ABOUT UNIVERSITY OF BRISTOL LAW SCHOOL :
The Law School has a large body of scholars engaged in research and teaching in law and its histories. The Centre exists to fosters excellent research in this field, individual and collaborative, and to forge links between disciplines and institutions, amongst scholars with an interest in examining law in its historical dimension.
The Centre includes academics with internationally-recognised research profiles, who work with a variety of local, national and international organisations to promote and further the study of law and history.
Call for Papers
Abstracts are invited for the 26th British Legal History Conference, which will take place at the University of Bristol from Wednesday 3 July to Saturday 6 July 2024.
The conference theme is ‘Insiders and Outsiders in the History of Law’.
Participants will be encouraged to explore the theme by reflecting on dividing lines drawn in the history of the law, and on who, or what, is within and without them.
Insiders, for example, may be lawyers, judges, parliamentarians, monarchs, and others with the power to influence law and its enforcement. Outsiders may be those often left out of, or marginalised in, classical accounts of legal history: for example, women, outlaws, colonial subjects, and enslaved people.
Consideration of insiders and outsiders also prompts us to examine jurisdictional dividing lines and classificatory rules, including substantive doctrinal boundaries and the borders between legal systems.
Moreover, the theme invites reflections on the study of legal history itself: which subjects and methods, and whose voices, are inside or outside our discipline?
Please note:
- Abstracts should be emailed to [email protected] by Friday 1 September.
- Decisions will be communicated by 31 December 2023.
- The word limit for abstracts is 300 words.
- Please submit abstracts as Microsoft Word documents.
- Abstracts will only be accepted for individual papers, not panels.
- Papers concerning any time period or part of the world are welcome, as are papers from scholars working on any aspect of legal history.
- Papers from postgraduate and early career researchers are welcome. If you are a postgraduate or early career researcher, you are encouraged to indicate this in your abstract, in order to aid us in selecting a range of speakers from different career stages.
- Speakers whose papers are accepted will be required to register for the conference and to pay the conference fee. There will be a reduced rate for postgraduate researchers.
- Speakers whose papers are accepted will be expected to present in person. Papers should be approximately 20 minutes in length.