Cfp: Law and Social Order Conference

The creation and enforcement of the law and the maintenance of social order have been key concerns for states, societies and individuals in Africa. However, the way in which these terms have been defined, practiced and justified has shifted across time and place. In our conference we will be unearthing some of the contestation that surrounds these shifts, and the consequences of this contestation.


3rd and 4th April 2017  –   Centre of African Studies Conference -University of Edinburgh

 

A conference with a difference…

Our aim is to facilitate a engaged and creative conversation around law and social order over the course of the conference.

We will begin on 3 April with three theoretical round tables on the concepts that lie at the heart of our theme: Statehood; Order and Disorder; Law and Norms.

These morning sessions will engage with some of the cutting-edge theoretical debates and developments in our field, and establish a range of thoughts and questions around which the conference conversations can coalesce.

In the afternoon we will invite scholars to reflect on how their own work engages with these conversations, providing a series of rooms across the university in which they can reconsider their papers and presentations in the light of the roundtable discussions, and incorporate new insights, ready for the panels on 4 April.

Participants will not be expected to submit a paper or presentation before the conference, but will be expected to commit to the full two days, in order to play an active role in the forging new conversations on the topic.

We welcome papers that come from a range of disciplines, including but not limited to anthropology, politics, law and history as well as transdisciplinary papers. Practitioners, graduate students and academic staff are all welcome to apply.

Abstracts of 400 words should be submitted to casconference2017@gmail.com   by the 6th January 2017

Podcast: Twenty Years under the Channel, and beyond? Rethinking Migrations and Borders ¦¦ Vingt années sous la Manche, et au-delà ? Repenser les migrations et les frontières

Click here to listen to the podcasts of the conference on migration and frontiers. Ed Naylor, one of our cluster members, was taking part

 


Below are the details of the conference in question, which took place last October at Brunel University, London.

 

Here is the detail of the conference:

Twenty Years under the Channel, and beyond? Rethinking Migrations and Borders

 Vingt années sous la Manche, et au-delà ? Repenser les migrations et les frontières

 

Fourth International Conference

Roundtable held in Brunel University London, Uxbridge campus, Darwin Room, Hamilton Suite.

Wednesday, 12 October 2016, 13:45-18:00

Quatrième rencontre internationale

Table ronde accueillie par l’Université Brunel de Londres, campus d’Uxbridge,

Salle Darwin, Hamilton Suite.

Mercredi 12 octobre 2016 de 13 h 45 à 18 h

 

PROGRAMME

Opening/ Ouverture

David AZÉMA, Chairman, Rails et histoire

Dr Naomi PERCIVAL, Special Collections Librarian

Channel Tunnel Archive, Brunel University

 Session 1: A new Border under the Sea / Première séance : Une frontière construite sous la mer

Opening speech and Chair/Allocation d’ouverture et présidence :

Professor Michel FOUCHER, Titulaire de la chaire de géopolitique appliquée, Collège d’études mondiales, Fondation Maison des Sciences de l’Homme

Discussant / Rapporteur : Dr Alison CARROL, Senior Lecturer in European History, Department of Politics, History & the Brunel Law School, Brunel University London, member of the steering Committee for the roundtable

l Dr Federica INFANTINO, Wiener-Anspach Post-Doctoral Fellow; COMPAS, University of Oxford; External Lecturer at European Studies Institute, Scientific Collaborator at Groupe de Recherche sur les relations ethniques, les migrations et l’égalité (GERME), Université libre de Bruxelles

l Dr Katja SARMIENTO-MIRWALDT, Senior Lecturer in Politics, Brunel University London

Session 2: Migration trends across the Channel / Deuxième séance : L’évolution des migrations Transmanche

Chair/Sous la présidence de : Professor Helen DRAKE, Professor of French and European Studies, Jean Monnet Chair in European Integration, Chair of UACES, Loughborough University, Member of the Scientific Board of Advisers for the Programme Twenty years under the Channel, and beyond?

Discussant / Rapporteur : Dr Laurent BONNAUD, Programme manager, member of the steering Committee for the roundtable

l Dr Daniel Alexander GORDON, Senior Lecturer in European History, Edge Hill University

l Dr Ed NAYLOR, Lecturer, School of Languages and Area Studies, University of Portsmouth

Conclusion          Dr Alison CARROL