Disc: Leilah Vevaina, The Max Planck Institute for Religious and Ethnic Diversity
Primary Keyword: Religion and Law
Realize the Right of Inclusive Education for Children
with Disabilities through Changing the Law,
Environment and the Minds of People Related
XIANGSHUN DING, Renmin University of China Law
School
42 Thursday
Who is Right about Rights? Making Sense of Rights
Scholarship
Jeb Barnes, USC
Thursday
Thursday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.
Sharing Glocal Information on Child Right: focused on
“Parental Rights” and “Phishing”
Amy Huey-Ling Shee, National Chung Cheng
University
Chuan-Chi Kuo, National Chung Cheng University
AMR: Jeb Barnes and Thomas F. Burke - “How Policy
Shapes Politics”
Author Meets Reader (AMR) Session
Room: Salon E
Author: Jeb Barnes, USC
Thomas Burke, Wellesley College
Chair: Charles Epp, University of Kansas
Readers:
Charles Epp, University of Kansas
Anna Kirkland, University of Michigan
Carroll Seron, University of California, Irvine
Shauhin Talesh, University of California, Irvine
Judicialization, juridification, legalization-whatever term
they employ, scholars around the world are fascinated by
the increasingly powerful role of courts, litigation and legal
rights in social life and seek to understand its implications for
politics. How Policy Shapes Politics (Oxford University Press,
2015) argues that claims about the effects of judicialization
are inherently comparative, so that scholars who seek to
probe its effects need to adopt research designs that compare
judicialized and non-judicialized politics and policy. Accordingly,
the book analyzes the field of injury compensation in the United
States, in which judicialized policies operate side-by-side with
bureaucratized social insurance programs. The authors find no
evidence to support some of the most familiar claims about the
turn to courts, litigation and legal rights--that the allure of law
traps activists in its spell, that court victories produce paralyzing
backlashes, or that law-focused public policy is more prone
to path dependency than bureaucratic alternatives. In many
respects the politics of rights and litigation does not look much
different from other forms of politics.
Nonetheless, in the field of injury compensation judicialization
has had powerful political consequences. By dividing social
interests into victims and villains, winners and losers,
judicialization has generated a fractious, chaotic politics in
which even seeming allies-business and professional groups
on one side, injured victims on the other-sometimes became
divided amongst themselves. By contrast, social insurance
programs that compensate for injury have brought social
interests together, narrowing the scope of conflict and over time
producing a more technocratic politics.
Primary Keyword: Civil Justice and Disputing
Contending Visions of Islamic Law and Society in the
20th and 21st Centuries
CRN: 30
Paper Session
Room: Studio 5
Chair: Seval Yildirim, Whittier Law School
Disc: Nurfadzilah Yahaya, National University of Singapore
Primary Keyword: Islamic Law and Society
Presentations:
A Supreme Court is not Enough: Re-evaluating
the Role of the Egyptian Supreme Constitutional
Court in Reconciling Islamic Shari’a with Modern
Constitutionalism
Ahmed Elsayed, University of Copenhagen - Currently
Fellowship at NYU
Hey…You Guys are Married (!) Regulating Sexuality
through Legitimizing Marriage and Children in
Bangladesh
MD ANISUR RAHMAN, National University of
Singapore (NUS)
Islamic Law & the Duty to Fight: States, Non-State
Actors and Jihad’s Evolution
Adnan Zulfiqar, University of Pennsylvania
The Implications of Weber’s Theory on Persian Law for
Islamic Constitutionalism in Iran
Maliheh Zare, NYU School of Law
Book Introduction Session: Critical Engagements and
Visions in International Law
CRN: 23
Roundtable Session
Room: Galerie 2
Chair: Sundhya Pahuja, University of Melbourne
Books and Authors:
Shawkat Alam, Sumudu Atapattu, Carmen G. Gonzalez,
and Jona Razzaque (eds), International Environmental
Law and the Global South (Cambridge University Press,
2015) [presented by Carmen Gonzalez]
Sumudu Atapattu, Human Rights Approaches to
Climate Change: Challenges and Opportunities
(Routledge, 2015)
Olivia Barr, A Jurisprudence of Movement: Common
Law, Walking, Unsettling Place (Routledge, 2016)
43 Thursday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m. Sally Merry (for co-editors Kevin Davis and Benedict
Kingsbury): The Quiet Power of Indicators: Measuring
Governance, Corruption, and the Rule of Law.
Cambridge University Press (May 2015)
Nick Cheesman, Opposing the Rule of Law: How
Myanmar’s Courts Make Law and Order (Cambridge
University Press, 2015)
Richard Rottenburg (for co-editors Sally Merry,
Sung-Joon Park, and Johanna Mugler): The World of
Indicators: The Making of Governmental Knowledge
through Quantification, Cambridge University Press
(September 2015)
Luis Eslava, Local Space, Global Life: The Everyday
Operation of International Law and Development
(Cambridge University Press, 2015)
Primary Keyword: New Legal Realism
Luis Eslava, Michael Fakhri, and Vasuki Nesiah (eds),
Bandung, Global History and International Law: Critical
Pasts and Pending Futures (Cambridge University Press,
2016) [presented by Michael Fakhri]
Book Panel - Introducing New Books in East Asian Law
and Society
Ben Golder, Foucault and the Politics of Rights
(Stanford University Press, 2015)
Room: Galerie 5
Markus Gunneflo, Targeted Killing: A Legal and Political
History (Cambridge University Press, 2016)
Vanja Hamzić, Sexual and Gender Diversity in the
Muslim World: History, Law and Knowledge (I. B. Tauris
Publishers, 2015)
James Parker, Acoustic Jurisprudence: Listening to the
Trial of Simon Bikindi (Oxford University Press, 2015)
Primary Keyword: International Law and Politics
Book Panel - Introducing New Books in Realist and
Empirical Legal Methods
CRN: 28
Roundtable Session
Room: Galerie 3
Books and Authors:
Dayna Bowen Matthew: Just Medicine: A Cure for
Racial Inequality in American Health Care, New York
University Press (December 2015)
Elizabeth Mertz (for co-editors Stewart Macaulay and
Thomas Mitchell): The New Legal Realism: Translating
Law-and-Society for Today’s Legal Practice, Cambridge
University Press (April 2016)
Heinz Klug (for co-editor Sally Merry): Studying Law
Globally: New Legal Realist Perspectives, Cambridge
University Press (April 2016)
Riaz Tejani: Marketing Justice: Neoliberal Access and
the For Profit Law School, Stanford University Press
(May 2016)
CRN: 33
Roundtable Session
Celeste Arrington, “Accidental Activists: Victim
Movements and Government Accountability in Japan
and South Korea”, Cornell University Press, 2016.
Chaihark Hahm and Sung Ho Kim, “Making We the
People: Democratic Constitutional Founding in Postwar
Japan and South Korea”, Cambridge University Press,
2015
Editors/Authors: Toshihisa TOYODA, Katsumi
MATSUOKA, Takayuki Li, and Yuka KANEKO; “Asian Law
in Disasters: Towards a Human-Centered Recovery”,
Routledge, 2016
Sida Liu and Terry Halliday, “Criminal Defense in China:
The Politics of Lawyers at Work”, Cambridge University
Press, 2016.
Richard Krooth, Morris Edelson, and Hiroshi Fukurai,
“Nuclear Tsunami: The Japanese Government and
America’s Role in the Fukushima Disaster”, Lexington
Books, 2015
Setsuo Miyazawa, Weidong Ji, Hiroshi Fukurai, KayWah Chan, and Matthias Vanhullebusch, “East Asia’s
Renewed Respect for the Rule of Law in the 21st
Century: The Future of Legal and Judicial Landscapes in
East Asia”, Brill, 2015
Dimitri Vanoverbeke, “Juries in the Japanese
Legal System: The Continuing Struggle for Citizen
Participation and Democracy”, Routledge, 2015
Matthew J. Wilson, Hiroshi Fukurai, and Takashi
Maruta, “Japan and Civil Jury Trials: The Convergence
of Forces”, Edward Elgar Pub, 2015
44 Thursday
Ben Boer, Philip Hirsch, Fleur Johns, Ben Saul & Natalia
Scurrah, The Mekong: A Socio-legal Approach to River
Basin Development (Routledge, 2016) [presented by
Fleur Jones]
Thursday
Thursday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.
Leon Wolff, Luke Nottage, and Kent Anderson, “Who
Rules Japan? Popular Participation in the Japanese
Legal Process”, Edward Elgar Pub, 2015
Jiunn-rong Yeh and Wen-Chen Chang, “Asian Courts in
Context”, Cambridge University Press, 2015
The Job Market for Justice in the Inter-American
Human Rights System
Cosette Creamer, Boston University School of Law
Carolina Alvarez Utoft, Centre of Excellence for
International Courts at Faculty of Law of University of
Copenhagen
Joachim Zekoll and Moritz Bälz, “Formalisation and
Flexibilisation in Dispute Resolution”, Brill, 2015
Who Holds Influence Over WTO Jurisprudence?
Krzysztof Pelc, McGill
Primary Keyword: East Asia
Examining Interventions to Protect Consumers
CRN: 25
Paper Session
Room: Studio 10
Chair/Disc: Freya Kodar, Faculty of Law, University of Victoria
Primary Keyword: Household Finance
Presentations:
Applying the Federal Civil Debt Collection Framework
to Combat Abuses in Criminal Justice Debt Collection
Neil Sobol, Texas A&M University School of Law
Fixes That Fail: The Effects of Some Governmental
Interventions on Consumers During In The 2008
Foreclosure Crisis
Judith Fox, Notre Dame Law School
Performance-Based Investor Protection
Lauren Willis, Loyola Los Angeles
Perpetual Debts
Dalie Jimenez, University of Connecticut School of
Law
Exercising Influence: The Relevance and Irrelevance of
the State in the Creation of International Governance
Regimes
Paper Session
Room: Studio 3
Primary Keyword: International Law and Politics
Presentations:
Noncompliance, Renegotiation, and Justice in
International Adjudication: A WTO-EU Perspective
Sivan Shlomo Agon, Bar-Ilan University
The governance of data flows through trade
agreements
Mira Burri, University of Bern
Gender in Legal Practice
CRN: 32 and IRC: 32
Paper Session
Room: Studio 8
Chair: Swethaa S. Ballakrishnen, New York University Abu Dhabi
Disc:
Hilary Sommerlad, University of Leeds
Primary Keyword: Gender and Judging
Presentations:
Gender and What is Made of it: Being a Woman Judge
in Turkish Judicial Culture
Seda Kalem, Istanbul Bilgi University
Legal Practice: Dysfunctional Spaces, the Cost of
Belonging, and the Possibilities of Change
Paula Baron, La Trobe University
Patronage and Gender Roles in the Inquisitorial Justice
in Chile
Jeanne Hersant, Universidad de Playa Ancha
Professor Alice Erh-Soon Tay - Visions of Law and
Social Change in Australia’s Legal Academy
Susan Bartie, University of Tasmania
The Elastic Ceiling: Gender and Professional Career in
Chinese Courts
Sida Liu, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Jiahui Ai, Nanjing University
Chunyan Zheng, Zhejiang University
Gendered Inequality and Violence As Human Rights
Problems
Paper Session
Room: Balcony K
Chair/Disc: Margot Young, University of British Columbia
Primary Keyword: Human Rights
Presentations:
45 Thursday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m. European Human Rights Law on Violence Against
Women: Promising Results at the Horizon or Fata
Morgana?
Renée Römkens, Atria, National Institute On Gender
Equality And Women’s History
International Women’s Rights and Migration: Sex
selection in the United States and India
Sital Kalantry, Cornell Law School
Immigrant Integration in an Era of Executive Action
CRN: 2
Paper Session
Thursday
“We Will Kill the Men and Take all the Women as
Wives”: Gender-Based Violence in Darfur
Gabrielle Ferrales, University of Minnesota
Allison Nobles, University of Minnesota
Hollie Nyseth Brehm, The Ohio State University
Michael Englehart, The Ohio State University
Room: Galerie 1
Chair: Stephen Lee, UC Irvine School of Law
Disc:
Juliet Stumpf, Lewis and Clark Law School
Primary Keyword: Citizenship, Migration, Immigration and
Nation
Presentations:
Brokering DACA Relief
Stephen Lee, UC Irvine School of Law
No, It’s Actually about Human Rights in Gaming
Journalism: Gamergate, Cyberharassment, and the
Dangers of being a Woman on the Internet
Daniel Tagliarina, Lycoming College
Corinne Tagliarina, University of Connecticut
Exile as Punishment: Crime-Based Deportation, PostConviction Rehabilitative Relief and Executive Action 20
Years After IIRIRA
Annie Lai, University of California, Irvine School of
Law
Reading Between the Lines of Rights: A Critical
Analysis of International and National Discourse (De)
marginalizing Indigenous and Minority Rights to Higher
Education
Sahar D. Sattarzadeh, Institute for Reconciliation and
Social Justice, University of the Free State
Immigration Legacies, Regional Collaborations, and the
Implementation of DACA
Els de Graauw, Baruch College -- CUNY
Shannon Gleeson, Cornell University
The Significance of the Federal in Immigrant Integration
Ming Chen, University of Colorado Law School
Women’s Involvement in Human Trafficking
Lauren McCarthy, University of Massachusetts
Amherst
Human Rights And Institutions: The Organizational
Dimensions of Human Rights Violations and Reforms
Paper Session
Three Ways of Looking at a Marriage
Kerry Abrams, University of Virginia
Imperial Legalities from Below: The Legal Lives of
Vagabonds, Fugitives, Debtors, and the Recently
Departed
Room:Iberville
CRN: 15
Paper Session
Chair: Leslye Obiora, University of Arizona
Room: Studio 6
Primary Keyword: Human Rights
Chair: Rohit De, Yale University
Presentations:
Human Rights as Reform, Rhetoric and Regulation in
Northern Irish Policing
Richard Martin, University of Oxford
Disc:
Summary executions by Brazilian Police Death Squads:
forms of private justice in the city of Salvador, BA
Mariana Possas, Federal University of Bahia
Andrija Almeida, UFBA
The Human Rights of Non-Citizens in Ecuador
Stephen Meili, University of Minnesota Law School
Sunil Amrith, Harvard University
Primary Keyword: British Colonialism
Presentations:
Diasporic Deaths And Mobile Legalities In India’s Great
Imperial Migration
Julia Stephens, Yale University
Elimination through Law: Settler-Colonialism’s Logic of
Elimination and Constitutional Law in Israel
Mazen Masri, City University London
46 Thursday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.
Thursday
On the Lam: Criminal Fugitives and Mobility in
Nineteenth-Century British Imperial Law
Catherine Evans, Center for History and Economics,
Harvard University
Prince Charles, David Beckham, and the Elephants:
Britain and the Colonial Origins of International
Conservation Law 1900-2014
Mario Prost, Keele University
Yoriko Otomo, School of Oriental and African Studies
(SOAS) - University of London
Internationalized Trials, Atrocities, and a Sociology of
Justifications
Ron Levi, University of Toronto
Who is To Uphold the Honour of the Crown?
Thomas McMorrow, University of Ontario Institute of
Technology
The Archive goes to Strasbourg: Facts, Values and the
Limits of Historical Knowledge at the European Court of
Human Rights
Jessica Greenberg, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign
Intended Consequences? The Effects of Legal Reform in
Matters of Sex
Paper Session
Room: Balcony J
Chair/Disc: Leonore Carpenter, Temple University Beasley School of Law
Primary Keyword: Gender and Sexuality
Presentations:
Comparing Faith-Based and Secular Schools With
Respect to GSAs and Approaches to Creating Safe,
Equitable and Inclusive Schools for LGBTQ Students
Donn Short, University of Manitoba
Foucault, Neo-Conservatism and the Government of
Same-Sex Attraction in Uganda
Michael Ashworth, University of Bristol
Sodomy’s Penumbra
Joseph Fischel, Yale University
The Law and Politics of Abortion Travel
Lisa Kelly, Columbia Law School & Center for
Reproductive Rights
Joanna Erdman, Schulich School of Law, Dalhousie
University
International Courts and Society
Paper Session
Room: Bonaparte
Chair: Gregory Shaffer, University of California Irvine
Disc:
Lisa Sundstrom, University of British Columbia
Primary Keyword: Transnational Legal Orders, International and
Regional Institutions
47 Presentations:
International Courts, Political Constraints, and the
Expansion of Rights: The IACtHR
Wayne Sandholtz, University of Southern California
Legal Mobilization and International Courts
Rachel Cichowski, University of Washington
Law, Society, and Psychological Science, Part 2
IRC: 29
Paper Session
Room: Bacchus
Chair: Richard Wiener, University of Nebraska
Disc:
Victor Quintanilla, Indiana University
Primary Keyword: Civil Justice and Disputing
Presentations:
A New Look at the Endowment Effect and Why It
Matters to the Law
Kenworthey Bilz, University of Illinois
An Experimental Approach to Understanding Trust in
Law and Society
Kees van den Bos, Utrecht University
Liesbeth Hulst, VU University Amsterdam
Experiencers, Witnesses, and Evaluators: Confirmation
Bias in Title VII Sexual Harassment
Katherine Kimble, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Richard Wiener, University of Nebraska
Loyalties v. Royalties
Sarah Polcz, Stanford Law School
The Effects of Regarding Others to Have a Mental
Disability: Limits of the ADA
Richard Wiener, University of Nebraska
Jordan Blenner, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Katlyn Farnum, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Katherine Kimble, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Thursday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m. Judging Parents -- Problems With Legal Enforcement of
Helicoptering Parenting Norms
Room: Balcony I
Chair: David Pimentel, University of Idaho College of Law
Participants:
Naomi Cahn, GW
David DeLugas, National Association of Parents
Bridget Kevane, Montana State University
Danielle Meitiv, Empower Kids America
Elizabeth Porter, University of Washington School of
Law
Diane Redleaf, The Family Defense Center
Zvi Triger, Striks School of Law, The College of
Management Academic Studies
In the last generation, parenting norms have shifted strongly
in favor of Intensive Parenting, with particular emphasis
on protecting children from risks of harm, both real and
imagined. Despite a recent backlash against the trend -- based
on the concern that coddling children with overprotection,
or “helicoptering,” inhibits children’s development and even
their welfare -- the law has encouraged it by enforcing the
overprotective norms in a variety of legal contexts. Such
enforcement generates fear among parents who, desperate
keep custody of their own children, capitulate to these
pressures, voluntarily surrendering their [14th amendment]
rights to raise their children as they see fit. The coerced
conformity in child-rearing practice does violence to pluralism,
and to the diverse conceptions of family, in various cultural
and socio-economic communities within society. Panelists have
advocated reform, mostly through scholarly work, but also by
pursuing cases in this area.
Primary Keyword: Family and Youth
Primary Keyword: Disasters
New Corporeal Humanisms: Law & Social Change
Paper Session
Room:Jackson
Chair/Disc: Michael Thomson, University of Leeds
Primary Keyword: Social Theory and Law,
Presentations:
Animal Beings: Toward a New Feminist Legal
Subjectivity for More-Than-Human Animals
Maneesha Deckha, University of Victoria
Bioethics of Vulnerability: Regulating Gamete Donation
and the Rights of the Donor-Conceived Child
Stu Marvel, Emory Law School
Corporeal or Embodied Humanisms?
michael thomson, University of Leeds
Sam Lewis, University of Leeds
New Challenges in Disaster Law and Climate Change
Adaptation
Jurisdiction in gender recognition: governing legal
embodiment
Chris Dietz, Centre for Law and Social Justice,
University of Leeds (UK)
Room: Studio 4
Of Rats and Dogs: The Role of Care Theory in Framing a
New Interspecies Ethics
Marie Fox, University of Birmingham
CRN: 24
Roundtable Session
Chair: Robert Verchick, Loyola New Orleans Law School
Participants:
Lloyd Burton, University of Colorado, Denver
Yoshida Kunihiko, Hokkaido University
Karen Bradshaw Shulz, Arizona State University Law
School
Lisa Sun, Brigham Young University Law School
Michalyn Steele, Brigham Young University
Sometimes we fail to learn the lessons of past disasters and
sometimes we learn them too well, as focusing too much
Vulnerability- Navigating the Empowerment/Protection
Dichotomy
Beverley Clough, University of Leeds
Perspectives on Law & Social Theory
Paper Session
Room: Galvez
Primary Keyword: Social Theory and Law
48 Thursday
Roundtable Session
on the last disaster can induce myopia and distort resource
allocation. This roundtable will give presenters and audience
members the chance to consider some of the new challenges in
disaster law and climate change adaptation, in light of both past
disasters and changing environmental and social conditions.
From planning for the resilience of transportation, water,
and energy infrastructure to dealing with issues surrounding
species translocation to finding ways to protect and compensate
vulnerable communities, evacuees, and refugees to developing
techniques for informing and engaging communities on critical
disaster issues, we will explore emerging and future challenges
that will shape disaster risk in the years to come.
Thursday
Thursday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.
Presentations:
Behavioral Sociology of Law and Behavioral Law and
Economics: Why We Need Less Rather Than More
Purity
Peter Mascini, Erasmus University Rotterdam
Law and the Politics of Defamation in the Sikh
Communities of British Columbia, 1990-2010
Bonar Buffam, University of British Columbia
Okanagan
Max Weber and the Possibility of the Constitution of
Everyday Subjectivity
Peter Swan, Carleton University
Reparations: Why Payment Doesn’t Adequately
Redress Emotional and Symbolic Damage
Steve Larocco, Southern Connecticut State University
Primary Keyword: Legal History
Redress and Recognition in Law and Society
Paper Session
Room: Salon B
Chair: Poulami Roychowdhury, McGill University
Disc: Anna-Maria Marshall, University of Illinois, Urbana-
Champaign
Primary Keyword: Disputes and Negotiation
Presentations:
Historicizing Marital Status: Struggle and
Accommodation in Post-Apartheid South Africa
Michael Yarbrough, John Jay College (CUNY)
The Precarious Legitimacy of Legal Standardization: An
Empirical Study of Four Model Public Health Laws
Arielle Tolman, Northwestern University
Reconciliation and Resistance: The Social and Political
Basis of Redress
Poulami Roychowdhury, McGill University
Readers Consider Aaronson’s “From Slave Abuse to Hate
Crime”
Sovereignty as Redress: Chernobyl, Crimea, and other
Territorial Claims in Response to Mass Harm
Monica Eppinger, Saint Louis University
CRN: 27, 44
Roundtable Session
Room: Studio 2
Chair: Ashley Rubin, Florida State University
Participants:
Malcolm Feeley, University of California-Berkeley
Ariela Gross, USC Gould School of Law
Valerie Jenness, UC Irvine
Jonathan Simon, University of California-Berkeley
Ely Aaronson, University of Haifa
The relationship between historical and contemporary forms
of institutionalizing racial disparities in the American criminal
justice system is a subject of growing scholarly interest. Ely
Aaronson’s recent book From Slave Abuse to Hate Crime
(Cambridge University Press, 2014) makes an important
contribution to this literature by revealing both continuity and
change in the mechanisms underpinning the failure to address
the problem of group-differentiated vulnerability to criminal
victimization throughout American history. The book also
makes an important contribution to theories of law and social
change, by analyzing the possibilities, limitations, unintended
consequences, and boomerang effects of the deployment
of criminalization reform as a tool of legal mobilization. This
roundtable will explore broad issues raised by the book’s
argument and evidence in the fields of the sociology of crime
and punishment, legal history, law and society theory, and
critical race theory.
49 The Moral Economy of Democracy
Loka Ashwood, Auburn University, Department of
Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology
Tribal Laws and Same-Sex Marriage
Ann Tweedy, Hamline University School of Law
Reproducibility, Replicability, and Reliability in Sociolegal
Scholarship
Professional Development Panel
Room: Salon D
Chair: Helena Silverstein, National Science Foundation
Participants:
Jon Gould, National Science Foundation
Devon Johnson, George Mason University
Saul Kassin, John Jay College, CUNY
Thomas M Keck, Syracuse University
Nancy Reichman, University of Denver
Susan Silbey, MIT
Disciplines across the social, behavioral, and economic sciences
are taking steps to encourage reproducible, replicable, and
reliable research. Journals and funding agencies, including the
National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of
Health, are establishing guidelines for data sharing and research
transparency. Universities are creating repositories to improve
access to data. In some fields, coordinated projects seek to
Thursday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m. Room: Studio 7
The objective of this roundtable is to generate inter- and
cross-disciplinary dialogue concerning the value, variability,
and limits of reproducibility, replicability, and reliability in
the context of sociolegal research, and the implications of
data sharing requirements, transparency efforts, and other
practices designed to improve reproducible and replicable
research. Among the specific questions roundtable participants
will address are the following: To what extent is lack of
reproducibility and replicability a problem for sociolegal
scholarship? What inhibits reproducible and replicable
research? How can reproducibility and replicability be improved
and encouraged? What are the costs, implications, and side
effects of efforts to reproduce and replicate sociolegal research?
Should law and society scholars be expected to generate
reproducible and/or replicable research? How do issues of
reproducibility and replicability vary across different sociolegal
approaches, different institutions, and researchers at different
career stages?
Primary Keyword: Economic and Social Rights
Resisting Stereotypes of Gender and Sexuality At Law
Paper Session
Room:Regent
Chair/Disc: JoAnne Myers, Marist College
Primary Keyword: Gender and Sexuality
Presentations:
Acting Gay, Acting Straight: Sexual Orientation
Stereotyping
Luke Boso, University Of San Francisco School Of Law
Is Black the New Gay? Sexual Orientation and the
Elision of Status and Conduct
Zachary Herz, Columbia University
Violence Against Transgender People
Justin O’Neill, University of California, Berkeley
“If You’re in a Committed Relationship with Someone
and They’re Unfaithful to You, then It’s Adultery,
Yeah?”: Sex and the Civil Partnership
Charlotte Bendall, University of Essex
Session II: Rights Making and Taking in the World of
Work
CRN: 8, 47
Paper Session
Chair: Diane Frey, Murphy Institute, CUNY
Disc:
Julia Tomassetti, Maurer School of Law, Center for Law,
Society, and Culture
Presentations:
Employer Liability for Nonemployee Discrimination
Dallan Flake, Brigham Young University
Hungarian Labor Law and Industrial Relations
Institutions: Flawed and Failed German and EU
Transplants
András Tóth, Hungarian Institute for Political Science
Marley Weiss, University of Maryland Carey School of
Law
Mammies, Matriarchs and the Michelle Obama Effect:
Black Women and the Salience of Race and Gender in
the Contemporary Workplace©.
Natasha Martin, Seattle University
Statutory Interpretation from the Agency Perspective:
An Empirical Examination of Statutory Methodologies
at the National Labor Relations Board
Amy Semet, Princeton University
The Changing Professoriate: A Case Study of Legal,
Professional, and Administrative Norms in Non-Tenure
Track Conditions of Employment
Gerald Turkel, University of Delaware
Tax Session 5: Deterrence and Enforcement
CRN: 31
Paper Session
Room: Salon H-G
Chair/Disc: Karie Davis-Nozemack, Georgia Tech
Primary Keyword: Taxation
Presentations:
Dynamic Deterrence
Emily Satterthwaite, University of Toronto Faculty of
Law
Joint Winners, Separate Losers: Proposals to Ease the
Sting for Married Taxpayers Filing Separately
Michelle Lyon Drumbl, Washington and Lee University
School of Law
50 Thursday
estimate the reproducibility of published research findings. But
efforts to enhance reproducible and replicable research and
to increase data sharing are not free of cost. For many types
of research, privacy interests and IRB requirements restrict
data sharing, and other impediments limit the generation of
reproducible and replicable research.
Thursday
Thursday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.
Permitting Abused Spouses to Claim the Earned Income
Tax Credit in Separate Returns
Fred Brown, University of Baltimore School of Law
Sex Reassignment Surgery, Etc.: The TaxWoman
Cometh
Bobby Dexter, Chapman University Dale E. Fowler
School of Law
Traversing Theoretical Borders: New Perspectives on
Migrant Inclusion and Exclusion
CRN: 2
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 4
Chair: Miranda Hallett, University of Dayton
Primary Keyword: Citizenship, Migration, Immigration and
Nation
Presentations:
Cultural Rights of Native Majorities between
Universalism and Minority Rights
Ruud Koopmans, WZB Berlin Social Science Center
Four Waves of Exclusion: Rethinking The Mexican
Repatriation Program
Marla Ramirez, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign
“Migration Capital” and “Ethnic Capital” in the
Bourdieusian Perspective
Jaeeun Kim, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Vaccine Refusal: Arguments, Beliefs, and Potential
Responses to a Growing Public Health Problem
Paper Session
Room: Riverview I
Chair/Disc: James Dillon, UC Berkeley
Primary Keyword: Health and Medicine
Presentations:
Fighting Against Vaccine Refusal: Strategies, Challenges
and Lessons from Australia
Dorit Rubinstein Reiss, Hastings College of Law
Individual Choice, Religious Liberty, and the
Complicated Relationship between Vaccination and
Abortion Politics
Jennifer Reich, University of Colorado
The New Faith Heaslers: How United States Law Treats
Parents Who “Opt Out” of Vaccinating Their Children
Compared to Previous Generations of Parents Who
51 Refused Medical Treatment for Their Children
Linda Fentiman, Pace University Law School
Vaccines: Benefits and Misconceptions
Frank Welch, Louisiana Office of Public Health
Veterans At The Delta: Returning Military
Servicemembers in American Law and Society
Roundtable Session
Room: Balcony N
Chair: Benjamin Pomerance, New York State Division of Veterans’ Affairs
Participants:
Katrina J. Eagle, The Law Office of Katrina J. Eagle
John S. Odom, Jones & Odom, LLP
Patricia E. Roberts, William & Mary Law School
Michael Wishnie, Yale Law School
Primary Keyword: Access to Justice
Wither Redistribution? Feminism, Neoliberalism, Work,
and Family
CRN: 7
Paper Session
Room: Studio 9
Chair: Maxine Eichner, UNC School of Law
Disc:
Erez Aloni, Whittier law school
Primary Keyword: Class and Inequality
Presentations:
A Feminist Anti-Work Critique of Hobby Lobby and
Ames
Jennifer Denbow, California Polytechnic State
University
Childcare and the New Parens Patriae
Meredith Harbach, University of Richmond School of
Law
Neoliberal Antidiscrimination Law: The Case of Title VII
Deborah Dinner, Emory University School of Law
Unequal Childhoods: The Law of Attachment
Clare Huntington, Fordham Law School
Notes:
Friday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.
Fr i d ay J u n e 3
8 :1 5 a . m . - 1 0 : 1 5 a . m .
Alternatives and Complements to Traditional Work Law
CRN: 8
Paper Session
Primary Keyword: Corporate and Securities Law
AMR Salon Session: Katharina Heyer - “Rights Enabled:
The Disability Revolution, from the US, to Germany and
Japan, to the United Nations”
Room: Studio 10
CRN: 40
Author Meets Reader (AMR) Session
Chair/Disc: Kenneth Dau-Schmidt, Indiana University Bloomington - School of Law
Room: Carondelet - Table 5
Primary Keyword: Labor
Friday
structured interviews with directors and documentary content
analysis of securities filings.
Presentations:
ESOPs and Comparative Employee Ownership in
Emerging Economies: Pathway or Pitfall for Economic
Democracy?
Jedidiah Kroncke, FGV Sao Paulo
Perfecting the Employment Marketplace.
Deepa Das Acevedo, University of Chicago Law School
The Evolving Project of Human Rights Due Diligence, its
Implications for Transnational Labor Regulation and the
Importance of Rule Intermediaries
Ingrid Landau, University of Melbourne
The Principle of Primacy of Fact in Latin American Work
Law
Sergio Gamonal, Adolfo Ibáñez University
César F. Rosado Marzán, IIT-Chicago-Kent College of
Law
AMR Salon Session: Aaron Dhir - “Challenging
Boardroom Homogeneity: Corporate Law, Governance,
and Diversity”
Author Meets Reader (AMR) Session
Room: Carondelet - Table 4
Author: Aaron Dhir, Osgoode Hall Law School of York University
Chair: Darren Rosenblum, Pace Law School
Readers:
Afra Afsharipour, UC Davis School of Law
James Fanto, Brooklyn Law School
Amanda Packel, Stanford Law School
Darren Rosenblum, Pace Law School
Challenging Boardroom Homogeneity: Corporate Law,
Governance, and Diversity (Cambridge University Press, 2015)
empirically investigates regulatory responses to the lack of
gender representation in corporate boardrooms using semi-
52 Author: Katharina Heyer, University of Hawai’i
Chair: Sagit Mor, University of Haifa
Readers:
Lynette Chua, National University of Singapore
David Engel, University at Buffalo, SUNY, School of Law
Anna-Maria Marshall, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign
Sagit Mor, University of Haifa
Rights Enabled: The Disability Revolution (University of Michigan
Press, 2015) follows the journey of the disability rights model
across national and ideological boundaries. It asks: how do
rights travel? What medium do they travel by, and how are
they transformed once they reach foreign shores? Drawing on
extensive fieldwork and original sources, this book examines
three case studies – Germany, Japan, and the United Nations
– to trace the evolution of a disability rights model from
its American origins trough its adaptation in countries with
radically different approaches to disability, welfare policy, and
the role of law as a tool for social change.
The 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act provided the first
articulation of disability as a civil rights issue and became
a powerful source of inspiration for German and Japanese
activists. They became “rights tourists” to learn about
rights consciousness and legal mobilization to protest the
segregation and stigma they experienced in their home
countries’ sophisticated but still segregated disability welfare
states. Returning home, these activists were determined to
graft the American rights model onto existing disability policy,
and combine equal rights guarantees with the protection
of disability difference. Finally, the passage of the 2006 UN
Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities provided
yet another, human rights model to challenge disability
discrimination, stigma, and exclusion.
Rights Enabled develops a framework for analyzing the ways
rights transplants might either support or contradict local
legal culture, generate new approaches to legislating disability
rights, and inspire political movements. The transplantation of
American-style rights regimes into global settings contexts raises
important issues for sociolegal scholarship on comparative
Friday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m. rights, the global reach of social movements, and the uses and
limitations of rights-based activism.
Primary Keyword: Disabilities and Law
AMR Salon Session: Kunal Parker - “Making Foreigners:
Immigration and Citizenship Law in America, 1600 2000”
Author Meets Reader (AMR) Session
Room: Carondelet - Table 3
Author: Kunal Parker, University of Miami School of Law
Chair: Renisa Mawani, University of British Columbia
At a time when immigration and citizenship issues crowd upon
the public consciousness in both North America and Europe
with particular urgency, and keeping in mind the significance
of migration and citizenship as a theme for the New Orleans
Law and Society meeting, this interdisciplinary author-meetsreader panel seeks to bring leading scholars of immigration
to discuss Kunal Parker’s Making Foreigners: Immigration and
Citizenship Law in America, 1600 - 2000 (Cambridge University
Press, 2015). The book seeks to reconceptualize the history of
U.S. immigration and citizenship law from the colonial period to
the beginning of the twenty-first century by joining the histories
of immigrants to those of Native Americans, African Americans,
women, Asian Americans, Latino/a Americans, and the poor.
Kunal Parker argues that, during the earliest stages of American
history, being legally constructed as a foreigner, along with
being subjected to restrictions on presence and movement, was
not confined to those who sought to enter the country from
the territorial outside, but was also used against those on the
territorial inside. Insiders thus shared important legal disabilities
with outsiders. It is only over the course of four centuries,
with the spread of formal and substantive citizenship among
the domestic population, a hardening distinction between
‘citizen’ and ‘alien,’ and the rise of a powerful centralized state,
that the uniquely disabled legal subject we recognize today
as the immigrant has emerged. The book advances new ways
of understanding the relationship between foreignness and
subordination over the long span of American history. At the
same time, it insists that designation as foreign has had no
necessary relationship to where one has stood in relationship to
territory.
Primary Keyword: Citizenship, Migration, Immigration and
Nation
Author Meets Reader (AMR) Session
Room: Carondelet - Table 2
Author: Jennifer Carlson, University of Toronto
Chair: Michael Musheno, University of Oregon
Readers:
Elizabeth Brown, San Francisco State University
Charles Epp, University of Kansas
Michael Musheno, University of Oregon
This session focuses on three questions to interrogate Jennifer
Carlson’s Citizen-Protectors: The Everyday Politics of Guns
in an Age of Decline, the first book to examine gun carry as
an everyday practice. Today in the United States, there are
over 11 million concealed carry licensees, and the top reason
cited for gun ownership is protection. Why are Americans
– disproportionately men – choosing to carry guns as part
of their everyday lives? And how does gun carrying impact
contemporary notions of crime, citizenship, and governance?
How is legality implicated in the new politics of lethal force?
Unpacking how gun carrying transforms the gendered and
racialized meanings of citizenship; the social distribution of
policing (at least symbolically); and the moral politics of killing,
this book develops the term “citizen-protector” to capture how
men use guns to assert their authority and relevance to their
families and even their broader communities by embracing a
duty to protect – up to and including the willingness to kill.
Primary Keyword: Crime and Victims
AMR Salon Session: Ronald Den Otter - “In Defense of
Plural Marriage” (Cambridge University Press 2015).
Author Meets Reader (AMR) Session
Room: Carondelet - Table 1
Author: Ronald Den Otter, Cal Poly San Luis Obispo
Chair: Sonu Bedi, Dartmouth
Readers:
William Araiza, Brooklyn Law School
Maxine Eichner, UNC School of Law
Eileen Scallen, UCLA
Alexander Tsesis, Loyola University Chicago School of
Law
Marriage is, according to the recent United States Supreme
Court decision Obergefell v. Hodges (2015) invalidating bans on
gay marriage, a “keystone to our social order” and a “building
block of our national community.” (Obergefell at 16). By denying
53 Friday
Readers:
Rose Cuison-Villazor, UC Davis School of Law
Michelle McKinley, University of Oregon
AMR Salon Session: Michael Musheno - Legality and
the New Politics of Lethal Force --Citizen Protectors: The
Everyday Politics of Guns in an Age of Decline
Friday
Friday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.
this kind of status to same-sex couples, the state, as the Court
reasons, “demeans gays and lesbians” by “lock[ing] them out
of a central institution of the Nation’s society.” (Obergefell at
17). One of the central themes of the 2016 Law and Society
Conference is the question of who belongs and who doesn’t.
The Court has made clear that gays and lesbians belong to the
institution of marriage. But every state in the United States
prohibits marriages between three or more individuals. Den
Otter’s book asks whether those who seek a polyamorous
relationship also belong. The book answers in the affirmative
arguing for a radical yet inclusive idea of marriage that includes
marriages between three or more individuals.
primarily through fact-intensive class action lawsuits, while its
French counterpart has been notable for its austere and highly
formalized register. In the U.S., institutionalizing their efforts
allowed aspiring legal activists to cement alliances with the
support structures that had developed around public interest
law. In France, by contrast, the process of repeatedly petitioning
the Conseil d’Etat gradually incorporated immigrant rights legal
networks into the orbit of this institution. Bringing law’s distinct
modalities into focus shows that neither adversarialism nor
liberal pluralism is an inevitable feature of legality, and offers a
reminder that studying the constitutive power of rights rhetoric
is only scratching the surface of this phenomenon.
Primary Keyword: Constitutional Law and Constitutionalism
Primary Keyword: Citizenship, Migration, Immigration and
Nation
AMR: Leila Kawar - “Contesting Immigration Policy in
Court: Legal Activism and Its Radiating Effects in the
United States and France.” Herbert Jacob Book Award
Co-Winner
CRN: 2, 21
Author Meets Reader (AMR) Session
Room: Salon E
Author: Leila Kawar, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Chair: Alexandra Huneeus, University of Wisconsin
Readers:
Bryant Garth, University of California Irvine
Adriana Kemp, Tel Aviv University
Doris Marie Provine, Arizona State University
Studies of immigration policy making have tended to
concentrate on the rules and remedies produced by judicial
decisions in immigration matters, leading to skepticism over
whether litigation is a viable strategy for constraining the
globally restrictive tendency of migration controls. In her
comparative study, Contesting Immigration Policy in Court:
Legal Activism and Its Radiating Effects in the United States
and France published by Cambridge University Press in 2015,
Leila Kawar challenges the conventional wisdom that “cause
litigation” has little long-term impact on policy making unless
it produces broad rights-protective principles. Drawing on
extended fieldwork and extensive archival research in France
and the U.S., Kawar argues that the work of specialized litigators
is best understood as a culturally productive activity in which
doctrine is only one element. When engagement with courts
is understood in this way, the radiating effects of high-profile
activity in court may be illuminated as legal frames, narratives,
and performances that inform and reshape how legislative and
administrative actors approach immigration policy.
Taking up and extending the constitutive turn in sociolegal
scholarship, Kawar distinguishes the specific legal instruments
and mechanisms produced by legal activism around
immigration. In the U.S., immigrant rights litigation has operated
54 Authority and Inspiration: Investigating Liminal Practices
of International Law
CRN: 23
Paper Session
Room: Studio 4
Disc:
Geoffrey Gordon, VU University, Amsterdam
Primary Keyword: International Law and Politics
Presentations:
‘Tragedy of the Commons’ and ‘Common Heritage of
Mankind’: Global Commons, Seminal Interventions,
and the Fascinations of Interdisciplinarity
Surabhi Ranganathan, University of Cambridge
Imaging Scenes of Mass Atrocity from Afar: The (Re)
construction of Place and Space in the Opening
Statements at the International Criminal Court
Sofia Stolk, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
The Authority to Inspire: EU Crisis Management at the
Limits of Discipline
Renske Vos, University of Edinburgh
The Auto-Construction of Authority in Academic
Presentations and Lectures: Taking a Closer Look at the
Cyberwar Debate
Lianne Boer, VU University Amsterdam
The Principle of Distinction as Visuality; Targeting in
Counterinsurgency
Amin Parsa, Lund Univeristy-Faculty of Law
Inspired by Destruction. The Construction of
International Criminal Justice
Marieke de Hoon, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Friday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m. Challenging and Changing American Jury Traditions
Breaking the Hunger (Lishbor Shever): The Israeli Tale
of African Asylum Seekers
Tamar katz Peled, Technion, Emek Izrael
Room: Studio 8
Indian Jews in Israel: Equal Rights under Secular Law
but Unequal According to Religious Laws. How Does a
Modern Nation with an Ancient People Navigate the
Relationship between Church and State?
Joseph Hodes, Texas Tech University
CRN: 4
Paper Session
Chair: Nancy Marder, IIT Chicago-Kent College of Law
Disc:
Mary Rose, University of Texas
Neil Vidmar, Duke Law
Primary Keyword: Lay Participation, Juries and Other Forms of
Lay Participation
Foster v. Chatman: A Watershed Moment for Batson
and the Peremptory Challenge?
Nancy Marder, IIT Chicago-Kent College of Law
Judicial Instructions in Three Cause Célèbre American
Trials: Guiteau (1882), Tucker (1904), and SaccoVanzetti (1921)
Marie Comiskey, University of Toronto
Jury Instructions for Character Evidence: What
Information are Jurors Given and How Well do They
Understand It?
Jennifer Hunt, SUNY Buffalo State and Baldy Center
for Law and Social Policy
Elizabeth Foster, Widener University
“We know he was guilty, but the proof was not there”:
The Performance of Objectivity in Jurors’ Post-Trial
Narratives of Decision-Making When Common Sense
and Legal Rationality Conflict
Katherine Culver, University of Pennsylvania
Citizenship and Immigration: Sociolegal Tales from Israel
CRN: 2
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 1
Primary Keyword: Citizenship, Migration, Immigration and
Nation
Presentations:
A Palestinian, A Photograph, and the Refugee
Crisis: A Discussion of Edward Said, Alan Kurdi, and
Contemporary Migrancy
Victoria Bisnauth, Carleton University
Popular Decision on the Death Penalty: Saiban-in and
Death Sentencing in Japan
CRN: 33, 4
Roundtable Session
Room: Galerie 6
Chair: Valerie Hans, Cornell Law School
Takashi Maruta, Kwansei Gakuin University Law School
Participants:
Takashi Maruta, Kwansei Gakuin University Law School
Takeshi Nishimura, Osaka Bar Association
Satoru Shinomiya, Kokugakuin University Law School
Dimitri Vanoverbeke, University of Leuven (KU Leuven)
Japan has still the death penalty. It is actually decided by the
decision of professional judges (3 judges) and lay judges (6
citizens). Two issues have come out so far: (1) It is not decided
by the unanimous voting of the panel; (2) There is a conflict
between the court precedent that has been a guideline,
standard or conditions of rendering death penalty shared
among professional judges but often Saiban-in ignored the
precedent and renders death penalty according to their own
standard. Those decisions are occasionally overturned at the
higher court level. Thus this panel will discuss and analyze (1)
the meaning of letting lay citizen decide death penalty, (2) If the
precedential standard should be kept as rigid rule for Saiban-in
or can it be ignored, and (3) the merit of letting professional
judges solely sentence death penalty from US experience. The
following are presenters and topics for discussions: Satoru
Shinomiya (Kokugakuin University) “Death Penalty and Saibanin: How System Works and Popular Image of Death Sentencing
through Survey”; Takeshi Nishimura (Nishimura, Shimada LO)
“Remaining Issues in Death Sentencing System in Japan; Takuya
Katsuta (Osaka City University) “Death Sentencing Comparing
with Saiban-in and American Jury”; Futoshi Iwata (Sophia
University) “Issues of Popular Death Sentencing through US
Experience; Takashi Maruta (Kwansei Gakuin Law School)
“Future Death Penalty in Japan.”
Primary Keyword: Lay Participation, Juries and Other Forms of
55 Friday
Presentations:
Exorcising Presumptions: The Screening of Felonious
Jurors in Maine
James Binnall, UC Irvine School of Law
The Family Reunification Cases in Israel from the
Standpoint of Palestinian Women: A Qualitative
Research
Yael Plitmann, Yale Law School
Friday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.
Lay Participation
Deconstructing the Carceral/Police State
CRN: 12
Paper Session
Room: Balcony M
Primary Keyword: Race, Critical Race Research
Presentations:
Abolitionist Ethics
Allegra McLeod, Georgetown University
Friday
Prosecuting Radicalization
Amna Akbar, Ohio State University
Race and Property
Sherally Munshi, Georgetown University Law Center
Deportability and the Spectrum of Gender-Based
Violence Across North America
CRN: 2
Paper Session
Room: Studio 6
Chair: Rupaleem Bhuyan, University of Toronto
Primary Keyword: Citizenship, Migration, Immigration and
Nation
Presentations:
A complex view of violence grounded in
intersectionality: the case of Central American migrant
women in Mexico’s southern border region.
Margarita Pintin-Perez, El Colegio de la Frontera Sur San Cristobal de las Casas
Martha Luz Rojas Wiesner, Ecosur
Roundtable Session
Room: Salon H-G
Chair: Lisa Moore, Canadian Forum on Civil Justice
Participants:
Nicole Aylwin, Osgoode Hall Law School/Canadian
Forum on Civil Justice
Albert Currie, Canadian Forum on Civil Justice
Trevor C.W. Farrow, Osgoode Hall Law School, York
University
Les Jacobs, York University
Matthew Dylag, Osgoode Hall Law School at York
University
There is a growing demand for quantifiable data that supports
the need for increased access to legal aid, justice services
and legal information. There remains little debate about the
importance of access to justice issues. Rather, the conversation
has shifted from what to how. Questions about what the issues
are have given way to a call for action, rooted in research that
reflects best practices and innovative strategies for addressing
these issues. The Cost of Justice Project by the Canadian
Forum on Civil Justice includes research, surveys and reports
on A2J issues across Canada. The results of this work have,
and continue to inform national strategies for change. This
roundtable brings together researchers from this Project to
discuss the next stages in access to justice research, how
evidence-based data by the Cost of Justice Project is being used
to develop and advance national strategies, the difficulties of
doing methodological-based A2J research and the future of this
Project.
Primary Keyword: Access to Justice
Expectations in Law in the Time of Disasters
Paper Session
Fleeing domestic violence from a “Safe” country?:
Refugee determination for Mexican asylum seekers in
Canada
Rupaleem Bhuyan, University of Toronto
Adriana Vargas, University of Toronto
Margarita Pintin-Perez, El Colegio de la Frontera Sur San Cristobal de las Casas
Room: Balcony I
Precarity and vulnerability in the lives of immigrant
women in the southern border of Mexico
Martha Luz Rojas Wiesner, Ecosur
Presentations:
Gendering Disasters in International Law
Gabrielle Simm, University of Technology Sydney
Sexuality, identity, and (in)humanity: Article 3 of the
European Convention on Human Rights and LGBT*
asylum-seekers
Natasa Mavronicola, School of Law, Queen’s
University Belfast
56 Discussing the Future of Access to Justice Research
Chair: Takayuki Ii, Senshu University
Disc:
Mitchell Crusto, Loyola University College of Law
Primary Keyword: Disasters
Law in the Time of Disaster: Comparative Experiences
in Tabasco, Mexico and New Orleans
Miguel Rabago Dorbecker, Universidad de los Andes
Friday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m. Law-making Process of the Nuclear Compensation Act
of 1961 in Japan: Examinations of the Draft-bills
Shunichiro Koyanagi, Dokkyo University
Chair: Eva Brems, Ghent University
Legal Response to the Cacophony of Disasters: The
Ghanaian Story
Olivia Anku-Tsede, University of Ghana Business
School
Primary Keyword: Human Rights
Responses of International Humanitarian Law to
Human Disasters
Olutunji Oyelade, University
Gender and Judging
CRN: 32
Paper Session
Chair/Disc: Monika Lindbekk, University of Oslo
Sally Engle Merry, New York University
Presentations:
A method of external referencing to interpret the rights
of persons with disabilities : (Missed) opportunities for
human rights integration in the ECtHR’s case law
Joseph Damamme, Université libre de Bruxelles
Dorothea Staes, Université St Louis, Brussels
Assessing human rights claims of ‘new’ groups: A
proposal of a framework of analysis, applied to the
cases of peasants and youth
Arne Vandenbogaerde, University of Antwerp
Ellen Desmet, University of Antwerp/University of
Ghent
Primary Keyword: Gender and Judging
Cornered tribunals: the two European courts and their
migrant rights dilemma
Moritz Baumgärtel, Université libre de Bruxelles
Presentations:
Contempt of Equality: Determinations and Sentencing
for Contempt of Court in Family Law in Quebec
Paul Millar, Nipissing University
Martine Dennie, Laurentian University
Prohibition of discrimination on the ground of
social condition: an efficient tool to protect socioeconomically underprivileged people?
Sarah Ganty, Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB) - Free
University of Brussels
How thick is the Peace Palace’s glass ceiling ? A
feminist analysis of the appointment of the ICJ’s (only)
four female judges
Bérénice K. Schramm, SOAS University of London
The Disability Convention and the Dutch: a first
assessment of the added value of ratification of the
CRPD for disabilities rights in the Netherlands
Barbara Oomen, University College Roosevelt (Utrecht
University)
Skol Summer Muse Advertise as an insight on
how Brazilian Courts interprets the concept of
discriminatory advertising
Tamara Amoroso Gonçalves, University of Victoria
The Right to a “Gay” Family Life: The Role of
Supranational and Constitutional Courts in Endorsing
Social Change in Europe
Valentina Volpe, Max Planck Institute for Comparative
Public Law and International Law
Sabrina Ragone, Max Planck Institute for Comparative
Public Law and International Law
Transformation of Gender Stereotypes in Judiciary:
Impact of Social Changes and Armed Conflict
Tetyana Fuley, National School of Judges of Ukraine
Human Rights and Vulnerable Groups: The Pros and Cons
of Affording Special Protection
Paper Session
Room: Studio 7
Interdisciplinary Explorations of Penal History: Prison,
Penal Change, and Law
CRN: 27, 44
Paper Session
Room: Studio 2
Chair: Ashley Rubin, Florida State University
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
Presentations:
Iterating Punishment: A Case Study of America’s ProtoPrisons (1785--1822) to Illustrate the Five Stages of
Penal Innovation
Ashley Rubin, Florida State University
Reforming California’s Death Row (1979-2009):
granting rights and preserving security.
Simon GRIVET, Cena, EHESS
57 Friday
Room:Regent
Disc:
Friday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.
The Privilege Of Punishing: Explaining The Rise Of
America’s Hidden Penal Regime, 1900-2015
Joshua Kaiser, Northwestern University and American
Bar Foundation
The Temporality of Law, Three Ways: Legal “Events”
and Regime Shifts in the Mass Incarceration State
Anjuli Verma, University of California, Irvine
Intimate Exceptionalism
Presentations:
Analyzing Mexico’s policies to eradicate violence
against women and girls with disabilities and the
efforts of civil society organizations (CSOs) setting
the agenda to realize the right of freedom from
exploitation, violence, and abuse of women and girls
with disabilities (Article 16 of the CRPD).
Ana Maria Sanchez Rodriguez, University of
Massachusetts Boston
CRN: 7
Paper Session
Exclusion of the Homeless from Public Spaces in Japan:
A preliminary study
Kiyoshi Hasegawa, Tokyo Metropolitan University
Room: Studio 9
Justiciability of Economic and Social Rights - Reflections
on the Judicial Response in India
Pam Rajput, High Level Committee on the Status of
Women, Govt. of India
Friday
Chair: Margo Kaplan, Rutgers Law School
Disc:
Sarah Swan, Columbia University
Primary Keyword: Family and Youth
Realising Education through Enhanced Cooperation
Azubike Onuora-Oguno, University of Pretoria Faculty
of Law
Presentations:
Intimate Lies: How Does and How Should the Law Treat
Deception Within Our Closest Relationships
Jill Hasday, University of Minnesota Law School
Punishing Sexual Fantasy
Andrew Gilden, Stanford Law School
Relational Crime
Cynthia Godsoe, Brooklyn Law School
Representations of ‘sexting’ and sexual violence on
legal dramas: implications for adolescents’ sexual and
intimate citizenship
Emily Lockhart, York University
The Wrong Kind of Help
Jane Stoever, University of California, Irvine School of
Law
A Focus on Specific Economic and Social Rights and
Vulnerable Groups in a Neoliberal World
CRN: 47 and IRC: 22
Paper Session
Room: Studio 1
Chair: Inga Winkler, Center for Human Rights & Global Justice, New York University School of Law
Disc:
Allison Corkery, Center for Economic and Social Rights
Primary Keyword: Economic and Social Rights
58 The human right to water and environmental justice in
the neoliberal era
LaDawn Haglund, Arizona State University
Law and Development: Institutions, Market, Courts,
Indicators, and Sustainability.
IRC: 13
Paper Session
Room: Balcony K
Chair: Lawrence Friedman, Stanford University Law School
Disc:
Pedro Fortes, FGV LAW SCHOOL
Manuel Gomez, Florida International University College of Law
Primary Keyword: Democracy, Governance and State Theory;
Transitions to Democracy and Revolutions
Presentations:
Designing a Constitutional Court for a New Democracy:
The Appointment of Supreme Court Justices in Mexico
(Presidential Power and the Appearance of Senate
Control)
Rolando Garcia Miron, Stanford Law School
Law and Urban Development: Lessons from Chile’s
Market-Based Housing Policy Regime
Diego Gil Mc Cawley, Stanford Law School
Legal Indicators and Managerial Governance: Towards
Evidence-based Law and Development Policy?
David Restrepo Amariles, HEC Paris
Friday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m. Law, Society, and Psychological Science, Part 3
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
Primary Keyword: Judges and Judging
Presentations:
Battered Woman’s Syndrome: When do People
Experience Imminent Danger?
Colin Holloway, University of Nebraska, Lincoln
Richard Wiener, University of Nebraska
Language, Law and Social Change in Multilingual/
Multicultural Legal Orders
Room: Balcony J
Chair: Janice Nadler, American Bar Foundation & Northwestern Law School
Do Legal Standards Matter? Unpacking Juror
Applications of the Insanity Defense
Rebecca Helm, Cornell University
CRN: 16
Paper Session
Room: Salon B
Chair: Anne Lise Kjær, University of Copenhagen, Faculty of Law, iCourts
Cornelis Baaij, Yale Law School
Motivated Constructions of Criminal Attempt
Avani Sood, University of California, Berkeley, School
of Law
Disc:
Public Perceptions of Consent
Roseanna Sommers, Yale University
Presentations:
Reluctant translators: Scandinavian Supreme Courts
and their discursive implementation of the case law of
the European Court of Human Rights
Anne Lise Kjær, University of Copenhagen, Faculty of
Law, iCourts
Wrong or Merely Prohibited: Special Treatment of
Strict Liability Crimes in Folk Judgments
Carly Giffin, University of California Berkeley
Tania Lombrozo, University of California Berkeley
Primary Keyword: Language And Discourse,
Judicial Conflict Resolution (JCR): Methodological and
Comparative Challenges
The Irony of Multilingual Legislation:The Less We
Understand, the Better
Lawrence Solan, Brooklyn Law School
Room: Studio 3
Theorising Multilingual Legal Order
Janny HC Leung, The University of Hong Kong / Yale
Law School
CRN: 43
Roundtable Session
Chair: Michal Alberstein, Bar Ilan University
Nadav Davidovitch, Ben Gurion University of the Negev
Disc:
Marc Galanter, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Linda Mulcahy, London School of Economics and Political Science
Law, Feminism, and Response
CRN: 38
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 3
Participants:
Paola Lucarelli, University of Florence Italy - Law school
Diana Richards, University College London
Chair: Åsa Gunnarsson, Forum for Studies on Law and Society
This roundtable session is inspired by an ERC five-years project
on Judicial Conflict Resolution (JCR). Inspired by the “vanishing
trial” phenomenon, the study will examine judicial activity in
Primary Keyword: Gender and Sexuality
Disc:
Kathleen Lahey, Queen’s University Faculty of Law
59 Friday
Disc: Avani Sood, University of California, Berkeley, School of Law
promoting settlement in Israel, Italy and the UK, by introducing
the perspective of conflict resolution, and employing both
quantitative and qualitative methods of research.
This roundtable will engage representatives from the three
countries of research, along with prominent scholars, experts
in judicial work, sociology of conflicts, and mixed methods. It
will develop a conversation related to the theory and practice
of studying judicial behaviour, as well as to comparative aspects
and questions of boundaries between legal systems - common
law and continental law as well as different fields of law criminal and civil.
IRC: 29
Paper Session
Friday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.
Presentations:
Law, Sex and Gender: One is Not Born a Woman
Louise Langevin, Laval University
Responses of Criminal Law to Femicides: Comparative
Analysis of Finland and Spain
Marjo Rantala, University of Helsinki
AMALIA VERDU, University of Helsinki
The Swedish Model for Prostitution and Myths, Halftruths and Resistance
Åsa Yttergren, Umeå Forum for Studies on Law and
Society
Friday
Trust as a Necessary Tool of Power in Elderly Care?
A Question of Who Defines the Best Interest for the
Elderly in Sweden
Ann-Christine Petersson Hjelm, Forum for Studies on
Law and Society
Wellbeing and Gender Equality for the Elderly in the
Context of Artic Sweden
Lena Wennberg, Umeå University, Umeå Forum for
Studies on Law and Society
Lawyers, Political Reform, and the Public Interest
Paper Session
Room: Balcony L
Chair/Disc: Milton Heumann, Rutgers University
Primary Keyword: Legal Professions and Other Legal Services
Providers
Presentations:
Criminal Court Judges’ Views of Required, Permissible,
and Impermissible Form of Assistance to Pro Se
Defendants
Jona Goldschmidt, Loyola University Chicago - Dept of
Criminal Justice and Criminology
Elite Law Firm Commitment to Racial Diversification:
External Presentation or Internal Value?
Atinuke (Tinu) Adediran, Northwestern University
Rationalizing Pro Bono: Corporate Social Responsibility
and the Reinvention of Legal Professionalism in Elite
Law Firms
John Bliss, Harvard Law School
Steven Boutcher, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst
Unionization at Justice Canada: Case Study
Andrij Kowalsky, Ball State University
60 White Hats and Dark Sides: The Permeability of the
Career Boundary between Prosecution and Defense in
State Courts
Kay Levine, Emory Law School
Ronald Wright, Wake Forest University Law School
Legal Geography I: Settler Societies, State Power and the
Legal Geographies of Difference/Indifference
CRN: 35
Paper Session
Room: Salon F
Chair/Disc: Hed Ehrlich, University of California, Berkeley
Primary Keyword: Geographies of Law
Presentations:
Law as a Key for Exercise State Power in the Context
of Law in Postcolonial Territories. Creating “Excluded
Zones”, Expropriation Land and Eviction, Land Regime
in Israel as an example.
Hadeel Abu Hussein, National University of Ireland
Recent Decisions of the Israeli Supreme Court and the
Shaping of the Legal Geography of the Negev, Southern
Israel
Alexandre (Sandy) Kedar, Law School, University of
Haifa
Security, Law and Indifference
Tugba Basaran, University of Kent
Legal Issues for Marriage and Family- Past, Present and
Future.
Paper Session
Room:Iberville
Chair: Amy Huey-Ling Shee, National Chung Cheng University
Primary Keyword: Family and Youth
Presentations:
Ceremonies of Protest: The Legal Regulation of
Marriage in the Australian Civil Wedding Ceremony
Becky Batagol, Faculty of Law, Monash University
Commitment-based parenthood: parental status and
responsibility in English law
Gillian Douglas, Cardiff University
Marriage and the Baby Carriage: Parentage Law After
Obergefell v. Hodges
Joanna Grossman, Hofstra University School of Law
Friday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m. The Outlawed Family: Does the Modern Family Really
Need the Law?
Sharon Shakargy, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Legal Pluralism and Legal Culture
Paper Session
Room: Salon C
Chair/Disc: Keebet von Benda-Beckmann, Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology
Primary Keyword: Legal Pluralism, Mixed Legal Systems, and
Non-State Law
Moving away from a binary of state law and ‘custom’
in former colonies: An examination of the continuing
development of the legal tradition of apology and
forgiveness in the Kingdom of Tonga
Debra McKenzie, University of Victoria
What Constitutes Constitutions: On the socio-legal
relationships between constitutions and legal pluralism
Alberto Febbrajo, University of Macerata
Methods Cafe Primer - Doing Empirical Research Using
Critical Race Theory (eCRT)
Professional Development Panel
Room: Bissonet
Chair: Ellen Berrey, University of Denver
Participants:
Tonya Brito, University of Wisconsin Law School
Kaaryn Gustafson, UC Irvine
Mona Lynch, University of California, Irvine
Osagie Obasogie, University of California Hastings
Victor Quintanilla, Indiana University
Nicole Gonzalez Van Cleve, Temple University
This session provides an introduction to empirically-grounded
research that engages law and critical race theory, also called
eCRT. The panelists do research in a variety of empirical and
disciplinary traditions. Each will discuss how they have designed
and implemented empirical research in dialogue with critical
race theory, which until recently has been focused primarily
at the level of theorizing rather than empirical testing and
elaboration. Topics covered may include formulating a research
question, designing a study, sampling/selecting cases, measuring
race, accounting for how racism and intersectionality operate,
incorporating narrative, and navigating obstacles, among other
themes. The goal is to open up conversations that have been
Primary Keyword: Race, Critical Race Research
Movements, Mobilities and the Law
CRN: 23
Paper Session
Room: Salon D
Chair/Disc: Olivia Barr, University of Melbourne
Rose Parfitt, Melbourne Law School
Primary Keyword: Legal Pluralism, Mixed Legal Systems, and
Non-State Law
Presentations:
Blowing winds, flowing waters: Feng shui, mobilities
and the law
Anita Lam, York University
Moving in place: incarcerated mobilities
Sarah Armstrong, University of Glasgow
The Dynamic Landscape: Fluid Materiality of Law and
Place
Sarah Marusek, University of Hawaii Hilo
Popular Participation in Democratic and Constitutional
Politics
Paper Session
Room: Studio 5
Chair/Disc: Andrea Freeman, University of Hawai’i William S. Richardson School of Law
Primary Keyword: Constitutional Law and Constitutionalism
Presentations:
Bottom-up Constitutionalism: The Case of Internet
Neutrality
Christoph B. Graber, University of Zurich, Faculty of
Law
Civil Disobedience to Overcome Corruption: The Case
of Occupy Wall Street.
M. Patrick Yingling, Reed Smith LLP
61 Friday
Presentations:
Empires as Engines of Mixed Legal Systems
Vernon Palmer, Tulane Law School
happening among people who do eCRT to include a wider
audience. This session is inspired by Laura Gomez’s 2012
presidential address, recommendations by the Committee on
LSA’s Second Half Century, and a 2012 session about eCRT’s
prospects.
Friday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.
Chantal Jones, University of California Los Angeles
Lloyd Sloan, Howard University
Governing by representation? (Participatory) data
collection, citizen participation and the mobilization of
legal regulations during reconstruction planning in New
Orleans after Katrina
Anne Dölemeyer, Leipzig University
Law School Enrollment among Immigrant-origin and
Native Black Law Students
Chantal Jones, University of California Los Angeles
Walter Allen, University of California, Los Angeles
Charles Daye, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Daryl Mcadoo, UCLA
Abigail Panter, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
Itinerary Justice in Brazil
Bernardo Medeiros, Instituto de Pesquisa Economica
Aplicada, Ipea
Properties and Politics of Transnational Law
CRN: 36
Paper Session
The Pursuit of the Public Interest: Social and Ideological
Factors Influencing Career Choice
James Pratt, University of California Irvine
Walter Allen, University of California, Los Angeles
Room: Bacchus
Friday
Chair: Peer Zumbansen, Kings College London
Disc:
Sara Seck, Western University
Primary Keyword: Transnational Legal Orders, International and
Regional Institutions
Rights Across Geographies of Law
CRN: 3
Paper Session
Room: Balcony N
Chair: Nina Siulc, Rutgers University
Presentations:
Property as Power: Transnational Real Estate
Investment, Urban ‘Renewal’ and Economic Progress
Priya S. Gupta, Southwestern Law School
Refugees, Migrants and Transnational Law’
Satvinder Juss, King’s College London
With and Beyond the State: The Promise and Limits of
Transnational Legal Ordering
Gregory Shaffer, University of California Irvine
Terence Halliday, American Bar Foundation
Race, Social Justice, and the Law: Studies from the
Educational Diversity Project
Paper Session
Room: Galvez
Disc:
Haley Duschinski, Ohio University
Primary Keyword: Ethnography
Presentations:
Monsieur Lefebvre visits Los Angeles: Examining rights
to the city in Los Angeles
Chima Michael Anyadike-Danes, University of
California, Irvine
Navigating the ‘Victim Role’ in the Courtroom
Anne Groggel, Indiana University
Spatial Justice and the Limits of the Rechtsstaat in
Catalonia: Contributions to an Ethnography and
Geography of Law
Johanna Romer, New York University
Chair: Walter Allen, University of California, Los Angeles
Charles Daye, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Same-Sex Marriage: Lessons from the Beginning of the
Fight for Inclusion
Disc: Abigail Panter, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Linda F. Wightman, University of North Carolina, Greensboro
Room:Jackson
Primary Keyword: Race and Ethnicity
Presentations:
Exploring Law School Students’ Support of Social
Justice
Kalen Kennedy, Howard University
Walter Allen, University of California, Los Angeles
62 Paper Session
Chair/Disc: Joe Rollins, City University of New York
Primary Keyword: Gender and Sexuality
Presentations:
A Survey Of Public Accommodation Statutes And
Religious Liberty: Free Access Or Free Exercise?
Lucien Dhooge, Georgia Institute of Technology
Friday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m. Families, Soldiers, and Workers: Balancing Law and
Politics in Pursuit of LGBT Inclusion
Eric van der Vort, Syracuse University
The Recognition of Same-Sex Marriage in Mexico via
the Supreme Court
Imer Flores, UNAM
Weber’s Sociology of Law and Same-Sex Marriage in
the U.S. Federal Courts
Nicholas Pedriana, Univeristy of WisconsinWhitewater
Studying Border Practices in the EU and the US
CRN: 2
Paper Session
Chair/Disc: Rebecca Hamlin, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Primary Keyword: Citizenship, Migration, Immigration and
Nation
Presentations:
Between Reluctance and Openness: Methodological
Implications of Secrecy for Studying Border Security
Karine Cote-Boucher, Universite de Montreal
Is the U.S. Gaming Refugee Status for Central
Americans? A Study of the Screening and Refugee
Status Determination Process for Central American
Women and Children Detained in Artesia, New Mexico
Galya Ruffer, Northwestern University
Movement across Schengen Internal Borders During
the “Migratory Crisis” in 2015: The Italy-France Case
Sara Casella colombeau, Aix-Marseille University,
CNRS, UMR 7305 LAMES, LabexMed
Noble Cause at the Dutch Borders? Unravelling
Crimmigration Control in EU Border Areas
Maartje van der Woude, Leiden Law School
The Drowned and the Deported: Rearticulating
Refugees, Humanity and Credibility in Contemporary
Europe
Abigail Stepnitz, UC Berkeley
Presentations:
America’s “Ideal Vision” for the Distribution of Wealth
by Race
Goldburn Maynard, University of Louisville Brandeis
School of Law
De/reconstructing Poverty
Francine Lipman, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Matthew Bruenig, Demos.org
How We Can Win the Tax War on Poverty: Looking
Beyond Efficiency to Design a More Effective LowIncome Housing Tax Credit
Michelle Layser, Georgetown University Law Center
Taxation and House Price Risk
Daniel Hemel, University of Chicago Law School
Technology, Law, Ethics, Human Rights and Citizenship in
East Asia
CRN: 33
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 5
Chair: Daniel Rosen, Chuo University Law School
Chair/Disc: Takeshi Akiba, Akita International University
Primary Keyword: Democracy, Governance and State Theory;
Transitions to Democracy and Revolutions
Presentations:
A Comparative Study on the Equity-Based
Crowdfunding Market in Taiwan
HUNGYI CHEN, Nagoya University, Japan
The Janus Face of Citizenship: the Legal and
Sociological Endless Contestation: A Case of Malaysia
Nur Atiqah Tang Abdullah, Universiti Kebangsaan
Malaysia (UKM)
Shamsul Amri Baharuddin, Institute of Ethnic Studies
(KITA), Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (UKM)
Triple Review: How do the Research Ethics Committees
of Biobanks Function in Taiwan
Chao-Tien Chang, National Chiao Tung University
Tax Session 6: Inequality
Understanding the Myanmar (Burma) National Human
Rights Commission in the Context osf Transition
Jonathan Liljeblad, University of New England
Room: Galerie 2
Whose Security Is It Anyway? : China’s New
Cybersecurity Law and Its Implications
Ching-Yi Liu, National Taiwan University
CRN: 31
Paper Session
Chair/Disc: Toni Robinson, Quinnipiac University School of Law
63 Friday
Room: Galerie 4
Primary Keyword: Taxation
Friday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
Fr i d ay J u n e 3
1 0 :1 5 a . m . - 12: 00 p . m .
Narratives, Resources and Equality
CRN: 38
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 3
Chair: Kathleen Lahey, Queen’s University Faculty of Law
Disc:
Ann Mumford, King’s College London
Friday
Primary Keyword: Gender and Sexuality
Presentations:
Plants v. Zombies: Final Appeal of Property, Trespass,
Nuisance, and Claims to Genetic Resources In the
Sovereign and Supreme Court of Gaea
Bita Amani, Queen’s University, Faculty of Law
Primary Keyword: Health and Medicine
Accommodating Disability, Transforming Society
CRN: 40
Paper Session
Securing Energy Access For Rural Women: A Role For
Policy And Law
Lilian Idiaghe, Centre for Petroleum, Energy
Economics and Law, University of Ibadan
Room: Salon B
The making and unmaking of gendered social sufferings
in the polluted and patriarchal waterscapes of Nigeria’s
Niger Delta
Victor Okorie, Obafemi Awolowo, University,
Presentations:
Assessing Social Change and Its Implications for People
with Disabilities: The Legalization of Physician-Assisted
Dying in Canada
Joan Gilmour, Osgoode Hall Law School, York
University
Truth is a stubborn beast – how will you handle it?:
Truth seeking and credibility assessment during asylum
proceedings
Sule Tomkinson, University of Kansas
Witchcraft label and Violence against Aged Women in
Igboland, South-Eastern Nigeria
Scholastica Atata, University Of Ibadan, Ibadan
Access to Health and Safety in Asia in Global Settings
CRN: 33
Roundtable Session
Room: Galerie 5
Participants:
Lesley Jacobs, York University
Hiroyuki Kojin, Tokyo Medical University
Toshimi Momo Nakanishi, Faculty of Medicine
Yamagata University
Ilan Vertinsky, University of British Columbia
Yoshitaka Wada, Waseda Law School
64 Although Access to Health and Safety are indispensable rights
that should be guaranteed for every person, its delivery system
is influenced by numerous other social factors and institutional
environment including government’s policy, economical
situation, cultural values and international market in global era.
In each country in Asia, Access to Health and Safety Rights are
facing with serious problems. In most cases, these problems
related to influences from global economy and we can observe
each country’s adaptation to those imposed forces utilizing
complementary system and institutions. Although its form
and appearance are different from each other depending on
the country’s specific circumstances, some common structural
relationships between influence of global economy and each
unique delivery of health and safety service can be found there.
In this session we examine the problems each country is facing
with and its efforts to overcome the situation.
Chair/Disc: Sagit Mor, University of Haifa
Primary Keyword: Disabilities and Law
Free trade Agreements and Healthcare: Examining
the impact of the Transatlantic Trade and Investment
Partnership (TTIP) on the right to health in the UK
Melinee Kazarian, The University of Portsmouth
Sara Hourani, The University of Bournemouth
Realizing the Goal of ‘Education For All’ in Nigeria with
Focus on Disabled Trainees: a Case Study of Federal
College of Education Oyo State, Nigeria
Mariam Abdulraheem-Mustapha, Faculty of Law,
University of ilorin
Rights Are Not Justice: A Case Study in Campus
Segregation and How University Accessibility Policies
Do Violence to the Americans with Disabilities Act
(ADA/ADAAA)”
Laura Harrison, University of California, Santa Cruz
The Rights of the mentally ill and the Nigerian Society:
Enhancing dignity in mental health through Legislation
Abdulwasiu YUSUFF, Obafemi Awolowo University,
Ile-Ife, Nigeria
Friday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. American Slavery, American Commerce: Rethinking the
Political Economy of the Antebellum United States
approach to immigration studies and is essential for immigration
law scholars and teachers.
Paper Session
Primary Keyword: Citizenship, Migration, Immigration and
Nation
CRN: 44
Room: Studio 4
Primary Keyword: Legal History
Presentations:
Private Vengeance, Public Law: J.T. Zealy’s Slave
Daguerreotypes
Mary Campbell, University of Tennessee
“the fate of millions… on the tongue of one…”: Thomas
Jefferson, Richard Dobbs Spaight, and American
Slavery’s Echoing “no…”
Anthony Baker, Atlanta’s John Marshall Law School
AMR Salon Session: Ming Chen, Rose Cuison-Villazor “The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965: Legislating
a New America”
CRN: 2
Author Meets Reader (AMR) Session
Room: Carondelet - Table 4
Author: Gabriel Chin, UC Davis School of Law
Rose Cuison-Villazor, UC Davis School of Law
Chair: Ming Chen, University of Colorado Law School
Readers:
Kerry Abrams, University of Virginia
Ming Chen, University of Colorado Law School
Stephen Lee, UC Irvine School of Law
Kunal Parker, University of Miami School of Law
Along with the civil rights and voting rights acts, the Immigration
and Nationality Act of 1965 is one of the most important bills
of the civil rights era. The Act’s political, legal, and demographic
impact continues to be felt, yet its legacy is controversial.
The 1965 Act was groundbreaking in eliminating the white
America immigration policy in place since 1790, ending Asian
exclusion, and limiting discrimination against Eastern European
Catholics and Jews. At the same time, the Act discriminated
against gay men and lesbians, tied refugee status to Cold War
political interests, and shattered traditional patterns of Mexican
migration, setting the stage for current immigration politics.
Drawing from studies in law, political science, anthropology,
and economics, this book reflects the modern interdisciplinary
CRN: 47
Author Meets Reader (AMR) Session
Room: Carondelet - Table 3
Author: Sakiko Fukuda-Parr, The New School for Public Engagement
Susan Randolph, University of Connecticut
Terra Lawson-Remer, The New School
Friday
“Infinitely Dangerous to the Revenue of the United
States”: Duty Remission and the Evolution of America’s
Antebellum Political Economy
Jane Manners, Princeton University
AMR Salon Session: Sakiko Fukuda-Parr, Terra LawsonRemer, Susan Randolph - “Fulfilling Social and Economic
Rights”
Chair: Richard Ashby Wilson, University of Connecticut School of Law
Readers:
Audrey Chapman, University of Connecticut
LaDawn Haglund, Arizona State University
Balakrishnan Rajagopal, MIT
Fulfilling Social and Economic Rights by Sakiko Fukuda-Parr,
Terra Lawson-Remer and Susan Randolph (OUP 2015)
One of the most ambitious legacies of the 20th century was
the universal commitment to ensure freedom from want as a
human right. How far have we progressed; to what extent are
countries across the world living up to this commitment? States
have long escaped accountability for these commitments by
claiming inadequate resources. This book charts new territory in
examining the extent to which countries meet their obligations
to progressively realize social and economic rights. It develops
an innovative evidence based index, the Social & Economic
Rights Fulfillment (SERF) Index and Achievement Possibilities
Frontier methodology, rigorously based on international human
rights norms, making possible for the first time comparisons
of performance across very differently resourced countries
and over time. The book provides an overall global picture
of progress, regress and disparities amongst and within
countries and explores the factors influencing performanceincluding whether treaty and legal commitments, gender
equity, democracy/autocracy, and economic growth, explain
good performance-revealing surprising results. The data
provide empirical evidence to resolve some long-standing
controversies over the principle of ‘progressive realization’. The
book concludes by observing how the SERF Index can be used
in evidence based social science research, policy making and
accountability procedures to advance social change.
Primary Keyword: Economic and Social Rights
65 Friday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
AMR: Crime of Aggressive War, Genocide and Competing
Representations: New Books on Iraq (John Hagan /
Joshua Kaiser / Anna Hanson) and Darfur (Joachim
Savelsberg)
CRN: 36
Author Meets Reader (AMR) Session
Room: Salon D
Author: John Hagan, Northwestern University & American Bar Foundation
Joachim Savelsberg, University of Minnesota
Friday
Chair: Susan Silbey, MIT
Readers:
Kitty Calavita, UC Irvine
Valerie Jenness, UC Irvine
Mark Fathi Massoud, University of California, Santa
Cruz
Leila Sadat, Washington University
Two interrelated books will be discussed. One addresses the
crime of aggressive warfare for the case of Iraq, the other
representations of mass violence for the case of Darfur. Their
common denominator is a concern with modern categories of
international law in the context of mass violence. The session
thus aligns well with central concerns entailed in the theme
of the 2016 annual meetings. One of four thematic plenary
sessions, for example, addresses “Natural and Unnatural
Disasters – human crises and law’s response.” The books
suggested for this “authors meet readers” session address
aggressive warfare and genocide, “unnatural disasters” thus,
resulting from human action, and legal responses to them (or
the lack thereof) in the context of competing fields. A brief
description of the content of each of the two books lays open an
obvious correspondence with the sub-theme of the conference:
(1) Iraq and the Crime of Aggressive War examines crimes
committed in the context of the U.S. led war in Iraq, from the
torture of detainees at Abu Ghraib to unnecessary military
attacks on civilians. The book is an account of the violations
of international criminal law committed during the United
States invasion of Iraq. Taking stock of the entire war, it
uniquely documents the overestimation of the successes and
underestimation of the failings of the Surge and Awakening
policies. The authors show how an initial cynical framing of
the American war led to the creation of a new Shia-dominated
Iraq state, which in turn provoked powerful feelings of legal
cynicism among Iraqis, especially the Sunni. The predictable
result was a resilient Sunni insurgency that reemerged in the
violent aftermath of the 2011 withdrawal. Examining more than
a decade of evidence, this book makes a powerful case that the
American war in Iraq constituted a criminal war of aggression.
(This book appeared in the summer of 2015 with Cambridge
University Press).
66 (2) Representing Mass Violence: Conflicting Responses to
Human Rights Violations in Darfur asks how interventions by
the UN Security Council and the International Criminal Court
influence representations of mass violence. Further: what
images arise instead from the humanitarianism and diplomacy
fields? How are these competing perspectives communicated
to the public via mass media? The book zooms in on the case of
Darfur. It is based on an analysis of more than three thousand
news reports and opinion pieces and interviews with leading
newspaper correspondents, NGO experts, and foreign ministry
officials from eight countries. The book shows the dramatic
differences in the framing of mass violence around the world
and across social fields. Representing Mass Violence contributes
to our understanding of how the world acknowledges and
responds to violence in the Global South. (This book appeared
in the summer of 2015 with the University of California Press.)
Primary Keyword: Human Rights
AMR: Hadar Aviram - “Cheap on Crime: RecessionEra Politics and the Transformation of American
Punishment”
CRN: 27
Author Meets Reader (AMR) Session
Room: Salon E
Author: Hadar Aviram, UC Hastings College of the Law
Chair: Benjamin Fleury-Steiner, University of Delaware
Readers:
Alessandro De Giorgi, Department of Justice Studies,
San Jose State University
Malcolm Feeley, University of California-Berkeley
Benjamin Fleury-Steiner, University of Delaware
John Pfaff, School of Law, Fordham University
Keramet Reiter, University of California, Irvine
After forty years of increasing prison construction and
incarceration rates, winds of change are blowing through
the American correctional system. The 2008 financial crisis
demonstrated the unsustainability of the incarceration project,
thereby empowering policymakers to reform punishment
through fiscal prudence and austerity. In Cheap on Crime, Hadar
Aviram draws on years of archival and journalistic research
and builds on social history and economics literature to show
the powerful impact of recession-era discourse on the death
penalty, the war on drugs, incarceration practices, prison health
care, and other aspects of the American correctional landscape.
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
AMR: Nick Cheesman - “Opposing the Rule of Law. How
Myanmar’s Courts Make Law and Order”
Author Meets Reader (AMR) Session
Room: Salon H-G
Friday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. Author: Nick Cheesman, Australian National University
Reparative Justice as Racial Governance: The
representational life of settler colonialism
Carmela Murdocca, York University
Chair: Martin Krygier, University of New South Wales
Readers:
Eve Darian-Smith, University of California Santa
Barbara
Martin Krygier, University of New South Wales
Sally Engle Merry, New York University
Frank Munger, New York Law School
Primary Keyword: Colonialism and Post-Colonialism
Bans From Within: Disposable Bodies and the Law
CRN: 12
Paper Session
Room: Balcony M
Chair/Disc: annie bunting, York University
Primary Keyword: Race, Critical Race Research
Presentations:
A Sight/site We Cannot Bear: The Eviction from Public
Space of Women Wearing the Niqab
Sherene Razack, Ontario Institute for Studies in
Education, University of Toronto
Fanon to the White Girl? Law, Dehumanization, and
Neoliberal Feminism in Settler Colonial Contexts
Leslie Thielen-Wilson, Nipissing University
Policing migrant criminality in “the jungle”: Neglecting
questions of justice
Gada Mahrouse, Concordia University
Citizenship, Law, and the Gig Economy
CRN: 8, 37
Roundtable Session
Room: Studio 10
Chair: Amy Cohen, Ohio State University
Brishen Rogers, Temple University Beasley School of Law
Disc:
Friday
A panel discussion of Nick Cheesman, Opposing the Rule of
Law: How Myanmar’s Courts Make Law and Order (Cambridge
Studies in Law and Society, Cambridge University Press,
March 2015), the first major study of courts and politics in
contemporary Myanmar. Combining sophisticated social and
legal theorising with a detailed account of courts in a littleunderstood country, it advances both general theory and
close empirical description at the highest level. It develops a
persuasive argument that the rule of law is opposed to law
and order, a concept with which it is commonly conflated. By
paying close attention to the Burmese-language records of
393 criminal cases supplemented by findings from fieldwork
and archival research of hitherto unutilised or underutilised
published and classified official documents, the book pushes the
study of politics in contemporary Myanmar beyond the binary
of democracy movement versus military dictatorship, and also
disrupts conventional thinking about how authoritarian rulers
use courts for political ends.
The Concrete Tent: Re-imaginings of “Return” in
Palestinian Refugee Community Life
Shaira Vadasaria, York University
Veena Dubal, University Of California, Hastings
Participants:
Kevin Kolben, Rutgers Business School
Sabeel Rahman, Brooklyn Law School
K Sabeel Rahman, Brooklyn Law School
The so-called “gig” economy has injected questions of
contingent work and citizenship back into political debates. The
term describes economic sectors characterized by short-term
labor contracts, including those dominated by freelance work,
those dominated by independent contractor relationships,
and those now being transformed by so-called “sharing
economy” companies such as Uber and TaskRabbit. While it is
unclear if the “gig economy” is a markedly new phenomenon,
its prominence has highlighted the important role that nontraditional and freelance work plays in the US labor market, and
increasingly in global labor markets. By some estimates over
30% of the U.S. workforce, or about 54 million workers, engaged
in some kind of freelance activity in 2014-2015.
This panel seeks to examine this phenomenon from the
perspective of law and citizenship. Some of the questions that
will be addressed include: How does the nature of sharing and
gig economy platforms affect social integration,
Primary Keyword: Economy, Business and Society
Disasters, Law, and the State in Comparative Perspective
CRN: 33 and IRC: 15
Roundtable Session
Room: Galerie 6
Chair: Eric Feldman, University of Pennsylvania Law School
Participants:
Moritz Baelz, Goethe University Frankfurt
Erik Herber, Leiden University
67 Friday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
Friday
Annelise Riles, Cornell Law School
Chun-Soo Yang, Yeungnam University Law School
This roundtable brings together a distinguished group of
sociolegal scholars to analyze and discuss the intersection of
law and disasters. In almost every respect, disasters and law are
deeply intertwined. The law defines what counts as a disaster,
establishes the prospects and limits of disaster mitigation,
enables and/or prevents disaster victim compensation, and
determines the pace and direction of rebuilding and resiliency.
In the absence of law, the human suffering that inevitably
accompanies disaster is dramatically magnified, yet law itself is
rarely a remedy to such suffering. How, then, should sociolegal
scholars approach the study of law and disasters? How can they
contribute to the lessening of human suffering? To what degree
might they be able to offer ways of understanding law and legal
institutions that have practical consequences for managing
aspects of the disaster lifecycle? What can they learn from
the intersection of law and disasters that might contribute to
sociolegal scholarship?
Our approach in this roundtable is explicitly comparative,
thanks to the participation of scholars from Korea, Taiwan, the
Netherlands, Germany, Japan, and the US. Although our primary
focus is Asia, our discussion with reach well beyond that region.
Our comparative focus results from the observation that unlike
some aspects of financial regulation where one can identify
the growth of transnational legal institutions that indicate
at least some degree of legal and regulatory convergence,
disaster management has aggressively resisted cross-border
cooperation. The ‘go it alone’ approach to disasters is in some
ways puzzling, given the regularity with which the property,
personal, and institutional damage wrought by disasters resists
the limit of national borders. One set of questions roundtable
participants will address, therefore, concerns the range of
similarities and differences in how law and disasters intersect
in different nations, why nations have not developed a robust
set of cross-border institutions for managing disasters, and the
degree to which collaborative or cooperative approaches to
disasters are feasible and/or desirable.
Primary Keyword: Disasters
Development and Change in Latin American Legal
Institutions
CRN: 44
Paper Session
Room: Balcony K
Chair/Disc: Alexandra Huneeus, University of Wisconsin
Primary Keyword: Legal History
Presentations:
Between INAH and UNESCO: Questions of Heritage
Governance in Oaxaca, Mexico
Hilary Leathem, University of Chicago
Legislating Dissent: Race, Republicanism and the Public
Sphere in Post-Independence Nicaragua
Justin Wolfe, Tulane University
Los Indios de Anansaya: Race, Property, and Citizenship
in colonial Perú
Pilar Margarita Hernádez Escontrías, Northwestern
University
The Conservative Struggle for the Constitution in
Colombia, 1950-53
Diana Andrade Melgarejo, Princeton University
The Interplay Between U.S. Diplomacy and Argentine
Constitutionalism in Late 19th Century Argentina
Jonathan Miller, Southwestern Law School
Ethnographic Explorations of Illegalities, Penality, and
Risk/Security (Part III)
CRN: 3, 27
Paper Session
Room: Balcony N
Chair/Disc: Jessica Greenberg, University of Illinois
Primary Keyword: Ethnography
Presentations:
Anchored Women and Imprisoned Men: Get Refusal,
Human Rights, and Jewish Law in Israel
Alexander Wamboldt, Princeton University
Ethnographic Advocacy Versus the Death Penalty
Jesse Cheng, Marquette University
Justice, Affect and Legal Change: Preliminary reflections
from ongoing research on trials of Crimes against
Humanity in Argentina
Leticia Barrera, CONICET
Noa Vaisman, Durham University
Re-entry and the Urban Landscape: Ex-Prisoners’
and Staff’s Perceptions of the Role of Re-entry
Organizations in Prisoner Re-entry
Katharina Helen Maier, University of Toronto
Interdisciplinary Explorations of Penal History: The
Interactions of Social Control and Race, Gender, Political
Regime
CRN: 27, 44
Paper Session
68 Friday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. Room: Studio 2
Why Inequality Matters for Human RIghts
James Heintz, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Radhika Balakrishnan, Rutgers University
Chair: Ashley Rubin, Florida State University
Disc:
Michael Campbell, University of Missouri, St. Louis.
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
Presentations:
Hidden Alchemy: African-American Women, Market
Capitalism, and the Sex Trade in Antebellum St. Louis,
1804-1860
Mark M. Carroll, University of Missouri
Politics and the judicial construction of ‘mob justice’ in
pre-and post apartheid South Africa.
Gail Super, University of Cape Town
Equality and Social Rights in a Neoliberal World
IRC: 29
Paper Session
Room: Balcony J
Chair: Eugene Borgida, University of Minnesota
Disc: Avani Sood, University of California, Berkeley, School of Law
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
Presentations:
Decision-Making in Plea Bargaining: A Psychological
Perspective
Eugene Borgida, University of Minnesota
JaneAnne Murray, University of Minnesota
Lauren Clatch, University of Minnesota
CRN: 47 and IRC: 22
Paper Session
Does race matter? An assessment of the role of implicit
bias in juvenile diversion officer decision-making for
low-risk juvenile offenders
Alisha Caldwell, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Richard Wiener, University of Nebraska
Room: Studio 1
Chair/Disc: Surabhi Chopra, Chinese University of Hong Kong
More than meets the eye: How visual attention can
bias or unite legal punishment decisions
Yael Granot, New York University
Emily Balcetis, New York University
Tom Tyler, Yale Law School
Primary Keyword: Economic and Social Rights
Presentations:
Inclusive Development of the Girl Child in Africa
Olanike Odewale, Lead City University, Ibadan, Nigeria
Inequalities and Human Rights: Shifting the Focus to
Achieving Substantive Equality and Addressing Stigma
Inga Winkler, Center for Human Rights & Global
Justice, New York University School of Law
Pros and cons of a trans-disciplinary perspective when
exploring economic and social rights in a neoliberal
world.
Claudio Schuftan, People’s Health Movement
Stuck in the Middle: The Approach(es) of the
Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights in
the Crises
Ben Warwick, Durham University
The Influence of Rap Music Stereotypes on Inferences
of Threat
Adam Dunbar, University of California-Irvine
Charis Kubrin, University of California-Irvine
Judges and Therapeutic Jurisprudence
CRN: 43 and IRC: 38
Paper Session
Room: Studio 3
Chair: David Wexler, University of Puerto Rico
Disc:
Richard Cornes, Essex University
Primary Keyword: Judges and Judging
The realization of socio economic rights through clinical
legal work: effectiveness of the principle of equality
and non-discrimination
Diana Quintero, Universidad Icesi
69 Friday
Policing the Mentally Ill in Los Angeles: The
Development and Deployment of Specialized Policing
Units in Penal Reform
Natalie A. Pifer, University of California, Irvine
Law, Society, and Psychological Science, Part 4
Friday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
Presentations:
A New Problem-Solving Court to Implement
Therapeutic Jurisprudence In Offenders’ Re-entry to
Society
Jalila Jefferson-Bullock, Arizona Summit Law School
Michael Jones, Arizona Summit Law School
Empowering the Quasi-Legal Profession of Judicial
Scriveners as Litigators – A Critical Look at the Actual
Effect of the Justice System Reform in Japan
Kay-Wah CHAN, Macquarie University
Takayuki Ii, Senshu University
Judicial Independence in Practice: Administrative Law
Litigation in Macau and China
Denis De Castro Halis, Faculty of Law / University of
Macau
A Solution Focussed Judging Program in Australia:
Enhancing the Role and Skills of Judicial Officers
Astrid Birgden, Consultant Forensic Psychologist, Just
Forensic
Joanna Kalowski, Joanna Kalowski and Associates
Friday
Child Welfare Workers in Family Court: A Therapeutic
Jurisprudence Analysis
Vicki Lens, Columbia University School of Social Work
Colleen Cary Katz, Silberman School of Social Work,
Hunter College
Kimberly Spencer Suarez, Columbia University
SOCIAL SUSTAINABILITY, A KEY PRINCIPLE FOR LAW
AND JUSTICE Improving social harmony, quality of life,
and transparency, through integration of values of
Social Sustainability
Alexander de Savornin Lohman, Center for
Sustainable Justice
The Judge’s Team on the Bench
Dale Dewhurst, Athabasca University
Ann Marie Dewhurst, Valerian Consulting
Therapeutic Jurisprudence as a lens for law and legal
system reform – The mainstreaming of therapeutic
jurisprudence & the International Framework for Court
Excellence
Pauline Spencer, Magistrates’ Court of Victoria
David Wexler, University of Puerto Rico
Judicial Reform in East Asia
CRN: 33
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 4
Chair/Disc: Matthew Wilson, University of Akron School of Law
Primary Keyword: East Asia
Presentations:
Does introducing mixed jury system promote trust
in justice system in Japan? Discussion based on the
secondary analyses of Japanese General Social Surveys
Masahiro Fujita, Faculty of Sociology, Kansai
University
Mapping China’s Judicial Reforms
Yi Zhao, Grand Valley State University
The Skills, Talents and Credentials of the Limited Legal
Professional in Japan: Based on the Questionnaire
Survey on the Labor and Social Security Attorney
Kota Fukui, Osaka University
Law and the Food System
Paper Session
Room: Studio 8
Chair: Peter Carstensen, University of Wisconsin Law School
Disc:
Alfonso Morales, University of Wisconsin - Madison
Primary Keyword: Regulation & Governance
Presentations:
A Categorical Irony: State Regulation and the Erosion of
Boundaries Between Organic and Conventional Foods
in the U.S. Market
Michael Haedicke, Drake University
Legal mobilization of food system policy by small-scale
diversified farmers
Lauren Suerth, University of Wisconsin - Madison
Of Recipes and Regulations: Socio-Legal Actions For
and Against Paty’s Taco Truck
Alfonso Morales, University of Wisconsin - Madison
Sean Basinski, The Street Vendor Project
Mathew Shapiro, The Street Vendor Project
Unleashing the power of the Amazon? Regulating
interacting anti-ageing, eco and fair trade claims in
superfood marketing: the case of acai berries
Chistine Parker, Melbourne Law School, University of
Melbourne
Law, Breaking At Its Seams: The Transnationalization of
Legal Fields
CRN: 36
Paper Session
Room: Bacchus
70 Friday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. Chair: Aziza Ahmed, Northeastern University School of Law
Room: Salon F
Primary Keyword: Transnational Legal Orders, International and
Regional Institutions
Chair/Disc: Tugba Basaran, University of Kent
Presentations:
A Special Kind of “Global Convergence”: Investigating
the Actors, Norms and Processes of Transnational
Corporate Governance
Peer Zumbansen, Kings College London
Dionysia Katelouzou, King’s College London
Globalization and Adjustments In The Provision Of High
End Corporate Legal Services In Latin America During
The Last Two Decades: The Case Of Venezuela
Manuel Gomez, Florida International University
College of Law
Primary Keyword: Geographies of Law
Presentations:
Changing the Game: Network Governance of
Multinationals in Chevron Corp. v. Yaiguaje, 2015
SCC 42 Lawyers’ Resistant Political Agency Furthering
Corporate Accountability on the Part of a Multinational
Rebecca Bromwich, Carleton University
Mapping for Business and Human Rights
Patrick Keenan, University of Illinois College of Law
Melting the Boundaries of Law: Transnational Climate
Law and Practice
Natasha Affolder, Peter A. Allard School of Law, UBC
Laypersons, Social Movements, and the Law
Mapping Space and Erasing Communities: The 1928
Flood Control Act, National Territories and Security
Laura Hatcher, Southeast Missouri State University
CRN: 21
Paper Session
Room: Studio 6
Chair/Disc: Michael Yarbrough, John Jay College (CUNY)
Legal Instrumentalism From Below: National and
Supranational Corporate Accountability
Paper Session
Primary Keyword: Social Movements and Legal Mobilization
Room: Galvez
Presentations:
Beyond Litigation: The Law and Politics of Kurdish
Mobilization before the ECtHR
Dilek Kurban, Hertie School of Governance
Chair: Sanne Taekema, Erasmus School of Law
Garbage, Courts and Political Struggles: An Assessment
of the Effects of Dialogical Justice and Socio-Economic
Rights Enforcement in Colombia’s Intermediate Cities.
Natalia Angel-Cabo, Osgoode Hall Law School
Legal Mobilization by Migrant Workers: Destabilizing
Citizenship by an Invisible Underclass
Vasanthi Venkatesh, Jurisprudence and Social Policy,
University of California, Berkeley
¿Undermining mobilization? Collective action and legal
reform as resistance against mining projects in Mexico.
Jorge Pelaez Padilla, Universidad Autónoma de la
Ciudad de México (UACM)
Legal Geography Panel II Law and the Material World:
Water, Ice and and Material Hazards
CRN: 35
Paper Session
Disc:
Ronen Shamir, Tel Aviv University
Chair/Disc: Jonathan Klaaren, University of the Witwatersrand
Primary Keyword: Geographies of Law
Presentations:
Evaluating the potential of legal mobilization: ending
impunity for corporate violations in Palestine
Jeff Handmaker, International Institute of Social
Studies, Erasmus University
From Law to Action: Mobilizing Social Action to Achieve
Corporate Social Responsibility Associated to Legal
Violations in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
Tom Moerenhout, Graduate Institute of International
and Development Studies
Reconceptualizing legal instrumentalism. How
individuals may use the rule of law
Sanne Taekema, Erasmus School of Law
71 Friday
Mapping international legal responsibility for the
human right to health: Expanding law on the books
and deepening the obligation to protect against risk
associated with disasters
Jean Carmalt, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Friday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
Revisiting the Theory of Change for Corporate Social
Responsibility: a case study on the extractives industry
in South Africa
Fola Adeleke, University of Witwatersrand
Legal Pluralism: Culture and Religion
CRN: 48
Paper Session
Room: Salon C
Chair: Janine Ubink, University of California Irvine
Chair/Disc: James Krueger, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Friday
Primary Keyword: Legal Pluralism, Mixed Legal Systems, and
Non-State Law
Presentations:
Indian Courts, Panchayats and Tibetan Justice Ideals:
Comparing Conceptions of Harm, Human Rights and
Non-State Laws in the Himalayas
Tamara Relis, London School of Economics, South Asia
Centre
Law, the democratic state, and the community: politics
by other means
Catherine Warrick, Villanova University
Marriage/Breakdown amongst Punjabi-Sikhs in
Canada: The relevance of religious and culture-specific
norms and practices amongst a transnational diaspora
community
Preet Kaur Virdi, SOAS, University of London
The Rise of Sharia in the West: A Feminist
Institutionalist Analysis of Sharia Law in Australia,
Canada and the UK
Amira Aftab, Macquarie University
Understanding the new Indonesian village police:
Vigilantes, enforcers of Islamic regulations, or institutes
of customary law?
Keebet von Benda-Beckmann, Max Planck Institute
for Social Anthropology
reporters, editors and producers with scholars to produce
engaging, critically curious stories about the law in the lives of
Americans.
This year, Life of the Law is partnering with scholars to produce
a series of reports examining the impact of money in politics on
fair access to state courts. The series is funded by an advocacy
foundation.
What is the model for journalists to produce feature reports, or
for scholars in academia to accept funding to conduct research
from institutions or foundations with a point of view?
Life of the Law’s Advisory Board Member and LSA Scholar,
Osagie Obasogie, will chair a roundtable discussion with Life
of the Law’s reporters and producers and our advising scholars
to consider the ethical and professional guidelines at issue.
Life of the Law would like to invite scholars with the Law and
Society Association to join in discussing this intersection of the
dissemination of legal research.
Participants:
Ashley Cleek, Life of the Law
Renee Cramer, Drake University
Nancy Mullane, Life of the Law
Lon Fuller, Legal Sociologist
Paper Session
Room:Iberville
Disc:
Dan Priel, Osgoode Hall Law School
Chair/Disc: Kenneth Winston, Harvard Kennedy School
Primary Keyword: Social Theory and Law,
Presentations:
Legal Realism at Harvard: The Surprising Case of Lon
Fuller
Dan Priel, Osgoode Hall Law School
Lon Fuller, Jerome Frank, and a Romantic Pragmatism
Charles Barzun, University of Virginia
Life of the Law - The Relationship Between Academics,
the Media, and Advocacy
Taking Fuller Seriously
Margaret Martin, Western University
Room: Balcony L
The Fuller-Nagel Debate.
Jeffrey Pojanowski, Notre Dame Law School
Public Outreach Session
Chair: Osagie Obasogie, University of California Hastings
Bridging three distinct worlds of journalism, scholarship and
advocacy, the podcast Life of the Law advances the research
of scholars in the Law and Society Association by connecting
72 Media, Criminal Law, and Judicial Decisionmaking:
Representations and Impacts
CRN: 45
Paper Session
Friday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. Room: Balcony I
Chair/Disc: William (Bill) Haltom, University of Puget Sound
Primary Keyword: Popular Culture, Media, Finance, and The
Arts
Presentations:
Lingual Injury: Crime Victims between the Criminal
Justice System and the Media in Israel
Anat Peleg, College of Management and Bar Ilan
University
Dana Pugach, Ono Academic College
Natti Ronel, Department of Criminology, Bar-Ilan
University
Why is Censorship Humor Flourishing Today?
Laura Little, Temple Law School
“The Watchdog’s Bite” – Media Effects On Judicial
Decision Making In U.S. State Courts
Itay Ravid, Stanford Law School
Liminal Races in Liminal Spaces: The Iranian-American
Body in Transnational Motion
Neda Maghbouleh, University of Toronto
Objects of International Law
CRN: 23
Paper Session
Room: Studio 7
Chair/Disc: Luis Eslava, Kent Law School
Rose Parfitt, Melbourne Law School
Primary Keyword: International Law and Politics
Presentations:
Sovereign Marks: indigenous signatures as legal
technology
Tanja Aalberts, Centre for the Politics of Transnational
Law
Methods Cafe Primer - Empirical Sociolegal Research
The Gavel
James Parker, Melbourne Law School
Room: Bissonet
The Ghost and other Half-Persons
Natasha Wheatley, University of Sydney
Professional Development Panel
Participants:
Lauren Edelman, University of California-Berkeley
Calvin Morrill, University of California-Berkeley
This session provides a basic introduction to empirical research
methods with a particular focus on the study of law, legal
institutions, and legal behavior. The first part covers how
to construct a good empirical research question; tradeoffs
in various research designs; and the link between research
question and research design. We then focus on criteria for
good quantitative and qualitative research designs, discussing
typical problems and ways of addressing those problems. If time
permits, we will address issues of measurement and sampling.
Muslim Identity On the Edge: Gendered Racializations &
Society-State Encounters
CRN: 2
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 1
sChair: Jennifer Carlson, University of Toronto
Disc:
Michael Musheno, University of Oregon
Primary Keyword: Rights and Identities
The Walker
Olivia Barr, University of Melbourne
The ‘Treaty 8’ Typewriter and the Objects of
International Legal Authority
Jessie Hohmann, Queen Mary, University of London
Procedural Regulation
Paper Session
Room: Studio 5
Chair/Disc: Amy Semet, Princeton University
Primary Keyword: Regulation & Governance
Presentations:
Delay Pays Well – Recent Case-law of the ECJ Related to
Air Passenger Rights
Nikolett Zovanyi, University of Debrecen
Economic subsidiarity and libertarian paternalism: a
political orientation?
Carina Quirino, State University of Rio de Janeiro
73 Friday
Symbols of Deviance: The Specter of the Jezebel from
Joan Little to Duke Lacrosse
Jamie Huff, Bridgewater State University
Presentations:
21st Century Security Politics and Immigrant
Integration in U.S. Public Schools: The Role of Civil
Rights in Muslim Youth Experiences
Mona Siddiqui, Virginia Commonwealth University
Friday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
Preliminary Injunctive Regulation
Albert Lin, UC Davis School of Law
TRANSADMINISTRATIVISM Concept, methods and
practical applications
Isabela Ferrari, Universidade do Estado do Rio de
Janeiro
Race, Law, and the Making of the Modern American
State
CRN: 44
Paper Session
Room:Regent
Friday
Chair: George Lovell, University of Washington
Disc:
Christopher Schmidt, Chicago-Kent College of Law
Primary Keyword: Legal History
Presentations:
James Weldon Johnson, Culture War, and the Roots of
Brown v. Board
John Witt, Yale Law School
Primary Keyword: Taxation
Presentations:
Finding a Better Rule for Taxing International Private
Equity Funds
Young Ran (Christine) Kim, New York University
School of Law
Global Minimum Effective Tax Rate as Global General
Anti Avoidance Rule
Rifat Azam, Columbia Law School
The OECD multilateral tax instrument: how to avoid a
stalemate on distributional issues?
Henk Vording, Leiden University
Dirk Broekhuijsen, Leiden University
Towards a New Theory of International Taxation
David Elkins, Netanya College School of Law
The Victim’s Perspective: Distrust, Reparations and the
Lived-Experience of Victims
Paper Session
Race, Sex, Equality, and Marital Supremacy in the Long
Civil Rights Era
Serena Mayeri, University of Pennsylvania
Room: Bonaparte
Taking Affirmative Action around the World
H. Timothy Lovelace, Jr., Indiana University Maurer
School of Law
Presentations:
Confronting the Tragic Disconnect between Law and
the Lived Experiences of Crime Victims: Efforts by the
United States Department of Justice to Bridge the
Longstanding and Seemingly Intractable Translation
Gap between Researchers and Practitioners in the
Crime Victim Assistance Field
Heather Warnken, US Department of Justice
The Crimes of Capitalism: Criminal Justice, Convict
Leasing, and the Rise of the New South
Megan Francis, University of Washington
SALON: Disasters, the Environment and the Law
Roundtable Session
Room: Carondelet - Table 1
Chair: Myanna Dellinger, University of South Dakota School of Law
Participants:
Denis Binder, Chapman University Law School
Myanna Dellinger, University of South Dakota School
of Law
Primary Keyword: Disasters
Tax Session 7: International Tax Issues
CRN: 31
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 2
74 Chair/Disc: Shu-Yi Oei, Tulane Law School
Primary Keyword: Access to Justice
Expanding participation: victims as agents of
accountability in the criminal justice process
Marie Manikis, McGill University
Legal Agency of Victims of Teen Dating Violence: How
Life Course Impacts Legal Mobilization
Jessica Fitzpatrick, SUNY Fredonia
Rethinking Law in transitional justice: The case of
Victims’ justice in Bosnia and Herzegovina
Alma Begicevic, The University of Melbourne,
Australia
Friday 12:45 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. The value for social restoration of acknowledgment
through non-judicial measures of transitional justice.
Findings from a population-based survey in BosniaHerzegovina (BiH).
Mina Rauschenbach, KU Leuven
Stephan Parmentier, KU Leuven
Ahh! Me So Horny: Theorizing Sexual Activity
Deprivation
Ummni Khan, Carleton University, Department of Law
Sexual scripts and male victimization: A study of young
peoples’ beliefs, perceptions and attitudes towards
situations in which males report to being sexually
victimized by women
David Gurnham, University of Southampton
What Can Law Transform?
Paper Session
Room:Jackson
Strategic Resistance or False Consciousness: Canadian
Indoor Sex Workers Speak Their Mind
Menaka Raguparan, Carleton University
Chair/Disc: David Abraham, University of Miami
Primary Keyword: Class and Inequality
Presentations:
Between scrutiny and invisibility: publicity, marginality,
and the public sphere
Esther Sullivan, University of Colorado Denver
Is there an antitrust “legal dogmatics”? A study about
Brazilian books and practices in antitrust field
LUIZ FELIPE ROSA RAMOS, University of São Paulo
Religious Separation or Elitist Segregation: Torani
Schools in Israel
Tammy Harel Ben-Shahar, University of Haifa
Eyal Berger, Independent Researcher
Sustainable finance, the law and stakeholders:
introducing the investment opportunity structure
Radek Stech, Exeter Law School
The Food Sharing Cases: Can the First Amendment
Protect People who Publicly Share Food with those
who Hunger?
Marc-Tizoc Gonzalez, St. Thomas University School of
Law
Who’s in Pain and Who’s to Blame? Troubling Notions
of Victimhood and Perpetration in Sexual and Gendered
Contexts
CRN: 7
Paper Session
Room: Studio 9
Chair: Ummni Khan, Carleton University, Department of Law
Disc:
Jessica Clarke, University of Minnesota
Primary Keyword: Gender and Sexuality
F r id ay Ju n e 3
12: 45 p .m. - 2: 30 p .m.
Gender, Identity and Equality
CRN: 38
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 3
Chair: Ann Mumford, King’s College London
Disc:
Åsa Gunnarsson, Forum for Studies on Law and Society
Primary Keyword: Gender and Sexuality
Presentations:
Boundaries and Binaries of Women’s Human Rights: On
the Limits of Identity Categories
Mariana Prandini Assis, The New School for Social
Research
Enduring Gender Inequalities in the Legal Profession?
Comparing the Early-Stage Careers of Lawyers in France
and Switzerland
GREGOIRE MALLARD, Graduate Institute of
International and Development Studies
Isabel Boni-Le Goff, University of Lausanne
Nicky Le Feuvre, University of Lausanne
Eléonore Lépinard, University of Lausanne
Engendering the New Aid Modalities (NAM) for
Inclusive Service Delivery in Uganda: Opportunity for
involving the Women’s Movement
Tabitha Mulyampiti, Makerere University
Presentations:
‘Revenge Porn’ and the Erotics of Punishment
Alex Dymock, Royal Holloway, University of London
75 Friday
‘Rape culture’ vs. “What about the men?” Using a
conflict reconciliation lens to understand tensions and
shifts among social movements addressing gender
Deborah Conners, Carleton University
Friday 12:45 p.m. - 2:30 p.m.
Fathers’ Rights in Family Law Reform: Taking account of
Fathers’ Violence Against Mothers
Monica Burman, Umea Forum for Studies on Law and
Society
Advancing Diversity With Feminist Legal Theory
CRN: 7
Paper Session
Room: Studio 9
Chair: Jessica Clarke, University of Minnesota
Disc:
Wendy Greene, Cumberland School of Law
Friday
Primary Keyword: Feminist Jurisprudence
Presentations:
Gender In/sight: Examining Culture and Constructions
of Gender
Stephanie Wildman, Santa Clara University
Adam Chang, Gender Spectrum
Mapping the European and international legal
framework concerning gender equality in employment
and working life
Aija Valleala, University of Helsinki
Sources of Support: An Empirical Study of Diversity in
Legal Academia
Meera Deo, Thomas Jefferson School of Law
The Collapse of the House that Ruth Built: The Impact
of the Feeder System on Female Judges and the
Federal Judiciary, 1970-2014
Alexandra Hess, Second Circuit Court of Appeals
The Year of the Woman Dean
Simon Michelle, Pace Law School
AMR: Ben Golder - “Foucault and the Politics of Rights”
Author Meets Reader (AMR) Session
Room: Salon E
Author: Ben Golder, UNSW
Chair: Jonathan Simon, University of California-Berkeley
Readers:
Marianne Constable, UC Berkeley
Eve Darian-Smith, University of California Santa
Barbara
Martin Krygier, University of New South Wales
George Pavlich, University of Alberta
76 “Foucault and the Politics of Rights” (Stanford: Stanford
University Press, 2015) focuses on Michel Foucault’s late
work on rights in order to address broader questions about
the politics of rights in the contemporary era. As several
commentators have observed, something quite remarkable
happens in this late work. In his early career, Foucault had been
a great critic of the liberal discourse of rights. Suddenly, from
about 1976 onward, he makes increasing appeals to rights in
his philosophical writings, political statements, interviews, and
journalism. He not only defends their importance; he argues
for rights new and as-yet-unrecognized. Does Foucault simply
revise his former positions and endorse a liberal politics of
rights? Ben Golder proposes an answer to this puzzle, which is
that Foucault approaches rights in a spirit of creative and critical
appropriation. He uses rights strategically for a range of political
purposes that cannot be reduced to a simple endorsement
of political liberalism. Golder develops this interpretation of
Foucault’s work while analyzing its shortcomings and relating it
to the approaches taken by a series of current critical thinkers
also engaged in considering the place of rights in contemporary
politics, including Wendy Brown, Judith Butler, and Jacques
Rancière, in the context of discussions about human rights,
‘relational rights’, the right to die and the death penalty.
Primary Keyword: Social Theory and Law
Coercive Power Or Political Possibilities?: Intellectual
Property and Statecraft
CRN: 14
Paper Session
Room: Studio 7
Disc:
Peter Yu, Texas A&M University School of Law
Primary Keyword: Intellectual Property, Culture
Presentations:
Saving Trips to Save Lives: The Need to Reevaluate U.S.
Foreign Policy on Intellectual Property Rights to Save
the Flexibilities Enshrined in Trips.
Damali Martin, Temple University, Beasley School of
Law
The Ghosts of Patent Exhaustion Past
Amelia Rinehart, University of Utah
The New (C)ensorship
John Tehranian, Southwestern Law School
Comparative Migration Politics: Collaboration,
Integration and Negotiation
CRN: 2
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 1
Friday 12:45 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. Primary Keyword: Citizenship, Migration, Immigration and
Nation
Presentations:
Please Sign Here: Integration Contracts between
Municipalities and Migrants in Denmark. Public Policies
on Integration and the (Dissolving) Dichotomy Private/
Public Law
Silvia Adamo, Faculty of Law, University of
Copenhagen
Racialized Hierarchies and Black Exceptionalism:
Understanding the Immigration and Nationality Act
Brenda Nyandiko Sanya, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign
Primary Keyword: Judges and Judging
Presentations:
Behind the scenes at the judiciary: the role and
influence of judicial assistants in the judicial decisionmaking process.
Nina Holvast, University of Amsterdam
Innovative judging following natural disasters: Lessons
from the Christchurch High Court Earthquake List in
New Zealand
Nina Khouri, Faculty of Law, University of Auckland
Judging and the impact of technology
Tania Sourdin, Monash University
Constitutionalism and Constitutional Courts in North and
South East Asia
Making up the judge -Neither dispassionate umpire
nor ordinary person - A legal and psychoanalytical
perspective
Richard Cornes, Essex University
Room: Galerie 5
Obsessed about Obsessives? The Challenge of
Persistent Litigants
Bridgette Toy-Cronin, University of Otago
CRN: 33
Paper Session
Chair/Disc: tom ginsburg, University of Chicago, Law School
Primary Keyword: Constitutional Law and Constitutionalism
Presentations:
Constitutional Identity and Heroism in Indonesia: The
Journey from Authoritarian Constitution to Mere Rule
of Law Constitutionalism
Stefanus Hendrianto, University of Notre Dame
Illiberal constitutionalism in Thailand
Eugenie Merieau, INALCO Paris / Sciences-Po Paris /
Thammasat University Bangkok
Islam and Constitutionalism: Constitutional Politics
Relating to Islam in the Malaysian Context
Naoko Kuwahara, Fukuyama City University
The Application of International Human Rights
Instruments in Decisions of the Constitutional Court of
Korea
Yoomin Won, Stanford Law School
Contemporary Challenges Faced by Judges
CRN: 43
Paper Session
Legal Transplant and Legal Transformation in East Asia
CRN: 33
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 6
Chair/Disc: Denis De Castro Halis, Faculty of Law / University of
Macau
Primary Keyword: Legal Pluralism, Mixed Legal Systems, and
Non-State Law
Presentations:
Global Governance and Legal Change: A BRICS
Perspective
Rostam J. NEUWIRTH, University of Macau, Faculty of
Law
International fragmentation of competition law:
The actual and expected contribution of the BRICS
countries
Alexandr Svetlicinii, University of Macau
The Civil Jury Trial in Okinawa & Fukushima, Japan:
Why Women Plaintiffs All Won Against Multinational
Corporations
Hiroshi Fukurai, University of California Santa Cruz
Room: Salon H-G
77 Friday
Resilience and Resistance: The Collaborative Endurance
of Tajik Labor Migrants in Russia
Joseph Schottenfeld, Yale Law School
Chair/Disc: Archie Zariski, Athabasca University
Friday 12:45 p.m. - 2:30 p.m.
Disability Rights Law Dilemmas in the United States and
Canada
potential to transform Argentina´s inquisitorial culture
Vanina Almeida, Asociación Argentina de Juicio por
Jurados
Denise Bakrokar, Asociación Argentina de Juicio por
Jurados
Mariana Bilinski, Asociación Argentina De Juicio Por
Jurados
Andrés Harfuch, Asociación Argentina de Juicio por
Jurados
CRN: 40
Paper Session
Room: Salon B
Chair: Ravi Malhotra, University of Ottawa
Primary Keyword: Disabilities and Law
The Historical Development of the Jury in Argentina
Natali Chizik, Asociación Argentina de Juicio por
Jurados
Denise Bakrokar, Asociación Argentina de Juicio por
Jurados
Friday
Presentations:
Considering Disability in the Canadian Criminal Jury
Context – A Review and Study of the Nature of Jury
Representativeness in Canada
Richard Jochelson, University of Winnipeg
Michelle Bertrand, University of Winnipeg
The Jury and its Democratic Legitimacy: Trial by Jury in
Argentina’s Public Agenda
Sidonie Porterie, Instituto de Estudios Comparados en
Ciencias Penales y Sociales (INECIP)
Aldana Romano Bordagaray, Instituto de Estudios
Comparados en Ciencias Penales y Sociales (INECIP)
Camila Petrán Sayago, Instituto de Estudios
Comparados en Ciencias Penales y Sociales (INECIP)
Constructing Disability and Dangerousness: The
Problem of Safety as a Precursor to Accommodation
in Police Responses to Persons with Mental Health
Disabilities
Robin Whitehead, University of Ottawa
Reasonable Accommodations after the ADA
Amendments Act
Jeannette Cox, University of Dayton School of Law
Social Science and the Meaning of Meaningful Access
Mark Weber, DePaul University College of Law
The Interpretation of the Convention of the Rights of
Persons with Disabilities in Canada
Ravi Malhotra, University of Ottawa
Emerging Jury Systems: Argentina and Beyond IRC
CRN: 4
Paper Session
Room: Studio 8
Chair/Disc: Shari Diamond, Northwestern U Law School/
American Bar Foundation
Primary Keyword: Lay Participation, Juries and Other Forms of
Lay Participation
Presentations:
Argentina’s Indigenous Jury
Andrés Harfuch, Asociación Argentina de Juicio por
Jurados
Mariana Bilinski, Asociación Argentina De Juicio Por
Jurados
Lilián Andrea Ortiz, Asociación Argentina de Juicio por
Jurados
From common law to civil law: The jury´s great
78 Following the Law: Ethnographies of Compliance and
Legal Obligation
CRN: 3
Paper Session
Room: Balcony N
Chair: William Garriott, Drake University
Robert Werth, Rice University
Disc:
Michelle Bigenho, Colgate University
Primary Keyword: Ethnography
Presentations:
Following the Constitution: Sexual Minorities and
Constitutional Morality in India and the US
Leo Coleman, Hunter College/CUNY
Following the Law as Legitimation Work in Colorado’s
Legal Marijuana Industry
William Garriott, Drake University
Is there a deep future for legal instrumentalism?
Underground water, following the law and the moral
drift of time
Andrea Ballestero, Rice University
The ‘Law of the Land’?: Trust Documents, Religious
Custom, or the Indian Constitution
Leilah Vevaina, The Max Planck Institute for Religious
and Ethnic Diversity
Friday 12:45 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. From Global Rights to Local Practices: Participation At
the Micro-Level in Latin America
Paper Session
Room: Balcony I
Primary Keyword: Lay Participation, Juries and Other Forms of
Lay Participation
Presentations:
Citizen Participation institutionalization: Social
movements and their strategic interaction with
regional government.
Gustavo Zambrano Chávez, Pontificia Universidad
Católica del Perú
Inclusion within “civil society”: another challenge for
true participation?
Maria Ibanez, Universidad de Los Andes
Stephania Yate Cortes, Universidad de los Andes
Social Movements: Housing in Tarija, Bolivia.
Nataly Vargas Gamboa, Universidad Autónoma Juan
Misael Saracho
The regulation of participation: The case of prior
consultation in Colombia, Chile and Peru
Robinson Sánchez Tamayo, Universidad de Los Andes
Maria Ibanez, Universidad de Los Andes
Hostile Institutions? Gendered Violence in Prisons,
Education, Housing, and the Military
CRN: 7
Paper Session
Room: Studio 10
Chair: Ann McGinley, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Disc:
Jamie Abrams, University of Louisville
Primary Keyword: Gender and Sexuality
Presentations:
Commanders and Sexual Assault Case Attrition in the
U.S. Army, 2008-2012
Eric Carpenter, FIU College of Law
Hostile Environments: Rape in Prison and the Military
Hannah Brenner, Michigan State University College of
Law
Kathleen Darcy, Michigan State University College of
Law
Immigration, Citizenship and Families
CRN: 2
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 4
Friday
Community based water management in Ecuador:
Participatory management vs Regulatory Agencies.
Stephania Yate Cortes, Universidad de los Andes
Pablo Poveda Mora, Universidad Técnica de Ambato
Heroism, Patriarchy and the Adult-Child Victim Divide
in Institutional Responses to Campus Sexual Violence
Jill Engle, Penn State Law
Rosemary Jolly, Pennsylvania State University
Courtney Kiehl, Pennsylvania State University
Chair: Marjorie Zatz, University of California, Merced
Primary Keyword: Citizenship, Migration, Immigration and
Nation
Presentations:
“We Need to Use Your Name”: American Citizen
Children and Their Asian Immigrant Parents in
California, 1907-1945
John Park, UCSB
Family-level citizenship: Mixed-citizenship families and
the limitations of family-based citizenship benefits
Jane Lilly Lopez, UC San Diego
Reinstatement of Deportation: Examining Obama’s
Enforcement Priorities for Detaining and Removing
Felons not Families
Robert Koulish, University of Maryland
Rethinking Migrant Desirability: the Role of Family
Reunification in the Construction of the US Immigration
Preference System
Talia Schiff, Northwestern University
International Law in Interaction: Actors, Orders, and
Tactics Influencing International Law’s Emancipatory
Potential
CRN: 23
Paper Session
Room: Studio 3
Chair/Disc: Honor Brabazon, University of Toronto
Primary Keyword: International Law and Politics
79 Friday 12:45 p.m. - 2:30 p.m.
Presentations:
Neither Feared Nor Loved: In Search of International
Criminal Law’s Constituency
Paul Clark, Garden Court Chambers, London
Riots and Human Rights: Black Lives Matter and New
Approaches to International law
Honor Brabazon, University of Toronto
Theorizing Collective Responsibility in International
Criminal Law
Heidi Matthews, SOAS, University of London
Friday
When Lawyers Go to War: A Study of the Role of
Lawyers in Palestinians’ Civil Litigation against Israel
Gilat Bachar, Stanford Law School
The Invisibility of Economic and Social Rights in A
Neoliberal World
CRN: 47 and IRC: 22
Paper Session
Room: Studio 1
Chair/Disc: Ben Warwick, Durham University
Primary Keyword: Economic and Social Rights
Presentations:
A Holistic Human Rights Lens on Neoliberalism
Gillian MacNaughton, University of Massachusetts Boston
Diane Frey, Murphy Institute, CUNY
Do Metrics Matter? Visibilizing economic and social
rights in post-revolution Egypt
Allison Corkery, Center for Economic and Social Rights
Heba Khalil, University of Illinois
Human rights informed the Sustainable Development
Goals, but are they lost in translation? A New Zealand
case study
Carmel Williams, FXB Center for Health and Human
Rights
Alison Blaiklock, University of Otago, Wellington
Making Economic and Social Rights Visible in Times of
Crisis: Addressing the Invisibility of Economic and Social
Rights in Transitional Justice and Peacebuilding – The
Case of Northern Ireland.
Amanda Cahill-Ripley, Lancaster University Law School
Gender Inequalities and Enforcement of Human Rights in
the MENA Region
IRC: 23
Roundtable Session
80 Room: Balcony J
Chair: Manuela Ceballos, University of Tennessee
Valorie Vojdik, University of Tennessee College of Law
Participants:
Zeina Jallad, Columbia Law School
Hajar Sekher, University of Mohammad V Soussi
Halla Shoaibi, Birzeit University
Primary Keyword: Human Rights
Transnational Natural Resource Governance, Sovereignty
and Human Rights
CRN: 23 and IRC: 10
Paper Session
Room: Studio 4
Chair/Disc: Carmen Gonzalez, Seattle University School of Law
Primary Keyword: Environment and Energy
Presentations:
Can law save the forest? Legal Traces in the Brazilian
Amazon - Localizing Global Norms in the “Terra Legal”
Reform Project
Michael Riegner Oliveira, Humboldt University Berlin
Litigating Water as a Human Right: An Effective Strategy
in Latin America?
Bruce Wilson, UCF
Lara Cortes, CMI
Camila Gianella, University of Bergen
Pluralising transnational resource governance
Julia Dehm, University of Texas at Austin
Sovereignty over Natural Resources in Chile:
Indigenous Claims Neutralized through Judicialization
Amaya Alvez Marin, University of Concepción
The rehabilitation of aquatic ecosystems in Chile and its
implications for the right to private property: Property
as social function:
Matias Guiloff, Universidad Diego Portales Law School
Law and Changing Financial Contexts
Paper Session
Room: Balcony K
Chair/Disc: Susan Block Lieb, Fordham University School of Law
Primary Keyword: Economy, Business and Society
Friday 12:45 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. Presentations:
Anti-Intermediation
Julia Lee, Penn State University School of Law
Do new capital requirements (Basel III requirements)
make loans more expensive in Colombia?
Nydia Remolina, Stanford University
Financial Sector Firms and Human Rights: the adoption
of the Ruggie Principles by financial sector firms listed
on the FTSE 100
Sally Wheeler, Queen’s University Belfast
Using Institutional Redundancy to Fight Corruption:
Why Brazil should serve as a model for other
developing countries?
Mariana Mota Prado, University of Toronto
CRN: 36
Paper Session
Room: Bacchus
Chair: Terence Halliday, American Bar Foundation
Disc:
Aziz Rana, Cornell Law School
Primary Keyword: Transnational Legal Orders, International and
Regional Institutions
Presentations:
Drying Tears and Counting Cash: Transnational
Technicalities within Lending Arrangements
Shanthi Elizabeth Senthe, Faculty of Law, Thompson
Rivers University
Gender Law Reform and Development: Entwined
Histories from the Colonial to the Postcolonial
Cyra Choudhury, FIU
The role of judicial epistemic communities and the
Global South in contemporary law and development
Toby Goldbach, Cornell Law School
The Travels and Continuities of Law: Native Claims to
Civil Justice Administration and Local Governance in
Colonial India
Cynthia Farid, University of Wisconsin Law school
Towards new approaches for Climate Change
Mitigation: Geoengineering and the false dichotomy of
Solving Climate Crisis
Koffi Dogbevi, University Of Wisconsin Law School
Law and Time
Paper Session
Room: Balcony L
Chair/Disc: Renisa Mawani, University of British Columbia
Primary Keyword: Social Theory and Law,
Presentations:
How Time Passes in Law
Jill Stauffer, Haverford College
Humanitarian Complicity: Law, Time and the Politics of
Rescue
Sara Kendall, University of Kent
Law and Time
Karl Shoemaker, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Legal Geography Panel III Homes, Houses, and City
Spaces
CRN: 35
Paper Session
Room: Salon F
Chair/Disc: Alexandre (Sandy) Kedar, Law School, University of Haifa
Primary Keyword: Geographies of Law
Presentations:
Do-It-Yourself (“DIY”) Venues: Transgressive
Transformative Cultural Spaces in the City, Cultural
Preservation Interests, and Contestations of Dominant
City Redevelopment and Gentrification Processes
Sara Ross, Osgoode Hall Law School
Regulating the Home: Housing Codes at Times of Social
Change, 1867-2015
Hed Ehrlich, University of California, Berkeley
The Challenge of Inclusion
Kenneth Stahl, Chapman University Fowler School of
Law
The Legal Geography of Housebuilding in England
Antonia Layard, University of Bristol
81 Friday
Law and Development from Below: Reconciling Practice
With Prescriptions
When You Hit The Jackpot!: An Ethnographic Account
On Judicial Decisons Of Transitional Justicie In
Colombia
Sergio Latorre, Universidad del Norte
Friday 12:45 p.m. - 2:30 p.m.
The properties of tenure
David Cowan, University of Bristol
Alison Wallace, University of York
Helen Carr, University of Kent
Legal Pluralism in a Context of Transitional Justice and
Reconstruction
CRN: 48
Paper Session
Room: Salon C
Chair/Disc: Janine Ubink, University of California Irvine
Friday
Primary Keyword: Legal Pluralism, Mixed Legal Systems, and
Non-State Law
Presentations:
Accountability in Northern Uganda: Changing
Traditions in Post-Conflict Justice
Janet McKnight, Armed Conflict Location and Event
Data Project
Inspiring Conflict-Related Justice? A Critical LegalPluralistic Perspective on Emerging Transnational Legal
Norms Contending with the Past
Philipp Kastner, University of Western Australia
Legal pluralism: The Multiple Paths to (In)Justice in the
Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo
Holly Dunn, University of Minnesota
The Sheikhs of Two Cities: Tribalism and Pluralism in
Post-2003 Iraq
Ruba Ali Al-Hassani, Osgoode Hall Law School
Transitional Justice in Ferguson, MO: Who is
Transforming Ferguson?
Laura Zlotowski, University of California-Irvine
Life of the Law - Pitching Scholarship to Media (A
Workshop)
Public Outreach Session
Room: Salon D
story and they’ll be ready to listen and provide individual
feedback.
Participating LOTL Reporters and Producers include:
Ashley Cleek, Life of the Law and NPR Reporter
Jonathan Hirsch, Life of the Law Producer and Reporter
Kirsten Jusewicz-Haidle, Reporter
Methods Cafe
Professional Development Panel
Room:Carondelet
Chair: Ellen Berrey, University of Denver
Participants:
Susan Coutin, University of California, Irvine
Ronit Dinovitzer, University of Toronto
Eric Feldman, University of Pennsylvania Law School
Lawrence Friedman, Stanford University Law School
Laura Hatcher, Southeast Missouri State University
Robert Nelson, Northwestern University
Osagie Obasogie, University of California Hastings
Keramet Reiter, University of California, Irvine
Justin Richland, University of Chicago
Kim Lane Scheppele, Princeton University
Gregory Shaffer, University of California Irvine
Susan Silbey, MIT
Nicole Gonzalez Van Cleve, Temple University
The goal of this session is to provide consultation and
informal instruction about the use of specific methods and
their application in sociolegal research. Scholars experienced
in a range of research methods will sit in a large ballroom
at different tables, which are prominently labeled with the
methods about which they are prepared to advise. If you have
heard about a method and would like to know more about it,
if you are thinking about a particular method for a research
project, or if you are currently struggling with a method, you are
invited to consult with our experts-they are diverse in approach
and eager to advise you.
Moving Beyond Criminal Law to Fix the Criminal Justice
System
Roundtable Session
Facilitator(s):
Nancy Mullane, Life of the Law
Mary Adkins, Life of the Law
Room: Galvez
You’ve just published years of research and now it’s time to get
it disseminated! Get tips on best practices for reaching out to
media to get your scholarship in the news. Meet one-on-one
with professional, award-winning journalists and producers
from Life of the Law.
Participants:
Monica Bell, Harvard Law School
Dan Farbman, Harvard Law School
Thomas Frampton, Orleans Public Defender
Trevor Gardner, NYU Law School
Benjamin Levin, Harvard Law School
Come prepared to pitch your exciting scholarship for a possible
82 Chair: Benjamin Levin, Harvard Law School
Friday 12:45 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. This Round table discussion will focus on a range of legal and
social institutions that do not clearly fall under the ambit of
“criminal law” or the “criminal justice system,” but that shape
the carceral state and criminal law enforcement regime.
Specifically, this roundtable will consider a set of related legal
regimes – immigration enforcement, municipal laws regarding
housing and zoning, and employment law doctrines and
institutions – that shape experiences of criminal punishment
and exacerbate the marginalization of those with criminal
records. While discussions of sentencing and policing reform
are certainly important to addressing the current state of
the criminal justice system, this Round table will focus on
the margins of criminal law to ask how other reforms or
legal decisions might reshape and address the problems of
contemporary criminal law.
Presentations:
Company Directors as Fiduciaries: Practical and
Theoretical Challenges
Colin Moore, University of Kent
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
Paper Session
CRN: 23
Paper Session
Room: Studio 6
Chair: Ioannis Kalpouzos, City Law School, City University London
Primary Keyword: International Law and Politics
Presentations:
Criminal Rebel Groups: Labelling-Punishing-Targeting
Ioannis Kalpouzos, City Law School, City University
London
The Diminishing Duty of Loyalty
Julian Velasco, Notre Dame Law School
Sentencing and Capital Punishment
Room:Jackson
Chair/Disc: Meredith Rountree, Northwestern Law
Primary Keyword: Capital Punishment
Presentations:
An Empirical Analysis of the Causes of the Astounding
Decline in Death Sentences in the United States in the
Last Two Decades
David McCord, Drake University Law School
Talia Harmon, Niagara University
Incorrigible states: Outlaws of collective security
Isobel Roele, Queen Mary University of London
Facilitating Abolition of the Death Penalty in the
United States: The Effectiveness of the United Nations
Universal Periodic Review
Alice Storey, Birmingham City University
The production of plunder: Somali piracy in
international legal thought
Tor Krever, London School of Economics and Political
Science
Knowledge of Punishing: A Neo-Institutional Account of
the Practice of Punishing
Gil Rothschild, UC Berkeley - JSP PhD (Jurisprudence
and Social Policy)
The Universal Boatperson
Itamar Mann, Georgetown Law Center
Relationship Between Social Movements and the
Capital Punishment in the Middle East
Sanaz Alasti, Lamar University
Eric Bronson, Lamar University
Eric Bronson, Lamar University
Amir Fakhravar, Lamar University
Private Fiduciary Law
Paper Session
Room: Studio 5
Chair: Evan Criddle, William & Mary Law School
Disc:
Repugnant Business Models
Claire Hill, University of Minnesota Law School
Friday
Outlaws of International Law
Fiduciary Contours: perspectives on mutual funds and
private funds
Deborah DeMott, Duke University School of Law
Paul Miller, McGill University Faculty of Law
Primary Keyword: Corporate and Securities Law
The Role of Identity in Court Officials’ Sentencing
Decisions
Alix Winter, Harvard University
Matthew Clair, Harvard University
Sexuality At the Margins
Paper Session
Room:Regent
83 Friday 12:45 p.m. - 2:30 p.m.
Chair/Disc: Clifford Rosky, College Of Law, University of Utah
Primary Keyword: Gender and Sexuality
Presentations:
Reimagining Ownership: The Impact of Sexual Violence
on the Law of Forced Labor and Slavery
Rana Jaleel, University of California, Davis
Religion, Culture, and Children’s Rights
Samantha Godwin, Yale Law School
Friday
Salvaging ‘Safe Spaces’: Best Practices for LGBTQ YouthServing Professionals Encountering Law Enforcement
Brendan Conner, Streetwise and Safe
Symbolic Legislation: Reevaluating Conversion Therapy
Bans
Marie-Amelie George, Columbia Law School
Unprofessional Advice
Claudia Haupt, Columbia Law School
Social Theories of Punishment I: Rethinking and
Enriching Theories of Punishment
CRN: 27
Paper Session
Room: Studio 2
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
Presentations:
Civil Society in Prison: Citizenship Theories and
Incarceration
Sheri-Lynn Kurisu, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign
How the Prison is a Black Box in Punishment Theory
Lisa Kerr, New York University
Towards a theory of social movements’ criminalization
and political deviance
Xenia Chiaramonte, Università di Milano, visiting
scholar at UC Berkeley, Center for the Study of Law &
Society
Tax Session 8: Retirement
CRN: 31
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 2
Chair/Disc: Emily Satterthwaite, University of Toronto Faculty of Law
Primary Keyword: Taxation
84 Presentations:
Current and Future Generations
Neil Buchanan, The George Washington University
Law School
Fossil Fuel Tax Incentives (Oops, I mean
“Expenditures”): Did Tax Expenditure Paradigm Really
Inform Tax Policy?
Mona Hymel, University of Arizona, College of Law
Removing the Legal Impediments to Offering Lifetime
Annuities in Pension Plans
Jonathan Forman, University of Oklahoma College of
Law
Taming the Roth IRA Monster
Ausher Kofsky, Western New England University,
College of Business
Trauma-Informed Lawyering and Social Change
CRN: 9, 12
Roundtable Session
Room: Balcony M
Chair: Priscilla Ocen, Loyola Law School, Los Angeles
Participants:
Alina Ball, UC Hastings
Claudia Pena, Repair & UCLA
Beth Ribet, Repair & UCLA
Can law comprehend trauma? The concept of “trauma-informed
lawyering” has recently been heralded as a new cutting edge or
breakthrough in the legal world. It might as easily be noted that
law is just, belatedly catching up, as “trauma-informed care” has
been an established field in healthcare for more than a decade.
Participants will initially discuss the potential meanings of
trauma-informed lawyering, and the opportunities that the
framework poses for advocates and scholars concerned
with racial, economic and gender justice, the often disabling
physical and mental health effects of subordination, and
deeper structural change. Each contributor will also identify
the salience of trauma in their own advocacy, scholarship, and
legal interventions, the challenges in attempting to address
trauma through legal narratives, structures, and process, and
the consequences when trauma is or is not acknowledged or
validated, in legal spheres.
Primary Keyword: Race, Critical Race Research
2063 Africa: Issues in Education Law, Strategic Policy, and
Sustainable Development
IRC: 27
Roundtable Session
Room: Bonaparte
Friday 2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Chair: Egbewole Abdulwahab Olasupo, University of Ilorin, Nigeria
Thomas Kleven, Thurgood Marshall School of Law
Participants:
Mariam Abdulraheem-Mustapha, Faculty of Law,
University of ilorin
Michael Addaney, University of Energy and Natural
Resources
Ashwanee Budoo, Centre for human rights, university
of Pretoria
Ngozi Chuma-umeh, Imo State University
David Nnanna Ikpo, CLAZ Solicitors and Advocates
Etudaiye Muhtar, Faculty of Law, University of Ilorin
Olanike Odewale, Lead City University, Ibadan, Nigeria
Primary Keyword: Economic and Social Rights
Fr i d ay J u n e 3
2 :4 5 p . m . - 4: 30 p . m .
AMR: Mitchell F. Crusto - State of Emergency: From
Compton to Ferguson, Lessons from Katrina
CRN: 12
Author Meets Reader (AMR) Session
Room: Salon E
Author: Mitchell Crusto, Loyola University College of Law
Chair: Charlton Copeland, University of Miami
Readers:
Andrea Armstrong, Loyola University (New Orleans)
College of Law
Charlton Copeland, University of Miami
Raymond Diamond, LSU Law School
Sheldon Bernard Lyke, Whittier Law School
Primary Keyword: Constitutional Law and Constitutionalism
Assessing Social Progress and Its Barriers: Supranational
Organizations and Technologies of Governance
Roundtable Session
Friday
The roundtable is a session of an IRC which investigates the
various challenges that confronts Africa. Prevalent among these
factors identified is the poor provision of social services which
affects the realisation of socio-economic rights in most African
states. Poor maternal and child mortality rates, poor access to
basic education, access to habitable environment, to food and
to portable water all continue to elude Africa. The IRC examines
the current AU response agenda 2063. ‘An Africa of good
governance, democracy and respect for human rights, justice
and the rule of law’ It is therefore the focus of this research
group to compile a series of research presentations into a book
with a proposed title of: 2063 Africa: Issues in Education Law,
Strategic Policy, and Sustainable Development. It is anticipated
that the book will explore various socio-economic rights issues
arobust and viable agenda for the African Union
This inter-active session will revolve around on my book
(Carolina Academic Press) entitled, Involuntary Heroes. It
explores Hurricane Katrina’s impact on civil liberties and
challenges governments’ actions that infringe on people’s civil
liberties during emergencies and how courts handle allegations
of wrongful infringements. Overall, it continues the post911 debate over the need for an “emergency constitution.”
It enhances that debate by examining how declarations of
emergencies impact the nature of civil liberties. I think this
is a compelling program and is extremely relevant in light of
Ferguson, Mo, the Boston Marathon bombing, and the Ebola
scare.
Room: Balcony N
Chair: Sally Engle Merry, New York University
Participants:
Javier Couso, University Diego Portales/Utrecht
University
Terence Halliday, American Bar Foundation
Leslye Obiora, University of Arizona
Gregory Shaffer, University of California Irvine
A group of sociolegal scholars has joined with a large number
of other social scientists to produce a collective report, the
International Panel on Social Progress (IPSP), which documents
the achievements and failures of social progress. The initiative
parallels the International Panel on Climate Change. This
roundtable includes many of the scholars who are working
on the chapter on “Supranational Organizations and The
Technologies of Governance.” The roundtable will introduce
the project, discuss several of the themes in the chapter, and
invite ideas from the audience. The IPSP aspires to produce an
overview of a large field that draws on the expertise of a large
group of scholars. The chapter is in the process of being drafted
and finalized, and the contributors would appreciate further
input.
Primary Keyword: International Law and Politics
Beyond Criminal Law: New Frames for Understanding
Gendered and Sexual Harms
CRN: 7
Paper Session
Room: Studio 9
Chair: Cynthia Godsoe, Brooklyn Law School
Disc:
Aziza Ahmed, Northeastern University School of Law
85 Friday 2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Primary Keyword: Crime and Victims
Philip Gaines, Advocacy Advice in the Adversarial
Tradition: The Emergence of the Modern Trial Manual
in England, 1600-1879 (2016)
Presentations:
Breaking the binary prostitution/sex work: a shift
towards corporate law
Macarena Saez, American University Washington
College of Law
Karen Tracy, Language and Social Change in Courts and
Legislative Hearings: Transforming Identities in the
Marriage Equality Debates (2016)
Decriminalizing Domestic Violence
Leigh Goodmark, University of Maryland Carey School
of Law
In addition to those books, we intend to feature the
following:
Roger W. Shuy, The Language of Fraud Cases (2016)
Developing Theories of “Collective Entity”
Responsibility for Gender-Based Violence in Tort
Nancy Chi Cantalupo, Barry University Dwayne O.
Andreas School of Law
Peter Tiersma and Lawrence Solan, eds., The Oxford
Handbook of Language and the Law (paperback edition
2016)
Friday
No Quick Fix: The Failures of A Criminal Law Framework
for Domestic Child Sex Trafficking and Advances in Civil
Remedies
Charisa Smith, University of Wisconsin Law School
Vijay Bhatia and Maurizio Gotti, eds., Arbitration
Discourse in Asia (2015)
Susan Sarcevic, ed., Language and Culture in EU Law
(2015)
Rape Beyond Crime
Margo Kaplan, Rutgers Law School
Book Panel Introducing New Books in Language and Law
Brian Slocumb, Ordinary Meaning: A Theory of the
Most Fundamental Principle of Legal Interpretation (U.
Chicago Press 2015).
Room: Galerie 3
Russell Powell, Sharia in the Secular State, part of the
Law, Language and Communication Series (Ashgate/
Routledge, to be published late spring 2016)
CRN: 16
Roundtable Session
Chair: Janet Ainsworth, Seattle University
Volumes published by the Oxford University Press
series Oxford Studies in Language and Law in 2015 and
the first half of 2016 include:
Jennifer Andrus, Entextualizing Domestic Violence
(2015)
Laura Felton Rosulek, Dueling Discourses: The
Construction of Reality in Closing Arguments (2015)
Philipp Sebastian Angermeyer, Speak English or What?:
Codeswitching and Interpreter Use in the New York City
Courts (2015)
Baudouin Dupret, Michael Lynch, and Tim Berard, eds.
Law at Work: Studies in Legal Ethnomethods (2015)
Lawrence M. Solan, Janet Ainsworth, and Roger
W. Shuy, eds., Speaking of Language and Law:
Conversations on the Work of Peter Tiersma (2015)
Susan Ehrlich, Diana Eades, and Janet Ainsworth,
eds., Discursive Constructions of Consent in the Legal
Process (2016)
86 Primary Keyword: Language And Discourse
Corporate/Securities Law Panel #1: Financial Market
Regulation
CRN: 46
Paper Session
Room: Salon C
Chair: Christina Parajon Skinner, Columbia Law School
Disc:
Olufunmilayo Arewa, University of California, Irvine School of Law
Nizan Packin, Baruch College
Primary Keyword: Corporate and Securities Law
Presentations:
Empire of the Fund: Mutual Funds, 401(k)s & The Way
We Save Now
William Birdthistle, Chicago-Kent College of Law
FDIC Suits Against Bank Directors and Officers
Julie Hill, University of Alabama
Pillow Talk, The Parent Trap, Sibling Rivalries, Kissing
Friday 2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Cousins, and Other Personal Relationships in U.S.
Insider Trading Cases
Joan Heminway, The University of Tennessee
Eviction: Social Exclusion and Enhanced Risk in
Vancouver’s DTES
Margot Young, University of British Columbia
Public-Private Equity
Summer Kim, University of California, Irvine, School
of Law
Improving Minha Casa, Minha Vida housing program:
applying behavioral economics discoveries and
libertarian paternalism to help people make better
decisions
Maria Laura de Souza Coutinho, Direito GV
Regulating Nonbanks
Christina Parajon Skinner, Columbia Law School
Should the Federal Government Assume a Larger Role
in Regulating U.S. Insurance Conglomerates in Order to
Maintain Financial Stability?
Elizabeth Brown, University of Wisconsin-Lacrosse
Politics and the Constitution: Strategies for
Strengthening Minority Rights and Access to Higher
Education
Kristen Barnes, University of Akron School of Law
Risks and Dynamics in Constitutional Adjudication:
Lessons from an Imaginary Social-Assiatance Case
Luca Martino Levi, Harvard Law School
Room: Galerie 5
The Perfect Storm: Property Rights Trump Human
Rights
JoAnne Myers, Marist College
CRN: 33
Paper Session
Chair/Disc: Mari Hirayama, Hakuoh University
Primary Keyword: Courts And Trials
Presentations:
An Empirical Analysis Of The Application Of Guiding
Cases In China: Implications For Judicial Reform In
China
Qingtao Xie, Stanford University
Can the Procedural Justice Model be applied to China?
Feng Jing, City University of Hong Kong
Japan’s Medical Accident Investigation System with
Three Main Purposes
NAOYA ENDo, Fairness-Law Firm
Exploring the Rights to Education, Housing and Social
Assistance in Context
CRN: 47
Paper Session
Room: Studio 1
Chair: ANA MARIA SANCHEZ RODRIGUEZ, University of Massachusetts Boston
Disc:
Diane Frey, Murphy Institute, CUNY
Primary Keyword: Economic and Social Rights
Presentations:
Courts, Communism, and Commercialism: Why the
1940s and 1950s Matter for Education Policy Today
Daniel Moak, University of Pennsylvania
Defining Law and Law & Society
Paper Session
Room: Galvez
Chair/Disc: Kirsten Anker, McGill University
Primary Keyword: Social Theory and Law,
Presentations:
Calling for Law. Is a normative definition of law
defendable?
Diane Bernard, KULeuven, U. St-Louis, UCLouvain, ULg
Critical Legal History and Law as a Social System: two
perspectives on the relation between law and society
Ana Beatriz Vanzoff Robalinho Cavalcanti, Yale Law
School
Law and compassion: law and society scholarship
Dermot Feenan, University of Portsmouth
Mandela’s law: Law as principle, power, resistance, and
statecraft
Fran Buntman, George Washington University
Semantic Legal Ordering: Theorizing the Causal
Influence of Legal Meanings
Laura Ford, The Baldy Center for Law & Social Policy
The Prospects for Change: The Question of Justice in a
Law & Society Framework
Michael Raphael, CUNY Graduate Center
87 Friday
Courts, Trials and Justice in East Asia
Friday 2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Emerging Issues in Critical Race and the Law
CRN: 12
Paper Session
Room: Balcony M
Chair/Disc: Andrea Freeman, University of Hawai’i William S. Richardson School of Law
The Theory and Practice of Functional Distributive
Justice: The Right of Enjoyment and New Causes of
Action
Temitope Onifade, University of Calgary
Fifty Years of the Law & Society Review: A Conversation
With Past Editors
Professional Development Panel
Primary Keyword: Race, Critical Race Research
Room:Riverview
Presentations:
Big Data and Consumer Racism
Andrea Freeman, University of Hawai’i William S.
Richardson School of Law
Chair: Joseph Sanders, University of Houston
Friday
Fearless Color Confrontations: On misplacing Dr. King’s
nonviolence, rediscovering Dr. Cress’ theory, and still
pondering Judge Reeves’ uncensored ruling teaching
from the bench
Angela Mae Kupenda, Mississippi College School of
Law
Participants:
Shari Diamond, Northwestern U Law School/American
Bar Foundation
Marc Galanter, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Herbert Kritzer, University of Minnesota Law School
Richard Lempert, University of Michigan
Frank Munger, New York Law School
Paper Session
This panel is part of the celebration of the 50th anniversary of
the Law and Society Review. The panel is comprised of a group
of past editors who represent most of the history of the Review.
Among other things they will discuss are:
• The nuts and bolts of editing the review
• Allocative decisions such as the types of articles
that the believed should and should not be
published in the Review.
• Trends in the discipline during each editor’s
tenure and what they see as the highlights of their
editorship.
• Changes in the field and the Review over time.
Room: Balcony I
Intellectual Property Contextualized
Race and Family Formation: The Current Racial
Discourse in Transracial Adoption Case Law in the
United States (1997-2015)
Emma Shakeshaft, University of Wisconsin-Madison
RACE AS DISABILITY?
Kimani Paul-Emile, Fordham University Law School
Environmental Justice
Chair: Alison Dundes Renteln, University of Southern California
Primary Keyword: Environment and Energy
Presentations:
Environmentalism and The Indian Court: New
Techniques of Governance and Questions for
Environmental Justice
Sanghamitra Padhy, Ramapo College
Live Again: Environmental Justice Considerations on
the Impacts of Goods Movement and Hazardous Waste
Transportation in U.S. Communities
Megan A. Moore, Temple University James E. Beasley
School of Law
Property Rights and Wrongs: Oil and Gas MineralRights Leasing Contracts as Artifacts of Social
Inequalities
Daniel Kluttz, University of California, Berkeley
88 CRN: 14
Paper Session
Room: Studio 7
Chair: Bita Amani, Queen’s University, Faculty of Law
Primary Keyword: Intellectual Property, Culture
Presentations:
Are Trademarks Ever Fanciful?
Jake Linford, Florida State University
Assessing the implications of distributed creative
production for copyright policy
Kristofer Erickson, University of Glasgow School of
Law
Christopher Buccafusco, Cardozo School of Law
Life on other Worlds: Copyright, creators, and a clash
of civilizations?
Smita Kheria, University of Edinburgh
Friday 2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. The Jus of Use: Trademarks in Transition
Carys Craig, Osgoode Hall Law School, York University
Carys Craig, Osgoode Hall Law School, York University
Bita Amani, Queen’s University, Faculty of Law
International Law and Global Orders: Contested Practices
and Identities
CRN: 23
Paper Session
Room: Studio 6
Chair/Disc: Jothie Rajah, American Bar Foundation
Primary Keyword: International Law and Politics
Colonizing Jihad: A dangerous occupation
John Strawson, University of East London
East of the Rule of Law: Spatialized Invocations of the
Rule of Law in post-unification Germany
Christiane Wilke, Carleton University
Self-determination and the Colonial Legacy in
International Law.
Barry Collins, University of East London
The Rule of Law and Qatar’s Rise to Global Prominence:
Prospects and challenges
Noha Aboueldahab, Durham Law School
Invisible Institutionalisms | What Can We See When We
Are Looking?
CRN: 36
Paper Session
Room: Bacchus
The Queer Politics of the Raj
Anurima Banerji, UCLA
The shifting place of Islamic law within the colonial
Indian legal order, from territorial to personal law.
Jean-Philippe Dequen, Max Planck Institute for
European Legal History
The Democratization of Courts in the Global South:
The Role of Human Rights Discourse in Shaping Judicial
Reforms
IRC: 30
Paper Session
Room: Balcony J
Chair/Disc: George Radics, National University of Singapore
Primary Keyword: Human Rights
Presentations:
Human rights discourse and judges’ work in Peru:
Disconnections in child support that matter
Wilson Hernandez, Universidad de Lima
Judicial Reform in Thailand’s Fluctuating Regime: A
Challenge for the Development of Domestic Human
Rights Norms
Akawat Laowonsiri, Thammasat University (Thailand)
and International Law Association of Thailand
Reforming the Court through Right to Justice
Yu Un Oppusunggu, University of Indonesia
“This Seductive Lie”? Checks and Balances, and
Deference in Judicial Review
Jack Tsen-Ta Lee, School of Law, Singapore
Management University
Chair/Disc: Sara Dezalay, Goethe University
Swethaa S. Ballakrishnen, New York University Abu Dhabi
Vocabularies of Environmental Justice
Primary Keyword: Transnational Legal Orders, International and
Regional Institutions
Room: Studio 4
Presentations:
Autonomy and control of the Shanghai Mixed Court
Stefan Kroll, Goethe University Frankfurt
Invisible Institutions & Women’s Property Rights’
Formal Emergence: Women’s Inheritance Rights
Reform and Son Preference in India
CRN: 23 and IRC 10
Paper Session
Chair/Disc: Karen Engle, University of Texas at Austin
Sumudu Atapattu, University of Wisconsin
Primary Keyword: Environment and Energy
Presentations:
Hierarchies as Law and Global Governance
Damjan Kukovec, Harvard Law School
89 Friday
Presentations:
13 Years of Solitude: (Re)Locating Law, Violence, and
Resistance in Guantanamo Bay’s Hunger Strikes
Safiyah Rochelle, CARLETON UNIVERSITY
Rachel Brulé, NYU Abu Dhabi
Sonia Bhalotra, University of Essex
Sanchari Roy, University of Sussex
Friday 2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Nature’s Mourning: On the Language of Law and the
Muteness of Nature
Matthew Nicholson, University of Southampton
Old Tragedies, New Ethics: Reframing the Moral
Economy of Commons
Rajshree Chandra, University of Delhi
The Marriage of Human Rights and the Environment:
From Mutual Convenience to Irreconcilable Differences
Usha Natarajan, The American University in Cairo
Towards a Global Political Economy of Environmental
Conflict: Some Remarks from the History of Biodiversity
Andreas Kotsakis, Oxford Brookes University
Friday
Issues in Socio-Legal Theory.
Paper Session
Room:Regent
Primary Keyword: Social Theory and Law,
Presentations:
Explaining the Legal Complex
Malcolm Langford, University of Oslo
Is there a right to sleep?
Jonathan Goldberg-Hiller, University of Hawai`i
Power, Law and Vulnerabilities Across Borders “Power
and Law” International Research Collaborative
Christopher Matera, U.C. Berkeley
Landing a Law and Society Job At a Teaching-Centered
Institution
Professional Development Panel
Room: Salon D
Chair: Renee Cramer, Drake University
Participants:
Paul Collins, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Renee Cramer, Drake University
Sarah Hampson, University of Washington Tacoma
Aaron Lorenz, Ramapo College
Anna-Maria Marshall, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign
Shannon Portillo, University of Kansas
Mary Nell Trautner, University at Buffalo, SUNY
Monica Williams, Weber State University
The academic job market is a difficult place to be - and
candidates need to think through how to present themselves
for a wide array of positions. Interdisciplinary legal studies
education is a unique and vibrant field - and applying for jobs
90 within it is different than applying for positions within more
standard disciplinary homes at research-focused institutions.
This roundtable includes faculty from several undergraduate
teaching-centered institutions, who hire often in the fields
related to law and society. It also includes faculty who mentor
graduate students towards these positions. The roundtable will
offer our collective reflections on, and advice for, the job market
for these types of positions. We will discuss cover letters,
teaching portfolios, the ‘job talk’ and teaching demonstration,
and the intangible things we look for, when evaluating
candidates to become our colleagues.
Primary Keyword: Teaching Law and Society
Law and Popular Culture: Representation of the
Underclasses in Movies and Television
Paper Session
Room: Balcony K
Chair/Disc: Lawrence Friedman, Stanford University Law School
Primary Keyword: Popular Culture, Media, Finance, and The
Arts
Presentations:
“How Can It Not Know What It Is?”
Christine Corcos, LSU Law Center
Ethnicity - offence, irony and satire in modern TV
drama
Peter Robson, University of Strathclyde
Jewish Lawyers on Television
Michael Asimow, Stanford/UCLA
Law and Society in ‘The Second Mother’.
Pedro Fortes, FGV LAW SCHOOL
Law’s Promise to Social Change: Gender and Identity
Boundaries
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 1
Chair: Shanthi Elizabeth Senthe, Faculty of Law, Thompson Rivers University
Primary Keyword: Gender and Judging
Presentations:
From Catcalling to Gamergate to Revenge Porn: Can
(and Should) Law Prevent Intimidation of Women in
Public Places?
JoAnne Sweeny, University of Louisville, Louis D.
Brandeis School of Law
Friday 2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. How Women Could Transform the World, If Only
We Would Let Them: International Law as Gender
Performance
Catherine Powell, Fordham University School of Law
The case for feminist legal history
Rosemary Auchmuty, University of Reading
Towards a New Departure: Suffrage, Litigation, and the
19th Century Women’s Movement
Gabriel Beringer, University of California, Berkeley
White Knighting: Exploring Manifestations of
Benevolent Sexism
Alexander Ruiz, University of California: Irvine
Legal Education and Judges in the Australasian Region
Room: Galerie 6
Chair: Richard Wai Sang Wu, The University of Hong Kong
Disc:
Kay-Wah CHAN, Macquarie University
Primary Keyword: Legal Pluralism, Mixed Legal Systems, and
Non-State Law
Presentations:
Challenge of the law school system in South Korea and
Japan
jihyun baek, kangwon national university
Transactional and Experiential Law Teaching – Trends
and Challenges in the Asia Pacific Region
Andrew Godwin, Melbourne Law School
When Law Meets Creative Media in Hong Kong and
China: Reflective Learning of Common Law Concept
and Values through Movies
Richard Wai Sang Wu, The University of Hong Kong
Grace Leung, Chinese University of Hong Kong
Legal Geography Panel IV Legal and Informal Production
of Urban Spaces
CRN: 35
Paper Session
Room: Salon F
Chair/Disc: Sara Ross, Osgoode Hall Law School
Primary Keyword: Geographies of Law
Judges and urban conflict in Mexico: a Quantitative
Exploration
antonio azuela, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de
Mexico
Carlos Herrera, University College London
Camilo Saavedra, Centro de Estudios Constitucionales
Mexican Supreme Court
The Spatial and Temporal Boundaries of Harm
Reduction Practices: Subjectivities of Exclusion
Lisa Wright, Carleton University
Managing the State: Law, Politics, and Foreign Relations
Paper Session
Room: Studio 5
Chair/Disc: Jennifer Balint, The University of Melbourne
Primary Keyword: International Law and Politics
Presentations:
Experimentalist Responses to Temporary Problems in
International Law: the Case of Counter-Terrorism
Nathanael Ali, Erasmus University Rotterdam
Sacred Rice: International Legal Frameworks and
Agricultural Policy in Japan
Nicole Freiner, Bryant University
Voluntary Global Governance Systems
Scott Cooper, American National Standards Institute
American Gavel Across Borders: An Empirical Study of
Federal District Court Cases on Extraterritorial Exercise
of U.S. Civil Jurisdiction (2000-2015)
Damira Khatam, Stanford Law School
New Developments in Juries and Lay Participation
Worldwide
CRN: 4 and IRC: 18
Paper Session
Room: Studio 8
Chair/Disc: Marie Comiskey, University of Toronto
Primary Keyword: Lay Participation, Juries and Other Forms of
Lay Participation
Presentations:
Jury Trials in Georgia: Trial and Error?
91 Friday
CRN: 33
Paper Session
Presentations:
Distribution As Recognition In Informal Urban
Settlements In Belo Horizonte Metropolitan Area
Maria Tereza Fonseca Dias, Universidade Federal de
Minas Gerais
Thiago Lopes DECAT, Milton Campos Faculty of Law
Friday 2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Nikolai Kovalev, Wilfrid Laurier University
Giorgi Meladze, Ilia State University
Observational Study of Youth courts: the planning stage
Penny Darbyshire, Kingston University London
The Criminal Jury in France and Belgium: Ebb and Flow
Claire Germain, Levin College of Law, University of
Florida
Twentieth anniversary of the Spanish Jury Law and
future perspectives: brief reflection about the jury trial
in Spain
Mar Jimeno-Bulnes, Universidad de Burgos
Friday
Youth courts in England and Wales and Germany
Stefan Machura, Bangor University
Responsive Judging
CRN: 43 and IRC: 38
Roundtable Session
Room: Salon H-G
Chair: Tania Sourdin, Monash University
Participants:
Honorable Kevin Burke, Minnesota District Court, 4th
Judicial District, Hennepin County
Michael Jones, Arizona Summit Law School
Pauline Spencer, Magistrates’ Court of Victoria
Rick J. Verschoof, Utrecht University & District Court
Midden-Nederland
This session involves discussion by judges using a series of
scenarios to explore how a responsive judge might deal
with issues that could emerge in a courtroom hearing. The
scenarios are based on real court interactions and at the close
of each scenario discussion, the outcome of the real life court
interaction will be revealed. In the context of the discussion,
Responsive Judging is used as a term that describes a range of
behaviours and approaches used by judges to more effectively
attend to issues and problems that emerge in the justice system.
It is particularly focused on the way judges relate to those in the
courtroom.
Primary Keyword: Judges and Judging
Rethinking Harm Through a Disability Lens
CRN: 40
Paper Session
Room: Salon B
Chair: Maya Sabatello, Columbia University
Disc:
92 Michael Waterstone, Loyola Law School Los Angeles
Primary Keyword: Disabilities and Law
Presentations:
Children with Psychiatric Disabilities, Bioethics, and
Genomic Knowledge
Maya Sabatello, Columbia University
Protecting the Social Autonomy of People with
Disabilities in the Context of Physician-Assisted Dying
Jonas-Sebastien Beaudry, University of British
Columbia
Responding to the Abuse of Persons with Disabilities
in Institutions of Care in Canada: An Assessment of the
Remedies
Freya Kodar, Faculty of Law, University of Victoria
Elizabeth Adjin-Tettey, Faculty of Law, University of
Victoria
Wrongful Birth, Genetic Gatekeeping, and Reproductive
Choice: The Disabled Body on Trial
Katharina Heyer, University of Hawai’i
Social Theories of Punishment II: Popular Punitivism
CRN: 27
Paper Session
Room: Studio 2
Chair/Disc: Rabia Belt, Stanford Law School
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
Presentations:
Crime and Turnout: An Empirical Investigation
Chris Kennedy, University of California, Berkeley
Amy E. Lerman, University of California, Berkeley,
Goldman School of Public Policy
Deserve Ain’t Got Nothing to Do With It: The
Deconstruction of the Moral Justifications for
Punishment
Kristin Henning, Georgetown Law Center
Edward Bunker and the Carceral Habitus
Phil Goodman, University of Toronto
Joshua Page, University of Minnesota
Taking popular punitivism seriously: an ethnographic
study of urban marginality and popular support for
“law and order” in the UK
Insa Koch, London School of Economics
Tax Session 9: Theory and Jurisprudence
CRN: 31
Paper Session
Friday 2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Room: Galerie 2
Chair/Disc: David Elkins, Netanya College School of Law
Primary Keyword: Taxation
Presentations:
Against Tax Exceptionalism
Alice Abreu, Temple University Beasley School of Law
Richard Greenstein, Temple University Beasley School
of Law
Bitcoin and the Case for Basis Pooling
Adam Chodorow, Arizona State University
CRN: 21
Paper Session
Room: Studio 3
Chair/Disc: Scott Cummings, University of California, Los Angeles
Primary Keyword: Social Movements and Legal Mobilization
Presentations:
Mobilizing the Law in Congress: Indian Nation’s Political
Struggles
Kirsten Carlson, Wayne State University Law School
Reactionary Civil Rights Activism in Cold War America:
The Case of Lucille Miller
Daniel LaChance, Emory University
Subsidizing the Heavenly Chorus: Labor Unions and
Political Equality
Philip Hackney, LSU Paul M. Hebert Law Center
Reluctant Radicals: How Moderates Shape Movements
for Social Change
Joseph Mello, DePaul University
The Moving Borders of Belonging: Revisiting the Relation
Between Law and Structural Disadvantage
Paper Session
What’s Radical about Lawyering Anymore? : Northern
Ireland in the 80s, Puerto Rican (Chicago) Legal work in
80s, and Post 9/11 Guantanamo Bay cases
Devyani Prabhat, University of Bristol Law School
Room: Studio 10
Chair: Pablo Marshall, Universidad Austral de Chile
Disc:
Rocio Lorca, New York University, School of Law
While Marriage Was Won: How Focused Litigation
Campaigns Affect the Legal Advocacy Industry and their
Priorities
David Jones, University at Albany - SUNY
Primary Keyword: Class and Inequality
Presentations:
Chile and its Immigrants: Theoretical Foundations to
Overcome a Structural Exclusion
Jaime Bassa, Valparaiso University
Well-Being for Law Students and Lawyers - Australian
Perspectives
Paper Session
Feminism and the Prohibition of Abortion in Chile:
Failure, Resistance and Clandestinity
Lieta Vivaldi, Goldsmiths, University of London
Room:Jackson
Prisoners’ disenfranchisement and the (Un)rule of Law
in Chile
Pablo Marshall, Universidad Austral de Chile
Disc:
The Constitutional Citizenship of Children
Domingo Lovera, Universidad Diego Portales
Presentations:
Academic Resistance to Wellness Initiatives within
Australian Law Schools
Nick James, Bond University
The Right to Punish the Excluded: A Comparison
between the Case of the Poor and the Case of
Foreigners
Rocio Lorca, New York University, School of Law
Chair: Caroline Strevens, University of Portsmouth
Paula Baron, La Trobe University
Primary Keyword: Professional Education
Belonging In The State Of Flux – A Foundation For
Lawyer Wellbeing
Florence Thum, College of Law Australia
93 Friday
Environmental Case for the X Tax
Tracey Roberts, University of California, Hastings
College of the Law
The Role of Political Alliances and Affiliations in Shaping
Rights Claims, Legal Consciousness, and Movement
Strategies
Friday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.
Implementing a Whole of Law School Approach to
Wellness
Judith Marychurch, Melbourne Law School, University
of Melbourne
2063 Africa: Issues in Education Law, Strategic Policy, and
Sustainable Development
Knowing Thyself – Legal Education for a Complex World
Colin James, ANU College of Law Legal Workshop
Room: Bonaparte
Perceptions of wellbeing in Law Teachers
Caroline Strevens, University of Portsmouth
Clare Wilson, University of Portsmouth
The Australian Wellness Network for Law: Promoting
Psychological Well-Being for Law Students and Lawyers
Rachael Field, Queensland University of Technology
Friday
What Is Wrong With the First Amendment
Roundtable Session
Room: Galerie 4
Chair: Tamara Piety, University of Tulsa College of Law
Participants:
Mary Anne Franks, University of Miami School of Law
Tamara Piety, University of Tulsa College of Law
Amanda Shanor, Yale Law School
Ciara Torres-Spelliscy, Stetson Law School
Sonja West, University of Georgia
The First Amendment represents a doctrine in flux. Many
of today’s most important legal conflicts are conflicts that
implicate the First Amendment, especially in light of the
Supreme Court’s continuing engagement with the issue and
the issuance of a dozen or more high profile cases. The most
prominent of these is, of course Citizens United. But there
have been many more such as Sorrell v. IMS Health, Brown v.
Entertainment Merchants Association, Reed v. Town of Gilbert,
United States v. Alvarez (Stolen Valor case), Synder v. Phelps,
McCullen v. Coakley, United States v. Stevens, and many more.
At stake are rules governing elections, net neutrality, regulation
of fraud, access to abortion, speech of public employees, free
exercise of religion and more. The First Amendment is the site
of the collision of disputes about gay marriage and commerce,
social responsibility and commerce, consumer protection,
protection of intellectual property and freedom of the press,
the role of the press in a democracy, pornography, hate speech,
and equality. Indeed, in large part because of the capaciousness
of the Court’s First Amendment doctrine, which offers the
opportunity to reframe many debates as questions of freedom
of religion or freedom of expression which would not previously
have been thought to raise these issues. This roundtable is
convened to discuss some of these issues.
Primary Keyword: Constitutional Law and Constitutionalism
IRC: 27
Roundtable Session
Chair: Thomas Kleven, Thurgood Marshall School of Law
Nlerum Okogbule, River State University of Science and Technology
Participants:
Ogechukwu Ojimaduekwu Ajoku, Ojimaduekwu
Attorneys
Nartey Joan, Faculty of Law Kings University College
Mariam Kamunyu, Centre for human rights, university
of Pretoria
WIYKIYNYUY CHARLES NYUYKONGE, The African Centre
for the Constructive Resolution of Disputes (ACCORD)
Sylvia Ivy Tayebwa., Uganda Civil Society: Fruits of
Rehab
Solomon Tekle Abegaz, Public International Law,
University of Pretoria
The roundtable is a session of an IRC which investigates the
various challenges that confronts Africa. Prevalent among these
factors identified is the poor provision of social services which
affects the realisation of socio-economic rights in most African
states. Poor maternal and child mortality rates, poor access to
basic education, access to habitable environment, to food and
to portable water all continue to elude Africa. The IRC examines
the current AU response agenda 2063. ‘An Africa of good
governance, democracy and respect for human rights, justice
and the rule of law’ It is therefore the focus of this research
group to compile a series of research presentations into a book
with a proposed title of: 2063 Africa: Issues in Education Law,
Strategic Policy, and Sustainable Development. It is anticipated
that the book will explore various socio-economic rights issues
arobust and viable agenda for the African Union
Primary Keyword: Economic and Social Rights
F r id ay Ju n e 3
4: 45 p .m. - 6: 30 p .m.
Taxation, Equality and the Transnational
CRN: 38
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 2
Chair: Ann Mumford, King’s College London
Disc:
Kathleen Lahey, Queen’s University Faculty of Law
Primary Keyword: Taxation
94 Friday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m. Presentations:
Introducing independent income taxation in Sweden in
1971
Åsa Gunnarsson, Forum for Studies on Law and
Society
Our Selfish Tax Laws
Anthony Infanti, University of Pittsburgh School of
Law
Women and Taxation – From Taxing for Growth and Tax
Competition to Taxing for Sex Equality
Kathleen Lahey, Queen’s University Faculty of Law
Beyond Mass Incarceration I: Crisis and Critique in North
American Penal Systems
Room: Studio 9
Chair: Alessandro De Giorgi, Department of Justice Studies, San Jose State University
Participants:
Alessandro De Giorgi, Department of Justice Studies,
San Jose State University
Marie Gottschalk, University of Pennsylvania
Kelly Hannah-Moffat, University of Toronto
Mona Lynch, University of California, Irvine
Dawn Moore, Carleton University
Jonathan Simon, University of California-Berkeley
After four decades of vertical increases in imprisonment
rates, driven by draconian penal policies and overly punitive
sentencing practices, the US carceral system appears to have
entered a state of structural crisis. With 2,2 million individuals
currently behind bars, 7 million under some form of penal
supervision, and hundreds of thousands of former prisoners
“reentering” society each year from penal institutions, mass
incarceration has become one of the most pressing social
problems facing the United States today.
Growing public awareness of the spiraling costs of this
hypertrophic carceral machine--in terms of both its fiscal
and social sustainability--seems to have provided, for the
first time since the punitive turn of the mid-1970s, a window
of opportunity to challenge the American penal state and
to question its compatibility with any notion of democratic
citizenship. After decades of penal populism and unabated
allegiance to the war on drugs and crime, some political
elites have finally started to take note of the unsustainable
nature of the present carceral state. Thus, over the past few
years a multitude of policy strategies, reform proposals, and
political platforms--e.g., “right on crime” coalitions, “justice
reinvestment” plans, “smart on crime” approaches, “reentry”
initiatives, and “evidence-based” policies--have begun to
These politico-institutional developments, underscored by
scattered legislative and policy reforms which so far have
resulted in modest--yet symbolically important--reductions in
the prison populations of some American states (e.g. Texas,
California, New Jersey, New York), have prompted a new wave
of critical analyses within the punishment & society literature.
Scholars and scholar/activists are faced today with the challenge
of trying to decipher the often ambivalent signals emerging
from the penal field, and to prefigure the possible futures of
the American penal state. Are we witnessing the beginning of
the end of mass incarceration, or are recent policy initiatives
just subtle ways to “tinker with the system”? Are current penal
reforms grounded in an emerging new sensibility towards
the human dignity of prisoners, or is fiscal austerity the only
vocabulary through which any effort at decarceration can be
framed today? Are the current reforms ushering a new era of
diversion and rehabilitation, or is net-widening and privatization
a more likely future for the US carceral state? Can penal reforms
be imagined separately from broader socioeconomic changes?
Is there any ground for strategic alliances between reformoriented policymakers and radical prison activists? What kinds
of scholar/activist collaborations can be imagined in the present
conjuncture? What agendas for penal reform can emerge from
such collaborations? This roundtable session aims to provide a
forum for scholars and scholar-activists to discuss these pressing
issues through an interdisciplinary lens at the crossroads of
political science, critical criminology, punishment & society, and
critical legal studies.
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
Case Studies in Indigenous-State Relations: Colonial
Governance in Canada, the US and El Salvador
CRN: 39
Paper Session
Room: Salon F
Chair: Eve Darian-Smith, University of California Santa Barbara
Disc:
Mayana C. Slobodian, University of Toronto
Primary Keyword: Colonialism and Post-Colonialism
Presentations:
Indigenous Peoples and the Elusive Nation:
Commissions in Canada, 1912 to 2015
Mayana C. Slobodian, University of Toronto
95 Friday
CRN: 27
Roundtable Session
crowd the public sphere, drawing the attention of the public
towards the current penal crisis. At the same time, highly massmediated grassroots mobilizations against police brutality, racial
profiling, and police militarization have contributed to raise
public awareness of the severe forms of democratic deficit and
institutional violence affecting the policing of racialized poverty
in the US.
Friday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.
Separate but Unequal: Tribal Jurisdiction, Social
Closure, and the Hurdles of American Indian SelfDetermination?
THERESA Rocha Beardall, Cornell University
The end of the Indian agents and the rise of First
Nations self-government in Canada.
Jacqueline Briggs, University of Toronto
Tierra, Indio, Unidad: Indigenous Governance in the
Age of the UNDRIP
Jorge Cuéllar, Yale University
Corporate/Securities Law Panel #2: Rulemaking, National
and International
Friday
CRN: 46
Paper Session
Room: Salon C
Chair: Wendy Couture, University of Idaho College of Law
Disc:
Elizabeth Brown, University of Wisconsin-Lacrosse
Primary Keyword: Corporate and Securities Law
Presentations:
A Glass-Half-Empty Analysis of Securities Regulation
Wendy Couture, University of Idaho College of Law
Convergence Of Corporate Sustainability Reporting
Standards: Are The Global Reporting Initiative
Guidelines The Best Route To Greater Corporate
Accountability?
Constance Wagner, Saint Louis University
Law for the (Private) Lawmakers: Regulating Business
Roles in Treatymaking
Melissa (MJ) Durkee, University of Washington School
of Law
Transnational Securities Fraud Jurisprudence in the
Wake of Morrison v. National Australia Bank
Margaret V. Sachs, University of Georgia School of
Law
Book Panel Introducing New Books in Citizenship and
Immigration
CRN: 2
Roundtable Session
Room: Galerie 3
Chair: Maartje van der Woude, Leiden Law School
The Law and Society Association CRN 2 on Citizenship and
Migration is holding a book session to introduce 12 new books
96 in the field published in 2015 and the first half of 2016.
Chin, Gabriel J. and Rose Cuison Villazor (eds.) 2015. “The
Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965: Legislating a New
America.” Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Coutin, Susan Bibler. May 2016. “Exiled Home: Salvadoran
Transnational Youth in the Aftermath of Violence.” Durham:
Duke University Press.
de Graauw, Els. April 2016. “Making Immigrant Rights Real:
Nonprofits and the Politics of Integration in San Francisco.”
Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
Gonzales, Roberto G. 2015. “Lives in Limbo: Undocumented and
Coming of Age in America.” Berkeley: University of California
Press.
Guia, Maria João, Robert Koulish and Valsamis Mitsilegas (eds.).
2015. “Immigrant Detention, Risk and Human Rights.” New York:
Springer.
Parker, Kunal M. 2015. “Making Foreigners: Immigration
and Citizenship Law in America, 1600 – 2000.” Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press.
Light, Matthew. March 2016. “Fragile Migration Rights: Freedom
of Movement in post-Soviet Russia.” London: Routledge.
Longazel, Jamie. March 2016. “Undocumented Fears:
Immigration and the Politics of Divide and Conquer in Hazleton,”
Pennsylvania. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
Provine, Doris Marie, Monica W. Varsanyi, Paul G. Lewis, and
Scott H. Decker. April 2016. “Policing Immigrants: Local Law
Enforcement on the Frontlines.” Chicago: University of Chicago
Press.
Zatz, Marjorie S. and Nancy Rodriguez. 2015. “Dreams and
Nightmares: Immigration Policy, Youth, and Families.” Berkeley:
University of California Press.
Primary Keyword: Citizenship, Migration, Immigration and
Nation
Rethinking Japanese Lawyers in the 19th Century
CRN: 33
Roundtable Session
Room: Galerie 5
Chair: Setsuo Miyazawa, University of California Hastings School of Law; Aoyama Gakuin University Law School
Participants:
Darryl Flaherty, University of Delaware
Bryant Garth, University of California Irvine
Friday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m. Ole Hammerslev, University of Southern Denmark,
Department of Law
Hilary Sommerlad, University of Leeds
Primary Keyword: Courts And Trials
Cultural, Social and Linguistic Discourses in East Asian
Law and Legal Systems
CRN: 33
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 6
Chair/Disc: Takayuki Ii, Senshu University
Primary Keyword: East Asia
Misrecognition and Legality in Practice: Educating
Vietnamese Engineers in Intellectual Property
David Bergan, NYU
Neuro-Linguistic Analysis of Trademark Dilution
Syugo Hotta, Meiij University/University of Hawaii
Masahiro Fujita, Faculty of Sociology, Kansai
University
Hioki Koichi, Kobe University
Current Developments in Comparative Constitutional
Law
CRN: 36
Paper Session
Room: Bacchus
Chair/Disc: tom ginsburg, University of Chicago, Law School
Primary Keyword: Constitutional Law and Constitutionalism
Presentations:
Adjudicating Malaysia’s Living Constitution
Yvonne Tew, Georgetown University Law Center
Democratic Integrity: Accommodating Individual Rights
and Structural Values
Julien du Vergier, Davis Polk & Wardwell
International Law, Constitutional Law, and Public
Support for Torture: Evidence from a Survey
Experiment
Adam Chilton, University of Chicago Law School
Paper Session
Room: Balcony I
Primary Keyword: Environment and Energy
Presentations:
Filling the Gap in the Regulation of Agriculture and
Environment: Water Works, Drainage Districts, and A
Shock to the System
Anna-Maria Marshall, University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign
How to build institutional capacity for environmental
law enforcement in the oil and gas sector? Analysing
the process of budget allocation for environmental
agencies in Ecuador before and after the 2008
constitutional change
Teresa Bornschlegl, Clark University
Many Shades of Green: A Typological Approach to
Characterize Environmental Court Diversity and
Governance Capacity
J. Michael Angstadt, Colorado State University
Evidentiary Challenges in Litigating Economic and Social
Rights: A Comparative Review of Domestic Adjudication
CRN: 47
Roundtable Session
Room: Studio 1
Chair: Holly Stubbs, Center for Economic and Social Rights
Participants:
Surabhi Chopra, Chinese University of Hong Kong
LaDawn Haglund, Arizona State University
Diana Quintero, Universidad Icesi
Claudio Schuftan, People’s Health Movement
This roundtable will explore the evidentiary challenges facing
the domestic litigation of claims based on economic and social
rights. In spite of the increasing domestic recognition of the
justiciability of economic and social rights, this litigation often
hinges on complex and innovative arguments about difficultand politically sensitive-social problems. Substantiating such
arguments often requires presenting complicated social
science, technical, or statistical evidence. The roundtable will
bring together participants to discuss how evidence was used
in major cases involving economic and social right, from a
selection of jurisdictions in different parts of the world. In so
doing, the conversation aims to tease out types of evidence
that judges have found compelling in supporting economic and
social rights claims. The focus is to understand the influence
of legal doctrines, social and political culture, and institutional
frameworks on the kinds of evidence used in adjudication.
97 Friday
Presentations:
Lay judges’ practical use of common sense and story in
mixed jury (Saiban-in) deliberations in Japan
Takanori Kitamura, School of Law, Tokai University
Environment, Energy, and Legal Institutions
Friday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.
Putting Academic Scientists Back into the Debate of
the Bayh-Dole Act: Credibility Cycle and the Shifting
Scientific Norms
Tai-Jan Huang, Stanford Law School
Primary Keyword: Economic and Social Rights
Family Law for a Postmarital World
Roundtable Session
Room: Balcony N
Chair: Jana Singer, University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law
Friday
Participants:
Naomi Cahn, GW
June Carbone, University of Minnesota
Martha Ertman, University of Maryland Law School
Clare Huntington, Fordham Law School
Jane Murphy, Unversity of Baltimore School of Law
For more than two centuries, American family law has
been organized around marriage. But marriage is no longer
the dominant family form in the United States or abroad.
Cohabitation has skyrocketed, and today more than 40% of
American children are born to unmarried parents. American
family law has been slow to react to these changes. Until
recently, non-marital families lacked access to many of the
legal remedies available to divorcing parents and their children.
To remedy this, several scholars have proposed a new legal
status for parent-partners -- a status that would come with
legally enforceable rights and duties. Other commentators have
expressed concerns about the impact of such a status on low
income parents, who are much more likely than their wealthier
counterparts to eschew marriage. The session will examine the
risks and benefits of creating a new legal status for unmarried
parents, and more generally of bringing previously excluded
groups into the family justice system.
Primary Keyword: Family and Youth
Intellectual Belongings: Intellectual Property,
Community, & Society
CRN: 14
Paper Session
New Sociological and Legal Perspectives About the
Approach of Social Conflicts in Latin America
IRC: 21
Roundtable Session
Room: Balcony J
Chair: Laura Lora, Universidad de Buenos Aires
Participants:
Angelica Cuellar Vazquez, Faculty of Political and Social
Sciences of the National Autonomous University of
Mexico (UNAM)
The presentation contains the analyses of several research
problems involving the Judiciary and the conflicts arising
from the interaction between the law and the society. It also
encompasses different legal frameworks applicable in the sociolegal research in Latin America.
After describing the works to be presented in this Roundtable
Session, we can conclude that all of them resort to the
qualitative methodology in order to address each topic of
interest. The importance of using this method in the socio-legal
research lies in the possibility to observe more than the evident.
In other words, the qualitative methodology is aimed at finding
the meaning that is not always expressed by the social agents;
it allows us to deepen the surface of the social phenomena. In
fact, the individuals have certain qualities which are impossible
to quantify. Therefore, by using tools to strengthen the
quantitative data generated by an investigation we can open a
broader vision of interpretation.
Primary Keyword: Social Theory and Law
Judges, Conflict Resolution, and Society
Room: Studio 7
CRN: 43
Paper Session
Chair: William Gallagher, Golden Gate University
Room: Salon H-G
Disc:
Peter Yu, Texas A&M University School of Law
Chair: Michal Alberstein, Bar Ilan University
Archie Zariski, Athabasca University
Primary Keyword: Intellectual Property, Culture
Disc:
Presentations:
Belonging as Intellectual Creation
Betsy Rosenblatt, Whittier Law School
Primary Keyword: Judges and Judging
Intellectual Property Futurism: Structuring Coherent
Laws in the Face of Disruptive Technologies
Alexandra George, University of New South Wales
98 Presentations:
Expanding Judicial Discretion: Between Legal and
Conflict Considerations
Michal Alberstein, Bar Ilan University
Yuval Sinai, Yale University
Friday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m. Judges and the Public Interest in Private Litigation
Archie Zariski, Athabasca University
Disc:
Pre-trial Procedures: Promoting Compromises or
Changing Procedural Reality?
Hanan Mandel, Ono Academic College
Half a century ago the LSR was born. The journal has matured,
but it cannot rest on its merits. Both the intellectual and the
institutional fields in which it is embedded have undergone
major shifts. What is the journal’s place in this changing
environment, what will it be? Three prominent socio-legal
scholars will present their thoughts, and two esteemed
colleagues will provide critical comments.
Settlement Judging: Choosing between a Wide or
Narrow Model
Karni Perlman, College of Management Academic
Studies
The Role of Judges in Settling Class Actions: The Case of
the Fairness Hearing
Nourit Zimerman, Bar Ilan University
Terence Halliday, American Bar Foundation
Carroll Seron, University of California, Irvine
Participants:
Sida Liu, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Calvin Morrill, University of California-Berkeley
Susan Silbey, MIT
Law’s Place in the Community of Academic Disciplines
Room: Galerie 4
Room: Salon D
Chair: Kay Levine, Emory Law School
Chair/Disc: Gene Shreve, Indiana University-Bloomington
Paper Session
Disc:
Alec Ewald, University of Vermont
Primary Keyword: Policing
Presentations:
Constructing Hate Crime: An Exploration of Police
Practices and Hate Crime Investigation in the Greater
Toronto Area
Timothy Bryan, York University
Ferguson, Law and Social Change
Barbara Graham, University of Missouri-St. Louis
Low institutional trust and victims’ strategies to meet
their needs in contexts of high levels of organized
crime victimization and low levels of institutional trust.
A quantitative-qualitative mixed methods approach
to victims’ response to violent crime victimization in
Mexico.
Alejandra Armesto, FLACSO
On the ‘misuse’ of law in India
Anuj Bhuwania, South Asian University
Sex Crimes, Cops, Cyberspace: New Penology in the
Information Age?
Meghan Peterson, University of Connecticut
Law & Society Review At 50 -- Journal in a Shifting Field
Professional Development Panel
Room:Riverview
Chair: Joachim Savelsberg, University of Minnesota
Professional Development Panel
Participants:
Jeannine Bell, Indiana University Maurer School of Law
— Bloomington
John Bessler, University of Baltimore School of Law
Carol Greenhouse, Princeton
Jayanth Krishnan, Indiana University, Bloomington
Ajay Mehrotra, American Bar Foundation
Elizabeth Mertz, University of Wisconsin, Madison
If research and publication are central to the importance of
an academic discipline, how does law compare to disciplines
in the social sciences or humanities? What is law’s disciplinary
mission, and how is it advanced by legal scholarship? Does
practice-oriented legal scholarship comport with high
university ideals? Does conceptual legal scholarship have an
audience? Does interdisciplinary legal scholarship enable law
to retain a disciplinary identity of its own? How important to
the acceptance of law as a discipline are historical, cultural
or economic factors? How important is acceptance by those
outside law’s disciplinary circle (e.g., nonlegal scholars,
university administrators, grant-funding institutions, and
academic publishers)?
Primary Keyword: Social Theory and Law
Law, Social Change, and Revolution
Paper Session
Room: Balcony K
Chair/Disc: Camille Walsh, University of Washington Bothell
Primary Keyword: Social Theory and Law,
99 Friday
Justice and Trust in Law?
Friday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.
Presentations:
Constituting Rebellion: Insurance Litigation and the
Foreclosure of Black ‘Self-Destruction’
Sam C. Tenorio, Northwestern University
Eight to Great: The Intersection of Politics, Policy,
and Problems in Leveraging Organizational and Social
Change
Andrew Grandage, University of Georgia
Britt Aliperti, University of Georgia
Brian Williams, University of Georgia
Perils and Prospects for Legal Theory: Brunkhorst and
Revolutions
James Chriss, Cleveland State University
Friday
Lawyers, Client and Professionalism
Paper Session
Room: Balcony L
Chair/Disc: Rick Abel, UCLA School of Law
Primary Keyword: Legal Professions and Other Legal Services
Providers
Presentations:
Clientele and the Progress of Women and Racial
Minorities in U.S. Corporate Law Firms
Fiona Kay, Queen’s University
Discriminating Professionals: Can Lawyers Choose
Clients on the Basis of Race or Gender?
Jessie Allen, University of Pittsburgh School of Law
The Declining Dominance of Lawyers in U.S. Politics
Nick Robinson, Harvard Law School
The Poodle Problem: The Paradox of Professional
Independence in Large Law Firms
Emma Oakley, University of Birmingham
Steven Vaughan, Birmingham Law School
The Ties That Bind: The Relationship Between Law Firm
Growth And Law Firm Survival
Alan Kluegel, University of California-Berkeley
Legal Mobilization and Domestic Impacts of the
European Court of Human Rights
Paper Session
Room: Galvez
Disc:
Rachel Cichowski, University of Washington
Wayne Sandholtz, University of Southern California
Primary Keyword: Social Movements and Legal Mobilization
100 Presentations:
Are Women’s Rights Human Rights? Russian Gender
Discrimination Cases and the European Court of
Human Rights
Lisa Sundstrom, University of British Columbia
Valerie Sperling, Clark University
Domestic politics and the legitimacy of the European
Court of Human Rights: the case of the United Kingdom
Basak Cali, Koc University
How Strategic is Strategic Litigation?: Reflections on the
Impact of LGBT Rights Cases Before the European Court
of Human Rights
Loveday Hodson, University of Leicester
Protecting Journalists at Risk: Defending the Freedom
of Expression in Russia through International Litigation
Freek van der Vet, Aleksanteri Institute, University of
Helsinki
The case of the Russian Federation’s “Foreign Agents”
Law at the European Court of Human Rights: NGOs
under threat
Bill Bowring, Birkbeck College, University of London
Legal Pluralism, Legal Reinventions
Paper Session
Room:Iberville
Chair/Disc: Laura Ford, The Baldy Center for Law & Social Policy
Primary Keyword: Legal Pluralism, Mixed Legal Systems, and
Non-State Law
Presentations:
Social Change and Adaptation of French Property Law
in Quebec, Louisiana and Francophone Switzerland in
the 19th Century
Asya Ostroukh, University of the West Indies
The Making of Market/Family Legal Distinction in Three
Codification Debates: The Germany-Japan-Taiwan
Trilogy
Yun-Ru Chen, Waseda University
Transforming the Common Law: Criminal Law Reform
in Seventeenth-Century Massachusetts Bay.
John Acevedo, Barry University Dwayne O. Andreas
School of Law
Market-Based Approaches to Old Age Services
CRN: 41
Paper Session
Room: Studio 4
Friday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m. Chair: Elin Peterson, Social Work, Stockholm University
Disc:
Helene Brodin, Stockholm University
Room: Studio 6
Chair: Sara Kendall, University of Kent
Primary Keyword: Aging
Disc:
Presentations:
Dilemmas and possibilities of small care enterprises: a
mixed-methods case study of the implementation of
the customer choice model in Swedish eldercare
Helene Brodin, Stockholm University
Elin Peterson, Social Work, Stockholm University
Primary Keyword: Human Rights
Presentations:
Economic Rights, Crimes, and Wrongs: Revisiting the
Critique of Transitional Justice
Zinaida Miller, McGill University
Exploring tensions & contradictions in marketinfluenced long-term care regulation
Jacqueline Choiniere, York University
Propaganda On Trial: Expert Knowledge in the
International Criminal Courtroom
Richard Ashby Wilson, University of Connecticut
School of Law
Rethinking Procedural Justice: Victim Participation in
International Criminal Trials
Alexa Koenig, Human Rights Center - Berkeley Law
Stephen Cody, Human Rights Center - Berkeley Law
Monetary Policy, Financial Regulation, and SocioEconomic Development
Roundtable Session
Seeking Truth in Times of Conflict and Transition:
Gross and Systematic Violations at the American and
European Human Rights Tribunals
Darren Dinsmore, Kent Law School, University of Kent
Room: Studio 5
Chair: David Zaring, The Wharton School
Discussions of monetary policy and financial regulation
often seem disconnected from issues of socio-economic
development. The conversation often focuses on the financial
industry – on the assumption that the broader economy and,
with it, society will prosper so long as the financial industry is
operating smoothly and profitably. This roundtable will seek to
reframe the debate by bringing together scholars of financial
regulation and monetary policy to discuss the history, flaws and
consequences of the predominant narrative. As an alternative,
this Roundtable will explore ways to connect financial
regulatory and monetary policy more directly with the end goal
of sustainable and broad-based economic growth and social
development.
Primary Keyword: Economy, Business and Society
New Challenges in International Criminal Law and
Transitional Justice
CRN: 23
Paper Session
Friday
Marketization in Eldercare: Staffing and Quality in the
Largest Nursing Home Chains in the US
charlene harrington, University of California
Participants:
Robert Hockett, Cornell Law School
Saule Omarova, Cornell Law School
Annelise Riles, Cornell Law School
David Zaring, The Wharton School
Rob Weber, Georgia State University
Jamie Rowen, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
The Perils of Information Advocacy
Jamie Rowen, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Megan Price, Human Rights Data Analysis Group
New Empirical Approaches to Studying Jury
Representation and Jury Selection
CRN: 4
Paper Session
Room: Studio 8
Chair: Mary Rose, University of Texas
Disc:
Nancy Marder, IIT Chicago-Kent College of Law
Primary Keyword: Lay Participation, Juries and Other Forms of
Lay Participation
Presentations:
A jury of whose peers? The impact of selection
procedures on racial composition and the prevalence
of majority-white juries
Jacinta Gau, University of Central Florida
Exploring Peremptory Use in Civil Trials: An
Experimental Approach
Andrew Krebs, University of Texas at Austin
101 Friday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.
Information Seeking on Voir Dire: Mapping Patterns of
Speech by Race
Barbara O’Brien, Michigan State University College of
Law
Catherine Grosso, Michigan State University College
of Law
Predicting Jury Participation Rates
Mary Rose, University of Texas
Friday
Race and Jury Selection: The Pernicious Effects of
Backstrikes
Shari Diamond, Northwestern U Law School/American
Bar Foundation
Joshua Kaiser, Northwestern University and American
Bar Foundation
Policing, Masculinities, and Gender
CRN: 7
Paper Session
Room: Salon E
Chair: Leigh Goodmark, University of Maryland Carey School of Law
Disc: Jane Stoever, University of California, Irvine School of Law
Primary Keyword: Crime and Victims
Presentations:
Policing and the Clash of Masculinities
Ann McGinley, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
The Feminist Case For Acknowledging Women’s Acts Of
Violence
Jamie Abrams, University of Louisville
The Violent Ends of Violent Delights: Punishing Teens
for Consensual Sex
Leslie Garfield, Pace Law School
Private Detectives, Conscientious Objectors, and Child
Detainees: Regulating Liberties in the Turn of the Century
United States
CRN: 44
Paper Session
Room: Studio 10
Chair/Disc: Gwen Jordan, University of Illinois Springfield
Primary Keyword: Legal History
102 Presentations:
Freedom of Conscience in War Time: World War I and
the Civil Liberties Path Not Taken
Laura Weinrib, University of Chicago
Learning to Police Drugs, 1875-1896
David Thacher, University of Michigan
LICENSED TO WATCH, LISTEN, & ENTER: PRIVATE
DETECTIVES & PRIVACY IN THE US, 1880-1940
Stephen Robertson, Roy Rosenzweig Center for
History & New Media, George Mason University
Reparations for Slavery: New Developments and
Perspectives
CRN: 12
Roundtable Session
Room: Balcony M
Chair: Kaimipono Wenger, Thomas Jefferson Law School
Participants:
Atiba Ellis, West Virginia University
Kaimipono Wenger, Thomas Jefferson Law School
The past few years have seen a variety of important
developments relating to the ongoing quest for reparations for
slavery and Jim Crow. These include renewed public interest in
reparations after high-profile news articles by Ta-Nehisi Coates;
new impetus for reparations from Caribbean actors; a variety of
new legal theories explored in contexts such as the international
arena; and the effect of the Black Lives Matter movement. How
do these developments affect the movement for reparations?
Panelists will discuss the current state of reparations law as well
as the ways that recent and ongoing developments will shape
reparations claims going forward.
Primary Keyword: Race, Critical Race Research
Sexual Violence and the Law
Paper Session
Room:Regent
Presentations:
How do victims of rape relate to the Law?
Solveig Laugerud, University of Oslo, Norway
How do we measure prosecutorial outcomes in cases
of rape in the US? Shifting numbers and meanings
reveal differential legal response to a serious crime
Linda Williams, Wellesley College
Socio-Legal Issues Of Child Sexual Abuse In Nigeria In
The Context Of Global Change
Michael Adeleke, Obafemi Awolowo University
Friday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m. State Legal Responses to Preventing Trusted Other
Sexual Abuse of Students: Do Legislatures Care?
Charol Shakeshaft, Dr.
Zachary Levinsky, University of Toronto
Drug Truce
Alex Kreit, Thomas Jefferson School of Law
State Regulatory Failure: The Painful Truth about Child
Sexual Abuse
Nadia Bowman, University of Utah
Lina Svedin, University of Utah
Law and Order Queers: Respectability, Victimhood, and
the Carceral State
Kyle Kirkup, University of Toronto Faculty of Law
Shifting the Boundaries of the Law in the War(s) on
Terror
Paper Session
Room:Jackson
Chair/Disc: Andrew Brighten, U.C. Berkeley
Presentations:
Crime and Punishment in International Law
Whitney Taylor, Cornell University
Out of Court Settlements and Policy Making:
Intelligence Informers at the Israeli Court
Menachem Hofnung, The Hebrew University of
Jerusalem
Power/knowledge Dynamics in the Iraq Affair
Rebecca Moosavian, Northumbria University, School
of Law
Square Pegs into Round Holes: The Misuse of the Laws
of War in Modern Warfare
Seth Weinberger, University of Puget Sound
The Queen’s Prerogative and Legal Constraints on the
Use of Force: Bringing Canada Into Line
Craig Martin, Washburn University School of Law
Social Theories of Punishment III: Discourse, Movements,
and Agency
CRN: 27
Paper Session
Room: Studio 2
Chair/Disc: Ashley Nellis, The Sentencing Project
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
Presentations:
A Genealogy of Zero-Tolerance in Ontario Student
Discipline: “Zero-tolerance is not referenced in the Safe
Schools Act … [but the Act] does set out mandatory
consequences for specific infractions”
Three Hots and a Cot? The Subjective Consciousness Of
Men And Women on the Margins
Lauren Mayes, Temple University
Special Topics in Punishment & Society I: Rationing
Criminal Justice
CRN: 27
Roundtable Session
Friday
Primary Keyword: War and Law including Security and
Terrorism
School Discipline, Justice, and Dropping Out: Examining
the Significance of Gender, Race, and Ethnicity
Kay Varela, Texas A&M University
Sanna King, University of Hawaii
Alicia Pantoja, University of Pennsylvania
Anthony Peguero, Virginia Tech
Room: Studio 3
Chair: Hadar Aviram, UC Hastings College of the Law
Participants:
Miriam Baer, Brooklyn Law School
W. David Ball, Santa Clara University School of Law
Stephanos Bibas, University of Pennsylvania Law School
Richard Bierschbach, Cardozo Law School
John Pfaff, School of Law, Fordham University
Today, there is widespread agreement that the costs of
the American carceral state far outweigh its benefits. This
Roundtable explores one dimension of this problem: the
mismatch between judging cases individually and weighing
the collective costs and spillover effects of criminal justice
synoptically. We have many mechanisms for ensuring that
individual defendants are arrested, prosecuted, convicted,
and sentenced in rough proportion to their desert. But we
have few mechanisms for rationing the systemic costs these
decisions impose. Participants will discuss strategies for
more systematically rationing criminal justice, including block
grants and cap-and-trade mechanisms for allocating crimeprevention measures; cost-benefit analysis at different stages
of the criminal process; and tax-based approaches to managing
searches and seizures. The aim is to examine the promise and
limits of managing criminal justice using public policy tools that
have long been applied to other areas.
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
103 Friday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.
Stakeholders and the Corporation
Paper Session
Room: Bonaparte
Disc:
Robert Rosen, University of Miami
The right to inclusive equality in education for disabled
children in Nigeria primary schools: Any respite under
the CRPD.
Ngozi Chuma-umeh, Imo State University
Ekenze Modestus Uchenna, Tansian University,
Anambra State
Primary Keyword: Corporate and Securities Law
Social Media, the Internet, and the Law I
Presentations:
Corporations and the 99%: Team Production Revisited
Shlomit Azgad-Tromer, UC Berkeley
Room: Galerie 1
Friday
Human rights and corporate personhood: a critical
approach to corporation constitutional rights
Sergio Negri, Federal University Of Juiz De Fora (Ufjf)
Law School - Brazil
Joana Machado, Federal University Of Juiz De Fora
(Ufjf) Law School - Brazil
The Evolution of the Corporate Secretary: Unassuming
Linchpin to Board Effectiveness and Sustainability
Governance
Carol Liao, University of Victoria
Christie Stephenson, Purpose Capital
Coro Strandberg, Strandberg Consulting Inc.
“A Right to Live in the World”: The Disability Challenge to
Institutions
CRN: 40
Paper Session
Room: Salon B
Chair/Disc: Katharina Heyer, University of Hawai’i
Primary Keyword: Disabilities and Law
Presentations:
Identifying Human Rights: The Convention on the
Rights of Persons with Disabilities, Grassroots Groups in
Nicaragua, and the Diversity of Legal Consciousness
Stephen Meyers, University of Washington
Mobilization of Law Under the Americans With
Disabilities Act: Power Dynamics, Discourse, and the
Disability Dilemma
Paul Durlak, University at Buffalo, SUNY
Olmstead Exceptionalism
Michael Waterstone, Loyola Law School Los Angeles
Outcasts from Evolution: Woman Suffrage Activists and
Disability
Rabia Belt, Stanford Law School
104 Paper Session
Primary Keyword: Technology
Presentations:
Humor as a thermometer: the freedom to create
humorous content on the Internet in Brazil
Dennys Antonialli, University Of Sao Paulo
The Social Military: the use of Social Media by the UK
Military
David Denney, Royal Holloway University of London
Rikke Bjerg Jensen, Royal Holloway University of
London
The Whack-a-Mole game of worldwide delisting from
Google search results: the significance of Equustek
Solutions Inc v Google Inc, 2015 BCCA 265
Emily Laidlaw, University of Calgary
Notes:
Saturday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.
S at u rd ay J u n e 4
8 :1 5 a . m . - 10: 00 a . m .
#AfricanEducationMustRise?
#AfricanJudicialIndependenceMustRise? Are Students
and Judges Changing the African Debate on Education
and Governance?
CRN: 13
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 4
Chair: Jonathan Klaaren, University of the Witwatersrand
Primary Keyword: African Law & Society
Presentations:
From a rights-based to a political approach to pretrial detention: donor aid, local governance, and the
instrumentalization of criminal justice in Gulu Town,
northern Uganda
Deval Desai, Harvard Law School
Rebecca Tapscott, The Fletcher School, Tufts
University
Saturday
Integrating Au’s Agenda 2063 Into National Educational
Policies: Strategy For Action
Michael Addaney, University of Energy and Natural
Resources
Rhodes Must Fall! Decolonising legal education in postapartheid South Africa
Dee Smythe, University of Cape Town
Socio-Legal Research In Africa: The Case Of Kenya And
How Research Plays A Role In Emancipation Through
Knowledge Production
Agnes Meroka, University of Nairobi, School of Law
Duncan Ojwang, University of Nairobi, School of Law
Attiay Waris, University of Nairobi, School of Law
Edwin Abuya, University of Nairobi, School of Law
South Africa’s immunity laws under scrutiny after
failure to arrest and President Al Bashir to the ICC in
light of Southern African Litigation Centre v Minister of
Justice
Ntombizozuko Dyani-Mhango, University of the
Witwatersrand
The vulnerability of Judges in Contemporary Africa:
Alarming Trends
Tabeth Masengu, University of Cape Town
105 Gender, Economy and the State
CRN: 38
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 3
Chair: Åsa Gunnarsson, Forum for Studies on Law and Society
Disc:
Ann Mumford, King’s College London
Primary Keyword: Gender and Sexuality
Presentations:
Criminalization of Abortion and Same-Sex Intimacy in
Africa: Triggers and Health Effects
Siri Gloppen, University of Bergen/CMI - Centre on
Law & Social Transformation
The Case of R (on applic of SG) and a Refreshed
Discourse of Welfare Rights
Ann Mumford, King’s College London
The Invention of Homophobia: How Variation among
British, French, and Portuguese Colonial Rule Formed
Legal Trajectories that Explain Patterns of AntiHomosexuality Legislation in their Respective African
Colonies
Matthew McEwen, University of Notre Dame
AMR: Edward L. Rubin - “Soul, Self, and Society: The New
Morality and the Modern State” (OUP)
Author Meets Reader (AMR) Session
Room: Salon E
Author: Edward Rubin, Vanderbilt
Chair: Malcolm Feeley, University of California-Berkeley
Readers:
Malcolm Feeley, University of California-Berkeley
Lawrence Friedman, Stanford University Law School
Liora Israël, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences
Sociales, Paris
Robert Kagan, University of California, Berkeley
Kim Lane Scheppele, Princeton University
Soul, Self and Society traces the transformation of both the
conception of the self adn he conception of society over
the past several hundred years. The author argues that a
profound transformation has taken place. The long standing
morality of duty has been displaced, he argues, by a morality
of self-fulfillment. The primary institution that has facilitated
this transformation, he continues, is the rise of the positive
state that has assumed welfare functions that were once the
responsibility of the individual. This relief of responsibility,
he maintains, had permitted individuals greater capacity for
Saturday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m. individual self-expression and fulfillment.
Readers responding to this argument are scholars with deep
interests in social theory, historical sociology, and the rise
of the modern administrative state, and thus will be able to
assess the author’s bold claims in light of their own work and
understanding of the consequences of the transformation of the
modern state.
Primary Keyword: Social Theory and Law, Beyond Mass
Incarceration II: Law Behind Bars: Dynamics of Social
Change in Prison
CRN: 27
Paper Session
Restorative Justice in Rio de Janeiro: Challenges and
perspectives
Vivian Gama, Mediação Brasil
Tenant Screening and Rental Housing Discrimination in
the Information Age
Anna Reosti, University of Washington
The Conditionality of Citizenship: Criminal Records and
the Employee
Alexandra Hunter, University of Toronto
Kelly Hannah-Moffat, University of Toronto
Contemporary Issues in Law and Society in Central and
Eastern Europe, Balkans, Russia and Eurasia
Room: Studio 8
CRN: 20
Paper Session
Chair/Disc: Jonathan Simon, University of California-Berkeley
Room: Bonaparte
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
Chair/Disc: Mihaela Serban, Ramapo College of New Jersey
Presentations:
Limiting Power: Examining Practices of Police and
Correctional Officers’ Accountability
Jihyun Kwon, University of Toronto
Primary Keyword: Central Eastern Europe, Balkans, Russia, And
Eurasia
Mad Politics: Insanity, Law, and Patient Collective
Action
Christopher Berk, University of Chicago
Where, O Law, Is Your Victory? Where, O Law, Is Your
Sting?: Law in Everyday Communications between
Prisoners and Authorities
Corentin Durand, Ecoles des hautes études en
sciences sociales (CMH-PRO)
Collateral Consequences of Arrest and Conviction
CRN: 27
Paper Session
Room: Studio 2
Chair/Disc: Adelina Iftene, Osgoode Hall Law School, York
University
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
Presentations:
Criminal Employment Law
Benjamin Levin, Harvard Law School
Deceptive Appearances - The Regulation of Prostitution
in the Czech Republic
Barbara Havelkova, University of Oxford
Public Procurement in Poland. Formal versus Informal
Institutions.
Kaja Gadowska, Jagiellonian University
Paulina Polak, Jagiellonian University
Saturday
Perceptions of Fairness by Prisoners Appealing to
Justice in California Prisons: The Role of Procedural
Justice in the Inmate Grievance System
Valerie Jenness, UC Irvine
Kitty Calavita, UC Irvine
Presentations:
Citizens and law. Case study of expropriation in Tatra
Mountains National Park in Poland
Marcin Wróbel, Jagiellonian University
Soviet Family Law: Internalized, Socialized, and
Collectivized
Jessica Willis, Granite State College
Contesting Motherhood Across Criminal, Civil, and State
Borders
CRN: 29
Paper Session
Room: Balcony L
Chair/Disc: Michele Goodwin, University of California - Irvine School of Law
Primary Keyword: Bioethics, Biotechnology and the Law
106 Saturday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.
Presentations:
Baby Factories: Modern Antidote For Childlessness And
Surrogacy In Nigeria
Titilayo Aderibigbe, Babcock University, School of Law
& Security Studies,
Room: Studio 1
Chair: Diana Quintero, Universidad Icesi
Carving out ‘space’ for mothering: Deconstructing the
imagined community and its techniques of governance.
Carlie Leroux, University of Waterloo
Presentations:
Children’s Rights, Autonomy and Protection – The
Right to Freedom from Economic Exploitation as a Case
Study
Noam Peleg, University of New South Wales
Corporate/Securities Law Panel #3: Investors,
Consumers, and the Public Interest
CRN: 46
Paper Session
Room: Salon C
Chair: Anne Tucker, Georgia State University College of Law
Disc: Summer Kim, University of California, Irvine, School of Law
Saturday
CRN: 47
Paper Session
Canadian Genes: Birth Abroad, Reproductive
Technologies and Citizenship Determination
Lois Harder, University of Alberta
The Prosecution of Pregnant Women in Three States:
Formal Codification, Drug Trends, and Race
Grace Howard, Rutgers University
Primary Keyword: Corporate and Securities Law
Presentations:
Corporate Political Activity and Non-Shareholder
Agency Costs
David Min, UC Irvine School of Law
Primary Keyword: Economic and Social Rights
Identifying the Right to Sport and its Significance for
the Healing of Traumatized Children in Refugee Camps.
Konstantinos Koutsioumpas, University of
Massachusetts Boston
Issues of human right to education and equality of
educational opportunity in Africa: An appraisal of
Nigeria’s legal provisions and implications thereof
Nchumaumeh ChumaUmeh, Imo State University
The Right to Health and Childhood Obesity
Katharina O Cathaoir, University of Copenhagen
The World Bank and The Right to Education in Brazil:
economic and social interests
Elisa Lucena, University of São Paulo - USP
Ana Carla Bliacheriene, University of São Paulo - USP
Cultural Perceptions of Law: Contracts, Women, & Fiction
Paper Session
Financial Returns and Contracting Norms in Impact
Investment
Anne Tucker, Georgia State University College of Law
Room: Galvez
Heightened Procedure
jessica erickson, university of richmond
Primary Keyword: Popular Culture, Media, Finance, and The
Arts
Investor Democracy
Anita K. Krug, University of Washington
Presentations:
Constructing Pilipin@ American Racial Identity in Legal
Texts: Ward’s Cove Packing Co.
Kim D. Chanbonpin, The John Marshall Law School
Social Credit and the Right to be Unpopular
Nizan Packin, Baruch College
Yafit Lev Aretz, NYU
The Private Law of Corporate Campaign Finance
Disclosure
Sarah Haan, University of Idaho College of Law
107 The Economic and Social Rights of Children
Chair/Disc: Kim D. Chanbonpin, The John Marshall Law School
Cultural Perception of the Law: The Doctrine of
Promissory Estoppel
Julie Spanbauer, The John Marshall Law School
Who’s Afraid of Katniss Everdeen?: How Fictional
Female Characters Can Inspire Legal Institutions to
Ameliorate Gender Inequality
Susan Brody, The John Marshall Law School
Saturday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m. Reconciliatory language in the ICTY: constructing
legitimacy through discourse
Sigrun Valderhaug, Lancaster University Law School
Discourse and Language in Practice
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 5
What (who?) is a person?: the linguistics of defining
legal personhood
Victoria Greenstone, Hofstra University
Primary Keyword: Language And Discourse
Presentations:
Corpus Linguistics, Law and Women Who Kill: An
Intersection around Homicide
Siobhan Weare, Lancaster University, UK
Amanda Potts, Cardiff University
I’m Not Suggesting that He is Lying, But…
Mel Greenlee, California Appellate Project
Law as Media Technology: Transformations in Legal
Writing Practices 1980-2010
Thomas Streeter, University of Vermont
The Function of English Evidentials; the Role of
Discourse Markers in Negotiating Common Ground in
Police Interviewing
Jennifer Glougie, University of British Columbia
Discrimination At Work
CRN: 8
Paper Session
Room: Salon F
Chair/Disc: Ann McGinley, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Primary Keyword: Rights and Identities
Presentations:
Do Unions Promote Rights for People with Disabilities?
Lilach Lurie, Tel Aviv University
Protecting Vulgarity, Epithets and Offensive Workplace
Speech?
Michael Green, Texas A&M University School of Law
Pumping Breast Milk at Work: New Rights, Old
Discrimination
Elizabeth Hoffmann, Purdue University
Words Cannot Express My Wonderment: High
Significance Cases and Disagreeable Rhetoric in
Supreme Court Opinions
Michael Zilis, University of Kentucky
Justin Wedeking, University of Kentucky
The Changing Concept and Scope of Non-discrimination
and Equality – International and European Rules on the
Broadening Scope of the Prohibition of Discrimination.
Substantive Equality through More (Precise) Formal
Equality.
Csilla Lehoczky Kollonay, Central European University
Discourse, Language, and Categoriziations
Paper Session
Dispute Resolution Worldwide
Room: Bacchus
CRN: 10
Paper Session
Chair/Disc: Sora Han, UC Irvine
Room:Iberville
Primary Keyword: Language And Discourse
Chair: Shozo OTA, The University of Tokyo
Presentations:
Balancing Exercise in Human Rights Cases s a Means to
Resolve Rhetorical Antinomies
Anita Soboleva, National Research University Higher
School of Economics
Disc:
Imagined Communicators in the Production of Legal
Meaning: Statutory Interpretation as Semiotic Theory
Anya Bernstein, SUNY Buffalo Law School
Saturday
U.S. State Government Lawyers’ Goals and
Communicative Practices for Advising Lawmakers
about Proposed Laws: A Goals-Plans-Action Study
Robert Richards, Penn State University
Hideaki Irie, Kyushu University
Primary Keyword: Civil Justice and Disputing
Presentations:
ADR in Japan: Interim Report of the User Survey
Shozo OTA, The University of Tokyo
Law and the Grammar of Judgment
Janet Ainsworth, Seattle University
108 Saturday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.
Can Procedural Justice be a Viable Strategy for Building
Trust Towards Judiciary in Post-Socialist Countries?
Evidence from Poland
Stanislaw Burdziej, Warmia and Mazury University in
Olsztyn - Poland
sPrimary Keyword: Race, Critical Race Research
Patterns of litigation and dispute management in Polish
and other ex-communist Central-Eastern European
societies
Jacek Kurczewski, University of Warsaw
Malgorzata Fuszara, University of Warsaw
Room: Galerie 2
The possibility of the settlement in court: application to
the conflicts relating to the Internet.
Hironao Kaneko, Tokyo Institute of Technology
Presentations:
Creating Quotas, Excluding Refugees: A Critical
Reexamination of the Emergency Quota Act of 1921
and the Immigration Act of 1924
Evan Taparata, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities
The Slippery Slope of University Title IX Compliance
Brian Pappas, Michigan State University College of
Law
Truth-Seeking and Peacemaking: Multi-Layered
Meaning and Function of Fact-Finding in Negotiation
and Dispute Resolution Process
Tomohiko Maeda, Meijo University
Dynamic Continuities and Discontinuities in Post-Katrina
New Orleans
Saturday
CRN: 12
Roundtable Session
Room: Balcony M
Chair: Daria Roithmayr, University of Southern California
Participants:
Leslie Harris, Emory University
John Lovett, Loyola Law School
Gary Rivlin, The New York Times
David Troutt, Rutgers Newark Law School
As is often the case with events of a certain scale, Hurricane
Katrina triggered a fundamental reconfiguration of New
Orleans at several levels. It decimated many neighborhoods
and displaced a population of evacuees, many of whom were
never to return. Their absence and post-storm reconstruction in
turn created an influx of a new population of immigrants who
differed from the diaspora in terms of race, class, gender and
in some cases sexuality. Families were fragmented and social
networks were disrupted. Some legal structures and practices
shifted along with the reconfigured city. At the same time, much
of post-Katrina New Orleans was preserved: neighborhoods
and networks recovered or were left intact, and some dynamic
processes (both good and bad) persisted. This panel will explore
the post-storm continuities and discontinuities, the factors
that differentiated what changed from what did not, and
the effect of continuity and discontinuity on vulnerable and
disempowered residents.
109 Human Rights As Asylum and Asylum As a Human Rights
CRN: 2
Paper Session
Primary Keyword: Citizenship, Migration, Immigration and
Nation
How (un)restrictive are we? ‘Adjusted’ and ‘expected’
asylum recognition rates in Europe and their relation to
public opinion
Arjen Leerkes, WODC / Erasmus University
Waves of Fear: Forced Migration by Sea
Harini Sivalingam, York University
Innovation Or Disruption? Practices of Regulation
Paper Session
Room: Balcony I
Chair/Disc: Lawrence Solan, Brooklyn Law School
Primary Keyword: Regulation & Governance
Presentations:
Environmental class actions in Colombia and the
regulatory state
Angela Maria Paez Murcia, Universidad de La Sabana
Getting Ahead Of Ag-Gag
Shaakirrah Sanders, University of Idaho College of law
New-Blue Cities and Uncooperative Localism.
Kathleen Morris, Golden Gate University School of
Law
Regulating Illegal Taxis, Uber and the illiberal/liberal
dialectic of law and Urban governance
david galano, university of toronto
Law and the Body: Surveillance, Bioethics, and Social
Change
CRN: 9
Paper Session
Room:Jackson
Saturday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m. Chair/Disc: Anne-Maree Farrell, Monash University, Australia
Room: Galerie 1
Primary Keyword: Health and Medicine
Chair: Rose Cuison-Villazor, UC Davis School of Law
Presentations:
A ‘Public Property’ Approach to Human Tissues?
Imogen Goold, University of Oxford
Simon Douglas, Oxford University
Government & the Opiate Addiction Crisis:
Incentivizing more Physicians to Treat Addiction
Barbara Andraka-Christou, Indiana University
Disc:
Targeting, Searching, Seizing, & Prosecuting Pregnant
Drug Addicts: An Analysis of the Constitutionality of
Laws Criminalizing Prenatal Substance Abuse
Myrisha Lewis, IIT Chicago-Kent College of Law
Hiroshi Motomura, UCLA School of Law
Primary Keyword: Citizenship, Migration, Immigration and
Nation
Presentations:
Bureaucratic Administration: Innovation and
Immigration Law
Joseph Landau, Fordham Law School
Flexibility and Immigration Law
Kit Johnson, The University of Oklahoma College of
Law
The Everyday Cyborg & Law’s Double Bind
Muireann Quigley, Newcastle University
Longitudinal Studies of Lawyers’ Careers
Flood of Images: Political Cartoon Analysis of Syrian
and UAC Crises
Katherine Abbott, University of New Hampshire
Room: Salon H-G
Towards a Social Relations Theory of Immigration Law
Rose Cuison-Villazor, UC Davis School of Law
Paper Session
A Cross National Comparison of Women and Racialized
Lawyers’ Experiences of Discrimination in Canada and
the United States
Meghan Dawe, University of Toronto
Ronit Dinovitzer, University of Toronto
Sexual Harassment in the Legal Profession
Robert Nelson, Northwestern University
Ronit Dinovitzer, University of Toronto
Ioana Vladescu, University of Toronto
Shifts, Exits, and Moves among Personal Injury
Plaintiffs’ Lawyers in the AJD Study
Ethan Michelson, Indiana University
The long view of legal careers: The persistence and
conversion of forms of capital
Ronit Dinovitzer, University of Toronto
Bryant Garth, University of California Irvine
New Frames in Immigration Law
CRN: 2
Paper Session
Post-Soviet Policing in Comparative Perspective
CRN: 20
Paper Session
Room: Studio 5
Disc:
Erica Marat, National Defense University
Chair/Disc: Lauren McCarthy, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
Presentations:
Determinants of the Growth of Private Policing: A
Comparative International Analysis
Matthew Light, University of Toronto
Anne-Marie Singh, Ryereson University
Saturday
Presentations:
Reproducing Legal Hierarchy While Replenishing the
Law and the Legal Profession: Insights from Qualitative
Interviews about Lawyer Careers
Joyce Sterling, University of Denver Sturm College of
Law
Bryant Garth, University of California Irvine
Policing in the Shadow of Protest
Suzanne Scoggins, UC Berkeley
Public-Police Contacts in Russia: Revisiting the
Predatory Model of Policing
Olga Semukhina, Marquette University
Nicolai Demidov, Volgograd Academy of MVD
Praxis and the Global South
CRN: 23
Roundtable Session
Room: Studio 4
110 Saturday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.
Chair: Usha Natarajan, The American University in Cairo
Mai Taha, Institute for Global Law & Policy, Harvard Law School
Participants:
Tyler McCreary, University of British Columbia
Vasuki Nesiah, NYU Gallatin
John Reynolds, NUI Maynooth University Department
of Law
Adrian Smith, Carleton University
Sujith Xavier, Faculty of Law University of Windsor
Saturday
The global South characterises a condition brought about by
various forces of history including colonialism, imperialism and
capitalism. It describes a globalised relationship between the
colonised and coloniser. An important aspect of the term global
South is the recognition that there are multitudes of claims in
various spaces. In particular, the possibility of a south in the
North and a north in the South is important. Our roundtable,
while taking stock of this complicated milieu, asks each
participant to contemplate the significance of one or more of
the texts identified below on their respective scholarship, and
explore the various new vistas and opportunities for praxis in
the global South.
Baldwin, Go Tell It On The Mountain
Bannerji, Thinking Through: Essays on Feminism, Marxism...
Fanon, Racism and Culture in Toward the African Revolution
D’Souza, Imperial Agendas, Global Solidarities...
Williams, The Alchemy of Race and Rights...
Hill & Rodney, Walter Rodney Speaks
Primary Keyword: Colonialism and Post-Colonialism
Regulating At the Front Lines: Empirical Insights from
Health and Safety, Animal Welfare, the Chemical
Industry, Agriculture, and The Environment
CRN: 5
Paper Session
Room:Regent
Chair: Heleen Weyers, University of Groningen
Primary Keyword: Regulation & Governance
Presentations:
Diffusion and Diversity of Meaning of Regulatory
Statute: how frontline regulators cope with uncertainty
of environmental damages and ambiguity of law
Ayako Hirata, University of California, Berkeley
Enforcement of health and safety violations in an
era of deregulation. Dilemmas for health and safety
regulators in the Netherlands.
Karin van Wingerde, Erasmus University Rotterdam
Peter Mascini, Erasmus University Rotterdam
111 Optic Compliance - Enforcement and Compliance in the
Dutch Chemical Industry
Marieke Kluin, Leiden University, Institute for Criminal
Law & Criminology
Private Governance and Animal Welfare
Sarah Morath, University of Akron School of Law
Transnational Agricultural Value Chains and Their
Governance: The Importance and Potential of the Legal
Contract as a Regulatory Tool
Jacob Muirhead, University of McMaster
Rule of Law Ethnographies
CRN: 23
Paper Session
Room: Studio 6
Chair/Disc: Tamir Moustafa, Simon Fraser University
Primary Keyword: International Law and Politics
Presentations:
Building an Islamic Rule of Law: British Colonialism in
Somalia
Mark Fathi Massoud, University of California, Santa
Cruz
New Police Studies and the Art of Policing
Jinee Lokaneeta, Drew University
Rule of Law Discourses: Abstractions and Silences in
the WJP’s Rule of Law Index
Jothie Rajah, American Bar Foundation
Technically Speaking: Law and Revolution in
Contemporary Egypt
Jeffrey Sachs, Simon Fraser University
Thinking and talking about the rule of law in hostile
places
Nick Cheesman, Australian National University
Socio-Legal Perspectives on Regulating Sexuality and
Identity Post-Obergefell
CRN: 7
Roundtable Session
Room: Studio 10
Chair: Jay Borchert, University of Michigan / Center for the Study of Law and Society
Russell Robinson, UC Berkeley Law
Participants:
Michael Boucai, SUNY Buffalo Law School
Saturday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m. Suzanne Kim, Rutgers University School of Law, Newark
Kimberly Richman, University of San Francisco
Marc Spindelman, The Ohio State University Moritz
College of Law
Edward Stein, Cardozo School of Law
With formal legal access to marriage rights for same-sex couples
established by Obergefell v. Hodges, this multidisciplinary
roundtable, consisting of participants from sociology and
law, takes up ongoing and emerging socio-legal frontiers
in addressing the regulation of sexuality and identity. PostObergefell, we may engage a series of questions: what are
contemporary socio-legal conditions that abridge LGBTQ liberty
and equality under the law? What other framings might and
should scholars pursue for understanding the regulation of
identity and sexuality in this historical moment? Discussion
will pursue these questions across a range of topics, including
socio-legal insights on sexual identity in transitions to being
legally recognized as married, ways LGBTQ identity interacts
with systems of criminal justice, extramarital sexuality, sexual
violence and injury, impacts of marriage access on LGBTQ
communities of color, and the conflation of civil and religious
marriage.
Primary Keyword: Gender and Sexuality
Special Topics in Punishment & Society II: Cross-National
Examinations of Scandinavian Punishment
CRN: 27
Paper Session
Chair: Jennifer Sumner, California State University, Dominguez Hills
Disc:
Vanessa Barker, Stockholm University
Primary Keyword: Formal Legal System
Presentations:
Challenges related to (being) released from prison
Anette Storgaard, Nordisk Samarbejdsråd for
Kriminologi
Danish Prisons: To What Extent Do They Aim at
Resocialization?
Anne Okkels Birk, DIS Study Abroad in Scandinavia
Negotiating Imperfect Humanity in the Danish Penal
System
Jennifer Sumner, California State University,
Dominguez Hills
Keramet Reiter, University of California, Irvine
Lori Sexton, University of Missouri, Kansas City
Punishing women in Denmark – Scandinavia
Charlotte Mathiassen, Aarhus University
The Realization of Human Rights and the Challenges of
the Twenty-First Century: Multiculturalism, Economic
Order and the State Organization
Paper Session
Room: Studio 7
Chair: Tulio Afonso, Universidade Presbiteriana Mackenzie
Lauro Ishikawa, Faculdade Autônoma De Direito - Fadisp
Disc:
Rodrigo Cavalcanti, Faculdades Alves Faria - ALFA
Erica Tais Ferrara Ishikawa, Escola Paulista De Direito - Epd
Primary Keyword: Human Rights
Presentations:
Application Of Human Rights And Fundamental
Principles In A Cross-Cultural World: A Post-Positivist
Law Interpretation
Erica Tais Ferrara Ishikawa, Escola Paulista De Direito
- Epd
Capitalism and its sense of justice: a perspective
through the human rights and the work of Thomas
Piketty
Rodrigo Cavalcanti, Faculdades Alves Faria - ALFA
Good governance and the realization of fundamental
human rights: analysis of Brazilian practices
Lauro Ishikawa, Faculdade Autônoma De Direito FADISP
Saturday
Room: Studio 3
Prison food as a self-catering system
Linda Kjær Minke, University of Southern Denmark
The labor law in the international order: economic
conglomerates and challenges of the twenty-first
century
Tulio Afonso, Universidade Presbiteriana Mackenzie
The Sociolegal Researcher As Social Justice Advocate:
Challenges and Opportunities
Public Outreach Session
Room: Salon D
Chair/Disc: Louise Trubek, University of Wisconsin
112 Saturday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.
Participants:
Monica Bell, Harvard Law School
Cynthia Farid, University of Wisconsin Law school
Sergio Latorre, Universidad del Norte
Ashley Nellis, The Sentencing Project
Jennifer Rasmussen, American Bar Association
Over the past two years, sociolegal scholars have gathered
during the Law and Society Association meetings to reflect on
the connections between social science research, public policy,
and social justice. This panel brings together activists and
researchers working in academia and in advocacy organizations
to continue the discussion of ways that sociolegal research can
contribute to social change. Participants will discuss projects
they have undertaken, and the challenges of linking sociolegal
research and policy advocacy.
Primary Keyword: International Law and Politics
Presentations:
Re-purposing African International Courts to Cover
International Crimes
Matiangai Sirleaf, University of Pittsburgh School of
Law
Tendayi Achiume, UCLA School of Law
Revisiting The Azapo Decision Twenty Years Later:
Reconciliation Versus Punishment?
Penelope Andrews, University of Cape Town Faculty
of Law
Securing accountability for violations of the right to life:
Ubuntu and Alternate Accountability Mechanisms in
Africa
Meetali Jain, University of Pretoria
Yvonne Oyieke, University of Pretoria
Primary Keyword: Access to Justice
The U.S. Consumer Bankruptcy System
Transitional Justice and International Courts: The
Quasi-Criminal Role of the Inter-American Court of
Human Rights
Tatiana Alfonso Sierra, University of WisconsinMadison/Universidad de Los Andes
Alexandra Huneeus, University of Wisconsin
CRN: 25
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 6
Chair/Disc: Susan Block Lieb, Fordham University
Saturday
Primary Keyword: Household Finance
Presentations:
A Tale of Two Bankruptcies: The Roots of Retrenchment
in America’s Protection of Private Debtors
Emily Zackin, Johns Hopkins University
Paper Session
Room: Balcony N
Chair: Erin Kerrison, University of Pennsylvania
Karin Martin, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Accessing Bankruptcy Justice: An Ethnography of a
Petition Preparer’s Office
Michael Sousa, University of Denver College of Law
Disc:
Explaining Chapter 13
Sara Greene, Duke Law School
Katherine Porter, University of California Irvine
Presentations:
Freedom Now or a Future Later: Can Collateral
Consequences be Rationally Considered in Plea
Decisions?
Vanessa Edkins, Florida Institute of Technology
Lucian Dervan, Southern Illinois University School of
Law
The Graying of the U.S. Bankruptcy System
Robert Lawless, University of Illinois
Katherine Porter, University of California Irvine
Deborah Thorne, Ohio University
Transitional Justice in Comparative Perspective: Exploring
the Role of International and Regional Courts
CRN: 36
Paper Session
Room: Balcony K
Disc: Richard Ashby Wilson, University of Connecticut School
of Law
113 Unpacking the Plea Bargaining Process: Exploring
Defendant and Defense Counsel Perspectives
Primary Keyword: Courts And Trials
TWO MODELS OF PRE-PLEA DISCOVERY IN CRIMINAL
CASES: AN EMPIRICAL COMPARISON
Jenia Turner, SMU Law School
Allison Redlich, George Mason University
Workload Management and Charge-Bargaining for DUI
Offenses: A Mixed-Method Analysis
Erin Kerrison, University of Pennsylvania
Emily Owens, University of Pennsylvania
Saturday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. S at u rd ay J u n e 4
1 0 :1 5 a . m . - 1 2 : 0 0 p . m .
Histories of Empire and Legal Pluralism – Mixed Legal
Systems Around the Globe
Plenary Session
Room: Galerie 3
sChair: Malcolm Feeley, University of California-Berkeley
Disc:
David Engel, University at Buffalo, SUNY, School of Law
Participants:
Vernon Palmer, Tulane Law School
Keebet von Benda-Beckmann, Max Planck Institute for
Social Anthropology
Mitra Sharafi, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Primary Keyword: Legal Pluralism, Mixed Legal Systems, and
Non-State Law
Jim Crow, New and Old -- Race and the Constitution of
Society
Plenary Session
Room: Salon D
Chair: Carroll Seron, University of California, Irvine
Laura Gomez, UCLA
Participants:
Jeannine Bell, Indiana University Maurer School of Law
— Bloomington
Tonya Brito, University of Wisconsin Law School
Lauren Edelman, University of California-Berkeley
Half a century after the civil rights movement forced dramatic
legal changes American society is being confronted with the
stark realities of the continuing embeddedness of race. From
the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina here in New Orleans to the
killings of unarmed black men and the “black lives matter”
movement to the less visible consequences of continuing racial
inequality across the society, the question of race and how it
shapes and is shaped by the law, remains a central theme in law
and society scholarship. Instead of focusing on the most obvious
and egregious manifestations of racism that were designed to
intimidate and subordinate whole communities, this panels
focus on the “new” Jim Crow in which a legal framework of
formal equality coexists with laws and practices that continue
to marginalize and exclude. Our three panelists research
and explore themes and contexts, from within the family
to employment and housing, demonstrating the continuing
importance of understanding the interaction between race
and law as well as the significance of old and new practices
from violence and exclusion to claims of colorblindness and
formal equality in the perpetuation of Jim Crow and its legacy in
contemporary America.
Primary Keyword: Race and Ethnicity
Saturday
Meeting here at the Delta, in the State of Louisiana, a product
of empire and home of a specifically mixed civil and common
law legal system, provides a unique opportunity for us to
consider anew the ways in which legal pluralism in all its forms
has been central to law and society. Our three presenters
approach the history and understanding of legal pluralism
from different disciplinary and research perspectives. As we
pursue the continuing discussion over the role and place of legal
pluralism as a core element of law in society, it will be of great
value for us to understand how different perspectives of legal
pluralism may be used to further our understanding of how law
is shaped by and operates in different social contexts. Whether
through the expansion of empires and the application of rules
of law in different social, political and cultural contexts, or in
post-colonial societies in which the inheritance of a so-called
modern legal system remains engaged with many other forms
and fora of law, it is in studying the ways in which law functions
under these conditions that our presenters are able to offer
important insights into the nature of legal pluralism and the
often unintended consequences that flow out of this multiplicity
of sources and understandings of law. By offering very
different approaches to the study and understanding of legal
pluralism the panel offers a unique opportunity to understand
the very pluralism that lies at the heart of both law and our
understandings of the law and society tradition itself.
Disc:
Natural and Unnatural Disasters – Human Crises and
Law’s Response
Plenary Session
Room: Galerie 2
Chair/Disc: Lloyd Burton, University of Colorado, Denver
Participants:
Fiona Haines, University of Melbourne
Rachel Luft, Seattle University
Robert Verchick, Loyola New Orleans Law School
Disaster focuses attention and raises questions about what
law can do: it disturbs and destabilizes law at the same time
as generating multiple new, and sometimes competing, legal
obligations. This panel will address questions about regulation
and its potential to prevent disaster as well as what laws and
regulation do and do not do in response to disaster. Panelists
will speak from their expertise in humanitarian assistance,
environmental justice, and regulation. In thinking through
justice claims, panelists will also implicitly raise questions
about definitions of disaster that focus on a discrete event.
Law potentially intertwines with disaster in regulating risky
114 Saturday 2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m.
behavior and responding to disaster. Yet law also fosters
disaster. Legal rules and processes may be the source of design
flaws in engineered systems or structures. Law may foster or
fail to ameliorate the inequality that makes people vulnerable,
or it may fail to hold actors accountable. Law and regulation,
however, are intimately connected not only to determining
the technical and physical requirements that can prevent or
reduce risk but is centrally concerned with ethical obligations
of fairness in law as well as with legal obligations and claims
centered on equality and justice. These ethical obligations are
commonly found in responses to disaster, in the humanitarian
turn in governance that brings nonprofits, local governments,
national states and international rights claims to alleviate
suffering. Yet, humanitarian interventions most often focus
on pressing need, so the ordinary practices of law are often
difficult to find. Finally, disaster impacts legal accountability and
law often disrupts the conditions required for organizing and
building allies. This panel will explore these many facets in the
connections between disaster, law, regulation and governance.
these multiple domains with the goal of highlighting what an
understanding of these dynamics might reveal about how the
boundaries between who are or who are not considered to
belong is maintained or challenged over time.
Primary Keyword: Disasters
Disc:
Who Belongs, Who Doesn’t - Law, Citizenship and
Political Economy in the 21st Century
Primary Keyword: Civil Justice and Disputing
Room: Salon E
Presentations:
New Forums for Intellectual Property Claims: The IP
Small Claims Track in England and Wales
Sheona Burrow, University of Glasgow/CREATe
Plenary Session
Saturday
Chair: Michael McCann, University of Washington
Disc:
Kitty Calavita, UC Irvine
Participants:
Penelope Andrews, University of Cape Town Faculty of
Law
Narendra Subramanian, McGill University
Chris Uggen, University of Minnesota
In accordance with our broader conference theme, “At the
Delta: Belonging, Place and Visions of Law and Social Change”,
this plenary encompasses a very broad perspective on the
question of belonging. From an analysis comparing the social
and legal dimensions of race and caste in the Mississippi Delta
in the United States and the Kaveri Delta in India to a study of
the new generation of “born free” students in post-apartheid
South Africa who are challenging the very structure and
functioning of the country’s institutions of higher education
as well as the content of their education, to the question of
the continued legal exclusion from the franchise through felon
disenfranchisement in the United States. Ranging across three
continents the participants on this panel explore the multiple
dimensions of inclusion and exclusion through law and social
practices across such diverse domains as higher education and
access to the ballot, on to the mobilization by communities
to achieve greater economic, and political access in the face
of racial and caste exclusions. The panel will explore the
linkages between who does and who doesn’t belong across
115 Primary Keyword: Citizenship, Migration, Immigration and
Nation
Satu rd ay Ju n e 4
2: 45 p .m. - 4: 30 p .m.
Access to Justice and Civil Justice System
CRN: 10
Paper Session
Room:Iberville
Chair: Daniel H. Foote, The University of Tokyo
Tomohiko Maeda, Meijo University
Our (allegedly) litigious society: why do we have so
many social security claims in the Brazilian Judiciary?
Bruno Takahashi, University of Sao Paulo (USP)/
Federal Court of Brazil
Public Interest litigation and anti-discrimination claims
Therese MacDermott, Macquarie University, Australia
Tort, Neo-liberalism and the Market in Injury
Annette Morris, Cardiff University
ACCESS TO JUSTICE IN BRAZIL - a shift toward
restriction and possibilities from a new theoretical
frame
Paulo Eduardo Alves da Silva, University of São Paulo
African Land and Health
CRN: 13, 48
Paper Session
Room: Salon B
Chair: Ntombizozuko Dyani-Mhango, University of the Witwatersrand
Primary Keyword: African Law & Society
Saturday 2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Presentations:
A Legal Empowerment approach to engaging with
customary justice systems. Case studies from Ghana,
Namibia and Malawi
Janine Ubink, University of California Irvine
Baby Factories: Modern Antidote For Childlessness And
Surrogacy In Nigeria
Titilayo Aderibigbe, Babcock University, School of Law
& Security Studies,
Between Carrot and Stick: Finding room for community
autonomy in land use policy and property law in subSaharan Africa
James Krueger, University of Wisconsin-Madison
AMR: Ellen Berrey - “The Enigma of Diversity: The
Language of Race and the Limits of Racial Justice”
Herbert Jacob Book Award Co-Winner
Author Meets Reader (AMR) Session
Room: Salon E
Author: Ellen Berey, University of Denver
Chair: Anna Kirkland, University of Michigan
Readers:
Mario Barnes, University of California-Irvine
The book draws on six years of fieldwork and historical sources
dating back to the 1950s to investigate three case studies from
widely varying arenas-affirmative action in the University of
Michigan’s admissions program, housing redevelopment in
Chicago’s Rogers Park neighborhood, and the workings of the
human resources department at a Fortune 500 company. With
this evidence, Berrey explores the complicated, contradictory,
and even troubling meanings and uses of diversity as it is
invoked by different groups for different, often symbolic ends.
In each case study, diversity affirms inclusiveness, especially in
the most coveted jobs and colleges. Yet it resists fundamental
change in the practices and cultures that are the foundation
of social inequality. Berrey shows how this has led racial
progress itself to be reimagined, transformed from a legal fight
for fundamental rights to a celebration of the competitive
advantages afforded by cultural differences. The true cost of
the public embrace of diversity, she concludes, is the taming of
demands for racial justice.
CRN: 27
Paper Session
Room: Studio 8
Chair: Nicole Lindahl, UC Berkeley
Disc:
Jonathan Simon, University of California-Berkeley
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
Presentations:
Bridging Organizing Inside and Outside the Prison: The
Role of Family Advocacy in the Movement to Abolish
Solitary Confinement in California’s Prisons
Chelsea van Aken, San Jose State University
Edith Kinney, San José State University
From troublemaker to bridge builder The trajectories of
political engagement of formerly incarcerated activists
and organizers
Femke Kaulingfreks, Radboud University Nijmegen
The Emergence of Unruly Politics Among Prison Staff
and Volunteers in California
Nicole Lindahl, UC Berkeley
“Contesting the ‘Archive’: The 2011 Pelican Bay State
Prison (CA) Inmate Hunger Strike”
Francisco Casique, University of California, Berkeley
Bioethics and Belonging
CRN: 29
Paper Session
Room: Balcony L
Saturday
Diversity has become a hallowed American value, widely shared
and honored. This is a remarkable change from the Civil Rights
era-but does this public commitment to diversity constitute a
civil rights victory? In The Enigma of Diversity: The Language
of Race and the Limits of Racial Justice (University of Chicago
Press, 2015), Ellen Berrey takes on this puzzle, asking what
diversity means in the contemporary era and what are the
effects of efforts to support it.
Beyond Mass Incarceration III: Resisting State
Punishment from Inside Prisons
Chair/Disc: Craig Konnoth, University of Pennsylvania Law School
Primary Keyword: Bioethics, Biotechnology and the Law
Presentations:
Belonging and the Social Practices of Membership and
Mutuality in a Health Commons
Bruce Jennings, Vanderbilt University
Creating Outcasts: Law, Discrimination, and Conscience
Clauses
Michele Goodwin, University of California - Irvine
School of Law
Redistributing Health
Craig Konnoth, University of Pennsylvania Law School
116 Saturday 2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m.
The Bio-politics of Race and The Paradox of State
Violence
Dorothy Roberts, University of Pennsylvania
Central Americans and the Politics of Non-Belonging
Roundtable Session
Room: Balcony J
Chair: Alejandro Villalpando, University of California, Riverside
Saturday
Participants:
Karla Cativo, University of California, Santa Cruz
Jorge Cuéllar, Yale University
Political and legal responses in the United States and Mexico
have resulted in the detainment and deportation of tens of
thousands of people fleeing the despair in Central America. This
roundtable session brings scholars from various disciplinary and
interdisciplinary fields to examine the ways Central American
bodies occupy a subject of non-belonging across space
and time. Genocidal state terror, slashing of social services,
and forced displacement amplifies the violence endured
by vulnerable Central American populations. The history of
Central Americans both in the Isthmus and diaspora has been
defined by an exclusion from rudimentary elements of safety.
How do legal and racialized policing structures animate the
subject position of non-belonging for Central Americans from
the Isthmus to the United States? How and why are Central
Americans made visible through a relationship to crisis? What
can centering Central American lives teach us about links
between race, security, and empire?
Primary Keyword: Citizenship, Migration, Immigration and
Nation
Challenges to Realizing the Right to Health
CRN: 47
Paper Session
Room: Studio 1
Chair: Audrey Chapman, University of Connecticut
Primary Keyword: Economic and Social Rights
Presentations:
From Rhetoric to Reparation: “Gender-Based Harm and
Reproductive Rights in the Inter-American System of
Human Rights”
Ciara O’Connell, University of Sussex
Health and Human Rights Among (US) Government
Health Professionals
Izraelle McKinnon, Emory University
Dabney Evans, Emory Universtiy
117 Identity in law: the case of drugs for neglected diseases
Marcos Vinicio Chein Feres, Universidade Federal de
Juiz de Fora/PQ2CNPq
Lorena Abbas da Silva, Universidade Federal de Juiz
de Fora
Thaís Miranda Moreira, Universidade Federal de Juiz
de Fora
Improving potential for participation and social
inclusion of adults receiving institutional care for
mental illnesses through a deepened culture of
accessible human rights education in facilities
April Jakubec, University Massachusetts Boston
Protecting the right to health of non-nationals: bridging
the gap through supranational monitoring
Claire Lougarre, University of Southampton,
Southampton Law School
Towards accountability to fulfill child health obligations
in Africa
Solomon Tekle Abegaz, Public International Law,
University of Pretoria
Class Action Litigation for Incarcerated Victims of Sexual
Assault: Successes, Setbacks, and Stories
CRN: 17
Roundtable Session
Room: Galerie 3
Chair: Hannah Brenner, Michigan State University College of Law
Participants:
Cristy Cummings, Michigan State University
Kathleen Darcy, Michigan State University College of
Law
This roundtable discussion will feature a mix of social scientists
and attorneys involved in assessing the outcomes of litigation on
behalf of 809 women who experienced sexual assault by prison
staff during their incarceration in a state prison. We begin with
an overview of the legal theory behind using class action as a
litigation strategy and the intended objectives of such litigation.
Specifically, we examine how the class action works to provide a
remedy for large numbers of similarly situated victims, and how
this operates as a strategy for victims of sexual assault (Kathleen
Darcy). We include a contextual overview of class action suits
on behalf of sexual assault survivors in other closed institutional
settings (i.e. military, prisons, universities). A more in-depth
discussion of the legal hurdles and successes of a specific class
action (Neal vs. Michigan Department of Corrections) involving
over 800 women sets the stage for subsequent discussants
to illustrate the individual benefits and consequences to
participation, as well as the effect on system level operation of
the prison.
Saturday 2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Using social science research methods, a retrospective survey
was collected from a sub-sample (n=166) of those involved in
the litigation (Sheryl Kubiak). Women discussed the individual
level ‘costs’ of their participation in the litigation as well as the
non-financial benefits. Negative consequences attributed to
involvement in the litigation included retaliation by officers,
being considered ‘snitches’ and dissatisfaction with the legal
procedures and an absence of individual punishment for the
perpetrators. Positive individual benefits of those involvement
included improved mental health, perceptions of a ‘just world’,
and feelings of being empowered and having a voice.
In terms of meeting the goals of tort litigation in ‘making the
person whole’, financial compensation provided to the women
to remedy their injury also had positive and negative benefits.
Using survey data, Cristy Cummings discusses women’s voiced
dissatisfaction with the settlement amount, the trauma
reminders and ‘triggering’ effects of receiving the funds, and
the ways that their financial settlement put them at risk for
exploitation by those in their lives. Conversely, women also
discussed the security that the settlement dollars afforded to
them in their reentry; being able to afford necessities such as
housing and transportation, to provide for their families, and to
pay down debts reduced their stress.
Primary Keyword: Gender and Sexuality
Conflict, Rights, and the Separation of Powers
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 4
Chair/Disc: Alexander Tsesis, Loyola University Chicago School of Law
Primary Keyword: Constitutional Law and Constitutionalism
Presentations:
California eaters vs the Constitution: commerce clause
predictions from foie gras, shark fins, and eggs
Ernesto Hernandez-Lopez, Chapman University
Fragile Rights: The Promise and Perils of Executive
Branch Constitutionalism
Joy Milligan, UC Berkeley
Institutional Tensions from Political Dissents to the
Constitutional Change: a Comparative Analysis
Augusto Sampaio, Universidade Federal do Rio de
Janeiro
Gustavo Costa, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro
Positive Education Federalism
Christian Sundquist, Albany Law School
A constitutional analysis from the institutional theory:
The decision in the Brazilian Supreme Court
Maíra Almeida, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
Corporate Diversity: Comparative and Critical
Perspectives
CRN: 46
Roundtable Session
Room: Galerie 5
Chair: Darren Rosenblum, Pace Law School
Participants:
Afra Afsharipour, UC Davis School of Law
Aaron Dhir, Osgoode Hall Law School of York University
Amanda Packel, Stanford Law School
Daria Roithmayr, University of Southern California
Jurisdictions around the world are enacting regulations to foster
diversity in corporate governance, ranging from soft measures
such as the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s diversity
reporting rule to more assertive measures such as quotas
in countries including Norway, Germany, Italy, and France.
Firms likewise increasingly prioritize inclusion, supported
by management consultant studies that trumpet diversity’s
instrumental value. As scholars begin to account for these
efforts, this Roundtable will examine crucial questions, such
as: how do national efforts compare? What do diversity efforts
convey about the relationship between public and private? Can
we compare diversity efforts for distinct identities such as sex
and race, and if so how? How do markets and firms implement
these rules and what are the lived experiences of those who
are subject to them? Do voluntary diversity efforts supplement
or compete with public remedies for inclusion? Should goals
of equality or profitability drive diversity efforts? In this
Roundtable, a range of scholars will explore and debate these
crucial questions for corporate and democratic governance.
Saturday
Beyond individual benefits, this class action litigation also
resulted in mandates for system/ prison-level reform. Women
involved in the litigation had differing opinions as to the prison
system changes. Gina Fedock describes the perceptions of
negative and positive changes within the prison. For example,
many women described new policies that restricted male staff
from working in the housing units of the prison as well as their
perception that the abuse declined and they were treated
better by staff. However, many women described the retaliatory
behavior of both staff and inmates, the insufficient change of
policies and practices, and the anger of the female corrections’
staff.
Constitutional Separation of Powers: Theory and
Practice from India
Shubhankar Dam, City University of Hong Kong School
of Law
Primary Keyword: Corporate and Securities Law
118 Saturday 2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Corporate/Securities Law Panel #4: Corporate
Governance and Value
CRN: 46
Paper Session
Room: Salon C
Chair: Christyne Vachon, University Of North Dakota School of Law
Disc:
Elizabeth Nowicki, Washington and Lee University
Primary Keyword: Corporate and Securities Law
Presentations:
English Legal Institutions Governing, Organizing, and
Reflecting a Pluralistic Colonial Society: Corporate New
York 1664-1714
Moira Watson, University of Oklahoma College of Law
Shareholder Value Thinking And The Systems
Alternative In Corporate Law
The CEO-Employee Pay Ratio and Behavioral
Implications
Lynne Dallas, University of San Diego
Tamara Belinfanti, New York Law School
Saturday
Unbundled Bargains: Multi-Agreement Dealmaking in
Complex Mergers & Acquisitions
Cathy Hwang, Stanford
She’s One Of Us: Looking At Gender Quotas To Evaluate
How Women In The Corporate System Engender
Change For Women
Christyne Vachon, University of North Dakota School
of Law
Student Mobilization—Building a Youth Centered
Critique of Police in Schools
Analicia Mejia Mesinas, University of California, Irvine
“The Sense of Law is Lost”: Car Impoundments and the
Racial Naturalization of Mexican Immigrants
Samuel Prieto, University of San Diego
“What are you doing here?” Policing race, Controlling
Space
Sebastian Sclofsky, University of Florida
Democratic Policymaking and the Judiciary
Paper Session
Room: Galvez
Chair/Disc: Jason Maloy, University of Louisiana, Lafayette
Primary Keyword: Constitutional Law and Constitutionalism
Presentations:
Agonism and Common Wealth Models of
Constitutionalism: Analyzing Democratic Benefits of
Conflict in Soft-Form Judicial Review
Garrett Lecoq, Carleton University
Between Democratic Security and Democratic Legality:
Discursive Institutionalism and the Empowerment of
Colombia’s Constitutional Court
Jan Boesten, University of British Columbia
Obergefell vs. Hodges Beyond Judicial Minimalism:
Same sex marriage adjudication in the U.S. Supreme
Court
Aline Brayner, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
Henrique Rangel, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
Critical Policing Studies 1: Policing Communities of Color
Across Space and Place
Rethinking Regime Theory
Mark Leinauer, University of California, Berkeley
Room: Balcony M
The Impact of Supreme Court Decisions on the
National Political Agenda
Logan Strother, Syracuse University
CRN: 12
Paper Session
Chair/Disc: Luis Daniel Gascón, University of San Francisco
Primary Keyword: Race, Critical Race Research
Presentations:
Mining the (trust) gap: Africans Americans, Whites,
Nonwhites and the Police
Jeannine Bell, Indiana University Maurer School of
Law — Bloomington
Policing the Segregated City: (Post) Racial Ideologies
and the Regulation of Urban Space
Daanika Gordon, University of Wisconsin-Madison
119 The Judicial Protection of Anti-Judicial Speech
Thomas M Keck, Syracuse University
Brandon Metroka, Syracuse University
Richard Price, Weber State University
Due Process, Justice and Rights Across Varied Legal Fields
Paper Session
Room: Studio 5
Primary Keyword: Access to Justice
Saturday 2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Presentations:
Access to Justice - On the Edge of Democratic Change?
Jennifer Leitch, Osgoode Hall Law School, York
University
Housing Mobility as a Platform for Opportunity:
Tapping into the American Housing Survey
Nicole Watson, Maxwell School of Citizenship and
Public Affairs, Syracuse University
The Clash of Procedural Values
Roger Michalski, University of Oklahoma College of
Law
To Include or Exclude? Law and social structure in a
legal debate over tenant screenings
Marco Brydolf-Horwitz, University of Washington
Emergency, Security, and the Law and Politics of Policing
Paper Session
Room: Bacchus
Chair/Disc: Anya Bernstein, SUNY Buffalo Law School
Mapping Prison Governance Reforms in Four Latin
American and Caribbean Countries
Jennifer Peirce, CUNY Graduate Center & John Jay
College
Silence, Situations, and Police Interrogations:
Reflections on Law’s Prolix “Silence”
John Douard, Rutgers, The State University of New
Jersey
Bill Hebenton, University of Manchester UK
jaime Herrera, Rutgers University School of Law
Super Iron Fist: security discourse, dehumanization,
and the uncanny in El Salvador’s war on gangs
Miranda Hallett, University of Dayton
Empirical Challenges of Deepening Democracy:
Reflections on Gender and Power
Roundtable Session
Room: Balcony I
Chair: Leslye Obiora, University of Arizona
This panel will explore the dissonances between the promise
of substantively promoting women’s participation in decisionmaking and specific outcomes in select arenas where
women are well represented in power echelons. Respective
papers will distill instructive insights from women’s lived
realities to interrogate orthodox assumptions about the
significance of gender as a paradigm for valuing and evaluating
political participation. The contributions are apt to refresh
understandings about the political economy mediating
women’s power-sharing and about the role of feminist agency
as a constructive orbit to democratize leadership, safeguard
human security and improve democratic quality. We will draw
on theoretical analyses, empirical critiques and doctrinal
interpretations to help ground abstract principles about powersharing and explore the correlation of ideas about building
the capacity of women to lead change within frameworks that
privilege egalitarian ideals and human rights.
Primary Keyword: Feminist Jurisprudence
Frontiers of Gender Theory: Freedom of Expression, IP,
and the Internet
CRN: 7
Paper Session
Room: Studio 9
Chair: Andrew Gilden, Stanford Law School
Disc:
Brian Soucek, UC Davis School of Law
Saturday
Primary Keyword: Democracy, Governance and State Theory;
Transitions to Democracy and Revolutions
Presentations:
Complex Emergency: Rethinking the state of
emergency
Roberto Mancilla, UC Berkeley
Participants:
Rebecca A. Chaisson, Southern University at New
Orleans
Jane Eggers, Capital Post-Conviction Project of
Louisiana
Sanna Lindberg, H&M
Leslye Obiora, University of Arizona
April Petillo, Kansas State University
Primary Keyword: Gender and Sexuality
Presentations:
A Feminist Critique of the Sharing Economy
Arianne Renan Barzilay, University of Haifa School of
Law
Feminist/Queer Theory and Intellectual Property:
Mapping the Connections
Daniela Kraiem, American University Washington
College of Law
Performative Privacy
Scott Skinner-Thompson, New York University School
of Law
120 Saturday 2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Who’s Afraid of Revenge Porn Laws?
Mary Anne Franks, University of Miami School of Law
A Forgotten History: LGBT Rights and the First
Amendment
Carlos Ball, Rutgers Law School
Governance and the Rule of Law Across the PostCommunist Space
CRN: 20
Paper Session
Room: Bonaparte
Chair/Disc: Grazyna Skapska, Jagiellonian University
Primary Keyword: Central Eastern Europe, Balkans, Russia, And
Eurasia
Presentations:
Public Opinion vs. Courtroom Experience - Conclusions
from 5 Years of Citizen Court Monitoring in Poland for
Building Trust in Judiciary
Bartosz Pilitowski, Court Watch Poland Foundation
Saturday
The Rule of Law: Abstract Principle and Living Practice.
The Case of Poland
Ewa Radomska, The Jagiellonian University
Grazyna Skapska, Jagiellonian University
The transition to true judicial independence and
impartiality in Armenia: is the legacy of the Soviet
Union being overcome in practice?
Sophie Gallop, Law School, University of Birmingham
Judicial Mediation - Comparative Perspectives
CRN: 10, 43
Paper Session
Room: Salon H-G
Chair: Shozo OTA, The University of Tokyo
Disc:
Tania Sourdin, Monash University
Primary Keyword: Judges and Judging
Presentations:
Comparison between Wakai (settlement)/Chotei
(mediation) in Japan and Perdamaian (settlement)and
Mediasi (mediation) in Indonesia
Yoshiro Kusano, Gakushuin Universty
Dutch civil law judges: between adjudication and
mediation
Wibo van Rossum, Utrecht University
Rick J. Verschoof, Utrecht University & District Court
Midden-Nederland
Evaluating the Impact of Judicial Mediation on Access
to Justice − Perspectives from the Singapore State
Courts’ Judicial Mediation System
Dorcas Quek Anderson, Singapore Management
University School of Law
How does Judicial Mediation Stop being Appealing to
Litigants? An Empirical Comparison between Dutch and
Chinese Judicial Mediation
Yedan Li, University of Amsterdam
Wibo van Rossum, Utrecht University
Rick J. Verschoof, Utrecht University & District Court
Midden-Nederland
Judicial mediation in Japan
Aya Yamada, Kyoto University
Judicial Settlement Assistance: Judge and Lawyer
Assessments of This Judicial Role in the Context of
Eight U.S. Federal District Courts
Donna Stienstra, Fedeeral Judicial Center
Labor Standards Enforcement (and the Lack Thereof)
CRN: 8
Paper Session
Room: Studio 10
Chair/Disc: Ruben Garcia, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Primary Keyword: Labor
Presentations:
A Comparative Study of Enforcement in Workplace
Retirement Schemes: Australian Superannuation
Guarantee vs. United States 401(k) Plans
Paul Secunda, Marquette University Law School
Addressing the Compliance/Enforcement Crisis in Labor
Law
Guy Davidov, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Can new civil society organizations contribute to the
realization of decent work standards for migrant farm
workers in North America?
Manoj Dias-Abey, Queen’s University, Canada
Can worker centers help enforce work law?
César F. Rosado Marzán, IIT-Chicago-Kent College of
Law
121 Saturday 2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. The Right to Improvise in Low Wage Work
Michael Oswalt, Northern Illinois College of Law
Life of the Law - Pitching Scholarship to Media (A
Workshop)
Public Outreach Session
Room: Salon D
Facilitator(s): Nancy Mullane, Life of the Law
Mary Adkins, Life of the Law
You’ve just published years of research and now it’s time to get
it disseminated! Get tips on best practices for reaching out to
media to get your scholarship in the news. Meet one-on-one
with professional, award-winning journalists and producers
from Life of the Law.
Come prepared to pitch your exciting scholarship for a possible
story and they’ll be ready to listen and provide individual
feedback.
Participating LOTL Reporters and Producers include:
Ashley Cleek, Life of the Law and NPR Reporter
Jonathan Hirsch, Life of the Law Producer and Reporter
Kirsten Jusewicz-Haidle, Reporter
Litigating Race, Slavery, and Freedom in Antebellum
Louisiana
Room: Studio 7
Chair/Disc: Michelle McKinley, University of Oregon
Primary Keyword: Legal History
Presentations:
“Being Once Free, She Cannot Fall Again in Slavery:”
Invoking French Medieval Law in Antebellum Louisiana
Alexandra Havrylyshyn, University of California,
Berkeley
Manumission, Freedom and Race in the Americas:
Cuba, Louisiana, Virginia in the Age of Revolution
Ariela Gross, USC Gould School of Law
Salvador v. Turner: Black Litigants, Citizenship, and the
Local Courts in the Antebellum American South
Kimberly Welch, West Virginia University
The Micro-Diplomacy of the Illegal Slave Trade: The
Case of William Houston
Randy Sparks, Tulane University
CRN: 41
Paper Session
Room: Balcony N
Chair/Disc: Nancy Knauer, Temple Law School
Primary Keyword: Aging
Presentations:
Guardianship: The Myth of Protection
Kristen Glen Booth, CUNY
Lawyers for Legal Ghosts: The Legality and Ethics of
Representing Persons Subject to Guardianship
Nina Kohn, Syracuse University
Moving Decision-Making Research Beyond the
Individual: An Overview of Qualitative and Quantitative
Dyadic Methods
Catheryn Koss, University of Kansas Gerontology
Center
No Longer In Their Shoes: How Will Canadian Financial
Institutions Manage the Shift From Substitute Decisionmaking to a Supported Decision-making Approach
while Guarding Against Undue Influence and Elder
Abuse?
Laura Tamblyn Watts, University of Toronto
Sexual Advance Directives
Alexander Boni-Saenz, Chicago-Kent College of Law
‘I always keep a lethal dose of something, because I
don’t want to become an elderly isolated person’ Older Lesbians, Gay Men and the ‘Right to Die’ debate.
Sue Westwood, The Open University
New Directions in Law and Public Health in the 21st
Century
Saturday
CRN: 12, 44
Paper Session
New Approaches to Decision-Making for Older Adults
CRN: 9
Paper Session
Room:Jackson
Chair/Disc: Anne-Maree Farrell, Monash University, Australia
Primary Keyword: Health and Medicine
Presentations:
Global securitization of epidemics and pandemics:
human migration, political selectivity and law
Maurício Palma Resende, University of Brasilia (UnB)
Legal ordering, global health and Ebola’s epidemic
space
Gearóid Ó Cuinn, Lancaster University
122 Saturday 2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m.
Old Bottle for New Wine? Electronic Cigarettes,
Regulations, and Public Health
Chuan-Feng Wu, Institutum Iurisprudentiae,
Academia Sinica
Rethinking Public Health Law: Dialogue between
Therapeutic Jurisprudence, Preventive Law and Public
Health
Nadav Davidovitch, Ben Gurion University of the
Negev
Risk, Relationality and Public Health Emergencies:
Conceptualising Public Health Law
Belinda Bennett, Queensland University of Technology
New Empirical Insights on the Relations Between
Governance, Regulatory Enforcement, and Compliance
CRN: 5
Paper Session
Room:Regent
Chair: Aleksandra Jordanoska, School of Law, Keele University
Disc:
Susan Silbey, MIT
Saturday
Primary Keyword: Regulation & Governance
Presentations:
How Does Legitimacy Matter for the Enforcement of
Social Security Law? Lessons from the Literature
Marc Hertogh, University of Groningen
Motivations for reporting organizational misconduct by
professional bystanders
Judith Van Erp, Department of Law, Economics and
Governance, Utrecht University
Kim Loyens, Utrecht University
New Regulatory Technologies: Regulating the Front
Lines of Benefits Delivery
Jennifer Raso, University of Toronto, Faculty of Law
The importance of trust for abiding rules of social
security services
Heleen Weyers, University of Groningen
‘Defining and designing’ discretionary power in matters
of regulatory enforcement – Theory and practice in the
European legal sphere
Stéphanie De Somer, University of Antwerp
Novelty, Innovation, and the Legal Challenges of New
Technologies: From Video Games to Drones
CRN: 37
Paper Session
123 Room: Galerie 2
Chair: Hillary Farber, University of Massachusetts School of Law
Disc: Karen Levy, New York University
Primary Keyword: Technology
Presentations:
Existing Policy and Emerging Technology: The Privacy
Act, the Electronic Communication Privacy Act, and the
Regulation of Drones
Derek Larson, Virginia Tech
Governing Fintech Innovation
Jane Winn, University of Washington
Howdy Neighbor – What you Doing Down There? :
Drone Users and Drone Laws
Hillary Farber, University of Massachusetts
Social Science at the Bar: Media Effects Research and
the Supreme Court in Brown v. Electronic Merchants
Association
Thomas Rousse, Northwestern University
Overlapping and Changing Systems of Law: Innovations
and Issues in Use
CRN: 27
Paper Session
Room: Studio 2
Chair/Disc: Kyle Kirkup, University of Toronto Faculty of Law
Primary Keyword: Legal Pluralism, Mixed Legal Systems, and
Non-State Law
Presentations:
“White Collar Crimes in Chile: A study cases about the
difficulties faced by prosecutors”
Eduardo Alcaino, Stanford Law School
A social and legal perspective of violence in hockey
to determine when criminal law should be used to
regulate hockey violence and player injuries
Martine Dennie, Laurentian University
Addressing Crime Civilly: A Tort-Based Alternative to
the Current Criminal Justice System
Molly Wilder, Georgetown University
The effects of liberal reforms in Russian criminal law on
conviction and sentencing of economic offenders. Are
there any?
Iryna Chatsverykova, The Institute for the Rule of Law
at the European University at Saint-Petersburg
Saturday 2:45 p.m. - 4:30 p.m. Risk in the Criminal Justice System
Room: Studio 4
Participants:
Kirsten Anker, McGill University
Paulo Ilich Bacca, University of Kent
Jessica Hallenbeck, University of British Columbia
Justin Richland, University of Chicago
Chair: Hadar Aviram, UC Hastings College of the Law
Primary Keyword: Language And Discourse
CRN: 27
Paper Session
Disc:
Robert Werth, Rice University
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
Presentations:
Opening a critical space: Data analytics, social
structures and criminogenic risk - needs.
Kelly Hannah-Moffat, University of Toronto
Regulating Recidivism-Risk: The Case for Judgmental
Bootstrapping
Hannah Laqueur, UC Berkeley
Ryan Copus, Jurisprudence and Social Policy, UC
Berkeley
Risky Needs: Risk-Entangled Needs in Probation
Supervision
Danielle Rudes, George Mason University
Kimberly Meyer, George Mason University
Jill Viglione, George Mason University
Session on the Work of the LSA Kalven Prize Winner –
Mariana Valverde
CRN: 27
Paper Session
Room: Studio 3
Chair/Disc: Jayashri Srikantiah, Stanford Law School
Primary Keyword: Citizenship, Migration, Immigration and
Nation
Presentations:
Big Immigration Law
Juliet Stumpf, Lewis and Clark Law School
Developing and Diffusing Legal Cynicism through
Immigration Detention
Emily Ryo, USC Gould School of Law
Punishing Noncitizens
Jennifer Chacon, University of California, Irvine School
of Law
The End of Ceremonial Justice? Courts, Judges, Lawyers
in Post Modern Era
Roundtable Session
CRN: 37
Roundtable Session
Room: Galerie 6
Room: Galerie 1
Chair: Mona Lynch, University of California, Irvine
Chair: Richard Cornes, Essex University
Participants:
Mariana Valverde, University of Toronto
Paula Maurutto, University of Toronto
George Pavlich, University of Alberta
Annelise Riles, Cornell Law School
Paul Passavant, Hobart and William Smith Colleges
Luis Eslava, Kent Law School
Participants:
Diane Bernard, KULeuven, U. St-Louis, UCLouvain, ULg
Claire de Than, City University, London, School of Law
and Institute of Law, Jersey
James Lambert, Jersey Court Service
David Marrani, Institute of Law
Speaking Law’s Home: Law, Language and Anthropology
CRN: 23
Roundtable Session
Room: Studio 6
Chair: Genevieve Painter, UC Berkeley
Saturday
Yesterday’s Monsters: Revision, Reinvention and
Rehabilitation in the Manson Family Parole Hearings
Hadar Aviram, UC Hastings College of the Law
Special Topics in Punishment & Society III: Noncitizens in
Prisons and Immigration Detention
If Garapon noted that ‘the event of judging is in fact part of
justice to the same degree as the law: it is its foundation’, the
end of ceremonial justice questions the foundation of the law
itself. According to Ricoeur in Love and Justice, ‘… the exercising
of justice is not just a case of arguments, it also involves a
decision and this is the responsibility of the judge, as the last
link in the chain of procedure, wherever this may occur. And
when judge’s words are those of condemnation we recall that
statutes of justice carries a sword as well as a balance scale.’ He
124 Saturday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.
adds that ‘Taken together, all these characteristics of judicial
practice allow us for the first time to define the formalism of
justice - not as a fault, but as a sign of force.’ By focusing on
the idea of formalism, we quickly realise that behind what
Ricoeur calls judicial practice hides the appearance, or even
the aesthetic of this justice. Such formalism is bind to ritual (s)
obvious in primitive societies, perfectly visible in archaic, premodern and modern societies.
Saturday
That said, the aesthetic side of the law and rituals seem to be in
declined in these ‘post-modern’ times. Contemporary societies
appears to be forgetting that applying the law is exercising a
power, a performative speech act (Austin), and the power to
decide of the meaning of words. From that point of view, like
Brunet puts it, we are all like Humpty Dumpty, who pretended
to be a master at that game. We have forgotten that in order
for the words to be spoken, a specific space, with specific
actors, has to be ready, and that often, like in a baroque-rococo
church, the words take their meaning solely because of a
specific ceremonial. Perhaps we should, like Latour recognise
that ‘Now that the modernity of our world is coming to a close,
we understand that it was no more secular than any other.’
Or we could question how the end of ceremonial in postmodernity, affect how justice is being done. This roundtable
will be concerned with transparent ‘post-modern’ courthouses,
the introduction of new technology in courts (Ipad judges,
cameras in courts,…), lawyer/courtroom video clips as a form of
internet “entertainment.”, and all the elements that affects the
ceremonial of justice.
Primary Keyword: Courts And Trials
Threats to Consumers’ Financial Soundness
CRN: 25
Paper Session
Room: Salon F
Transnational Dynamics in Legal Orders: From Rights to
Commerce
CRN: 36
Paper Session
Room: Balcony K
Primary Keyword: Transnational Legal Orders, International and
Regional Institutions
Presentations:
Configurations of Sovereignty in Transnational Rules:
English East India Company and the International
Chamber of Commerce
Swati Srivastava, Northwestern University
De facto compliance with human rights treaties: Taiwan
in the context of transnational legal orders
Yu-Jie Chen, U.S.-Asia Law Institute, NYU School of
Law
The Pluralism/Harmonization Dynamic in Transnational
Commercial Law: Conceptual Foundations and
Empirical Analysis
Edward Cohen, Westminster College
The Struggle for Existence: Meta-Bargaining of Global
Legislatures in a Trade Lawmaking Ecology
Susan Block Lieb, Fordham University School of Law
Terence Halliday, American Bar Foundation
Satu rd ay Ju n e 3
4: 45 p .m. - 6: 30 p .m.
AMR: Felice Batlan - “Women and Justice for the Poor:
A History of Legal Aid, 1863–1945” J. Willard Hurst Book
Award Winner
Chair: Dalie Jimenez, University of Connecticut
Author Meets Reader (AMR) Session
Primary Keyword: Household Finance
Room: Salon E
Presentations:
Barriers To Debt Relief For Undocumented Debtors
Chrystin Ondersma, Rutgers School of Law Newark
Author: Felice Batlan, Chicago Kent College of Law
Documenting Coerced Debt
Angela Littwin, University of Texas School of Law
Adrienne Adams, Michigan State University
Private Lines of Credit for Law, Medical and Business
School Students: A Canadian Perspective
Saul Schwartz, Carleton
Stephanie Ben-Ishai, Osgoode Hall Law School
The Expressive Power of Bankruptcy
Pamela Foohey, Indiana University
125 Readers:
Deborah Dinner, Emory University School of Law
Amalia Kessler, Stanford Law School
Felice Batlan’s Women and Justice for the Poor: A History of
Legal Aid, 1863-1945, reconstructs a lost history of legal aid
in the United States. Building on extensive archival research,
it pushes beyond traditional narratives of the early history of
legal aid and accepted definitions of the meaning of legal work,
demonstrating how in the late nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries women’s organizations became leading providers of
legal aid in cities across the United States.
Saturday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m. Batlan then examines the dramatic consequences when, in
the early twentieth century, professional male lawyers took
an interest in legal aid. Male lawyers sought to professionalize
legal aid. Part of this professionalization process involved the
displacement of the women lay lawyers who for generations
had been providing legal services to the poor. At stake in
this conflict was not only the question of who could claim
professional authority but also two different models of legal
aid. One model—which became associated with the rising
profession of social workers—sought to blur the line between
legal and non-legal services, insisting on a holistic approach to
clients’ problems, aiming at substantive rather than procedural
justice, and focusing on the entire family unit, rather than
focusing simply on the individual. Strikingly, as Batlan shows,
the end result of this conflict was not a linear progression from
social work to law—or from women to men—but a complex
story in which conflict was followed by accommodation.
Ultimately, the book questions what justice, the rule of law, and
expertise really means, in the face of aching need and poverty.
This panel of leading scholars will discuss how legal history can
be rewritten to allow for new narrative that challenge much of
what we know about the legal profession and how such new
histories create a usable past.
Corporate/Securities Law Panel #5: Addressing Agency
Costs and Corporate Wrongdoing
CRN: 46
Paper Session
Chair: Benjamin Edwards, Barry University Dwayne O. Andrews School of Law
Disc: Christyne Vachon, University of North Dakota School of Law
Primary Keyword: Corporate and Securities Law
Presentations:
Agency Cost Capitalism
Benjamin Edwards, Barry University Dwayne O.
Andreas School of Law
Diversifying to Mitigate Misconduct Risk
Cary Martin, DePaul University College of Law
Investigating Disasters, Wildland Firefighting, and
Lessons From The Legal Community
Elizabeth Nowicki, Washington and Lee University
The Stockholder Monitor: Plaintiff Stockholders Versus
Activist Stockholders
Megan Shaner, University of Oklahoma
Paper Session
Room: Balcony J
Chair/Disc: Kalyani Ramnath, Princeton University
Primary Keyword: Social Movements and Legal Mobilization
Presentations:
Adopting Human Rights Approach to Tackle Marriage
Business: the Transformation of the Strategy in the
Movement to Decriminalize Adultery in Taiwan
Hsiaowei Kuan, National Taipei University
Does Accelerating Civil Rights Litigation Shortchange
Social Change?
Katherine Macfarlane, University of Idaho College of
Law
From A Global Strategy to Local Ordinances: Battling
Alcohol Consumption in Contemporary Israel
Erez Garnai, University of Minnesota
Overcoming Constraints? Courts and Social Change in
Canada and Germany
Whitney Taylor, Cornell University
Elizabeth Acorn, Cornell University
Understanding Judicial Behavior and Legal Mobilization
by Analyzing Governmental Positions in Litigation
Yoav Dotan, Faculty of Law, Hebrew University
Jerusalem
Working Around the Law: How the University of
Michigan Limited the Impact of Proposal 2’s Ban on
Affirmative Action
Lauren Foley, Johns Hopkins University
Saturday
Room: Salon C
Courts, Litigation and Social Change
Critical Police Studies 2: Enforcing Racial Formations in
the United States
CRN: 12
Paper Session
Room: Balcony M
Chair/Disc: Luis Daniel Gascón, University of San Francisco | Department of Sociology
Primary Keyword: Policing
Presentations:
Building the Policing State: Investments in City Police
Departments, 1957-2012
Charles Epp, University of Kansas
126 Saturday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.
Colorblind Progress: Continuing the Racial Logic of the
War on Drugs
Aaron Roussell, Washington State University
Marisa Omori, University of Miami
Environment and Law: Imagining Alternatives
Police Brutality: Paradigms, Patterns, and Policies
Malcolm Holmes, University of Wyoming
Primary Keyword: Environment and Energy
Race and Policing: A Contemporary Look at the Impact
of Historical Racialization
Akwasi Owusu-Bempah, Indiana University
“Straight for the gun”: Understanding gang violence
and space policing in South Los Angeles
Luis Daniel Gascón, University of San Francisco |
Department of Sociology
Monitoring, Accountability and Access to Justice for
Economic and Social Rights
CRN: 47
Paper Session
Room: Studio 1
Saturday
Chair: Konstantinos Koutsioumpas, University of Massachusetts Boston
Primary Keyword: Economic and Social Rights
Presentations:
Institutional Flip Flops in the Brazilian Budget Process
in the light of the Mechanisms of Democracy
Guilherme Vasconcelos, Universidade Federal do Rio
de Janeiro
Carlos Bolonha, Universidade Federal do Rio de
Janeiro
Nuclear Disaster Risk Management and Human Rights
Tokuko Munesue, Kanazawa University
Parallel State
Irina Manta, Maurice A. Deane School of Law at
Hofstra University
Gregory Dolin, University of Baltimore
Pension Funds in Brazil - The unfinished reform
Luis Felipe Lopes Martins, Fundação Getulio Vargas
Totally Institutionalized?: Assessing Outcomes of
Societal Reentry Among Formerly Incarcerated and
Former Active Duty Military, 1979-1986
Brandon Finlay, Indiana University, Bloomington
‘What if there is nowhere you can get advice?’ Civil
legal aid cuts and advice agencies
Jennifer Sigafoos, University of Liverpool
James Organ, University of Liverpool
127 Paper Session
Room: Galerie 5
Presentations:
A critical reading of environmental harm per se through
a methodological enquiry of earth jurisprudence and
wild law
Saskia Vermeylen, Lancaster University
Sophia Kopela, Lancaster University
Disaster prevention observed with social systems
theory: intersystemic communication for risk reduction
Laura Appignanesi, University of macerata
Happiness, Law and Sustainable Development
Senko Plicanic, School Of Law
The need and potential for climate change issues to
shape private law litigation: a study in overheating
deaths
Kim Bouwer, UCL
Understanding and Combatting Climate Change Denial
Edward Rubin, Vanderbilt
Evaluating International Law’s Responses to the
Humanitarian Crises of Our Time
Paper Session
Room: Balcony I
Chair/Disc: Doris Buss, Carleton University
Primary Keyword: International Law and Politics
Presentations:
Assessing Europe’s Commitment to International
Refugee Law: Syrian Displacement and the Common
European Asylum System
Ruth Alminas, Fort Lewis College
Ethics of Storytelling: Confronting Mass Atrocity in the
Age of Pluralism
Renana Keydar, Hebrew University
The Case for Resurrecting Humanitarian Intervention
Milena Sterio, Cleveland State University
The role of international criminal law in the exclusion
process: defences and mitigating circumstances
James Sloan, University of Glasgow
Saturday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m. Fantasy, Fabulation and the Writing of Law: Locating the
Time-Space of the Legal Body
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 6
Primary Keyword: Language And Discourse,
Presentations:
Archive, Algorithm and Agency: Writing the Flesh in
Domestic Abuse Trials
Kelli Moore, New York University
Pregnant Promises: Beyond the Property Metaphor of
Race, Gender and Slavery
Sora Han, UC Irvine
The Joliet Prison Photos: What Remains Unsaid?
Marianne Constable, UC Berkeley
Unsettling Innocence: Gender Violence, Nonimmigrant
Visas, and The Law’s Writing of the Foreign into the
Body of the Civil
LeeAnn Wang, UC Berkeley School of Law
Governing Sustainable Relations Between States, the
Economy, and Ecology on a European and Transnational
Level
CRN: 5
Paper Session
Participants:
Lamis Abdelaaty, Syracuse University
Rebecca Hamlin, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Leila Kawar, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Maria O’Sullivan, Monash University
This roundtable brings together scholars from a range of
countries and disciplinary backgrounds to discuss the dynamics
of the global response to the Syrian refugee situation.
Panellists will apply their expertise to various dimensions of the
crisis, including: the creative use of labels by states to opt in/
out of their legal obligations, particularly Turkey’s use of the
‘temporary guest’ label, the journeys of Syrian refugees to the
EU, the response of European policy-makers, advocates, and
the media to mass arrivals, European legal proposals, possible
international legal options for burden-sharing, the response
of the traditional ‘resettlement’ countries of Australia, Canada
and the USA, and finally, a more general discussion of the ways
in which human movement is a collective political act for those
with few other means of political expression.
Ultimately, the panel will assess how this particular ongoing
situation can inform the more general study of migration, law,
and society.
Primary Keyword: Citizenship, Migration, Immigration and
Nation
Judicial Behavior in the Context of Judicial, Political, and
Popular Culture
CRN: 43 and IRC: 38
Paper Session
Room: Salon H-G
Chair: Caroline Bradley, University of Miami School of Law
Chair: Archie Zariski, Athabasca University
Disc:
Marc Hertogh, University of Groningen
Disc:
Saturday
Room:Regent
Dale Dewhurst, Athabasca University
Primary Keyword: Regulation & Governance
Primary Keyword: Judges and Judging
Presentations:
Ecological regulation: rethinking the parameters of
regulation
Fiona Haines, University of Melbourne
Christine Parker, Monash University
Presentations:
“Now it’s my turn to talk”: a quantitative analysis of
the effects of TV broadcasting on the length of Brazilian
Supreme Court opinions, 2000-2013
Daniel Chada, Getulio Vargas Foundation (FGV)
Diego Werneck Arguelhes, Fundação Getulio Vargas
Law School - Rio de Janeiro (FGV Direito Rio)
Instrumental choice in the context of shared regulation
and enforcement in the EU
Linda Senden, Utrecht University, RENFORCE
International Responses to the Syrian Refugee Crisis –
Discourse, Humanitarianism and the Law
CRN: 2
Roundtable Session
Room: Galerie 4
Chair: Galya Ruffer, Northwestern University
Judicial behavior and public deliberation: A case study
of the land restitution judges in Colombia.
Diana Guzman-Rodriguez, Stanford University
The Chief Justice as Political Agent: The Politics of
Managing a Loyal Judiciary in Authoritarian Regimes
Rachel Ellett, Beloit College
Alexei Trochev, Nazarbayev University
Raul Sanchez-Urribarri, La Trobe University
128 Saturday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.
Towards a European Judicial Culture? A Comparative
and Empirical Analysis
Elaine Mak, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Erasmus
School of Law
“We are Judges Now”: The Elected Lay Jurists of
Rwanda’s Gacaca Courts
Chris Uggen, University of Minnesota
Hollie Nyseth Brehm, The Ohio State University
Presentations:
“Citizenship Be a Matter of Sentiment”: The Law and
Honor of Collective Naturalization of Puerto Ricans
after the Imperial Turn
Sam Erman, USC Gould School of Law
Interrogation and Respectability at the U.S.-Mexico
Border, 1908-1917
Celeste Menchaca, University of Southern California
Law, Politics and Corruption in South Africa
Peculiar Relations: The Legal Pluralism of New Mexican
Peonage
Skyler Reidy, University of Southern California
Room: Salon B
Race and Citizenship: Californios and Americans at the
California Constitutional Convention of 1849
Citlali Sosa-Riddell, UCLA
CRN: 13
Roundtable Session
Saturday
Chair: Brian Ray, Cleveland-Marshall College of Law
Participants:
Penelope Andrews, University of Cape Town Faculty of
Law
James Fowkes, University of Pretoria
Mark Kende, Drake Law School
Heinz Klug, University of Wisconsin Law
Chris Roederer, Florida Coastal Law
Shanelle Van der Berg, University of Stellenbosch
Legal Counseling and Mediation
Corruption recently has emerged as one of the most important
issues in South African law and politics. This Roundtable
session brings together experts with a diverse range of
perspectives for a wide-ranging conversation that will discuss
the potential relationships among the new Unite Against
Corruption movement, the increase in “service-delivery” or
“local” protests, the threat posed by new and emerging parties
to the African National Congress’ political dominance, the role
of independent, Chapter 9, institutions (including the Public
Protector) and the South African Constitutional Court’s uneven
and conflicting approach to corruption and related issues in its
democratic-rights decisions. We’ll also prognosticate the ANC’s
future and whether the related political reconfigurations these
developments portend might influence the Court’s role in future
cases.
Primary Keyword: Civil Justice and Disputing
Primary Keyword: Democracy, Governance and State Theory;
Transitions to Democracy and Revolutions
Law, Race, Honor Across United States-Latin American
Borders, 1848-1914
CRN: 44
Paper Session
Room: Studio 7
Chair/Disc: Laura Gomez, UCLA
Primary Keyword: Legal History
129 CRN: 10
Paper Session
Room:Iberville
Chair: Hideaki Irie, Kyushu University
Disc:
Shozo OTA, The University of Tokyo
Presentations:
Beyond Armchair Dispute Resolution discussion: An
empirical study on private dispute resolution in Japan
Hideaki Irie, Kyushu University
Mediators with Italian characteristics. Styles, conflict
attitudes and settlement rates
Luigi Cominelli, University of Milan
Claudio Lucchiari, University of Milan
Methodologies for Investigating Mediator Effectiveness
Alysoun Boyle, Monash University
The Effect of Legal Counsel on Outcomes of Custody
Determinations
Ryan Fortson, University of Alaska Anchorage, Justice
Center
Troy C. Payne, University of Alaska Anchorage
The Priority of “governability” in Medical SelfRegulating Bodies: A case study of The College
of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario Discipline
Committee Hearings
Kerri Scheer, University of Toronto
Saturday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m. Transform rehabilitation Lawyer-client-mentorinteractions inside ‘Community Rehabilitation
Companies’ in England
Annette Olesen, University of Southern Denmark
Legal Experiences and Attitudes of Immigrants
CRN: 2
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 1
Chair: Emily Ryo, USC Gould School of Law
Disc:
Susan Coutin, University of California, Irvine
Primary Keyword: Citizenship, Migration, Immigration and
Nation
Presentations:
From Boundaries to Brotherhood: The Feedback
Effects of Immigration Enforcement on Inter-Minority
Relations
Hana Brown, Wake Forest University
Jennifer Jones, University of Notre Dame
Immigrants’ Personal Transformations: Deploying
Identities as Non-Criminal and as Deserving
Cecilia Menjivar, University of Kansas
Understanding the salience of legal status in the lives
of unaccompanied youth workers
Stephanie Canizales, University of Southern California
Swedish Feminism Goes to Hollywood: Celebrity
Activism, Prostitution Abolitionists, Sex Workers Rights
Advocates, and the Amnesty International Prostitution
Decriminalization Policy Debates
Edith Kinney, San José State University
Victimization, Human Trafficking and Immigrants:
Mixed Methods analysis of the Perceptions of
Victimhood in U.S. Courts, 2000 – 2015
Annie Fukushima, University of Utah
Patient Harm and Redress: Exploring the Dynamics of
Claiming, Privacy, Safety and No-Fault Schemes
CRN: 9
Paper Session
Room:Jackson
Chair/Disc: Anne-Maree Farrell, Monash University, Australia
Primary Keyword: Health and Medicine
Presentations:
Birth Injuries and Parents’ Decisions to Sue Their
Doctor
Mary Nell Trautner, University at Buffalo, SUNY
Delegating Regulation to the Market: Analysis of FDA
Inspection of Institutional Review Boards 2008-2014
Gabrielle Goldstein, University of California at
Berkeley
Moving Towards (Partial) Decriminalization?: Shifting
Socio-Legal Contexts of Prostitution and Trafficking
Governance in Law, Discourse, Advocacy, and Research
Overcoming legal uncertainty by studying boundary
arrangements: truth-finding mechanisms in medical
malpractice as a case study
Chih-Ming Liang, Graduate Institute of Health and
Biotechnology Law, Taipei Medical University
Room: Galerie 3
Perceptions of Health Information Security Breaches
Leslie Francis, University of Utah
John Francis, The University of Utah
CRN: 17
Paper Session
Disc:
Amy Cohen, Ohio State University
Chair/Disc: Edith Kinney, San José State University
Primary Keyword: Gender and Sexuality
Presentations:
Defelonizing Sex Workers: Governance Feminism and
Neoliberal Penality in a Context of Decarceration
Rashmee Singh, University of Waterloo
Saturday
The Rise of Legal Status Restrictions in State Welfare
Policy in the 1970s
Cybelle Fox, UC Berkeley
Moving Away From Damage-Centered Research in
Studies with Prostitute Women
Corey Shdaimah, University of Maryland
Chrysanthi Leon, University of Delaware
Problem or Panacea? No Fault Compensation for
Medical Injury
Anne-Maree Farrell, Monash University, Australia
Perspectives on Mass Incarceration & Punishment
Paper Session
Room: Bacchus
Chair/Disc: Andrea Armstrong, Loyola University (New Orleans) 130 Saturday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.
College of Law
Primary Keyword: Social Theory and Law,
Presentations:
Public Receptivity to the Era of Mass Incarceration
George Balgobin, Northwestern University
Presentations:
Administrative Enforcement of the “Affirmatively
Further Fair Housing” Mandate: Guidelines for the
Present from the History of the Civil Rights State
Blake Emerson, Yale University
Law, Politics, and the Progressive Shift of the American
Bar Association
Paul Nolette, Marquette University
Racial Etiquette in a Midwestern Prison: Preliminary
Findings
Holly Sims-Bruno, Indiana University
NAACP v. Alabama: A Case Study in Social Change
Ellie Campbell, University of Mississippi
The Ceaseless Sentence: Disparate Punishment of
Latinos and the War on Drugs
Nick Rochin, University of Illinois at Chicago
Meggan Lee, University of Illinois
Prisons, Cycles, and Ghettoization
CRN: 27
Paper Session
Room: Studio 2
Chair/Disc: Lisa Kerr, New York University
Saturday
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
Presentations:
Highways, Housing & Racial Ghettoization: The Making
of the Modern American Penal State
Rebecca Thorpe, University of Washington
Parental Incarceration and School Discipline: Examining
the School-Prison Circuit
Emily Knaphus, University of Washington
Send Fewer Women to Prison: An Excellent Measure of
Progress for the Prison Reform Movement
Elizabeth Rapaport, University of New Mexico
The Welfare Police: Bureaucrats at the Intersection of
Law Enforcement and Public Assistance
Spencer Headworth, Northwestern University/
American Bar Foundation
The California Un-American Activities Committee:
Suspicion, Subversion, and Social Punishment in
America’s Golden Age
Zac Stone, University of California - Irvine
Risk, Liability, and Norms in a Digital Age
CRN: 37
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 2
Chair: Karen Levy, New York University
Disc:
Ifeoma Ajunwa, Columbia University
Primary Keyword: Technology
Presentations:
Autonomous vehicles: Shaping technology and society
through regulation
Catherine Easton, Lancaster University
Limitless Worker Surveillance
Ifeoma Ajunwa, Columbia University
Risky business: the effectiveness of risk assessment
tools in immigration control
Tim Dekkers, Universiteit Leiden
Rights and Liberties in the Twentieth Century
Sharing Liability in the New Sharing Economy
Agnieszka McPeak, University of Toledo College of
Law
Room: Studio 9
The Presentation of Machine in Everyday Life: The Legal
Consequences of Algorithmic Theaters
Karen Levy, New York University
CRN: 44
Paper Session
Chair: Joanna Grissinger, Northwestern University
Primary Keyword: Legal History
Shifting the Terrains of International Law: Violence and
Imaginaries of Justice
Paper Session
Room: Bonaparte
131 Saturday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m. Chair/Disc: Jennifer Balint, The University of Melbourne
Primary Keyword: War and Law including Security and
Terrorism
Presentations:
Canada’s Legal Understanding of Human Trafficking:
Considering the Effects and Boundaries
Katrin Roots, York University
Masculinities, ‘Marriage’ and Violence in War: Liberia
and Uganda
annie bunting, York University
Nature vs. Culture in Global Legal Studies:
Transnational Normative Regimes as Cultural
Reconstruction of World Law
Lasha Bregvadze, Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University
Post-Conflict Justice in a Semi-International Tribunal:
Witness Perceptions of Procedural Justice at the Court
of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Sanja Kutnjak Ivkovich, Michigan State University
Darko Datzer, University of Sarajevo
John Hagan, Northwestern University & American Bar
Foundation
Special Topics in Punishment & Society IV: Spaces and
Bodies of Exception
Room: Studio 3
Chair/Disc: Phil Goodman, University of Toronto
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
Presentations:
Bestial Acts: Police Dogs and the Bloody Teeth of the
Law
Tyler Wall, Eastern Kentucky University
Correctional Workers and the Intense Cleansing of
Prison Work During the Era of Mass Incarceration.
Jay Borchert, University of Michigan / Center for the
Study of Law and Society
Redacted: “black sites”, crime scenes and the powers
of exorcism and erasure.
Travis Linnemann, Eastern Kentucky University
Judah Schept, Eastern Kentucky University
The Challenges and Prospects of Human Rights in the
Rise of Privatized and Offshore Criminal and Immigrant
Detention
Patrick van Berlo, Leiden Law School
Street Bureaucracies and the Everyday of the Global (Dis)
Order
CRN: 23
Paper Session
Room: Studio 6
Chair: Lina Buchely, Universdad Icesi
Disc:
Tatiana Alfonso Sierra, University of Wisconsin-
Madison/Universidad de Los Andes
Primary Keyword: Ethnography
Presentations:
Legal geographies in the contexts in the Colombian
urban contexts: On the relation between Law, Space,
and Power
Lina Buchely, Universdad Icesi
Maria Victoria Castro, Universidad del Norte
Urban Ethnicity, Multicultural Policy, and City: The case
of the Uitoto Indigenous Council
Catalina Del Pilar Mejia, University of los Andes y
Universidad Libre
Visual cartographies of poverty in Brazil – securitizing
the poor trough social street level bureaucracies
Maria Cecilia Riegner Oliveira, Catholic University of
Sao Paulo
Teaching Cafe
Professional Development Panel
Room: Bissonet Ballroom
Saturday
CRN: 27
Paper Session
Trust Based Policing
Eric Miller, Loyola Law School, Los Angeles
Chair: Renee Cramer, Drake University
Participants:
Jean Carmalt, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
William Garriott, Drake University
Lauren McCarthy, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Danielle Rudes, George Mason University
Mihaela Serban, Ramapo College of New Jersey
Lori Sexton, University of Missouri, Kansas City
Michael Yarbrough, John Jay College (CUNY)
At this “cafe” style panel, you can move from table to table,
talking about the different approaches to undergraduate
teaching brought by each of the several participants. From
lobbying state legislators, to ride alongs with city police, faculty
in this cafe engage students in a wide range of experiential
learning. They use moot courts, mock trials, and a research lab
132 Saturday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.
to immerse their students in undergraduate legal education.
Primary Keyword: Teaching Law and Society
The Angola Prison Seminary: Effects of Faith-Based
Ministry on Identity Transformation, Desistance, and
Rehabilitation.
CRN: 27
Roundtable Session
Room: Studio 8
Chair: Benjamin Fleury-Steiner, University of Delaware
Saturday
Participants:
Michael Hallett, University of North Florida
Kelly Hannah-Moffat, University of Toronto
Byron Johnson, Baylor University
Jonathan Simon, University of California-Berkeley
Winnifred Sullivan, Indiana University Bloomington
Drawing from three years of on-site research, this panel utilizes
survey analysis and life-history interviews of inmates and
staff to explore the history, purpose and functioning of the
Prison Seminary and Inmate Minister programs at Louisiana
State Penitentiary (aka “Angola”). Life-history interviews
foregrounding religious faith as a means of coping with the
deprivations of long-term confinement, highlight deep-level
change in self-identity corresponding to lower rates of discipline
and higher functioning when controlling for other factors. The
research documents faith-based programming at Angola as
more than just “neoliberal responsibilization” or traditional
rehabilitation. Religious practice among inmates who freely
choose to participate proves to be dramatically transformative
in analyses utilizing structural equation modeling. Concerns
regarding the First Amendment, the dysfunctional state of
American corrections, and directions for future research will
also be addressed.
leave no time for families. The political assault on public
institutions like schools and municipal agencies are erasing
many mid-level jobs that provide stable employment for many
women. The cult of entrepreneurship that rewards those
with outsized egos who are not just willing to take risks, but
to advance themselves at the expense of others. The future
promise more of the same, with unstable business cycles, a
surge in contract workers (part of the new “sharing economy”),
and the strafing of safety-net programs. In this age, antidiscrimination laws and family leave policies aren’t enough. We
must rebuild gender equity from the ground up. Speakers in this
session will suggest how.
Primary Keyword: Feminist Jurisprudence
The Legal Regulation of Structural Violence
CRN: 23
Paper Session
Room: Studio 4
Chair/Disc: Zinaida Miller, McGill University
Primary Keyword: International Law and Politics
Presentations:
Anthropogenic Hunger: Climate-Ready Seeds and the
Pyramid of Assumptions in International Law
Anne Saab, Graduate Institute of International and
Development Studies
Between Structural Violence and Everyday Resistance:
Towards a Global Socio-legal Approach
Ali Malik, York University
Food and Financial Crises and Speculative Excesses:
Whither Regulation?
Anna Chadwick, European University Institute
Primary Keyword: Religion and Law
Love and Loathing: Distorted Images in the European
Mirror
Jason Beckett, American University in Cairo
The Coming Era of Gender Inequality
CRN: 7
Roundtable Session
Room: Studio 10
Participants:
June Carbone, University of Minnesota
Maxine Eichner, UNC School of Law
Robert Verchick, Loyola New Orleans Law School
This panel will address issues that arise when the economic
realities of tomorrow meet feminist legal theory. The
institutions that used to provide security to people and their
families are coming apart. The wage gap continues to escalate
as women lose out in the winner-take-all tournaments that
133 The Sociolegal Justice Project: Operationalizing Justice
in Sociolegal Scholarship, Local Government, Prison, and
Education
Paper Session
Room: Studio 5
Chair: Shannon Portillo, University of Kansas
Disc:
Lori Sexton, University of Missouri, Kansas City
Primary Keyword: Rights and Identities
Saturday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m. Presentations:
Nested Mentoring: Integrating Students into Sociolegal
Scholarship
Shannon Portillo, University of Kansas
Renee Dinsmore, University of Kansas
Erika Garcia Reyes, University of Kansas
Lori Sexton, University of Missouri, Kansas City
The Sociolegal Justice Project LSA Panel
Marah Schlingensiepen, University of Kansas
Shannon Portillo, University of Kansas
Lori Sexton, University of Missouri, Kansas City
The Sociolegal Justice Project: A Meta-Analysis of
Justice in Law & Society
Renee Dinsmore, University of Kansas
Erika Garcia Reyes, University of Kansas
Shannon Portillo, University of Kansas
Lori Sexton, University of Missouri, Kansas City
Sarah Smith, Elmhurst
The Sociolegal Justice Project: Operationalizing Justice
in Sociolegal Scholarship, Local Government, Prison,
and Education
Nicole Humphrey, University of Kansas
Shannon Portillo, University of Kansas
Lori Sexton, University of Missouri, Kansas City
residential elder care and it examines the important concept of
dignity.
Primary Keyword: Aging
Trafficking on Trial: Case Studies on Law in Practice
Paper Session
Room: Galvez
Chair/Disc: Anne Dölemeyer, Leipzig University
Primary Keyword: Ethnography
Presentations:
Emotions, Gender, and the Discovery of Suitable
Victims: How Police Officers Regulate through
Emotional Control
Julia Leser, Leipzig University
Gwénaëlle Mainsant, IRISSO - CNRS
On the Embodiment of Suffering in Court. The Effects
of Evidence Rules on Victims in Trials on Trafficking
Rebecca Pates, Universität Leipzig
Mathilde Darley, CNRS
Room: Balcony N
Trials and Tribulations: On the Difficulties of Observing
Court Cases
Mathilde Darley, CNRS
CRN: 41
Roundtable Session
Chair: Nina Kohn, Syracuse University
Participants:
Israel (Issi) Doron, University of Haifa
Sue Field, Western Sydney University
Helen Meenan, Kingston University, United Kingdom
This Roundtable explores the rights of older people and their
quality of care once they are living in a care home. It considers
how we can commence the journey towards a human rights
framework to ensure decent and dignified care for older people.
The participants are authors of “Towards Human Rights in
Residential Care for Older Persons: International Perspectives.”
The book takes a comparative approach to present and future
challenges facing the care home sector for older people. It
identifies how particular societies (Kenya, Egypt, Australia,
China, England, Israel, Japan, and the US) care for their older
and oldest people, whether demographic and economic change
has placed their systems under pressure and the role residential
elder care homes play in their culture. The Roundtable will
explore the extent to which constitutional or other rights form
a foundation to the regulatory and legislative structures to
Twenty Years Gone: Human Rights, Labor Rights and
International Trade
CRN: 8
Paper Session
Saturday
Towards Human Rights in Residential Care for Older
Persons: International Perspectives
Putting Numbers on the Unknown: What is counted in
Statistics on Trafficking cases and why?
Sarah Klosterkamp, University of Muenster
Julia Leser, Leipzig University
Room: Salon F
Chair/Disc: César F. Rosado Marzán, IIT-Chicago-Kent College of
Law
Primary Keyword: Labor
Presentations:
Global Minimum Wages: A Way Out of the Trade-Labor
Conundrum?
Ruben Garcia, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Labor Standards on Anti-Union Discrimination and
Retaliation: A Critical Review
Diane Frey, Murphy Institute, CUNY
134 Saturday 4:45 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.
Labour governance, east and west of the Atlantic
Michele Rioux, UQAM
Multinational Corporations, Transnational Supply
Chains and Mega-International Economic Agreements:
Causes and Effects Regarding Workers’ Power and
Workers’ Rights
Marley Weiss, University of Maryland Carey School of
Law
State Legitimation, Organized Youth Workers, and the
Politics of Children’s Rights in Peru
Mikaela Luttrell-Rowland, Franklin and Marshall
College
Writing Legal Histories Across Disciplinary and
Institutional Boundaries
CRN: 44
Roundtable Session
Room: Balcony K
Chair: Victoria Woeste, American Bar Foundation
Saturday
Participants:
Clara Altman, Federal Judicial Center
Adam Winkler, UCLA School of Law
Victoria Woeste, American Bar Foundation
Daniel Sharfstein, Vanderbilt University Law School
This session will explore different modes of writing, including
the use of narrative, biography, prosopography, and other
genres, that people use to speak across disciplinary audiences
and/or institutional directives. We will explore how questions
of audience and institutional constraints and mission shape
decisions about how to present historical subjects, stories,
evidence, and arguments. We will hear from a public historian
about the nexus of legal history, public history, and institutional
histories (institutional in the dual sense, meaning historical
narratives of institutions and historical narratives that are the
product of institutions in contrast to the product of individual
scholars). These scholars face choices about narrative styles
and prose in writing history for the public, just as academybased scholars encounter tensions between addressing their
specialized readers and reaching broader, general audiences.
Primary Keyword: Legal History
135 Sunday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.
S u n d ay J u n e 5
8 :1 5 a . m . - 10: 00 a . m .
A Racial Critique of State, Capital, and Rights
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 5
Primary Keyword: Social Theory and Law,
Presentations:
Civil Rights, Social Rights and Surplus Populations in the
Global Economy
Boatema Boateng, University of California, San Diego
Indigenous Rights, Neoliberal Dreams and Corporate
Communities in Native North America
Dian Million, University of Washington, Seattle
The Impossibility of“Owning, Knowing and Being” ?
Indigenous Dispossession in the postcolonial Australian
state
Mark Harris, University of British Columbia
Meaghan Katrak, Australian College of Applied
Psychology
The Postcolonial Capitalist Condition: Or, on the
Authority of Global Capital to Annihilate the Poor
Rashne Limki, University of Essex
Access to Justice: An International Examination of Law
and Politics
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 6
Primary Keyword: Access to Justice
Sunday
Presentations:
Marketing with Emotion: The Interplay Between
Emotional Narratives and Political Marketing in
Canadian Criminal Justice Legislation.
Grant Valentine, University of Toronto
Promotion of childhood and youth rights: the
University as transformation axis in Brazil
Ana Luiza Castro, Federal University of Minas Gerais
Daniella Borges, Federal University of Minas Gerais
Lucas Silva, Federal University of Minas Gerais
Punishing Addiction? Analysing the sentencing
approach towards ‘user-dealers’ of heroin and crack
cocaine in England and Wales.
Leah Moyle, Royal Holloway, University of London
136 The rights of drug users mothers and the Statute of
Children and Adolescents in Belo Horizonte - Brazil
Cibele Aimée Souza, Universidade Federal de Minas
Gerais
Grayce Kellen Pereira Assis, Universidade Federal de
Minas Gerais
Grazzielli Gonçalves Gozer, Universidade Federal de
Minas Gerais
Isabella Domiciano Lima, Universidade Federal de
Minas Gerais
Adriana Goulart de Sena Orsini, Universidade Federal
de Minas Gerais
Luiza Berlini Dornas Ribeiro, Universidade Federal de
Minas Gerais
African American Fraternities and Sororities and the Civil
Rights Movement
Roundtable Session
Room: Bacchus
Chair/Disc: Gregory Parks, Wake Forest University School of Law
Participants:
Marcia Hernandez, University of the Pacific
The common narrative about African Americans’ quest for social
justice and Civil Rights during the Twentieth Century consists,
largely, of men and women working through organizations to
bring about change. The typical list of organizations includes,
inter alia, the NAACP, the NAACP-LDF, the National Urban
League, the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and the
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. What is almost
never included in this list is African American collegiate-based
fraternities. However, at the turn of the Twentieth Century
emerged a small group of organizations founded on personal
excellence, the development and sustaining of fictive-kinship
ties, and racial uplift. Given these organizations’ almost
immediate creation of highly-functioning alumni chapters in
cities around the United States, members of these organizations
who were college graduates could continue their work in
actualizing their respective organizations’ ideals.
Primary Keyword: Race, Critical Race Research
Alternative Models for Social Justice Lawyering: Looking
Backwards, Looking Forward
Paper Session
Room: Balcony I
Chair/Disc: Scott Cummings, University of California, Los Angeles
Primary Keyword: Access to Justice
Sunday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m. Presentations:
Locating Social Along the Continuum of Legal Services
Luz Herrera, UCLA School of Law
Looking Backward to Look Forward: What I Learned as
a Public Interest Lawyer and Clinician
Louise Trubek, University of Wisconsin
Public and Private Models for Public Interest Law
Funding
Kathryn Sabbeth, University of North Carolina School
of Law
Tipping the Scale: The Role of the Nonprofit Sliding
Scale Law Firm in the Delivery of Legal Services
Mr Mitch, University of Wisconsin Law School
When Access to Justice Brings About Systematic
Change
Rebecca Sharpless, University of Miami School of Law
AMR: Marie Gottschalk - “Caught: The Prison State and
the Lockdown of American Politics”
Author Meets Reader (AMR) Session
Room: Salon E
Author: Marie Gottschalk, University of Pennsylvania
Chair: Mona Lynch, University of California, Irvine
Readers:
Andrea Armstrong, Loyola University (New Orleans)
College of Law
Katherine Beckett, University of Washington
Jennifer Chacon, University of California, Irvine School
of Law
Mona Lynch, University of California, Irvine
Dorothy Roberts, University of Pennsylvania
Jonathan Simon, University of California-Berkeley
In this bracing appraisal of the politics of penal reform,
Gottschalk exposes the broader pathologies in American politics
that are preventing the country from solving its most pressing
problems, including the stranglehold that neoliberalism exerts
on public policy. She concludes by sketching out a promising
alternative path to begin dismantling the carceral state.
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
Beyond Protected Classes
Paper Session
Room: Balcony K
Chair/Disc: Jessica Clarke, University of Minnesota
Primary Keyword: Rights and Identities
Presentations:
Choosing Equality
Stephen Rich, USC Gould School of Law
Protected Class Gatekeeping
Jessica Clarke, University of Minnesota
Rationalizing the Workplace: Title VII’s Lasting
Contribution to American Society
Vicki Schultz, Yale Law School
What Happened to Hernandez?
Brian Soucek, UC Davis School of Law
Collateral Consequences, Misdemeanor Justice, and the
“Micro” Dimension of Mass Punishment
Paper Session
Room: Balcony M
Chair: Gabriel Chin, UC Davis School of Law
Disc:
Alec Ewald, University of Vermont
Jenny Roberts, American University, Washington College of Law
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
Sunday
The huge prison buildup of the past four decades has few
defenders today, yet reforms to reduce the number of people in
U.S. jails and prisons have been remarkably modest. Meanwhile,
a carceral state has sprouted in the shadows of mass
imprisonment, extending its reach far beyond the prison gate.
It includes not only the country’s vast archipelago of jails and
prisons but also the growing range of penal punishments and
controls that lie in the never-never land between prison and full
citizenship, from probation and parole to immigrant detention,
felon disenfranchisement, and extensive lifetime restrictions
on sex offenders. As it sunders families and communities and
reworks conceptions of democracy, rights, and citizenship, this
ever-widening carceral state poses a formidable political and
social challenge.
Politics” (Princeton University Press, 2015), Marie Gottschalk
examines why the carceral state, with its growing number
of outcasts, remains so tenacious in the United States. She
analyzes the shortcomings of the two dominant penal reform
strategies-one focused on addressing racial disparities, the
other on seeking bipartisan, race-neutral solutions centered on
reentry, justice reinvestment, and reducing recidivism.
In “Caught: The Prison State and the Lockdown of American
137 Sunday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.
Presentations:
Barbers and Caregivers: A Close Study of State
Licensure Restrictions Imposed on People with Criminal
Convictions
Alec Ewald, University of Vermont
Collateral Consequences and the Bill of Rights:
Rethinking Ex Post Facto and the Grand Jury Clause
Gabriel Chin, UC Davis School of Law
Defining “Wrongful Conviction” in Misdemeanor
Arrests and Prosecutions
Jenny Roberts, American University, Washington
College of Law
Discretionary Disenfranchisement: The Case of Legal
Financial Obligations
Marc Meredith, UPenn
Michael Morse, Harvard University
Framing Broken Windows: Framing, Ethical Blindness,
Heuristics, and Misdemeanor Defense Advocacy
Babe Howell, CUNY School of Law
The Small Pieces of the Carceral State: Fragmented
Government and Prison Expansion
David Dagan, Johns Hopkins University
Collective Action: Conditions and Constraints
Paper Session
Room: Bonaparte
The Right to the City: Insurgent Cities and Urban
Citizenship in the 21st Century
Rafaela Moreira, Universidade Federal Fluminense
Roberto Fragale Filho, Universidade Federal
Fluminense
James Holston, University of California in Berkeley
Constitutional Interpretation and Theorizing Rights
Paper Session
Room: Galvez
Chair/Disc: Tamara Piety, University of Tulsa College of Law
Primary Keyword: Constitutional Law and Constitutionalism
Presentations:
Belonging, Place and Home: How Homeowner’s
Associations Harm Individuals
Jeff Kleeger, FGCU
Dilemmas of the New Originalism
John Valauri, Chase College of Law, Northern Kentucky
University
On the Categorical Approach to Free Speech
Wayne Batchis, University of Delaware
The Right That Undermines All the Other Rights:
Indigents’ Sixth Amendment Right to Appointed
Counsel
Russell Christopher, University of Tulsa College of Law
Chair/Disc: John Douard, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Contemporary Issues in Criminal Justice and Punishment
Primary Keyword: Social Movements and Legal Mobilization
Room:Jackson
Presentations:
Becoming Black Political Subjects: Movements and
Ethno-Racial Rights in Colombia and Brazil
Tianna Paschel, University of California - Berkeley
Chair/Disc: Jona Goldschmidt, Loyola University Chicago - Dept of Criminal Justice and Criminology
Sunday
The CIA on Trial and the Necessity Defense: Civil
Disobedience as Political Theater
Jonathan Markovitz, University of California, Irvine,
School of Law
The Global and Local of Feminist Law-making: Locating
the Discursive Limits of the Gendered ‘Workplace”
in Transnational Feminist Movement and the Sexual
Harassment at Workplace Law in India
Jhuma Sen, O. P. Jindal Global University
138 Paper Session
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
Presentations:
Better Late than Never: The Effect of Time of Recall on
Eyewitness Identification Accuracy of Criminals
Melissa Baker, Appalachian State University
Verne Bacharach, Appalachian State University
Disentangling Flight Risk from Danger
Lauryn Gouldin, Syracuse University College of law
Sunday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m. Do We Need Criminal Justice Reform or a Reframe?
Considering Local Cultural and Indigenous Community
Responsive Justice Approaches
April Petillo, Kansas State University
Rebecca A. Chaisson, Southern University at New
Orleans
Jane Eggers, Capital Post-Conviction Project of
Louisiana
April Petillo, Kansas State University
Chair/Disc: Adriaan Bedner, Leiden University
Primary Keyword: Courts And Trials
Presentations:
Explaining non-Dissenting Judicial Opinions
Igor De Lazari, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro
Antonio Sepulveda, Universidade Federal do Rio de
Janeiro
Fact Investigation Failure, Wrongful Convictions, and
Implications for Defending Poor People
Rosa Greenbaum, University of California, Irvine,
Dept. of Criminology, Law & Society
Modern Pretrial Evidence Access Undermines the
Criminal Trial—and the Rationales for Coercive Plea
Bargaining
Darryl Brown, University of Virginia
Police and Prosecutorial Discretion, Proportionality and
Constitutionalism in Criminal Justice
Alana Klein, McGill University School of Law
Reconsidering law vs. politics: repeat players, nonaccountable bureaucracies and access to justice
Juliana Ponde Fonseca, Yale Law School
Contemporary Issues in Human Rights and the Law
Paper Session
Room:Regent
Chair/Disc: Fulvia Staiano, UCC Cork
Primary Keyword: Human Rights
Presentations:
Beyond Visiocracy: The Construction of Identities in
Human Rights Discourses
Elisabeth Roy Trudel, University of Western Australia
Dignity and Freedom of Speech: The Controversial
Relationship between Two Liberal Concepts
Clarissa Gross, São Paulo University
Fundamental Rights and Labor
CRN: 8
Paper Session
Room: Salon F
Chair/Disc: James Pope, Rutgers Law School - Newark
Primary Keyword: Labor
Presentations:
Decolonizing Labor Law
Adelle Blackett, Faculty of Law, McGill University
Friedrichs v. California Teachers Association: How
Did We Get Here, and What’s Next for Union Fees
Litigation?
Charlotte Garden, Seattle University School of Law
Human Rights Obligations in Investor-State Contracts:
Reconciling the Investors’ Legitimate Expectations with
the Public Interest
Enrique Boone Barrera, Centre for International
Governance Innovation (CIGI)
Internet and Society in Brazil: Empirical Studies
Vulnerable Subjects in the Jurisprudence of the
European Court of Human Rights
Fulvia Staiano, UCC Cork
Room: Studio 6
Courts and Judges
Paper Session
CRN: 37
Roundtable Session
Chair: Danilo Doneda, Ministry of Justice
Participants:
Francisco Brito Cruz, InternetLab
Ivan Franco, InternetLab
Pedro Ramos, InternetLab
Mariana Valente, University of São Paulo
Rafael Zanatta, InternetLab
Sunday
War Refugees? Climate Refugees? Migrants?
Challenges to the World’s Moral and Legal Obligations
Charlotte Lülf, Institute for International Law of Peace
and Armed Conflict, Ruhr-University of Bochum/
Germany
Reconstruction and Workers’ Rights
Rebecca Zietlow, University of Toledo College of Law
Room:Iberville
139 Sunday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.
This session proposal aims to present the main findings of
different empirical research projects that provide a framework
for understanding the interaction between Brazilian society and
the Internet. These empirical research projects focused on the
following topics (i) freedom of speech and humor on the web;
(ii) gender, identity and internet platforms; (iii) sharing economy
and its regulatory challenges in Brazil; (iv) transparency and
online channels of participation; (v) net neutrality; (vi) state
surveillance. This session will take Brazilian society and the
Internet as a case study to promote dialogue among academics
and policymakers from other legal cultures.
Primary Keyword: Technology
Interpreting ‘Influence’
Paper Session
Room: Salon H-G
Chair: Chloe Kennedy, University of Edinburgh
Disc:
Stephen Bogle, University of Glasgow
Primary Keyword: Social Theory and Law,
Presentations:
Influence in Legal Studies
Daniel Carr, University of Edinburgh
On the Circumstantial
Jen Hendry, University of Leeds
Undue Influence and the Boundaries of the Self
Susanna Blumenthal, University of Minnesota
‘And if it were not true it would still seem true’: is the
question of influence in legal history a poetic one?
Zoe Sutherland, University of St Andrews
Law and Ideology in Post-War America
CRN: 44
Paper Session
Sunday
Room: Studio 1
Chair/Disc: Laura Weinrib, University of Chicago
Primary Keyword: Legal History
Presentations:
Grasping at Origins: Shifting the Conversation in the
Historical Study of Human Rights
Christopher Roberts, Univ. of Minnesota Law School
The Influence of Law and Economics on Supreme Court
Antitrust Jurisprudence: An Empirical Study
Camden Hutchison, University of Wisconsin-Madison
140 “No Member of the Court:” Desegregation Rhetoric
and Judicial Decisions in the 1970s
Camille Walsh, University of Washington Bothell
Law on the Borderline of Belonging and Exclusion
CRN: 29
Roundtable Session
Room: Balcony L
Chair: Kimberly Mutcherson, Rutgers University School of Law-Camden
Participants:
Khiara Bridges, Boston University School of Law
D’Lane R. Compton, The University of New Orleans
Martha Ertman, University of Maryland Law School
Michele Goodwin, University of California - Irvine
School of Law
Maya Manian, University of San Francisco School of
Law
Pluralism challenges boundaries by resisting either/or views
of relationships or identities. Adoption and reproductive
technologies create situations in which a child can have
multiple mothers -- genetic, gestational, and social -- which
requires law to draw boundaries to distinguish between
legal and biological parenthood. International adoption and
reproductive technology expand the inquiry to citizenship.
Boundaries between so-called good and bad mothers further
shape social and legal parenthood. Commodification and
reproductive justice scholarship map these evolving boundaries
and propose improvements that reconceive parenting,
especially motherhood, across boundaries of race, class,
sexual orientation, marital status, age, and disability. This
roundtable explores ways to create a less fractured discourse on
procreation and procreation and parenting as a matter of legal
and social concern.
Primary Keyword: Bioethics, Biotechnology and the Law
New Developments in Civil Justice Systems
CRN: 10
Paper Session
Room: Studio 10
Chair: Herbert Kritzer, University of Minnesota Law School
Disc:
Tomohiko Maeda, Meijo University
Primary Keyword: Civil Justice and Disputing
Presentations:
Law on the Books and Foreclosures in Action:
Adherence to Foreclosure Formalities During the
Foreclosure Crisis
Emily Taylor Poppe, Cornell University
Sunday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m. The Future of Private Enforcement of Civil Rights
Lynda Dodd, City College of New York
Uncertainty and Civil Procedure
Adam Muchmore, Penn State Law
Police As the Enforcer and the Enforced
Paper Session
Room: Studio 9
Chair: Mari Hirayama, Hakuoh University
Disc:
Setsuo Miyazawa, University of California Hastings School of Law; Aoyama Gakuin University Law School
Primary Keyword: Policing
Presentations:
From Selma to Ferguson: The Voting Rights Act as a
Blueprint for Police Reform.
Stephen Rushin, University of Alabama School of Law
I Know What Happened Establishing Epistemic Stance
and Status in Police Interrogations
Gary David, Bentley University
Law Enforcement Use of Technological Searches:
Dollars and Sense
Anne Boustead, Pardee RAND Graduate School
The Role of Compliance and Social Desirability in the
Decision to Falsely Confess
Alexandria Mackinnon, Appalachian State University
Alissa Anderson, University of Toledo
Twila Wingrove, Appalachian State University
Race and Place
Paper Session
Room: Studio 5
Chair/Disc: Victoria Reyes, Bryn Mawr College
Primary Keyword: Race, Critical Race Research
Pockets of Dominance: Whiteness, Mentoring and
Obstacles to Equity in the Academy
Karla Erickson, Grinnell College
“Being” Illegal: The Legal Regulation of Race and the
Occupation of Space
Anette Sikka, University of Illinois Springfield
Reflections on Methods of Empirically Studying
Collaboration, Deliberation, Democracy and Participation
Roundtable Session
Room: Galerie 4
Chair: Amy Cohen, Ohio State University
Participants:
Bronwen Morgan, UNSW School of Law
Linda Mulcahy, London School of Economics and
Political Science
Annelise Riles, Cornell Law School
Brishen Rogers, Temple University Beasley School of
Law
Jenny Scott, University of Glasgow, UK
Annelise Riles recently argued that today “collaboration [has
become] its own kind of constitutional moment, a different
form of politics - one that is constitutive of a new set of ethical,
social, political, and institutional relations, albeit one deeply
implicated in the economics of the moment, just as pluralism
was for a previous generation.” This roundtable gathers scholars
to discuss methods of empirically studying such practices of
collaboration, democracy, and participation in both dispute
resolution and economic exchange-as these practices variously
represent efforts to improve existing legal and economic
institutions, radicalize or supplant such institutions, or offer
alternative forms of economic and legal organization but
without necessarily upending dominant statist and capitalist
frames. The roundtable explores ways in which the courtroom
and the jury system could be characterized as democratic
spaces, as well as social activism and social enterprise in
economic exchange including how concepts such as profit,
equity and debt are configured by actors with commitments to
civic participation, grassroots innovation, and economic justice.
Ultimately, the roundtable asks how diverse methodologies
can help the researcher understand and assess the ways in
which democratic practices of dispute resolution, law, and
economic justice move, however piecemeal (or not), beyond
neoliberalism.
Primary Keyword: Economy, Business and Society
Sexy Business: Regulating Non-Normative Sexual
Communities and Practices
Sunday
Presentations:
Neighborhood Effects on Drug Abuse for Youth in Hong
Kong
Qin Zhou, City University of Hong Kong, School of Law
White Space: Self Defense Laws and Neighborhood
Segregation
Addie Rolnick, UNLV Williams S. Boyd School of Law
Paper Session
Room: Studio 8
141 Sunday 8:15 a.m. - 10:00 a.m.
Chair/Disc: Kyle Kirkup, University of Toronto Faculty of Law
Chair/Disc: Liz Chiarello, Saint Louis University
Primary Keyword: Gender and Sexuality
Primary Keyword: Health and Medicine
Presentations:
Could There Be a Hearsay Exception for Sex Workers?
Helene Love, University of Toronto
Presentations:
Doing Harm: When Physicians and other “Helping
Professionals” Report New and Expecting Mothers to
the Police
Jeanne Flavin, Fordham University
Don’t Be a Drag, Just Be a Queen—How Drag Queens
Protect their Intellectual Property without Law.
Eden Sarid, University of Toronto
The ‘Everyday’ Escort in the Shadow of the Law:
an Examination of Legal Consciousness and the
Effects of the New Canadian Sex Work Legislation on
Independent Escorts
Andrea Sterling, University of Toronto
Who’s Your Daddy? The Income Tax Obligations of Sex
Workers in Canada
Megan Ross, University of Toronto
Punishing Disease: HIV and the Criminalization of
Sickness
Trevor Hoppe, University at Albany, SUNY
When the Solution Becomes the Problem: Prescription
Drug Misuse as a Case of “Iatrogenic Spillover”
Liz Chiarello, Saint Louis University
Social Media, the Internet, and the Law II
Under-Recognized Struggles in Old Age Policy
Room: Galerie 2
Room: Balcony N
Chair/Disc: Aaron Smyth, University of California, Berkeley
Chair/Disc: Susan Cancelosi, Wayne State University Law School
Primary Keyword: Technology
Primary Keyword: Aging
Presentations:
@POTUS: The Bully Pulpit in the 21st Century
Aniket Kesari, University of California, Berkeley
Presentations:
Care for the Elderly and Succession Disputes
Shiri Regev-Messalem, Bar Ilan University
CRN: 37
Paper Session
Discovering the Basis for Internet Jurisdiction: Patterns
of Conflict of Law Resolutions and Trends in United
States and European Union
Reirui Ri, Stanford University
Gender Online. Human Flaws, Absent Regulation, or
Media Scapegoating – Time for Change?
Kim Barker, University of Wolverhampton
Sunday
Medicine, Law, and the Lash – Medical Discipline in the
Australian Colonies
Catherine Kelly, University of Western Australia
Same-Sex Male Social Dating and Encounter Networks:
Identity Formation and Protection
Chris Ashford, Northumbria University
Kevin Brown, Queens University Belfast
The Criminalization of Medicine, the Medicalization of
Crime: Crossing Institutional Boundaries in Healthcare
and Criminal Justice
CRN: 9
Paper Session
Room: Studio 3
142 CRN: 41
Paper Session
LGBT Older Adults, Caregiving, and Chosen Family
Nancy Knauer, Temple Law School
Life Course and Turning Points for Risk of Elder
Financial Exploitation
Julie Brancale, Florida State University
Thomas Blomberg, Florida State University
Brae Campion, Florida State University
George Pesta, Florida State University
J.W. Andrew Ranson, Florida State University
Say What? The Affordable Care Act, Medicare and
Hearing Aids
Mary Helen McNeal, Syracuse University College of
Law
The Older Woman Worker in Swedish Labour Law –
Intersectional Perspectives
Jenny Julén Votinius, Faculty of Law, Lund University
Sunday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. ‘Africa’ As a New Frontier? Lawyers & Extractive
Economies (I)
Room: Studio 4
precisely are the constituting elements of the heteronormative?
What is the part of law, legal regimes and the courts? What
is the role of the heteronormative in the market, or what is
its value? How and in what conditions do practices aimed at
subversion work? What would a post-heteronormative look
like?
Chair: Sara Dezalay, Goethe University
Primary Keyword: Gender and Sexuality
CRN: 13
Paper Session
Disc:
Fabio de Sa e Silva, Institute of Applied Economic Research (Ipea); Harvard Law School’s Center on the Legal Profession
Presentations:
Mapping for Business and Human Rights
Patrick Keenan, University of Illinois College of Law
The entanglement of South African law firms and
African mining
Jonathan Klaaren, University of the Witwatersrand
Towards Extractive Justice in EU-African Relations
Hanri Mostert, University of Cape Town
Cheri-Leigh Young, University of Cape Town
S u n d ay J u n e 5
1 0 :1 5 a . m . - 1 2 : 0 0 p . m .
(De)constructing the Heteronormative: Conversations
and Confrontations on Law and Society
Roundtable Session
Room: Balcony J
Chair: Grietje Baars, City University London
Joanna Vieira Noronha, Harvard Law School
The heteronormative can be defined as that set of legal rules,
social norms, prevailing moral tendencies and ethical ‘moods’
that together form the ideology of the heteropatriarchy,
which can be defined as is the systemic privilege of the (elite,
white, able-bodied) male heterosexual in (global) society. In
this roundtable we seek to debate the nature, characteristics,
workings and life-cycle of the various elements of the
heteronormative, and which may be found in practices,
policies or regimes that perpetuate, legitimate or reconstitute
the heteropatriarchy on its existing or renewed terms. What
CRN: 33
Author Meets Reader (AMR) Session
Room: Salon D
Author: Hiroshi Fukurai, University of California Santa Cruz
Matthew Wilson, University of Akron School of Law
Readers:
Nancy Marder, IIT Chicago-Kent College of Law
Satoru Shinomiya, Kokugakuin University Law School
Neil Vidmar, Duke Law
The successes seen by Japan’s quasi-jury system combined
with societal and legal challenges encountered by individuals
seeking recourse against powerful companies and the Japanese
government give rise to the need for more lay participation in
the civil realm. This work closely examines this need in various
contexts including injuries suffered at the hands of the recent
Fukushima nuclear disaster. It also focuses on a forgotten
era in Okinawa in which Japan actually conducted civil jury
trials. During this era, a pattern emerged in which women
plaintiffs consistently won legal disputes against multinational
corporations and a local electric company. Despite this success,
the civil jury was quickly scrapped. This precedent stands as an
important illustration to Japan and the rest of the world.
By way of background, Japan lagged the rest of the world in
terms of citizen participation in the judicial process for over
sixty years. In fact, it was the only G-8 nation without a citizen
participation system in either criminal or civil trials. As part of
a historic internal transformation of its legal system though,
this drastically changed on May 21, 2009, when Japan officially
introduced citizen participation into a select category of
criminal trials pursuant to the “Saiban-in ho” or Act Concerning
Participation of Lay Assessors in Criminal Trials (the “Lay Judge
Act”). As part of its new “saiban-in seido” or lay judge system,
Japan now conscripts registered voters to serve on mixed
criminal tribunals comprised of lay citizens and professional
judges. By design, the Lay Judge Act purposefully limits lay
participation to involvement in select serious criminal cases
only.
Sunday
Participants:
Libby Adler, Northeastern University School of Law
Alejandra Azuero Quijano, Harvard Law SchoolUniversity of Chicago
Grietje Baars, City University London
Ivana Isailovic, McGill Faculty of Law
Dianne Otto, Melbourne Law School
Joanna Vieira Noronha, Harvard Law School
AMR Salon Session: Matthew J. Wilson, Hiroshi Fukurai,
and Takashi Maruta - “Japan and Civil Jury Trials: The
Convergence of Forces”
Albeit early in the process, Japan’s lay judge system has realized
substantial progress, altered attitudes, and exudes a promising
outlook. Before adoption, some members of the public and
143 Sunday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
Sunday
Japanese legal community predicted quick failure based on the
perceived incompetence of lay judges, public hostility to the
idea of jury participation, and lack of tradition. Others voiced
skepticism that the system was doomed because the lay judges
would lack adequate legal training, suffer from insufficient
knowledge, and rely too heavily on emotion and bias. Contrary
to these predictions, Japanese citizens have seriously embraced
their new responsibilities and positively contributed to the
judicial process. The educational outcomes of lay service
in serious criminal trials have been invaluable as well. Not
only has the level of satisfaction in participation among lay
judges reached 95%, but also the lay judge system has gained
acceptance from both the public and the government.
Given the high interest in Japan regarding lay participation
together with the substantial impact that certain civil trials can
have on society, the current environment in Japan is perfect
for seriously considering the expansion of citizen participation
into the legal decision-making process in civil trials. Civil dispute
resolution plays a vital role in shaping any society. In fact, it
constitutes the core of any legal system and popular base. In
civil law systems, citizen participation is alien to many forms
of dispute resolution, particularly civil litigation. Consistent
with this concept, Japan does not presently have a jury system
or allow lay participation in civil cases. Instead, professional
judges conduct Japanese civil litigation without juries over the
course of months, if not years. However, having embarked on a
course that encourages civic engagement and seeks for greater
transparency and access to the judicial system, Japan would be
well served to extend citizen participation into the civil justice
system. Opening certain civil trials to lay participation in lawsuits
having major societal impact is the next logical step for Japan
as it continues to advance the goals underlying its ongoing
legal reforms. These lawsuits might involve governmental
misconduct, administrative dispositions, environmental
disasters such as the recent meltdown at the nuclear reactors in
Fukushima, and other disputes that significantly affect society as
a whole.
Author: Richard McAdams, University of Chicago
Chair: tom ginsburg, University of Chicago, Law School
Readers:
Kenneth Dau-Schmidt, Indiana University Bloomington
- School of Law
Jack Knight, Duke University
Janice Nadler, American Bar Foundation &
Northwestern Law School
Daria Roithmayr, University of Southern California
A central question for socio-legal studies is why people obey
the law (to the extent they do), or stated more generally,
what causal role the law plays in people’s behavior. The social
sciences are preoccupied with a debate between two dominant
answers: that people are motivated to defer to law’s perceived
legitimacy and that law deters behavior by threatening
sanctions. In The Expressive Powers of Law, Richard McAdams
(the Bernard D. Meltzer Professor at the University of Chicago
Law School) fundamentally shifts the debate by offering a
third explanation of how law creates compliance: through its
expressive power. McAdams identifies and investigates two
sources of law’s expressive influence, its ability to coordinate
behavior and its ability to inform beliefs.
AMR: Richard H. McAdams - “The Expressive Powers of
Law”
McAdams first claims that law has a coordination power in
situations where people seek order, i.e., where, despite some
level of conflict, they share a mutual interest in limiting the
costs of conflict. Traffic regulations, for example, coordinate
behavior by making salient one way of avoiding an accident
– as by observing lane boundaries or having drivers on one
road yield to those on another – where both drivers prefer
having priority over the other but also strongly wish to avoid a
collision. McAdams generalizes from traffic to many domains
including property disputes, constitutions, and international
law. Second, McAdams claims that law has an information
power. Anti-smoking laws, for example, reveal information
about public attitudes against smoking and the health risks of
second-hand exposure. This information causes individuals to
anticipate greater reputational risks to legal non-compliance
and greater benefits from the private enforcement of law, both
of which produce greater legal obedience. McAdams generalizes
from smoking regulation to other legal realms, exploring the
information communicated by mandatory seat belt rules, antidiscrimination law, and the repeal of unenforceable sodomy
laws, as well as discussing the informational importance of
constitutional doctrine against government endorsement of
religion. In general, McAdams claims that expressive power
explains the law’s sometimes puzzling efficacy, as when certain
tribunals – the International Court of Justice, medieval Icelandic
courts, mining camp courts, pirate arbitration, etc. – are able
to resolve disputes effectively even though they lack coercive
power or (at least initially) legitimacy.
Room: Salon E
The issue of legal compliance – why people obey law – is
fundamental to socio-legal studies and public policy. Yet the
With five years of intensive preparatory activities and six years
of actual lay judge trial experience under its belt, it is an ideal
time for Japan to expand lay participation into the civil realm.
With this expansion, Japan can foster more accountability,
enhance democratic engagement, generate positive change
in society, and fully achieve the objectives of its recent
monumental legal reforms. Also, the Japanese judiciary is
prepared for a progressive expansion of the system given that
criminal lay judge trials have taken root and started bearing
fruit.
Primary Keyword: Lay Participation, Juries and Other Forms of
Lay Participation
Author Meets Reader (AMR) Session
144 Sunday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. dominant debate between legitimacy and deterrence (largely
between sociology and psychology on the one hand and
economics on the other) neglects and distracts from the fact
that law influences behavior in myriad ways, and that the most
important mechanism may vary from context to context. Too
often, those advocating the causal significance of legitimacy
infer empirical support for their position merely from the
fact that law affects behavior in the absence of sanctions
(and those who advocate the causal significance of sanctions
tend to think that any and all compliance is evidence of their
position). Yet where sanction-less law does affect behavior
(as it often does), the best explanation might be not be
legitimacy but the expressive powers McAdams identifies, as
he claims in certain examples. Overall, McAdams advocates a
pluralistic understanding of law’s effects, one that embraces
legitimacy and sanctions, as well as expression (coordination
and information), and also important interactions between the
mechanisms. These ideas are a challenge to the way most sociolegal scholars think about the fundamental issue of obedience.
The proposed panel of prominent scholars will offer a genuinely
interdisciplinary discussion of The Expressive Powers of Law,
making the panel of broad interest to anyone interested in how
law influences behavior. Dau-Schmidt is a legal economist who
is entirely conversant with the conventional sanction-centered
view that economics has of law, but also wrote a path-breaking
article on the economically heterodox idea that law also
influences behavior by shaping individual preferences. Knight
is a political scientist specializing in law, institutions, and social
theory, who has written on the legitimacy of courts and the
coordination theory on which McAdams relies. Nadler is a legal
psychologist who has written extensively on the psychology
of legitimacy. Roithmayr is a critical race scholar who uses
evolutionary game theory to explain institutional racism, well
positioned to assess the game theory in McAdams’ book and
the claims about the expressive effects of anti-discrimination
law.
Primary Keyword: Social Theory and Law
Big Data and New Technologies in Policing and Courts
CRN: 37
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 2
Primary Keyword: Technology
Presentations:
Can Big Data Analytics Predict Policing Practice?
Janet Chan, UNSW Australia
Lyria Bennett Moses, UNSW Australia
Hearing Voices: Audio Forensics and Expert Listening in
the Legal Arena
Michael Mopas, Carleton University
Narrowing the View: An Analysis of Initial Canadian
Reports on Police Body Worn Cameras
Amanda Glasbeek, York University
Mariful Alam, York University
Katrin Roots, York University
Police Contestation of the Use of Big Data
Sarah Brayne, University of Texas at Austin
Policing as (Monitored) Performance: Police Body
Cameras, Citizen Video, and New Visibility
Bryce C. Newell, Tilburg Institute for Law, Technology,
and Society (TILT), Tilburg University
Bioethics and Health Care
Paper Session
Room: Balcony K
Chair: Elaine Draper, California State University, Los Angeles
Disc:
Maya Sabatello, Columbia University
Primary Keyword: Bioethics, Biotechnology and the Law
Presentations:
Devising an Ethico-Legal Framework for Cross-Border
Use of Healthcare Data
John Rumbold, Kingston University London
Barbara Pierscionek, Kingston University London
Disposable People: Physician-Assisted Suicide and
Vulnerable Patients
Browne Lewis, Cleveland Marshall College of Law
Equality of Resources and Compulsory Licensing of
Cognitive Enhancement Drugs
Denis Silva, Federal University of Juiz de Fora - Brazil
Praemeditatio malorum: Advance Care Planning, SelfNarration, and the Death Gaze
Thomas Hayes, Cardiff University
Can Restorative Justice Help To Dismantle the School to
Prison Pipeline?
Sunday
Chair/Disc: Aaron Smyth, University of California, Berkeley
Community Technology, Community Privacy: How
Detroit Community Technology Project Negotiates
Surveillance and Social Control
Larisa Mann, McGannon Center for Communication
Research, Fordham University
Roundtable Session
Room: Balcony I
145 Sunday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
Chair: Mary Louise Frampton, Berkeley Law
Participants:
Danfeng Koon, UC Berkeley School of Educiation
Margaret Olmos, Louisiana Board of Education
Recovery School Districtui
Daniel Perlstein, UC Berkeley School of Education
Laura Pulido, UC Berkeley School of Educiation
This proposed roundtable will be a conversation between the
Assistant Superintendent For Student Programs at the Louisiana
Board of Education Recovery School District and a group of
researchers at the University of California at Berkeley in the
fields of law and education who are engaged in an empirical
research project on the impact of restorative justice approaches
in schools in California’s Central Valley. The UC Berkeley
researchers are studying not only how restorative justice
may affect suspension and expulsions rates and the school to
prison pipeline but also what conditions can enhance a sense
of belonging among students and foster school-wide culture
change. The law professor member of the UC Berkeley research
team has presented at prior Law and Society Association
meetings on her research on the effectiveness of restorative
justice approaches in certain Bay Area schools. This research
is more expansive and includes educational partners in the
academy and in schools.
Primary Keyword: Race and Ethnicity
Capitalism, Morality and the Rule of Law
Paper Session
Room: Bacchus
Challenging the Criminological Hegemony
Roundtable Session
Room: Galerie 5
Chair: Alessandro De Giorgi, Department of Justice Studies, San Jose State University
Participants:
Laurence Pedroni, San Jose State University
While radical criminology is not the pariah of the discipline it
once was, there is still only a relatively small space in which
such scholarship can be heard. Mainstream theoretical
perspectives still dominate the criminological landscape, as
they have since the field’s inception, forcing radical scholars
and policymakers onto the fringes of academia where their
work is less likely to influence the epistemology and politics
of contemporary criminology, both within academia and in
the realm of policy. This roundtable seeks to discuss ways in
which mainstream criminological discourse can be challenged
and new critical spaces be broken open in an attempt to make
more radical perspectives heard. Participants in this roundtable
will draw on their research in areas such as immigration, mass
incarceration, prison reform, alternatives to incarceration, social
control, human rights, and inequality in an attempt to challenge
mainstream discourses.
Primary Keyword: Language And Discourse, Challenging the
Secularity of Law: Case Studies from Australia, Egypt,
and the United States
Paper Session
Chair/Disc: Edward Cohen, Westminster College
Room: Galerie 4
Primary Keyword: Economy, Global Economy and Law
Chair: Matthew Scherer, George Mason University
Presentations:
State Capitalism: Challenges Faced by the Multilateral
Trading System
Luyao Che, The University of Nottingham
Disc:
Sunday
The Moral Economy of Markets: Desert, Competence
and Trust
Tamar Kricheli-Katz, Tel Aviv University
The Nineteenth Century American Legal Profession and
the Market: Economic Trust in Theory and Practice
Justin Simard, Baldy Center for Law and Social Policy
Michael Halberstam, SUNY Buffalo Law School
What Exactly Is It About the Rule of Law That Seems so
Necessary to Capitalism’s Success?: The Rule of Law,
Economics & the (Re)Production of Markets.
Christopher May, Lancaster University
146 Winnifred Sullivan, Indiana University Bloomington
Primary Keyword: Religion and Law
Presentations:
“Starve Them Out”: From Religious Liberty to Human
Rights during the MOVE Blockade
Richard Kent Evans, Temple University
Identities that Matter: Baha’i Legal Activism in the Era
of Minority Rights
Mona Oraby, Northwestern University
Religion in the Context of Transnational Discrimination
and Human Rights Law
Farrah Raza, Kings College London
Sunday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. The (In) Visible Boundaries of the Eruv: Law, Space, and
Religion
Mareike Riedel, The Australian National University,
RegNet School of Regulation and Global Governance
This is Not What You Get: Agency Among
Contemporary Jewish Women Going Through a Jewish
Divorce in the United States
Anat Livshits, The New School for Social Research
Children and Youth---At Risk and in Needs
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 6
Chair: Thomas McMorrow, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Disc:
June Carbone, University of Minnesota
Primary Keyword: Family and Youth
Presentations:
Extended Adolescence and the Law
Kevin Lapp, Loyola Law School Los Angeles
Model for the Nation? Pennsylvania as Testing Ground
for Juvenile Justice System Reforms
Sarah Cate, University of Pennsylvania
“The Child’s Own Will”: Comparative Perspectives on
German Child Custody Cases in the 20th Century
Jan-Robert Schmidt, Hamburg University
Constitutional Politics and Comparative Institutional
Design
Paper Session
Room: Galvez
Chair: Diego Werneck Arguelhes, Fundação Getulio Vargas Law School - Rio de Janeiro (FGV Direito Rio)
Disc:
Thomaz Pereira, FGV Direito Rio
Presentations:
Between Reason and Politics: The Indian Constitutional
Court’s Struggle to Protect the Constitution from
Parliamentary Sovereignty
Thomaz Pereira, FGV Direito Rio
Common Law and the Creation of the Administrative
State in the Us
Michaela Hailbronner, University of Pretoria, South
Africa
The First, the Last, and Everything? The Supreme
Court’s Role in the Legalization of Same-Sex Marriage
in Brazil
Diego Werneck Arguelhes, Fundação Getulio Vargas
Law School - Rio de Janeiro (FGV Direito Rio)
Leandro Molhano Ribeiro, Fundação Getulio Vargas
(RJ)
Contemporary Issues in Policing and the Law
Paper Session
Room:Regent
Chair/Disc: Luis Daniel Gascón, University of San Francisco | Department of Sociology
Primary Keyword: Policing
Presentations:
Not Limited to the Usual Beating: How the Jon Burge
Police Torture Scandal Helped Catalog Everyday Abuse
of Criminal Suspects in Chicago and the United States
Andrew Baer, American Bar Foundation
Police Perceptions on Female Offending: Study of an
American Police Department
Tasneem Deo, Yale Law School
Policing Complaints: A Collaborative Vision of Civil
Actions Against the Police and Police Complaints
Processes
Clare Torrible, University of Bristol
Race, Police-Citizen Interactions, and Perceptions
of Police: Experimental Results on the Impact of
Procedural (in)Justice
Devon Johnson, George Mason University
Belen Lowrey, American University
Edward Maguire, American University
Towards a Phenomenology of Police Violence
Peter Hanink, University of California, Irvine
Corporate Finance and Insolvency
Paper Session
Room:Jackson
Sunday
Primary Keyword: Constitutional Law and Constitutionalism
Everyone Knows What a Court Is, No-One Knows What
a Court Is: The Institutional Nature of the South African
Court in Comparative Perspective
James Fowkes, University of Pretoria
Chair/Disc: Claire Hill, University of Minnesota Law School
Primary Keyword: Corporate and Securities Law
147 Sunday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
Presentations:
Better Than Bankruptcy?
Andrew Dawson, University of Miami School of Law
Debt and Discipline
Tayyab Mahmud, Seattle University
Loan difficulties: Unnatural Disaster - Human crises and
law’s response
Safia Kherbouche, University Lille 2
The Spanish Business Bankruptcy Puzzle: An Economic
and Sociological Approach
Aurelio Gurrea Martinez, Stanford Law School
Courts As Agencies
Roundtable Session
Room: Galerie 3
Chair: Michael Coenen, LSU Law Center
Seth Davis, University of California, Irvine School of Law
Participants:
Andrew Bradt, UC Berkley
Margaret Lemos, Duke Law School
Elizabeth Porter, University of Washington School of
Law
Mila Sohoni, University of San Diego
Adam Zimmerman, Loyala Law School
This roundtable session will consider the extent to which
principles of administrative law might usefully inform inquiries
into judicial practice and procedure. Beginning from the
premise that the responsibilities of Article III courts bear
important similarities to those of federal administrative
agencies, presenters will ask whether courts can and/or
should be conceptualized as specialized agencies of their own.
Put somewhat differently, the session will explore ways in
which insights and innovations of administrative law might be
extended or adapted to a shed new light on questions derived
from the federal courts and civil procedure canons.
Sunday
Primary Keyword: Courts And Trials
Criminal Justice Welfare in an Age of Neoliberal Penality
Paper Session
Room: Bonaparte
Chair/Disc: Jonathan Simon, University of California-Berkeley
Primary Keyword: Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control
148 Presentations:
An Experiment in Penal Welfare: The New Human
Trafficking Courts
Aya Gruber, University of Colorado
From Market Exploitation to Family Trauma: A History
of Prostitution Courts in New York
Amy Cohen, Ohio State University
Programs, Punishment, and “Doing Something” With
Misdemeanor Cases
Issa Kohler-Hausmann, Yale Law School
The Promise and Peril of Community Prosecution:
A Case Study of Cook County’s Community Justice
Centers
Genevieve Lakier, The University of Chicago Law
School
The Welfare State, the Carceral State, and Shades of
Citizenship
Julilly Kohler-Hausmann, Cornell
Crises, Corruption and Change
Paper Session
Room: Balcony M
Chair/Disc: Sally Wheeler, Queen’s University Belfast
Primary Keyword: Economy, Global Economy and Law
Presentations:
Adjudicating Transition: The Role of the Judicial System
in a Political-Economic Transformation to a Market
Economy in the Case of the Israeli Bankers’ Trial
Yaniv Ron-El, University of Chicago
Empowering People to Choose Wisely Via Mindfulness
and Thinking Tools
Peter Huang, University of Colorado
The Rationale, Establishment, Workings and Findings
of the Irish Banking Crisis Inquiry: Surrounding
Public Policy Issues and Events Impacting Regulatory
Governance
Shaun Elder, Solicitor
Cross-National Perspectives on LGBTI Rights.
Paper Session
Room: Galerie 1
Primary Keyword: Gender and Sexuality
Sunday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. Presentations:
Football Evangelism and the Gospel of Sport: Using
Association Football to Combat Gender and Sexual
Discrimination in Uganda
Richard Peltz-Steele, University of Massachusetts
Homosexuality in the Government: Importing the
Lavender Scare into Britain in the 1950s
Aleardo Zanghellini, University Of Reading
Sexuality, Identity, and (In)humanity: Article 3 of the
European Convention on Human Rights and LGBT*
Asylum-seekers
Natasa Mavronicola, School of Law, Queen’s
University Belfast
Histories of Race, Law, and the African Diaspora
CRN: 44
Paper Session
Room: Studio 2
Chair/Disc: Adrienne Davis, Washington University
Primary Keyword: Legal History
Presentations:
Fugitive Slaves, Free Soil, and the Contest over
Sovereignty in the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands, 1829-1860
Alice Baumgartner, Yale University
Ports of Sanctuary: Maritime Marronage, Imperial Law
and the Judicial Imaginary of Enslaved Mariners in the
South Atlantic, 1739-1839
Mary Hicks, Amherst College
Sold as a Slave after U.S. Emancipation: the Convict/
Slavery Pipeline in Post-Civil War Criminal Prosecutions
Tamika Nunley, Oberlin College
“Finer Things: African-Descended Sumptuary Laws and
Governance in Early Spanish America”
Danielle Terrazas Williams, Oberlin College
International Legal Histories
Room: Studio 1
Chair/Disc: Anders Walker, Saint Louis University School of Law
Primary Keyword: Legal History
Beyond Elections: The Forgotten History of the Right to
Democracy in International Law
Jonathan Crock, Leiden University
Engendering International Civil Rights Advocacy During
the Cold War: The Transnational Activism of Women of
Color for Rights and Dignity, 1949-1958
Gwen Jordan, University of Illinois Springfield
On German “Life” and American “Experience”: German
Free Law, American Legal Realism, and the Transatlantic
Turn to Jurisprudential Naturalism, 1903-1934
Katharina Isabel Schmidt, Yale Law School
Processes of Constitutional Change in Comparative and
Theoretical Perspective
Paper Session
Room: Studio 5
Chair/Disc: Rohit De, Yale University
Primary Keyword: Constitutional Law and Constitutionalism
Presentations:
Constitutional Change and the Myanmar Supreme
Court: Writs, Rights and Remedies
Melissa Crouch, University of New South Wales
Do Citizens Influence Constitutional Content?
Mechanisms of Popular Constitution Making in
Comparative Perspective
Solongo Wandan, University of Oklahoma
From Foreign Legal Text to Local Meaning: Political
Manipulation in Constitutional Borrowing
Hanna Lerner, Tel Aviv University
Asli Bali, UCLA School of Law
David Mednicoff, University of MassachusettsAmherst
Matthew Nelson, SOAS
Mexico’s Constitutionalism: A Mirage
Mariana Velasco Rivera, Yale Law School
Popular Ownership and Citizen Juries in Formal
Constitutional Change
Jason Maloy, University of Louisiana, Lafayette
Sunday
CRN: 44
Paper Session
Presentations:
A Revolution In Search of a Historiography: On the
Introduction of the Small High Court of Justice of Israel
Yair Sagy, U of Haifa Faculty of Law
149 Sunday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
Psychology and Law: Conceptual Advancements to
Bridge the Disciplinary Divide
Justifying Criminalization of Non-Compliance to Duty
to Report Crimes (Moral and Legal Principles of Duty to
Report Crimes)
sungyong kang, Fordham Law
Room: Salon H-G
Policing Backyard Breeding Through Targeted Spay/
Neuter Programs
Lisa Milot, University of Georgia School of Law
IRC: 29
Roundtable Session
Chair: Victor Quintanilla, Indiana University
Participants:
Eve Brank, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Linda Demaine, ASU
Valerie Hans, Cornell Law School
Jennifer Robbennolt, University of Illinois College of
Law
Barbara Spellman, University of Virginia
Although law and legal process are inherently psychological
in nature, traditionally, relatively few law professors, judges,
or legal practitioners have drawn on empirical psychological
research to inform their perspectives and decisions. In recent
years, the legal community has increasingly recognized that
both substantive law and legal procedure rest on a multitude
of testable assumptions about human behavior that can be
informed by psychological research. Without formal training in
psychology, however, it can be challenging for legal experts to
identify relevant and informative psychological research and to
interpret the empirical research results. And psychologists who
lack formal training in law have difficulty identifying important
legal issues and conducting research that deftly informs
them. This Roundtable discusses an effort to strengthen the
intersection of law and psychology by integrating psychological
research with topics covered in the core law school curriculum.
Primary Keyword: Social Theory and Law, Regulating Particular
Social Behaviors
Paper Session
Room:Iberville
Sunday
Chair/Disc: Fabio de Sa e Silva, Institute of Applied Economic Research (Ipea); Harvard Law School’s Center on the Legal Profession
Primary Keyword: Regulation & Governance
Presentations:
Decision-making with regard to Whistleblowing
Behavior: The Case of the SEC Whistleblower Award
Program
Masaki Iwasaki, Stanford Law School
Higher Mortality Risk, Higher Value of Life: A Critique of
Current Regulatory Practice in Monetizing the Benefit
of Life-Saving Regulations
Dov Waisman, Southwestern Law School
150 Relations Between Regulatory Models, Relations and
Risks in Complex Infrastructures
CRN: 5
Paper Session
Room: Studio 7
Chair: Fiona Haines, University of Melbourne
Disc: Linda Senden, Utrecht University, RENFORCE
Primary Keyword: Regulation & Governance
Presentations:
Financial Stability: Regulation and Politics
Caroline Bradley, University of Miami School of Law
Regulating the Digital Working Classes: A Multi-Method
Study of Airbnb and Uber
H.C. Robinson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Regulatory Enforcement in a Principles-Based
Regulatory Regime: The Paradoxical Effects of Broad
Standards
Aleksandra Jordanoska, School of Law, Keele
University
The Never-Ending Too-Big-To-Fail Story
Peter Knaack, University of Southern California
Study Space Guatemala: From Extraction to
Emancipation—Reimagining Development for Guatemala
Roundtable Session
Room: Salon C
Chair: Steven Bender, Seattle University School of Law
Participants:
Maria Antonia Tigre, Maurice A. Deane School of Law
at Hofstra University
Steven Bender, Seattle University School of Law
Patricia Ferreira, Centre for Global Governance and
Innovation in Canada
Marcia Narine, St Thomas University School of Law
Lauren Gilbert, St. Thomas University School of Law
Sunday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. This roundtable details and engages the research findings of a
diverse group of scholars from law and other disciplines who
participated in a LatCrit Study Space project in Guatemala
during summer 2015. The research group is preparing a
book of participant essays that aims to study more closely
the relationship between Guatemala and its corporations.
Guatemala is experiencing tremendous social upheaval
from corporate acts, with the state as an accessory, with
consequences that include environmental degradation, water
depletion and contamination, forced displacement, and labor
exploitation, among others. Caught between the obliging state
and corporations are the communities most deeply affected
by both the law’s absence and presence. The questions this
roundtable will address include how law can and should restore
the balance between promoting investment and economic
development with protecting the public interest and preserving
the public good. These inquiries also implicate the protection of
rights, whether of individuals or communities in the collective,
including the right to self-determination, the right to food and
health, or the right to dignified work.
The New Waves in Negotiation and ADR
CRN: 10
Paper Session
Room: Studio 10
Chair/Disc: Eileen Scallen, UCLA
Primary Keyword: Civil Justice and Disputing
Presentations:
Art, Disputes and the Reconciliation of Culture
Debbie De Girolamo, Queen Mary University of
London
Confidentiality of International Commercial Arbitration
and the Public Policy Exception
Joanna Jemielniak, iCourts, University of Copenhagen
Ethically Negotiating on Behalf of Low-Income
Plaintiffs: The Distorting Effects of Model Rule 4.1
Megan McDermott, University of Wisconsin School of
Law
Spaces of Disputing: Interrogating the Relationship
Between Digital Geographies and Dispute Resolution
Leah Wing, University of Massachusetts-Amherst
The Social and Legal Challenges of Informed Consent:
Coercion, Manipulation, and The State
CRN: 29
Paper Session
Room: Balcony L
Chair/Disc: Michele Goodwin, University of California - Irvine School of Law
Primary Keyword: Bioethics, Biotechnology and the Law
Presentations:
Exemption Wars: The U.S. Controversy over Exemptions
to Vaccination
Mary Holland, NYU School of Law
Informed Consent (to Become Potentially Ill): An
Ethnography
Ronen Shamir, Tel Aviv University
Not Truly Mandatory? Not Fully Voluntary? An
Empirical Study of Taiwan’s Implementation of HIV
Screening Laws and its Implications for Public Health
Law and Policymaking
Shin-Rou Lin, Department of Health Management,
Chang-Gung University
Sunday
Part I of the forthcoming book reframes the relationship
between Guatemala as a state and mostly foreign corporations
such as in the mining industry. One framework is through
the lens of voluntary codes on corporate social responsibility
whereby the corporation obtains both a legal and social license
to operate effectively and legitimately in Guatemala. A second
lens emphasizes Guatemala’s obligations to regulate acts of
corporations to comply with human rights responsibilities
under the American Convention on Human Rights. Part II
addresses development and the environment in Guatemala’s
business practices. Guatemala needs economic development,
but how can it do so sustainably and responsibly? Part II not
only documents significant gaps or deficiencies in Guatemala’s
current environmental regime-e.g., water or environmental
impact assessments-or poor practices by corporations-e.g.,
deforestation and the palm oil industry-but also prescribes
solutions to improve current practices. Part III documents the
power imbalance in the development choices of the central
government vis-a-vis rural and indigenous communities. These
chapters rely on international norms and comparative studies to
offer lessons for Guatemala that respect the sovereignty rights
of local and indigenous communities in terms of development.
Part IV examines development in the context of trade and
investment norms, considering whether and how international
trade agreements, in particular CAFTA-DR, promote or
discourage corporate social responsibility in Guatemala. Finally
Part V looks at the phenomena of migration and development.
The recent surge of Central American unaccompanied minors
and children fleeing with their mothers to the United States
made us confront the human face of migrants whose fates are
rooted in the dire reality that the countries from which they
flee cannot or will not protect them. These chapters connect
Guatemala’s story of migration and violence to both the past
and the present-the civil war years to now-and to the licit and
illicit actors who exploit them.
Primary Keyword: Economy, Global Economy and Law
151 Sunday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
The Anti-apartheid Genome: Genetic Ancestry Testing,
Informed Consent, and the Fashioning of Biogenetic
Belonging in South Africa
Laura Foster, Indiana University
CRN: 9
Paper Session
levels, and exists in many different contexts . Despite the
shocking statistics on the prevalence of ageism and its negative
effects, research on ageism is relatively scarce, especially when
compared to sexism and racism. The goal of this COST Action is
to challenge the practice of ageism and allow older people to
realize their full potential. It is a European funded collaborative
platform that bridge disciplinary, methodological, and national/
regional practices, and schools of thought.
Room: Studio 3
Primary Keyword: Aging
Chair/Disc: Anne-Maree Farrell, Monash University, Australia
What Is Left Out of Contemporary Academic and Reform
Conversations About Forensic Science and Expert
Testimony?
The Socio-Legal Dynamics of Health Systems
Primary Keyword: Health and Medicine
Presentations:
A (Null) Right to Health
Christina Ho, Rutgers School of Law, Newark
The Double Edged Sword of Federalism: Deference to
the States in the Creation of Essential Health Benefit
Benchmark Plans and the Question of Variation
Charley Willison, University of Michigan
Phillip Singer, University of Michigan
The Right to be Free from Sex Discrimination in Health
Care Settings: Mobilizing New Rights Claims under the
Affordable Care Act
Anna Kirkland, University of Michigan
“In Sickness and in Health…”, but Within Reasonable
Limits: Tracing the Swiss Welfare State’s Qualified
Commitment to Health Care
Melanie Levy, The Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics,
Tel Aviv University
Understanding the Relationships Between Law, Aging,
and Ageism: The COST Action on Ageism - A MultiNational, Interdisciplinary Perspective
CRN: 41
Roundtable Session
Room: Balcony N
Sunday
Chair: Israel (Issi) Doron, University of Haifa
Participants:
Bridget Sleap, HelpAge International
This session presents the research and action conducted so far
by the Legal Working Group within the European COST Action
on the multi disciplinary and multi national perspectives on
ageism.Ageism (i.e., the complex and often negative social
construction of old age) is highly prevalent worldwide.A
recent study found that ageism is the most prevalent type of
discrimination, reported by almost 35% of all participants over
the age of 18. Ageism occurs at the structural and the individual
152 CRN: 37
Roundtable Session
Room: Studio 6
Chair: Sherene Razack, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, University of Toronto
Participants:
Simon Cole, University of California, Irvine
Emma Cunliffe, UBC Faculty of Law
Gary Edmond, University of New South Wales
Mehera San Roque, University of New South Wales
Participants in this roundtable will critically evaluate whether
the academic turn towards emphasizing scientific reliability and
rigour in respect of expert opinion evidence (e.g. NAS, 2009;
Mnookin et al, 2011; Edmond et al, 2012) is compromised
by relative inattention to the social dimensions of science,
including the gendered and racialized context of knowledge
production in forensic science and criminal justice. Forensic
evidence has both produced and revealed wrongful convictions.
However, gender, race and forensic science are rarely analyzed
together (see Parkes & Cunliffe, 2015). This roundtable will
consider why ‘social questions’ have largely been bracketed
separately from studies of the reliability and utility of forensic
evidence, and investigate the invidious consequences of this
separation. The participants are drawn from a broad range of
jurisdictions and perspectives, but all share an interest in the
intersection of criminal investigation, sociology and law.
Primary Keyword: Crime and Victims
What Is Work and What Should Work Law Be in the
21st Century?: Empirical, Interpretative, and Normative
Perspectives
CRN: 8
Paper Session
Room: Salon F
Chair/Disc: Marley Weiss, University of Maryland Carey School of Law
Sunday 10:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. Primary Keyword: Labor
Presentations:
A New Capitalist Ideology as Revealed in Disputes over
Employment Status: Networks, Technology, and “That
Guy with a Car” as “Entrepreneur”
Julia Tomassetti, Maurer School of Law, Center for
Law, Society, and Culture
Home-Based Care Work at the Crossroads of Labor and
Health Care Regulation: The Structuring of Aide Jobs
and Knowledge of Care Workers
Elizabeth Nisbet, John Jay College
Independent Contractor Drivers: Where Are We
Heading?
Naomi Sunshine, NYU School of Law
Required Intimacy
Einat Albin, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
‘Africa’ As a New Frontier? Lawyers & Extractive
Economies (II)
CRN: 13
Paper Session
Room: Studio 4
Chair/Disc: Sara Dezalay, Goethe University
Primary Keyword: African Law & Society
Presentations:
Lawyers, extractive economies and global
reconfigurations of political authority: a case-study of
the ‘Africa corporate bar’ in Paris
Sara Dezalay, Goethe University
Out of Storage: Law and Minerals in the African Oil
Boom
Peter Rosenblum, Bard College
Sunday
The role of law and legal experts in Africa’s extractive
economies: explaining the implementation of
transnational capabilities of the actors involved in
extractive activities through a realistic approach
Florian Favreau, EM Normandie - Ecole Normale
Supérieure Rennes
153 Participant Index
Index
A
Aalberts, Tanja 73
Aaronson, Ely 49
Abaya, Miriam 39
Abbott, Katherine 110
Abdelaaty, Lamis 128
Abdullah, Nur Atiqah Tang 63
Abdulraheem-Mustapha, Mariam 64, 85
Abegaz, Solomon Tekle 94, 117
Abel, Rick 25, 36, 100
Abiri, Gilad 42
Aboueldahab, Noha 89
Abraham, David 75
Abrams, Jamie 79, 102
Abrams, Kerry 46, 65
Abreu, Alice 93
Abuya, Edwin 105
Acevedo, Deepa Das 52
Acevedo, John 100
Acevedo, Ohn 12
Achiume, Tendayi 113
Acorn, Elizabeth 126
Adam, Erin 5
Adamo, Silvia 77
Adams, Adrienne 125
Addaney, Michael 85, 105
Adediran, Atinuke (Tinu) 60
Adeleke, Fola 72
Adeleke, Michael 102
Aderibigbe, Titilayo 107, 116
Adjin-Tettey, Elizabeth 92
Adkins, Mary 82, 122
Adler, Libby 143
Affairs, International 25
Affairs, Public 120
Affolder, Natasha 71
Afonso, José Roberto 10
Afonso, Tulio 112
Afsharipour, Afra 52, 118
Aftab, Amira 72
Agon, Sivan Shlomo 45
Ahmed, Aziza 15, 71, 85
Ahmed, Muneer 30
Ai, Jiahui 45
Ainsworth, Janet 86, 108
Ajoku, Ogechukwu Ojimaduekwu 94
Ajunwa, Ifeoma 131
Akande, Rabiat 10
Akbar, Amna 56
Aken, Chelsea Van 116
Akiba, Takeshi 22, 63
Alam, Mariful 145
154 Alasti, Sanaz 83
Alberstein, Michal 59, 98
Albin, Einat 153
Albiston, Catherine 2, 24
Al-Botmeh, Reem 17
Alcaino, Eduardo 123
Al-Hassani, Ruba Ali 82
Ali, Nathanael 91
Aliperti, Britt 100
Allen, Jessie 100
Allen, Walter 62
Almeida, Andrija 46
Almeida, Carlos Alberto Lima De 23
Almeida, Maíra 118
Almeida, Matheus De 23
Almeida, Vanina 78
Alminas, Ruth 127
Aloni, Erez 1, 51
Altman, Clara 135
Alves, Cleber 33
Amani, Bita 64, 88, 89
Amariles, David Restrepo 58
Amorim, Maria Carolina 33
Amrith, Sunil 46
Anderson, Alissa 141
Anderson, Cora Fernandez 21
Anderson, Dorcas Quek 121
Anderson, Gavin 9
Andraka-Christou, Barbara 110
Andrews, Neil 6
Andrews, Penelope 113, 115, 129
Angel-Cabo, Natalia 71
Angstadt, J. Michael 97
Anker, Kirsten 87, 124
Anku-Tsede, Olivia 57
Ansolabehere, Karina Mariela 30
Antognini, Albertina 36
Antonialli, Dennys 104
Anyadike-Danes, Chima Michael 62
Anyshchenko, Artem 10
Appignanesi, Laura 127
Applegate, Amy 36
Araiza, William 53
Araujo, Alexandra Fuchs De 16
Aretz, Yafit Lev 107
Arewa, Olufunmilayo 86
Arguelhes, Diego Werneck 128, 147
Armesto, Alejandra 99
Armstrong, Andrea 85, 130, 137
Armstrong, Sarah 61
Arruda, Octaviano 5
Ashford, Chris 142
To email a participant, please use the “contact me” link available on the Online Program Guide.
Participant Index
B
Baaij, Cornelis 9, 59
Baars, Grietje 143
Bacca, Paulo Ilich 124
Bacharach, Verne 138
Bachar, Gilat 80
Back, Laura 41
Baek, Jihyun 91
Baelz, Moritz 67
Baer, Andrew 147
Baer, Miriam 103
Baharuddin, Shamsul Amri 63
Baker, Anthony 65
Baker, Melissa 138
Bakiner, Onur 26
Bakrokar, Denise 78
Balakrishnan, Radhika 69
Balcetis, Emily 69
Balgobin, George 131
Bali, Asli 3, 149
Balint, Jennifer 19, 37, 91, 132
Ballakrishnen, Swethaa S. 11, 36, 45, 89
Ball, Alina 84
Ball, Carlos 22, 121
Ballestero, Andrea 78
Ballucci, Dale 19
Ball, W. David 27, 103
Banerji, Anurima 89
Banks, Angela 30
Banner, Francine 18
Barak, Maya 35
Barker, Kim 142
Barker, Vanessa 112
Barkway, Kelsi 23
Barnes, Jeb 2, 41, 42, 43
Barnes, Kathie 9
Barnes, Kristen 87
Barnes, Mario 28, 116
Baron, Paula 45, 93
Barragan, Melissa 32
Barrera, Enrique Boone 139
Barrera, Leticia 68
Barr, Olivia 61, 73
Bartie, Susan 45
Barzilay, Arianne Renan 120
Barzun, Charles 72
Basaran, Tugba 39, 60, 71
Basinski, Sean 70
Bassa, Jaime 93
Basu, Srimati 4, 15, 24
Batagol, Becky 60
Batchis, Wayne 138
Batlan, Felice 125
Baumgärtel, Moritz 17, 57
Baumgartner, Alice 149
Beach, Lindsey 37
Bea, Megan Doherty 20
Beardall, Theresa Rocha 96
Beaudry, Jonas-Sebastien 92
Becak, Rubens 8
Beckett, Jason 133
Beckett, Katherine 41, 137
Bedi, Sonu 53
Bedner, Adriaan 16, 139
Begicevic, Alma 74
Belinfanti, Tamara 119
Bell, Ashley 26
Bell, Jeannine 38, 99, 114, 119
Bell, Lindsey 39
Bell, Monica 82, 113
Bello, Enzo 14
Belt, Rabia 92, 104
Benda-Beckmann, Keebet Von 61, 72, 114
Bendall, Charlotte 50
Bender, Steven 150
Ben-Ishai, Stephanie 125
Bennett, Belinda 123
Ben-Shahar, Tammy Harel 75
Berch, Jessica 27
Bergan, David 97
Berger, Eyal 75
Berg, Shanelle Van Der 129
Beringer, Gabriel 91
Berk, Christopher 106
Berlo, Patrick Van 132
Bernard, Diane 87, 124
Bernard, Rachel 16
Bernstein, Anya 108, 120
To email a participant, please use the “contact me” link available on the Online Program Guide.
Index
Ashwood, Loka 49
Ashworth, Michael 47
Asimow, Michael 90
Assis, Grayce Kellen Pereira 136
Assis, Mariana Prandini 75
Atapattu, Sumudu 2, 36, 80, 89
Atata, Scholastica 64
Auchmuty, Rosemary 25, 91
Augustine, Kif 17
Aviram, Hadar 6, 17, 66, 103, 124
Aylwin, Nicole 56
Azam, Rifat 74
Azeem, Muhammad 37
Azgad-Tromer, Shlomit 28, 104
Azuela, Antonio 91
155 Index
Participant Index
Berrey, Ellen 61, 82
Berryessa, Colleen 19
Bertenthal, Alyse 38
Bertrand, Michelle 78
Bessler, John 99
Bhalotra, Sonia 89
Bhuwania, Anuj 99
Bhuyan, Rupaleem 56
Bibas, Stephanos 103
Bierschbach, Richard 103
Bigenho, Michelle 78
Bilinski, Mariana 78
Bilz, Kenworthey 47
Binder, Denis 74
Binnall, James 55
Birdthistle, William 86
Birk, Anne Okkels 112
Bisharat, George 16
Bisnauth, Victoria 55
Blackett, Adelle 139
Blad, Karin 33
Blagg, Harry 6
Blaiklock, Alison 80
Blenner, Jordan 37, 47
Blevis, Laure 37
Bliacheriene, Ana Carla 107
Bliss, John 60
Blomberg, Thomas 142
Blum, Binyamin 15
Blumenthal, Susanna 140
Boateng, Boatema 136
Boer, Lianne 54
Boesten, Jan 119
Bogle, Stephen 140
Bogoch, Bryna 18, 31
Bolonha, Carlos 127
Boni-Saenz, Alexander 122
Booth, Kristen Glen 122
Borchert, Jay 111, 132
Bordagaray, Aldana Romano 78
Borges, Daniella 136
Borgida, Eugene 69
Bornschlegl, Teresa 97
Bos, Kees Van Den 47
Boso, Luke 50
Botero, Sandra 35
Bouagga, Yasmine 21
Boucai, Michael 36, 111
Boustead, Anne 141
Boutcher, Steven 11, 38, 60
Bouwer, Kim 127
Bowman, Nadia 103
156 Bowring, Bill 100
Boyle, Alysoun 129
Brabazon, Honor 79, 80
Bradley, Caroline 128, 150
Bradt, Andrew 148
Brancale, Julie 142
Brank, Eve 150
Bratspies, Rebecca 2
Brayner, Aline 119
Brayne, Sarah 145
Bregant, Jessica 11
Bregvadze, Lasha 132
Brehm, Hollie Nyseth 46, 129
Brems, Eva 57
Brenner, Hannah 79, 117
Bridges, Khiara 140
Briggs, Jacqueline 96
Brighten, Andrew 31, 103
Brito, Tonya 24, 61, 114
Brodin, Helene 101
Brody, Susan 107
Broekhuijsen, Dirk 74
Bromwich, Rebecca 71
Bronson, Eric 83
Brophy, Alfred 37
Brown, Darryl 139
Brown, Elizabeth 21, 53, 87, 96
Brown, Fred 51
Brown, Hana 130
Brown, Kevin 142
Brueck, Laura 15
Bruenig, Matthew 63
Bruey, Veronica Fynn 39
Brulé, Rachel 89
Bryan, Timothy 99
Brydolf-Horwitz, Marco 120
Bryson, Anna 25
Buccafusco, Christopher 88
Buchanan, Neil 84
Buchely, Lina 132
Budoo, Ashwanee 85
Buerger, Catherine 7
Buffam, Bonar 49
Buhmann, Karin 7
Bumiller, Kristin 41
Bunting, Annie 67, 132
Buntman, Fran 87
Burch, Melissa 14
Burciaga, Edelina 31
Burdziej, Stanislaw 109
Burke, Honorable Kevin 92
Burke, Thomas 2, 41, 43
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Participant Index
C
Cahill-Ripley, Amanda 80
Cahn, Naomi 48, 98
Calábria, Carina 5
Calavita, Kitty 66, 106, 115
Calder, Gillian 9
Caldwell, Alisha 69
Cali, Basak 8, 100
Campbell, Ellie 131
Campbell, Mary 65
Campbell, Michael 26, 69
Campion, Brae 142
Cancelosi, Susan 142
Canfield, Matthew 32
Canfield, Neil 29
Canizales, Stephanie 130
Cantalupo, Nancy Chi 86
Carbone, June 1, 98, 133, 147
Carlisle, Jessica 34
Carlson, Jennifer 31, 53, 73
Carlson, Kerstin 12
Carlson, Kirsten 93
Carmalt, Jean 71, 132
Carpenter, Anna 38
Carpenter, Eric 79
Carpenter, Leonore 34, 47
Carr, Daniel 140
Carr, Helen 82
Carroll, Mark M. 69
Carstensen, Peter 70
Caserta, Salvatore 12
Casique, Francisco 116
Castel, Alison 42
Castillo, Melissa 39
Castrellon, Mariana 7
Castro, Ana Luiza 136
Castro, Maria Victoria 132
Cate, Sarah 147
Cathaoir, Katharina O 107
Cativo, Karla 117
Cavalcanti, Ana Beatriz Vanzoff Robalinho 87
Cavalcanti, Rodrigo 112
Cawley, Diego Gil Mc 58
Ceballos, Manuela 80
Chacon, Jennifer 124, 137
Chada, Daniel 128
Chadwick, Anna 133
Chaffee, Eric 20
Chaisson, Rebecca A. 120, 139
Chambliss, Elizabeth 11
Chanbonpin, Kim D. 107
Chandra, Rajshree 90
Chang, Adam 76
Chang, Chao-Tien 63
Chan, Janet 145
Chan, Kay-Wah 70, 91
Chapman, Audrey 65, 117
Chatsverykova, Iryna 123
Chávez, Gustavo Zambrano 79
Cheesman, Nick 67, 111
Che, Luyao 146
Chen, Chun-Yaun 6
Cheng, Jesse 68
Chen, Hungyi 63
Chen, Ming 46, 65
Chen, Po Liang 40
Chen, Yueyi 6
Chen, Yu-Jie 125
Chen, Yun-Ru 100
Chesnut, Kelsie 32
Chiaramonte, Xenia 84
Chiarello, Liz 142
Chilton, Adam 97
Chin, Gabriel 65, 137, 138
Chinn, Stuart 39
Chizik, Natali 78
Chodorow, Adam 93
Choiniere, Jacqueline 101
Chopra, Surabhi 5, 69, 97
Choudhury, Cyra 81
Chriss, James 100
Christensen, Mikkel 12, 42
Christopher, Russell 138
Chua, Lynette 4, 34, 52
Chumaumeh, Nchumaumeh 107
Chuma-Umeh, Ngozi 85, 104
Cichowski, Rachel 47, 100
Clair, Matthew 83
Clarke, Jessica 75, 76, 137
Clark, Paul 80
Clatch, Lauren 69
Cleek, Ashley 72
Cleve, Nicole Gonzalez Van 61, 82
Clopton, Zachary 11
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Index
Burman, Monica 76
Burri, Mira 45
Burrow, Sheona 115
Burton, Lloyd 48, 114
Bushway, Shawn 40
Bush, Zoe 6
Buss, Doris 127
Butler, Mark 39
157 Index
Participant Index
Clough, Beverley 48
Cobb, Sara 42
Cody, Stephen 101
Coelho, Lina 33
Coenen, Michael 148
Cohen, Amy 4, 67, 130, 141, 148
Cohen, Edward 125, 146
Coleman, Leo 78
Cole, Simon 152
Collins, Barry 89
Collins, Paul 19, 90
Colombeau, Sara Casella 63
Comaroff, John 12
Cominelli, Luigi 129
Comino, Vicky 15
Comiskey, Marie 55, 91
Compton, D’lane R. 140
Conner, Brendan 84
Conners, Deborah 75
Constable, Marianne 12, 76, 128
Conti, Joseph 10, 17
Cooper, Jessica 17, 24
Cooper, Scott 91
Copeland, Charlton 19, 37, 85
Copus, Ryan 124
Corcos, Christine 90
Corda, Alessandro 18
Cords, Danshera 29, 41
Corkery, Allison 58, 80
Cornes, Richard 69, 77, 124
Cornwell, Erin York 20
Correa-Cardozo, Hernan 33
Corrigan, Rose 14, 40
Cortes, Lara 80
Cortes, Stephania Yate 79
Costa, Gustavo 118
Cote-Boucher, Karine 63
Couso, Javier 30, 85
Coutinho, Maria Laura De Souza 87
Coutin, Susan 24, 82, 130
Couture, Wendy 96
Cowan, David 82
Cowan, Sharon 9
Cowger, Sel 35
Cox, Jeannette 78
Craig, Carys 89
Cramer, Renee 11, 40, 72, 90, 132
Craven, Matt 22
Creamer, Cosette 45
Criddle, Evan 15, 83
Crock, Jonathan 149
Crouch, Melissa 149
158 Crusto, Mitchell 56, 85
Cruz, Francisco Brito 139
Cuéllar, Jorge 96, 117
Cuinn, Gearóid Ó 122
Cuison-Villazor, Rose 53, 65, 110
Culver, Katherine 55
Cummings, Cristy 117
Cummings, Scott 14, 93, 136
Cunliffe, Emma 152
Currie, Albert 56
Cuy, María Amparo Hernández Chong 8
D
Dadush, Sarah 9
Dagan, David 138
Dallas, Lynne 119
Damamme, Joseph 57
Dam, Shubhankar 118
Daniels, Stephen 11
Darbyshire, Penny 92
Darcy, Kathleen 79, 117
Darian-Smith, Eve 3, 12, 67, 76, 95
Darley, Mathilde 134
Datzer, Darko 132
Dau-Schmidt, Kenneth 52, 144
David, Gary 141
Davidov, Guy 121
Davidovitch, Nadav 59, 123
Davis, Adrienne 149
Davis-Nozemack, Karie 10, 50
Davis, Seth 27, 148
Dawe, Meghan 110
Dawson, Andrew 148
Daye, Charles 62
Dean, Steven 41
Decat, Thiago Lopes 91
Deckha, Maneesha 48
Dehm, Julia 80
Dekkers, Tim 131
Dellinger, Myanna 31, 74
Delugas, David 48
Demaine, Linda 150
Demidov, Nicolai 110
Demott, Deborah 83
Denbow, Jennifer 51
Denney, David 104
Dennie, Martine 57, 123
Denning, Brannon 27
Denver, Megan 40
Deo, Meera 76
Deo, Tasneem 147
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Participant Index
Dunn, Holly 82
Durand, Corentin 106
Durkee, Melissa (Mj) 96
Durlak, Paul 104
Duschinski, Haley 5, 62
Dwyer, Leslie 42
Dyani-Mhango, Ntombizozuko 105, 115
Dylag, Matthew 56
Dymock, Alex 75
Index
Depaoli, Sarah 20
Dequen, Jean-Philippe 89
De, Rohit 46, 149
Dervan, Lucian 113
Desai, Deval 105
Desmet, Ellen 57
Deveaux, Chad 27
Dewhurst, Ann Marie 70
Dewhurst, Dale 70, 128
Dew, Spencer 42
Dexter, Bobby 51
Dezalay, Sara 12, 37, 89, 143, 153
Dhaliwal, Preeti 26
Dhir, Aaron 52, 118
Dhooge, Lucien 62
Diamond, Raymond 85
Diamond, Shari 78, 88, 102
Dias-Abey, Manoj 121
Dias, Maria Tereza Fonseca 91
Dibennardo, Rebecca 30
Dietz, Chris 48
Dillon, James 51
Dingwall, Robert 29
Ding, Xiangshun 42
Dinner, Deborah 51, 125
Dinovitzer, Ronit 82, 110
Dinsmore, Darren 101
Dinsmore, Renee 134
Disc: 36
Dixon, Peter 25
Dobrovolskaia, Anna 35
Dodd, Lynda 141
Dogbevi, Koffi 81
Dölemeyer, Anne 62, 134
Dolin, Gregory 127
Doneda, Danilo 139
Donovan, James 7
Dorbecker, Miguel Rabago 56
Doron, Israel (Issi) 134, 152
Dotan, Yoav 126
Douard, John 120, 138
Douglas, Gillian 60
Douglas, Simon 110
Dover, Tessa 36
Draper, Elaine 145
Drumbl, Michelle Lyon 50
Duarte, Fernanda 5, 14, 33
Dubal, Veena 24, 67
Dudas, Jeffrey 40, 41
Duffy, Maureen 39
Dunbar, Adam 69
Dunbar, Rupert 17
E
Eagle, Katrina J. 51
Eason, John 41
Easton, Catherine 131
Easton, Eric 16
Edelman, Lauren 73, 114
Edelman, Meredith 25
Edkins, Vanessa 113
Edmond, Gary 152
Edwards, Benjamin 126
Eggers, Jane 120, 139
Ehrlich, Hed 60, 81
Eichner, Maxine 51, 53, 133
Eilbaum, Lucia 17
Elder, Shaun 148
Elek, Jennifer 37
Elkins, David 74, 93
Ellett, Rachel 128
Ellis, Atiba 19, 102
Elsayed, Ahmed 43
Elsrud, Torun 39
Elveris, Idil 26
Emerson, Blake 131
Endo, Naoya 87
Engelcke, Dörthe Kirsten 34
Engel, David 13, 32, 52, 114
Englehart, Michael 46
Engle, Jill 79
Engle, Karen 89
Epp, Charles 1, 43, 53, 126
Eppinger, Monica 49
Erakat, Noura 16
Erdman, Joanna 47
Erickson, Emily 16
Erickson, Jessica 107
Erickson, Karla 141
Erickson, Kristofer 88
Erman, Sam 129
Erp, Judith Van 123
Ertman, Martha 98, 140
Escontrías, Pilar Margarita Hernádez 68
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159 Index
Participant Index
Escudero, Kevin 31
Eshbaugh-Soha, Matthew 19
Eslava, Luis 12, 73, 124
Espinoza, Gabriela 14
Esteves, Diogo 33
Evans, Catherine 47
Evans, Dabney 117
Evans, Richard Kent 146
Ewald, Alec 99, 137, 138
F
Fakhravar, Amir 83
Fanto, James 52
Farber, Hillary 123
Farbman, Dan 82
Farid, Cynthia 81, 113
Farnum, Katlyn 47
Farrell, Anne-Maree 110, 122, 130, 152
Farrow, Trevor C.w. 56
Fast, Idit 41
Favreau, Florian 153
Febbrajo, Alberto 61
Fedders, Barbara 37
Federman, Sarah 42
Feeley, Malcolm 23, 37, 49, 66, 105, 114
Feenan, Dermot 87
Feinberg, Jessica 36
Feldman, Eric 6, 67, 82
Fentiman, Linda 51
Feres, Marcos Vinicio Chein 117
Fernandes, Devin 14
Ferrales, Gabrielle 46
Ferrari, Isabela 74
Ferreira, Patricia 150
Feuvre, Nicky Le 75
Fezer, Tamas 20
Field, Rachael 94
Field, Sue 134
File, Patrick 16
Filho, Rafael Mario Iorio 5, 33
Filho, Roberto Fragale 138
Finlay, Brandon 127
Fischel, Joseph 47
Fisher, Shauna 34
Fitzpatrick, Jessica 74
Flaherty, Darryl 96
Flake, Dallan 50
Flavin, Jeanne 142
Fleury-Steiner, Benjamin 66, 133
Florano, Ebinezer 6
Flores, Alvaro Cordova 23
160 Flores, Andrew 41
Flores, Imer 63
Florin, Karin Lundström 33
Foley, Lauren 126
Fonseca, Juliana Ponde 139
Foohey, Pamela 125
Foote, Daniel H. 2, 21, 23, 115
Ford, Laura 87, 100
Forman, Jonathan 84
Forsman, Maria 39
Fortes, Pedro 58, 90
Fortin, Véronique 24
Fortson, Ryan 129
Foster, Elizabeth 55
Foster, Laura 152
Foster, Sheila 2, 35
Fowkes, James 129, 147
Fox, Cybelle 130
Fox-Decent, Evan 15
Fox, Judith 45
Fox, Marie 48
Frade, Catarina 33
Frampton, Mary Louise 146
Frampton, Thomas 82
Francis, John 9, 130
Francis, Leslie 130
Francis, Megan 74
Franco, Ivan 139
Franks, Mary Anne 94, 121
Frattari, Carlotta Go 10
Freeman, Andrea 61, 88
Freiner, Nicole 91
Freitas, Carolina 23
Freitas, Tiago Fidalgo De 8
Frey, Diane 40, 50, 80, 87, 134
Friedman, Lawrence 58, 82, 90, 105
Fritz-Mauer, Matthew 40
Frye, Brian 37
Fujita, Masahiro 70, 97
Fukuda-Parr, Sakiko 65
Fukui, Kota 70
Fukurai, Hiroshi 2, 21, 77, 143
Fukushima, Annie 130
Fuley, Tetyana 57
Fuszara, Malgorzata 109
G
Gadowska, Kaja 106
Gajda, Amy 31
Galano, David 109
Galanter, Marc 59, 88
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Participant Index
Goldschmidt, Jona 20, 60, 138
Goldstein, Gabrielle 130
Gomez, Laura 114, 129
Gomez, Manuel 58, 71
Gomez, Marcela 7
Gonçalves, Tamara Amoroso 21, 57
Gonzalez, Carmen 2, 36, 80
Gonzalez, Ernesto Fabian Mieles 42
Gonzalez, Marc-Tizoc 75
Goodale, Mark 13, 42
Goodman, Phil 24, 92, 132
Goodmark, Leigh 86, 102
Goodwin, Michele 106, 116, 140, 151
Goold, Imogen 10, 110
Gordon, Daanika 119
Gordon, Geoffrey 54
Gordon, Jonathan 17
Gottschalk, Marie 95, 137
Gouldin, Lauryn 138
Gould, Jon 16, 49
Gozer, Grazzielli Gonçalves 136
Graauw, Els De 46
Graber, Christoph B. 61
Grace, Anita 8
Graf, Andreas 8
Graham, Barbara 99
Grandage, Andrew 100
Granot, Yael 69
Grant, Daragh 13
Greenbaum, Rosa 139
Greenberg, David 9
Greenberg, Jessica 47, 68
Greene, Sara 113
Greene, Wendy 76
Greenhouse, Carol 32, 99
Greenlee, Mel 108
Green, M. Christian 17
Green, Michael 108
Greenstone, Victoria 108
Grekul, Jana 23
Grewal, Inderpal 15
Grimes, Kelsey 20
Grissinger, Joanna 131
Grivet, Simon 57
Groggel, Anne 62
Gross, Ariela 49, 122
Gross, Clarissa 139
Grossman, Joanna 60
Grosso, Catherine 102
Gruber, Aya 148
Grunwald, Ben 6
Guichard, Justine 13
To email a participant, please use the “contact me” link available on the Online Program Guide.
Index
Gallagher, Janice 4, 21
Gallagher, William 98
Gallen, James 21
Galloway, Kate 11
Galoob, Stephen 15
Gama, Vivian 106
Gamboa, Nataly Vargas 79
Gamonal, Sergio 52
Ganty, Sarah 57
Garcia, Angela S. 14
Garcia-Jimeno, Mariana 7
Garcia, Ruben 121, 134
Garden, Charlotte 139
Gardner, Trevor 82
Garfield, Leslie 39, 102
Garnai, Erez 126
Garriott, William 33, 78, 132
Garth, Bryant 54, 96, 110
Gascón, Luis Daniel 17, 119, 126, 127, 147
Gau, Jacinta 101
Gazit, Yifat Holzman - 18
George, Alexandra 98
George, Erika 2
George, Marie-Amelie 84
Germain, Claire 92
Ghandnoosh, Nazgol 30
Ghias, Shoaib 5
Gianella, Camila 80
Giffin, Carly 59
Gilbert, Lauren 150
Gilden, Andrew 58, 120
Gillander-Gadin, Katja 20
Gilmartin, David 24
Gilmour, Joan 64
Gimenez, Francisca Pou 7, 30
Gingerich, Jonathan 18
Ginsburg, Tom 77, 97, 144
Giorgi, Alessandro De 33, 66, 95, 146
Girolamo, Debbie De 151
Glasbeek, Amanda 145
Gleeson, Kate 25
Gleeson, Shannon 46
Gloppen, Siri 105
Glougie, Jennifer 108
Godsoe, Cynthia 58, 85
Godwin, Andrew 91
Godwin, Samantha 84
Goff, Isabel Boni-Le 75
Gold, Andrew 15
Goldbach, Toby 81
Goldberg-Hiller, Jonathan 3, 41, 90
Golder, Ben 7, 22, 76
161 Index
Participant Index
Guiloff, Matias 80
Gunnarsson, Åsa 59, 75, 95, 105
Gupta, Priya S. 62
Gupta, Sanjukta Das 24
Gurnham, David 75
Gustafson, Kaaryn 24, 61
Guzik, Keith 6
Guzman-Rodriguez, Diana 128
H
Haan, Sarah 107
Hackett, Ciara 28
Hackney, Philip 20, 93
Haedicke, Michael 70
Hagan, John 66, 132
Haglund, Ladawn 58, 65, 97
Haijer, Friederycke 14
Hailbronner, Michaela 147
Haines, Fiona 114, 128, 150
Ha, Jasmine Trang 14
Halberstam, Michael 146
Halis, Denis De Castro 5, 70, 77
Hallenbeck, Jessica 124
Hallett, Michael 133
Hallett, Miranda 51, 120
Halliday, Terence 5, 62, 81, 85, 99, 125
Haltom, William (Bill) 18, 73
Hamilton, Marci 25
Hamlin, Rebecca 63, 128
Hamlyn, Olivia 10
Hammerslev, Ole 36, 97
Hampson, Sarah 39, 90
Handmaker, Jeff 71
Hanink, Peter 147
Hannah-Moffat, Kelly 18, 95, 106, 124, 133
Hansford, Thomas 20
Han, Sora 108, 128
Hans, Valerie 55, 150
Harbach, Meredith 51
Harder, Lois 107
Harfuch, Andrés 78
Hargreaves, Stuart 40
Harmon, Talia 83
Harpalani, Vinay 38
Harrington, Charlene 101
Harrington, Christine 32
Harris, Leslie 109
Harris, Mark 136
Harrison, Laura 64
Hartmann, Ivar A. 37
Hasday, Jill 1, 58
162 Hasegawa, Kiyoshi 58
Hastie, Bethany 15
Hatcher, Laura 71, 82
Haupt, Claudia 84
Havelkova, Barbara 106
Havrylyshyn, Alexandra 122
Hawkins, Joanne 18
Hayes, Thomas 145
Headworth, Spencer 131
Heath, Mary 11
Hebenton, Bill 21, 120
Heintz, James 69
Helm, Rebecca 59
Hemel, Daniel 63
Heminway, Joan 87
Hendrianto, Stefanus 77
Hendry, Jen 140
Henne, Kathryn 7
Henning, Kristin 92
Herber, Erik 23, 67
Hernandez-Lopez, Ernesto 118
Hernandez, Marcia 136
Hernandez, Wilson 89
Herrera, Carlos 91
Herrera, Jaime 120
Herrera, Luz 137
Hersant, Jeanne 45
Hertogh, Marc 123, 128
Herz, Zachary 50
Hess, Alexandra 76
Heumann, Milton 60
Hewitt, Anne 11
Heyer, Katharina 52, 92, 104
Hicks, Mary 149
Hill, Claire 83, 147
Hill, Julie 86
Hirata, Ayako 111
Hirayama, Mari 23, 87, 141
Hjelm, Ann-Christine Petersson 60
Ho, Christina 152
Hockett, Robert 101
Hodes, Joseph 55
Hodson, Loveday 100
Hoffmann, Elizabeth 108
Hofnung, Menachem 103
Hofnung, Tamar 38
Hogemann, Edna Raquel 5, 23
Hohmann, Jessie 73
Holland, Mary 151
Hollis-Brusky, Amanda 1, 40
Holloway, Colin 59
Holmes, Malcolm 127
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Participant Index
I
Iacobelli, Nicholas 7
Iafolla, Vanessa 39
Ibanez, Maria 79
Ibrahim, Ahmed 5
Idiaghe, Lilian 64
Iftene, Adelina 21, 106
Ii, Takayuki 6, 56, 70, 97
Ikpo, David Nnanna 85
Ilarraz, Marcelo 29
Infanti, Anthony 95
Irie, Hideaki 108, 129
Isailovic, Ivana 143
Ishikawa, Erica Tais Ferrara 112
Ishikawa, Lauro 112
Ishikawa, Lauro 112
Israël, Liora 11, 105
Israel, Mark 11
Ivkovich, Sanja Kutnjak 2, 132
Iwasaki, Masaki 150
J
Jacobs, Les 56
Jacobs, Lesley 64
Jain, Meetali 113
Jakubec, April 117
Jaleel, Rana 84
Jallad, Zeina 80
Jamar, Astrid 42
James, Colin 94
James, Nick 93
Janger, Edward 32
Jeanpierre, Eric 17
Jefferson-Bullock, Jalila 70
Jefferson-Jones, Jamila 11
Jemielniak, Joanna 151
Jenness, Valerie 49, 66, 106
Jennings, Bruce 116
Jensen, Rikke Bjerg 104
Jesus, Fernanda 33
Jewel, Lucy 18
Jimenez, Dalie 45, 125
Jimeno-Bulnes, Mar 92
Jing, Feng 87
Joan, Nartey 94
Jochelson, Richard 78
Johnson, Byron 133
Johnson, Calvin 10
Johnson, Devon 49, 147
Johnson, Kit 110
Jolly, Rosemary 79
Jones, Carwyn 39
Jones, Chantal 62
Jones, Chelle 13
Jones, David 93
Jones, Jennifer 130
Jones, Michael 70, 92
Jones, Ronnell Andersen 31
Jordan, Gwen 102, 149
Jordanoska, Aleksandra 123, 150
Josev, Tanya 9
Joslin, Courtney 36
Joyce, Richard 22
Jungmann, Nadja 33
Jung, Younghoa 6, 14
Juric, Tanja 5
Juss, Satvinder 62
Justice, Social 46
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Index
Holston, James 138
Holvast, Nina 77
Hong, Zhigang 30
Hoon, Marieke De 54
Hoppe, Trevor 142
Horowitz, Veronica 21
Hotta, Syugo 97
Hourani, Sara 64
Howard, Grace 107
Howell, Babe 138
Hsieh, Kuo-Hsing 42
Hsu, Jimmy Chia-Shin 22
Huang, Peter 148
Huang, Tai-Jan 98
Hudson, Alexander 37
Huff, Jamie 73
Hulst, Liesbeth 47
Humphrey, Nicole 134
Huneeus, Alexandra 54, 68, 113
Hunter, Alexandra 106
Hunter, Brandon 24
Hunter, Rosemary 36
Huntington, Clare 4, 28, 51, 98
Hunt, Jennifer 55
Hussain, Salman 5
Hussein, Hadeel Abu 60
Hutchison, Camden 140
Hwang, Cathy 119
Hymel, Mona 84
163 Participant Index
Index
K
Kagan, Robert 105
Kahraman, Filiz 5
Kaiser, Cheryl 36
Kaiser, Joshua 11, 41, 58, 102
Kalantry, Sital 46
Kalbfeld, Jessica 9
Kalem, Seda 45
Kalhan, Anil 5
Kalowski, Joanna 70
Kalpouzos, Ioannis 83
Kamunyu, Mariam 94
Kaneko, Hironao 109
Kaneko, Yuka 6
Kang, Hyo Yoon 37
Kang, Sungyong 150
Kaplan, Margo 58, 86
Kassem, Ramzi 3
Kassin, Saul 49
Kastner, Philipp 82
Katelouzou, Dionysia 71
Katrak, Meaghan 136
Katz, Colleen Cary 70
Kaufman, Zachary 19
Kaulingfreks, Femke 116
Kavanagh, Matthew 19
Kawar, Leila 54, 128
Kay, Fiona 100
Kazarian, Melinee 64
Keck, Thomas M 16, 49, 119
Kedar, Alexandre (Sandy) 60, 81
Keenan, Patrick 71, 143
Kellogg, Catherine 19
Kelly, Catherine 142
Kelly, Lisa 15, 47
Kemp, Adriana 54
Kendall, Chris 19
Kendall, Sara 81, 101
Kende, Mark 129
Kennedy, Chloe 140
Kennedy, Chris 92
Kennedy, Kalen 62
Kerrison, Erin 113
Kerr, Lisa 84, 131
Kesari, Aniket 142
Kessler, Amalia 125
Kevane, Bridget 48
Keydar, Renana 127
Keyes, Elizabeth 30
Khadjavi, Lily 9
Khalil, Heba 80
Khan, Nabila 40
164 Khan, Nausheen 21
Khan, Ummni 75
Khatam, Damira 91
Kherbouche, Safia 148
Kheria, Smita 88
Khondker, Rokhsana 21
Khouri, Nina 77
Kiehl, Courtney 79
Kimble, Katherine 47
Kimhi, Omer 28
Kim, Jaeeun 51
Kim, Myeonki 30
Kim, Summer 87, 107
Kim, Suzanne 112
Kim, Young Ran (Christine) 74
King, Sanna 103
Kinney, Edith 116, 130
Kirkland, Anna 43, 116, 152
Kirkup, Kyle 103, 123, 142
Kitamura, Takanori 97
Kjær, Anne Lise 59
Klaaren, Jonathan 71, 105, 143
Kleeger, Jeff 138
Klein, Alana 19, 139
Kleven, Thomas 85, 94
Klosterkamp, Sarah 134
Kluegel, Alan 100
Klug, Heinz 129
Kluin, Marieke 111
Kluttz, Daniel 88
Knaack, Peter 150
Knaphus, Emily 131
Knauer, Nancy 122, 142
Knight, Jack 144
Koch, Insa 92
Kodar, Freya 45, 92
Koehler, Johann 21
Koenig, Alexa 101
Kofsky, Ausher 84
Koga, Masayoshi 17
Kohler-Hausmann, Issa 9, 148
Kohler-Hausmann, Julilly 148
Kohn, Nina 122, 134
Koichi, Hioki 97
Kojin, Hiroyuki 64
Kolben, Kevin 67
Kollonay, Csilla Lehoczky 108
Kolsky, Elizabeth 38
Koltay, Andras 31
Konnoth, Craig 116
Koon, Danfeng 146
Koopmans, Ruud 51
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Participant Index
L
Lachance, Daniel 11, 93
Lahey, Kathleen 59, 64, 94, 95
Lai, Annie 46
Laidlaw, Emily 104
Lakier, Genevieve 148
Lam, Anita 61
Lambert, James 124
Landau, David 27
Landau, Ingrid 52
Landau, Joseph 110
Langevin, Louise 60
Langford, Malcolm 90
Laowonsiri, Akawat 89
Lapp, Kevin 147
Laqueur, Hannah 124
Larocco, Steve 49
Larson, Derek 123
Latorre, Sergio 81, 113
Laugerud, Solveig 102
Law, David S 14, 27
Lawless, Robert 113
Lawrence, Al 12
Lawson-Remer, Terra 65
Layard, Antonia 81
Layser, Michelle 63
Lazari, Igor De 139
Lazar, Ruthy Lowenstein 20
Lazarus-Black, Mindie 11
Leathem, Hilary 68
Lecoq, Garrett 119
Lee, Jack Tsen-Ta 89
Lee, Jennifer 30
Lee, Julia 81
Lee, Meggan 131
Leerkes, Arjen 109
Lee, Stephen 24, 46, 65
Leflar, Rob 22
Leinauer, Mark 119
Leitch, Jennifer 120
Lemos, Margaret 11, 148
Lempert, Richard 29, 88
Lens, Vicki 70
Leon, Chrysanthi 130
Lépinard, Eléonore 75
Lerman, Amy E. 92
Lerner, Hanna 149
Lerner, Pablo 26
Leroux, Carlie 107
Leser, Julia 134
Leung, Grace 91
Leung, Janny Hc 59
Leverentz, Andrea 8, 26
Levi, Luca Martino 87
Levin, Benjamin 82, 106
Levine, Felice 29
Levine, Kay 60, 99
Levin, Leslie 36
Levinsky, Zachary 103
Levi, Ron 12, 25, 47
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Index
Kopela, Sophia 127
Koram, Kojo 8
Korpiola, Mia 26
Koss, Catheryn 122
Kotani, Junko 22
Kotsakis, Andreas 90
Koulish, Robert 79
Koutsioumpas, Konstantinos 107, 127
Kovalev, Nikolai 92
Kovandzic, Tomislav 9
Kowalsky, Andrij 60
Koyanagi, Shunichiro 57
Kraiem, Daniela 120
Krebs, Andrew 101
Kreit, Alex 103
Krell, Matthew 6
Krever, Tor 83
Kricheli-Katz, Tamar 146
Krishnan, Jayanth 3, 99
Kristiansen, Bettina Lemann 10, 16
Kritzer, Herbert 36, 88, 140
Kroll, Stefan 89
Kroncke, Jedidiah 8, 32, 52
Krueger, James 72, 116
Krug, Anita K. 107
Krygier, Martin 19, 67, 76
Kuan, Hsiaowei 126
Kubrin, Charis 69
Kukovec, Damjan 89
Kukura, Elizabeth 15, 36
Kunihiko, Yoshida 48
Kuo, Chuan-Chi 43
Kupenda, Angela Mae 88
Kurban, Dilek 71
Kurczewski, Jacek 109
Kurisu, Sheri-Lynn 31, 84
Kurlychek, Megan 40
Kusano, Yoshiro 121
Kuwahara, Naoko 77
Kuzmarov, Betina Appel 10
Kwon, Jihyun 106
Kyle, Brett 25
165 Index
Participant Index
Levy, Karen 123, 131
Levy, Melanie 152
Levy, Ran A. 37
Lewis, Browne 10, 145
Lewis, Myrisha 110
Lewis, Sam 48
Liang, Chih-Ming 130
Liao, Carol 104
Lidsky, Lyrissa 31
Lieb, Susan Block 80, 113, 125
Liew, Jamie 5
Light, Matthew 110
Li, Jianyong 35
Liljeblad, Jonathan 63
Lima, Isabella Domiciano 136
Lima, Mariana De Araujo Mendes 16
Lima, Roberto Kant De 16
Limki, Rashne 136
Lin, Albert 74
Lindahl, Nicole 116
Lindbekk, Monika 34, 57
Lindberg, Sanna 120
Linford, Jake 88
Linnemann, Travis 132
Lin, Shin-Rou 151
Lipman, Francine 63
Li, Su 24
Little, Laura 73
Littwin, Angela 125
Liu, Chien-Yu 31
Liu, Ching-Yi 63
Liu, Sida 45, 99
Livshits, Anat 147
Li, Yedan 121
Lockhart, Emily 58
Loewy, Arnold 25
Lohman, Alexander De Savornin 70
Lohne, Kjersti 12
Lokaneeta, Jinee 11, 15, 111
Lombrozo, Tania 59
Lonegrass, Missy 37
Longazel, Jamie 14
Longhi, Joao 8
Lopez, Jane Lilly 79
Lora, Laura 98
Lorca, Rocio 93
Lorenz, Aaron 11, 90
Loud, Jamila 7
Lougarre, Claire 117
Love, Helene 142
Lovelace, H. Timothy 74
Lovell, George 5, 74
166 Lovera, Domingo 93
Lovett, John 109
Lowrey, Belen 147
Loyens, Kim 123
Lucarelli, Paola 59
Lucchiari, Claudio 129
Lucena, Elisa 107
Luft, Rachel 114
Lukic, Melina Rocha 10
Lülf, Charlotte 139
Lurie, Lilach 108
Luttrell-Rowland, Mikaela 135
Lyke, Sheldon Bernard 38, 85
Lynch, Mona 41, 61, 95, 124, 137
M
Macdermott, Therese 115
Macfarlane, Katherine 126
Machado, Joana 104
Machura, Stefan 92
Mackinnon, Alexandria 141
Mack, Kenya 26
Macmillan, Catharine 26
Madeira, Jody 28
Madern, Tamara 33
Maeda, Tomohiko 109, 115, 140
Magaldi, Meagan 37
Maghbouleh, Neda 73
Maguire, Edward 147
Mahmud, Tayyab 148
Mahrouse, Gada 67
Maier, Katharina Helen 68
Mainsant, Gwénaëlle 134
Major, Blair 29
Major, Brenda 36
Mak, Elaine 129
Malhotra, Ravi 78
Malik, Ali 133
Mallard, Gregoire 75
Maloy, Jason 119, 149
Mamlyuk, Boris 21, 22
Mancilla, Roberto 120
Mandal, Saptarshi 4, 23
Mandel, Hanan 99
Manian, Maya 140
Manikis, Marie 74
Manners, Jane 65
Mann, Itamar 83
Mann, Larisa 145
Manta, Irina 127
Marat, Erica 110
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Participant Index
Mccorkel, Jill 26
Mccreary, Tyler 111
Mcdermott, Megan 151
Mcdonnell, Brett 14
Mcelhattan, David 18
Mcevoy, Kieran 25
Mcewen, Matthew 105
Mcginley, Ann 79, 102, 108
Mckenzie, Danielle 25
Mckenzie, Debra 61
Mckim, Allison 33
Mckinley, Michelle 53, 122
Mckinnon, Izraelle 117
Mcknight, Janet 82
Mcleod, Allegra 56
Mcmahon, Kevin 42
Mcmillan, L. Jane 23, 39
Mcmorrow, Thomas 47, 147
Mcneal, Mary Helen 142
Mcpeak, Agnieszka 131
Mcquay, Brian 39
Mctighe, Laura 14
Means, Benjamin 1
Medeiros, Bernardo 62
Medina, M. Isabel 38
Mednicoff, David 149
Meenan, Helen 134
Mehrotra, Ajay 99
Meili, Stephen 46
Meitiv, Danielle 48
Mejia, Catalina Del Pilar 132
Meladze, Giorgi 92
Melgarejo, Diana Andrade 68
Mellinger, Hillary 35
Mello, Joseph 93
Menchaca, Celeste 129
Mendeloff, David 25
Menjivar, Cecilia 24, 130
Meredith, Marc 138
Merieau, Eugenie 77
Merkel, William 19
Meroka, Agnes 105
Merry, Sally Engle 4, 12, 57, 67, 85
Mertz, Elizabeth 11, 28, 99
Mesinas, Analicia Mejia 119
Metroka, Brandon 119
Meyer, Kimberly 124
Meyerson, Denise 39
Meyers, Stephen 104
Miao, Michelle 30
Michalski, Roger 120
Michelle, Simon 76
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Index
Marder, Nancy 55, 101, 143
Marin, Amaya Alvez 80
Marino, Gabriele 35
Mark, Alyx 38
Markovitz, Jonathan 138
Marques, Francisco Paes 8
Marrani, David 124
Marriott, Lisa 29
Marshall, Anna-Maria 4, 32, 49, 52, 90, 97
Marshall, Pablo 93
Martin, Cary 126
Martin, Craig 103
Martin, Damali 76
Martinez, Aurelio Gurrea 148
Martin, Karin 113
Martin, Margaret 72
Martin, Natasha 50
Martin, Richard 46
Martins, Luis Felipe Lopes 127
Marusek, Sarah 61
Maruta, Takashi 55
Marvel, Stu 15, 48
Marychurch, Judith 94
Marzán, César F. Rosado 52, 121, 134
Mascini, Peter 49, 111
Masengu, Tabeth 105
Masri, Mazen 46
Massoud, Mark Fathi 66, 111
Matambanadzo, Saru 19
Mate, Manoj 5
Matera, Christopher 90
Mather, Lynn 36
Mathiassen, Charlotte 112
Matsumura, Kaiponanea 36
Matsunaka, Manabu 35
Matsuura, Yoshiharu 42
Matthews, Heidi 80
Matthiesen, Sara 28
Maurutto, Paula 8, 124
Mavronicola, Natasa 56, 149
Mawani, Renisa 18, 38, 53, 81
May, Christopher 146
Mayeri, Serena 74
Mayes, Lauren 103
Maynard, Goldburn 40, 63
Mayson, Sandy 11
Mcadams, Richard 144
Mcadoo, Daryl 20, 62
Mccann, Michael 5, 34, 115
Mccarthy, Lauren 46, 110, 132
Mccloskey, Megan 10
Mccord, David 83
167 Index
Participant Index
Michelson, Ethan 110
Michel, Veronica 21
Miksch, Karen 9, 38
Millar, Paul 57
Miller, Eric 132
Miller, Jonathan 68
Miller, Paul 83
Miller, Zinaida 101, 133
Milligan, Joy 118
Million, Dian 136
Milot, Lisa 150
Min, David 107
Minke, Linda Kjær 112
Miron, Rolando Garcia 58
Mitchell, Gemma 25
Mitch, Mr 137
Miyazawa, Setsuo 23, 96, 141
Moak, Daniel 87
Modak-Truran, Mark C. 17
Moerenhout, Tom 71
Mohapatra, Seema 15, 28
Moore, Colin 83
Moore, Dawn 19, 95
Moore, Kelli 128
Moore, Lisa 56
Moore, Megan A. 88
Moosavian, Rebecca 103
Mopas, Michael 145
Morales, Alfonso 70
Mora, Pablo Poveda 79
Morath, Sarah 111
Moreira, Rafaela 138
Moreira, Thaís Miranda 117
Morgan, Bronwen 141
Morrill, Calvin 73, 99
Morris, Annette 115
Morris, Kathleen 109
Mor, Sagit 52, 64
Morse, Michael 138
Moses, Lyria Bennett 145
Moss, Aaron 37
Mostert, Hanri 143
Motomura, Hiroshi 24, 110
Moustafa, Tamir 32, 111
Moyle, Leah 136
Mucciaroni, Gary 22
Muchmore, Adam 141
Muhtar, Etudaiye 85
Muirhead, Jacob 111
Mukharji, Projit 15
Mukherjee, Mithi 24
Mulcahy, Linda 59, 141
168 Mullane, Nancy 72, 82, 122
Mulyampiti, Tabitha 75
Mulzer, Amy 28
Mumford, Ann 64, 75, 94, 105
Munesue, Tokuko 127
Munger, Frank 67, 88
Muniz-Fraticelli, Victor M. 29
Munshi, Sherally 56
Murcia, Angela Maria Paez 27, 109
Murdocca, Carmela 67
Murphy, Jane 98
Murphy, Mary 36
Murray, Janeanne 69
Musheno, Michael 53, 73
Mutcherson, Kimberly 140
Myers, Joanne 50, 87
Myers, Samuel 38
N
Nadler, Janice 59, 144
Naerssen, Margaret Van 41
Nakanishi, Toshimi Momo 64
Narine, Marcia 150
Narotzki, Doron 10
Nascimento, Carlos 33
Natarajan, Usha 2, 90, 111
Naus, Wendy 29
Negri, Sergio 104
Nellis, Ashley 30, 103, 113
Nelson, Matthew 149
Nelson, Robert 82, 110
Nesiah, Vasuki 31, 111
Neuwirth, Rostam J. 77
Newark, Carol 32
Newell, Bryce C. 145
Nicholson, Matthew 90
Nielsen, Laura 1, 24
Nieto, Alberto 19
Nisbet, Elizabeth 153
Nishimura, Takeshi 55
Nobles, Allison 46
Nolette, Paul 2, 131
Noronha, Joanna Vieira 143
Norris, Jesse 25
Norris, Luke 40
Norwood, Kimberly 7
Nowicki, Elizabeth 119, 126
Nunes, Rodrigo 35
Nunley, Tamika 149
Nyuykonge, Wiykiynyuy Charles 94
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Participant Index
O
P
Packel, Amanda 52, 118
Packin, Nizan 86, 107
Padhy, Sanghamitra 3, 88
Padilla, Jorge Pelaez 71
Page, Joshua 92
Pahuja, Sundhya 12, 22, 43
Painter, Genevieve 12, 124
Palmer, Vernon 61, 114
Pamplona, Danielle Anne 35
Panter, Abigail 62
Pantoja, Alicia 103
Papandrea, Mary-Rose 31
Pappas, Brian 109
Parfitt, Rose 12, 61, 73
Parker, Chistine 70
Parker, Christine 128
Parker, James 73
Parker, Kunal 12, 53, 65
Park, John 79
Park, K-Sue 13
Parks, Gregory 136
Parmar, Pooja 3, 37
Parmentier, Stephan 75
Parsa, Amin 54
Paschel, Tianna 138
Passavant, Paul 124
Pates, Rebecca 134
Patmore, Glenn 34
Paul-Emile, Kimani 88
Pauli, Carol 12
Pavlich, George 19, 76, 124
Payne, Troy C. 129
Pearson, Kim 28
Pedriana, Nicholas 63
Pedroni, Laurence 146
Pedroza, Juan 14
Peguero, Anthony 103
Peirce, Jennifer 120
Pejovic, Caslav 35
Pelc, Krzysztof 45
Peled, Tamar Katz 55
Peleg, Anat 73
Peleg, Noam 107
Peletz, Michael 34
Peltz-Steele, Richard 149
Pena, Claudia 84
Pereira, Anthony 26
Pereira, Thomaz 147
Perez, Joanna 31
Perez, Vanessa Casado 20
Perlman, Karni 99
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Index
Oakley, Emma 100
Obasogie, Osagie 61, 72, 82
Oberarzbacher, Franz Erwin 16
Obiora, Leslye 46, 85, 120
O’brien, Barbara 102
O’brien, Laurie 37
Ocen, Priscilla 84
O’connell, Ciara 117
Odewale, Olanike 69, 85
Odom, John S. 51
Oei, Shu-Yi 20, 41, 74
Ojwang, Duncan 105
Okogbule, Nlerum 94
Okorie, Victor 64
Olasupo, Egbewole Abdulwahab 85
Olesen, Annette 130
Olivares, Mariela 30
Oliveira, Luis Roberto Cardoso De 17
Oliveira, Maria Cecilia Riegner 132
Oliveira, Michael Riegner 80
Oliveira, Miguel 33
Olmos, Margaret 146
Omarova, Saule 101
Omori, Marisa 127
Ondersma, Chrystin 125
O’neill, Justin 50
Onifade, Temitope 88
Onuora-Oguno, Azubike 58
Oomen, Barbara 57
Oppusunggu, Yu Un 89
Oraby, Mona 146
Organ, James 127
Orians, Kelly 14
Orsini, Adriana Goulart De Sena 136
Ortiz, Lilián Andrea 78
Osaka, Eri 6, 35
Ossorio, Pilar 10
Ostroukh, Asya 100
O’sullivan, Maria 128
Oswalt, Michael 122
Ota, Shozo 108, 121, 129
Otomo, Yoriko 47
Otter, Ronald Den 10, 53
Otter, Sandra Den 24
Otto, Dianne 143
Ouyang, Wei 42
Owens, B. Robert 9
Owens, Emily 113
Owusu-Bempah, Akwasi 127
Oyelade, Olutunji 57
Oyieke, Yvonne 113
169 Index
Participant Index
Perlstein, Daniel 146
Perreau, Bruno 22
Pesta, George 142
Petersen, Nick 30
Peterson, Elin 101
Peterson, Meghan 99
Petillo, April 120, 139
Pfaff, John 66, 103
Pierscionek, Barbara 145
Piety, Tamara 20, 25, 94, 138
Pifer, Natalie A. 30, 69
Pilitowski, Bartosz 121
Pimentel, David 48
Pintin-Perez, Margarita 56
Pires, Lenin 16
Platsas, Antonios E. 37
Pleasant, Shakira 38
Plicanic, Senko 127
Plitmann, Yael 55
Pojanowski, Jeffrey 72
Polak, Paulina 106
Polcz, Sarah 47
Polikoff, Nancy 22
Pomerance, Benjamin 51
Poon, Yee Suan 13
Pope, James 139
Poppe, Emily Taylor 20, 140
Porter, Elizabeth 48, 148
Porterie, Sidonie 78
Porter, Katherine 113
Portillo, Shannon 90, 133, 134
Possas, Mariana 46
Potts, Amanda 108
Powell, Catherine 91
Prabhat, Devyani 93
Prado, Mariana Mota 81
Pratt, James 62
Price, Megan 101
Price, Polly 26
Price, Richard 119
Priel, Dan 72
Prieto, Samuel 119
Prost, Mario 47
Provine, Doris Marie 54
Pucci, Rafael Diniz 10
Puga, Alma Beltran Y 7
Pugach, Dana 73
Pulido, Laura 146
Purkey, Anna 15
Purvis, Dara 28
170 Q
Qiao, Yuan 6
Queiroz, Rafael Mafei R. 26
Quigley, Muireann 110
Quijano, Alejandra Azuero 143
Quintanilla, Victor 36, 47, 61, 150
Quintero, Diana 69, 97, 107
Quirino, Carina 73
Quirouette, Marianne 8, 17
R
Rabb, Intisar 32
Radhakrishna, Vanishree 38
Radics, George 13, 89
Radomska, Ewa 121
Ragone, Sabrina 57
Raguparan, Menaka 75
Rahman, K Sabeel 67
Rahman, Md Anisur 43
Rahman, Sabeel 67
Rajagopal, Balakrishnan 3, 65
Rajah, Jothie 89, 111
Rajput, Pam 58
Ramirez, Marla 51
Ramnath, Kalyani 38, 126
Ramos, Luiz Felipe Rosa 75
Ramos, Pedro 139
Rana, Aziz 3, 13, 81
Randolph, Susan 65
Ranganathan, Surabhi 54
Rangel, Henrique 119
Ranson, J.w. Andrew 142
Rantala, Marjo 60
Rapaport, Elizabeth 131
Raphael, Michael 87
Rasmussen, Jennifer 113
Raso, Jennifer 123
Rathod, Jayesh 30
Raup-Kounovsky, Anna 11
Rauschenbach, Mina 75
Ravid, Itay 18, 73
Ray, Brian 129
Razack, Sherene 67, 152
Raza, Farrah 146
Razavi, Negar 7
Rebouche, Rachel 15
Redleaf, Diane 48
Redlich, Allison 113
Reed, Douglas 18
Regev-Messalem, Shiri 142
Reich, Jennifer 51
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Participant Index
Rodriguez, Leila 9
Roederer, Chris 129
Roediger, Brendan 7
Roele, Isobel 83
Rogers, Brishen 67, 141
Roig, Jorge 19
Roithmayr, Daria 109, 118, 144
Rollins, Joe 62
Rolnick, Addie 141
Rolph, David 31
Romer, Johanna 62
Römkens, Renée 46
Ronel, Natti 73
Ron-El, Yaniv 148
Roots, Katrin 132, 145
Roque, Mehera San 152
Rose, Mary 55, 101, 102
Rosenberg, Gerald 1, 34
Rosenblatt, Betsy 98
Rosenblum, Darren 52, 118
Rosenblum, Peter 153
Rosen, Daniel 22, 63
Rosen, Robert 28, 104
Rosky, Clifford 22, 84
Ross, Megan 142
Ross, Sara 81, 91
Rossum, Wibo Van 121
Rostain, Tanina 38
Rothschild, Gil 83
Rountree, Meredith 28, 83
Roussell, Aaron 127
Rousse, Thomas 123
Rowen, Jamie 11, 101
Roychowdhury, Poulami 49
Roy, Sanchari 89
Ruan, Nantiya 40
Rubin, Ashley 49, 57, 69
Rubin, Edward 18, 105, 127
Rudes, Danielle 124, 132
Ruffer, Galya 63, 128
Ruibal, Alba 21
Ruiz, Alexander 91
Rumbold, John 145
Rury, Abigail 19
Rushin, Stephen 141
Ryo, Emily 124, 130
Index
Reichman, Nancy 49
Reidy, Skyler 129
Reilly, Peter 15
Reinbold, Jenna 17
Reiss, Dorit Rubinstein 51
Reitemeyer, John R. 42
Reiter, Andrew 25
Reiter, Keramet 66, 82, 112
Relis, Tamara 72
Remolina, Nydia 81
Remus, Dana 11
Renteln, Alison Dundes 88
Reosti, Anna 106
Resende, Maurício Palma 122
Reyes, Erika Garcia 134
Reyes, Victoria 40, 141
Reynolds, John 111
Ribeiro, Luiza Berlini Dornas 136
Ribeiro, Raquel 33
Ribet, Beth 84
Richards, Diana 59
Richardson, L. Song 7
Richards, Robert 108
Richland, Justin 3, 82, 124
Richman, Kimberly 112
Rich, Stephen 137
Riedel, Mareike 147
Riggs, Robert 8
Riles, Annelise 35, 68, 101, 124, 141
Rinehart, Amelia 76
Ring, Diane 10, 20
Rios-Figueroa, Julio 30
Rioux, Michele 135
Ri, Reirui 142
Rivera, Mariana Velasco 149
Rivlin, Gary 109
Robbennolt, Jennifer 150
Roberts, Christopher 13, 140
Roberts, Dorothy 117, 137
Roberts, Jenny 137, 138
Robertson, Michael 20
Robertson, Stephen 102
Roberts, Patricia E. 51
Roberts, Tracey 93
Robinson, H.c. 150
Robinson, Nick 100
Robinson, Russell 22, 111
Robinson, Toni 20, 63
Robson, Peter 90
Rochelle, Safiyah 89
Rochin, Nick 131
Rodriguez, Ana Maria Sanchez 58, 87
S
Saab, Anne 133
Saavedra, Camilo 91
Sabatello, Maya 92, 145
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171 Index
Participant Index
Sabbeth, Kathryn 137
Sachs, Jeffrey 111
Sachs, Margaret V. 96
Sadat, Leila 66
Saez, Macarena 86
Sagy, Yair 149
Said, Wadie 3
Saiger, Aaron 11
Saksena, Priyasha 8
Sampaio, Augusto 118
Sanchez-Urribarri, Raul 128
Sandefur, Rebecca 38
Sanders, Joseph 88
Sanders, Shaakirrah 109
Sandholtz, Wayne 47, 100
Santos, Shirley 33
Sanya, Brenda Nyandiko 77
Sargoni, Janine 18
Sarid, Eden 142
Sarria, Mario Alberto Cajas 26
Sattarzadeh, Sahar D. 46
Satterthwaite, Emily 50, 84
Savelsberg, Joachim 66, 99
Sayago, Camila Petrán 78
Scallen, Eileen 53, 151
Scheer, Kerri 129
Scheppele, Kim Lane 82, 105
Schept, Judah 132
Scherer, Matthew 29, 146
Schiff, Talia 79
Schlingensiepen, Marah 134
Schmidt, Christopher 1, 74
Schmidt, Jan-Robert 147
Schmidt, Katharina Isabel 149
Schmidt, Rebecca 8
Schneiderman, David 17
Schoenfeld, Heather 26
Schor, Miguel 27
Schottenfeld, Joseph 77
Schramm, Bérénice K. 57
Schuftan, Claudio 69, 97
Schultz, Vicki 137
Schwartz, Saul 125
Schwidetzky, Walter 20
Sclofsky, Sebastian 119
Scoggins, Suzanne 110
Scott, Dayna Nadine 35
Scott, Jenny 141
Sebba, Leslie 18
Seck, Sara 2, 36, 62
Secunda, Paul 121
Seeds, Christopher 41
172 Sekher, Hajar 80
Selberg, Niklas 26
Selberg, Rebecca 26
Semet, Amy 50, 73
Semukhina, Olga 110
Senden, Linda 128, 150
Sen, Jhuma 8, 138
Sen, Sudipta 38
Senthe, Shanthi Elizabeth 81, 90
Sepulveda, Antonio 139
Serban, Mihaela 106, 132
Seron, Carroll 11, 43, 99, 114
Sexton, Lori 112, 132, 133, 134
Shaffer, Gregory 47, 62, 82, 85
Shakargy, Sharon 61
Shakeshaft, Charol 103
Shakeshaft, Emma 88
Shalhoub-Kevorkian, Nadera 17
Shamir, Ronen 71, 151
Shanahan, Colleen 38
Shaner, Megan 126
Shanor, Amanda 94
Shapiro, Mathew 70
Sharafi, Mitra 4, 15, 114
Sharfstein, Daniel 135
Sharpless, Rebecca 137
Shaw, Alex 11
Shdaimah, Corey 13, 130
Shee, Amy Huey-Ling 42, 43, 60
Shehada, Nahda 34
Shepard, Cassandra 31
Shepherd, Hana 41
Sherman, Jim 36
Shimizu, Takashi 35
Shinomiya, Satoru 55, 143
Shirazyan, Sarah 8
Shoaibi, Halla 34, 80
Shoemaker, Karl 81
Short, Donn 47
Shreve, Gene 99
Shulz, Karen Bradshaw 48
Sibley, Marcus 19
Siddiqui, Mona 73
Sieder, Rachel 30
Sierra, Isabel C Jaramillo 6, 7
Sierra, Tatiana Alfonso 113, 132
Sigafoos, Jennifer 127
Sikka, Anette 141
Silbey, Susan 41, 49, 66, 82, 99, 123
Silva, Bruno 14
Silva, Denis 145
Silva, Fabio De Sa E 10, 143, 150
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Participant Index
Sosa-Riddell, Citlali 129
Soucek, Brian 120, 137
Sourdin, Tania 77, 92, 121
Sousa, Michael 113
Southworth, Susanna 9
Souza, Cibele Aimée 136
Spanbauer, Julie 107
Sparks, Randy 122
Spellman, Barbara 150
Spencer, Pauline 70, 92
Sperling, Valerie 100
Spindelman, Marc 112
Srikantiah, Jayashri 124
Srivastava, Swati 125
Staaf, Annika 6
Staes, Dorothea 57
Stahl, Kenneth 81
Staiano, Fulvia 139
Starr, Sonja 9
Stasiulis, Daiva 5
Stauffer, Jill 81
Stech, Radek 75
Steel, Alex 11
Steele, Michalyn 48
Stein, Edward 112
Stein, Nan 20
Stephens, Julia 46
Stephenson, Christie 104
Stepnitz, Abigail 63
Sterett, Susan 38
Sterio, Milena 127
Sterling, Andrea 142
Sterling, Joyce 110
Stienstra, Donna 121
Stoever, Jane 58, 102
Stokes, Elen 18
Stolk, Sofia 54
Stone, Zac 131
Storey, Alice 83
Storgaard, Anette 112
Strandberg, Coro 104
Strawson, John 26, 89
Streeter, Thomas 108
Strevens, Caroline 93, 94
Strother, Logan 119
Stuart, Forrest 9, 33
Stubbs, Holly 97
Stumpf, Juliet 46, 124
Suarez, Kimberly Spencer 70
Suarez, Paola 16
Subedi, Rabin 6
Subramanian, Narendra 115
To email a participant, please use the “contact me” link available on the Online Program Guide.
Index
Silva, Lorena Abbas Da 117
Silva, Lucas 136
Silva, Lucia Frota Pestana De Aguiar 33
Silva, Paulo Eduardo Alves Da 115
Silva, Ronaldo Lucas Da 23
Silver, Carole 11
Silverstein, Gordon 2
Silverstein, Helena 16, 49
Simard, Justin 146
Simm, Gabrielle 56
Simon, Jonathan 49, 76, 95, 106, 116, 133, 137, 148
Simon, Stefanie 37
Simpson, Gerry 22
Sims-Bruno, Holly 131
Sinai, Yuval 98
Singer, Jana 98
Singer, Phillip 152
Singh, Aditya 18
Singh, Anne-Marie 110
Singh, Rashmee 19, 130
Sirleaf, Matiangai 113
Siulc, Nina 62
Sivalingam, Harini 109
Siwach, Garima 40
Skapska, Grazyna 121
Skead, Natalie 11
Skinner, Christina Parajon 86, 87
Skinner-Thompson, Scott 120
Sleap, Bridget 152
Sloan, James 127
Sloan, Lloyd 62
Slobodian, Mayana C. 95
Smail, Dan 32
Smal, Jamie 25
Smith, Adrian 111
Smith, Charisa 86
Smith, Dean 16
Smith, Sarah 134
Smith, Tobias 21
Smulovitz, Catalina 21
Smyth, Aaron 142, 145
Smythe, Dee 105
Soboleva, Anita 108
Sobol, Neil 45
Sohoni, Deenesh 14
Sohoni, Mila 148
Sokhi-Bulley, Bal 41
Solan, Lawrence 41, 59, 109
Somer, Stéphanie De 123
Sommerlad, Hilary 36, 45, 97
Sommers, Roseanna 59
Sood, Avani 59, 69
173 Index
Participant Index
Suerth, Lauren 70
Sullivan, Esther 75
Sullivan, Winnifred 133, 146
Sumner, Jennifer 112
Sundquist, Christian 118
Sundstrom, Lisa 47, 100
Sung, Yu-Hsien 13
Sun, Lisa 48
Sunshine, Naomi 153
Super, Gail 69
Sutherland, Kate 9
Sutherland, Zoe 140
Svedin, Lina 103
Svetlicinii, Alexandr 77
Swan, Peter 49
Swan, Sarah 1, 58
Sweeny, Joanne 90
Swiffen, Amy 19
Sykes, Katie 18
T
Taekema, Sanne 71
Tagliarina, Corinne 46
Tagliarina, Daniel 46
Taha, Mai 111
Tait, Allison 1
Takahashi, Bruno 115
Talesh, Shauhin 28, 43
Tamayo, Robinson Sánchez 79
Tanaka, Darren 5
Tan, Eugene K B 22, 40
Taparata, Evan 109
Tapscott, Rebecca 105
Tatour, Lana 23
Tauber, Steven 8
Tay, Alice Erh-Soon 45
Tayebwa, Sylvia Ivy 94
Taye, Mihreteab 12
Taylor, Whitney 103, 126
Tehranian, John 76
Tenorio, Sam C. 100
Tew, Yvonne 97
Thacher, David 102
Than, Claire De 124
Thielen-Wilson, Leslie 67
Thimmesch, Adam 41
Thomas, Tanesha A 16
Thomas, Terry 21
Thompson, Lilah 35
Thompson, Vetta 7
Thomson, Michael 48
174 Thomson, Michael 48
Thorne, Deborah 113
Thorpe, Rebecca 131
Thum, Florence 93
Thusi, I. India 17
Tigre, Maria Antonia 150
Toksoz, Ayse 41
Tolman, Arielle 49
Tomassetti, Julia 50, 153
Tomita, Satoko 6
Tomkinson, Sule 64
Tomlins, Christopher 12, 13
Torres-Spelliscy, Ciara 94
Torrible, Clare 147
Toscano, Vicki 25
Tóth, András 50
Toy-Cronin, Bridgette 77
Trammell, Rebecca 26
Trautner, Mary Nell 90, 130
Triger, Zvi 20, 48
Trispiotis, Ilias 35
Trochev, Alexei 128
Troutt, David 109
Trubek, David 10
Trubek, Louise 112, 137
Trudel, Elisabeth Roy 139
Tsesis, Alexander 53, 118
Tucker, Anne 107
Tulich, Tamara 6
Turkel, Gerald 50
Turner, Jenia 113
Turney-Lewis, Ct 14
Tushnet, Mark 27
Tu, Yu-Yin 18
Tweedy, Ann 49
Tyler, Tom 69
Tyson, Christopher J. 21
U
Ubink, Janine 72, 82, 116
Uchenna, Ekenze Modestus 104
Udell, David 38
Uggen, Chris 115, 129
Unger, Matthew 19
Utoft, Carolina Alvarez 45
V
Vachon, Christyne 119, 126
Vadasaria, Shaira 67
Vaisman, Noa 68
To email a participant, please use the “contact me” link available on the Online Program Guide.
Participant Index
W
Wada, Yoshitaka 64
Wagner, Constance 96
Waisman, Dov 150
Wakefield, Sara 41
Walker, Anders 149
Wallace, Alison 82
Wall, Tyler 132
Walsh, Camille 99, 140
Wamboldt, Alexander 68
Wandan, Solongo 149
Wang, Chin-Shou 13
Wang, Hsiao-Tan 20
Wang, Leeann 128
Waris, Attiay 105
Warnken, Heather 74
Warrick, Catherine 72
Warwick, Ben 69, 80
Wasserman, Howard 7
Waterstone, Michael 92, 104
Watson, Moira 119
Watson, Nicole 120
Watts, Laura Tamblyn 122
Weare, Siobhan 108
Weber, Mark 78
Weber, Rob 101
Wedeen, Lisa 12
Wedeking, Justin 108
Weinberger, Seth 103
Weinberg, Jill 40
Weinrib, Laura 102, 140
Weiss, Marley 50, 135, 152
Welch, Frank 51
Welch, Kimberly 122
Wenger, Kaimipono 102
Wennberg, Lena 60
Werth, Robert 33, 78, 124
West, Sonja 31, 94
Westwood, Sue 122
Wexler, David 69, 70
Weyers, Heleen 111, 123
Wheatley, Natasha 73
Wheeler, Sally 81, 148
Whitehead, Jason 10, 42
Whitehead, Robin 78
Whittle, Tanya 39
Wiener, Richard 36, 37, 47, 59, 69
Wiesner, Martha Luz Rojas 56
Wightman, Linda F. 62
Wilder, Molly 123
Wildman, Stephanie 76
Wilke, Christiane 89
Williams, Brian 100
Williams, Carmel 80
Williams, Danielle Terrazas 149
Williams, Kaya 33
Williams, Linda 14, 102
Williams, Mary Spiers 37
Williams, Monica 5, 90
Willis, Jessica 106
To email a participant, please use the “contact me” link available on the Online Program Guide.
Index
Valauri, John 138
Valderhaug, Sigrun 108
Valdes, Frank 19
Valente, Mariana 139
Valentine, Grant 136
Valleala, Aija 76
Valverde, Mariana 124
Vandenbogaerde, Arne 57
Vanoverbek, Dimitri 2
Vanoverbeke, Dimitri 55
Varela, Kay 103
Vargas, Adriana 56
Vasconcelos, Guilherme 127
Vaughan, Steven 18, 36, 100
Vazquez, Angelica Cuellar 98
Vedaschi, Arianna 35
Velasco, Julian 83
Venkatesh, Vasanthi 71
Verchick, Robert 114, 133
Verdu, Amalia 60
Vergier, Julien Du 97
Verma, Anjuli 58
Vermeylen, Saskia 127
Verschoof, Rick J. 92, 121
Vertinsky, Ilan 64
Vet, Freek Van Der 100
Vevaina, Leilah 42, 78
Vidmar, Neil 55, 143
Vieraitis, Lynne 9
Viglione, Jill 124
Villalpando, Alejandro 117
Villegas, Mauricio Garcia 30
Virdi, Preet Kaur 72
Vivaldi, Lieta 93
Vladescu, Ioana 110
Vojdik, Valorie 34, 80
Volpe, Valentina 57
Vording, Henk 74
Vort, Eric Van Der 63
Vos, Renske 54
Votinius, Jenny Julén 142
Votinius, Sacharias 17
175 Index
Participant Index
Willis, Lauren 45
Willison, Charley 152
Wilson, Bruce 80
Wilson, Clare 94
Wilson, Joshua 1, 40
Wilson, Matthew 2, 23, 70, 143
Wilson, Richard Ashby 13, 65, 101, 113
Winchester, Sean 25
Wingerde, Karin Van 111
Wing, Leah 151
Wingrove, Twila 141
Winkler, Adam 135
Winkler, Inga 58, 69
Winn, Jane 123
Winston, Kenneth 72
Winter, Alix 83
Wishnie, Michael 51
Witt, John 74
Woeste, Victoria 135
Wolfe, Justin 68
Wolkart, Erik 26
Won, Yoomin 77
Woods, Andrew 36
Wood, William 23
Woo, Margaret 23
Woude, Maartje Van Der 63, 96
Wright, Jamie 42
Wright, Lisa 91
Wright, Ronald 60
Wróbel, Marcin 106
Wu, Chuan-Feng 123
Wulff, Stephen 24
Wu, Richard Wai Sang 91
Yttergren, Åsa 60
Yu, Peter 76, 98
Yusuff, Abdulwasiu 64
Z
Zackin, Emily 1, 113
Zacks, Eric 28
Zanatta, Rafael 139
Zanghellini, Aleardo 25, 149
Zare, Maliheh 43
Zaring, David 101
Zariski, Archie 77, 98, 99, 128
Zarnetske, Robert 41
Zatz, Marjorie 79
Zenker, Olaf 9
Zhang, Yue 40
Zhao, Yi 70
Zheng, Chunyan 45
Zhou, Qin 141
Zhou, Yao 10
Zietlow, Rebecca 139
Zilis, Michael 108
Zimerman, Nourit 99
Zimmerman, Adam 148
Zlotowski, Laura 39, 82
Zovanyi, Nikolett 73
Zug, Marcia 36
Zulfiqar, Adnan 32, 43
Zumbansen, Peer 62, 71
Zuniga, Natalia Torres 9
X
Xavier, Sujith 111
Xiao, Huina 29
Xie, Qingtao 87
Y
Yahaya, Nurfadzilah 32, 43
Yamada, Aya 121
Yang, Chun-Soo 68
Yarbrough, Michael 49, 71, 132
Yarrow, David 39
Ye, Haibo 40
Yildirim, Seval 43
Yingling, M. Patrick 61
Young, Cheri-Leigh 143
Young, Kathryne 24
Young, Margot 38, 45, 87
176 To email a participant, please use the “contact me” link available on the Online Program Guide.
Keyword Index
Economy, Business and Society 6, 28, 35, 67, 80, 101, 141
Access to Justice 16, 20, 21, 24, 25, 33, 38, 51, 56, 74, 113,
Economy, Global Economy and Law 10, 146, 148, 151
115, 119, 120, 121, 127, 136, 137
Environment and Energy 80, 88, 89, 97, 127
African Law & Society 105, 115, 153
Ethnography 4, 13, 17, 24, 33, 62, 68, 78, 113, 132, 134,
Aging 35, 101, 122, 134, 142, 152
151
B
F
Bioethics, Biotechnology and the Law 10, 106, 116, 140, 145,
Family and Youth 1, 28, 36, 48, 58, 60, 98, 147
151
Feminist Jurisprudence 7, 25, 76, 120, 133
British Colonialism 37, 46, 111
G
C
Gender and Judging 34, 45, 57, 90
Capital Punishment 22, 83
Gender and Sexuality 15, 22, 47, 50, 59, 62, 64, 75, 79, 84,
Citizenship, Migration, Immigration and Nation 5, 25, 30, 35,
105, 112, 118, 120, 130, 142, 143, 148
46, 51, 53, 54, 55, 56, 63, 65, 77, 79, 96, 109, 110, 115,
Geographies of Law 7, 60, 71, 81, 91
117, 124, 128, 130
Civil Justice and Disputing 36, 43, 47, 108, 115, 129, 140,
H
151
Health and Medicine 51, 64, 110, 122, 130, 142, 152
Class and Inequality 7, 24, 39, 51, 75, 93
Household Finance 33, 45, 113, 125
Colonialism and Post-Colonialism 3, 13, 16, 37, 40, 42, 67,
95, 111
I
Constitutional Law and Constitutionalism 2, 5, 8, 14, 19, 27,
Islamic Law and Society 32, 43
28, 54, 61, 77, 85, 94, 97, 118, 119, 138, 147, 149
Index
A
Corporate and Securities Law 14, 52, 83, 86, 96, 104, 107,
L
118, 119, 126, 147
Labor 26, 35, 50, 52, 70, 77, 84, 93, 121, 134, 139, 153
Crime and Victims 15, 53, 86, 102, 152
Language and Discourse 59, 86, 108, 124, 128, 146
Lay Participation, Juries and Other Forms of Lay Participation
D
55, 78, 79, 91, 101, 144
Democracy, Governance and State theory; Transitions to
Legal Culture 20, 26, 37, 61
Democracy and Revolutions 21, 58, 63, 120, 129
Legal History 12, 26, 49, 65, 68, 74, 87, 89, 102, 122, 129,
Disabilities and Law 53, 64, 78, 92, 104
131, 135, 140, 149
Disasters 6, 31, 48, 56, 57, 66, 67, 68, 74, 114, 115, 126
Legal Professions and Other Legal Services Providers 36, 51,
Disputes and Negotiation 49
60, 100
E
N
East Asia 2, 6, 13, 21, 35, 40, 42, 44, 45, 63, 70, 77, 87, 97
New Legal Realism 9, 18, 29, 44
Economic and Social Rights 40, 50, 58, 65, 69, 80, 85, 87, 94,
Non-State Legal Actors 16
97, 98, 107, 117, 127
For an online keyword search, please visit the Online Program Guide
177 Keyword Index
P
Policing 9, 17, 33, 46, 67, 69, 96, 99, 102, 110, 111, 119,
Index
120, 126, 127, 132, 141, 145, 147, 150
Professional Education 11, 38, 93
Public-Private Dichotomy 20
Punishment, Sentencing, and Social Control 8, 11, 17, 21, 26,
30, 31, 41, 57, 59, 66, 69, 83, 84, 92, 95, 103, 106, 110,
116, 124, 131, 132, 137, 138, 148
R
Race and Ethnicity 35, 38, 62, 114, 146
Race, Critical Race Research 56, 61, 67, 84, 88, 102, 109,
119, 136, 141
Regulation & Governance 11, 70, 73, 109, 111, 123, 128,
150
Religion and Law 10, 17, 29, 42, 133, 146
Rights and Identities 39, 40, 41, 73, 108, 133, 137
S
Social Movements and Legal Mobilization 2, 4, 13, 14, 20, 21,
31, 32, 34, 71, 93, 100, 126, 138
Social theory and Law 18, 48, 72, 76, 81, 87, 90, 98, 99, 106,
131, 136, 140, 145, 150
South Asia 4, 5, 8, 24, 72
T
Taxation 10, 20, 29, 30, 40, 50, 63, 74, 84, 93, 94, 95
Teaching Law and Society 9, 90, 133
Technology 18, 47, 56, 62, 63, 94, 108, 109, 113, 123, 131,
140, 142, 145, 147, 150, 153
Transnational Legal Orders, International and Regional
Institutions 8, 12, 47, 62, 71, 81, 89, 125
W
War and Law Including Security and Terrorism 4, 34, 39, 103,
132
178 For an online keyword search, please visit the Online Program Guide