Category Archives: September

Call for Papers: Poverty & Access to Justice

Call for Papers:

The University of Mississippi and the Mississippi Law Journal is pleased to announce that in Spring 2013 Supra will be devoted to current scholarship in the area of Poverty & Access to Justice. Supra publishes content exclusively for our online format. Thus, our articles are generally concise.  Supra serves as a practitioner’s aid with articles detailing current challenges and practical solutions.  Supra is seeking submissions that address practical solutions under this general theme.

Possible civil topics include, but are not limited to:

  • The Use of Forms for Self-Represented Litigants
  • Developing Statutory Law that can be Utilized by Self-Represented Litigants
  • Civil Gideon
  • Should Bar Associations Require Mandatory Pro Bono Hours

Scholars in the area of pro bono assistance and legal profession are invited to submit paper proposals, 1-2 pages in length, by September, 15, 2012.  Proposals should be sent to Kristen Kyle-Castelli, Executive Supra Editor.  Papers will be selected to ensure a wide range of topics.  As an online Journal, Supra accepts papers that are 4,000 words or greater.  Final drafts of papers are due by October 31, 2012.

Contact Information:

Kristen Kyle-Castelli
Executive Supra Editor, Mississippi Law Journal
mkkyle@go.olemiss.edu

http://lawprofessors.typepad.com/legal_profession/2012/08/call-for-papers-poverty-access-to-justice.html

Global Intellectual Property Enforcement

Date(s) of Conference:

September 21-22, 2012

Location:

Renaissance Washington, DC Dupont Circle Hotel
1143 New Hampshire Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20037

Description:

The Conference is designed to offer a practical guide to enforcement of intellectual property rights across a multiplicity of jurisdictions.

Contact Information:

uiacentre@uianet.org

http://seminaires.uianet.org/index.php?id=home212&L=1

Call for Papers: Journal of International Organizations Studies

Call for Papers:

The Journal of International Organizations Studies is organizing a special issue for Spring 2013 to address how international organizations address the management of climate change today and in future.  We seek papers that analyze issues of governance and management, and welcome those that build on international agreements that will have been reached at the Rio+20 Summit and other venues.   Submissions must be received before September 15, 2012.

Contact Information:

http://www.journal-iostudies.org/home

Call for Papers: Pace Environmental Law Review

Call for Papers:

The Pace Environmental Law Review (PELR) will devote its winter journal to pressing issues in the development and regulation of nanotechnology. Jesse Glickstein and Sarah Wegmueller, the acquisition editors of PELR, would like to invite you to submit for publication an article or essay that discusses the intersection between nanotechnology and environmental issues. Based on your expertise, we encourage you to take an interdisciplinary approach to nanotechnology from legal and other perspectives, including technology, science, public health, economics, or policy.

Authors should send an abstract and cover letter to pelracq@law.pace.edu. The deadline for submissions of article proposals is September 30, 2012. Please feel free to email Jesse (jglickstein@law.pace.edu) and Sarah (swegmueller@law.pace.edu) with any questions.

Contact Information:

Jesse Glickstein
jglickstein@law.pace.edu

Sarah Wegmueller
swegmueller@law.pace.edu

http://lawprofessors.typepad.com/environmental_law/2012/07/call-for-papers-pace-environmental-law-review-1.html

Call for Papers: Expanding the Gaze: Gender, Public Space, and Surveillance

Call for Papers:

The past decade has witnessed an explosion of scholarship covering the broad area of surveillance studies. Surveillance, or the ability to engage in what David Lyon (2003) calls ‘social sorting’, is understood by social scientists to be key to neoliberal governance, in large part because of its capacity to reconfigure both public space and forms of citizenship.  And yet, to date, very little scholarly work systematically considers the gendered dimensions of, and experiences with, surveillance. The little research that does exist indicates the need for more in-depth study. This edited collection seeks to engage  with contemporary studies on surveillance by expanding the gaze to include a critical analysis of gender and public space.

The aim of the collection is to capture a wide range of gendered experiences, identities, and subjectivities, including, but not limited to, those of ‘women’. By public space we are referring to those places to which the public has reasonable expectations of access.  This space might be privately owned, public space, or a hybrid; it may be physical (e.g. shopping malls, city streets) or virtual (e.g. public on-line profiles and social media platforms). Surveillance itself may be technological (e.g. CCTV) or informal (e.g. ‘eyes on the street’). The key uniting theme of ‘Expanding the Gaze: Gender, Public Space, and Surveillance’ is the ways that the dimensions of gender, public space, and surveillance interact to produce particular configurations that have yet to be fully explored.

This call for papers seeks innovative feminist and/or intersectional scholarship for an interdisciplinary edited collection of original works. We welcome submissions from a variety of perspectives and academic disciplines, including: communication studies, criminology, geography, law, sexuality studies, socio-legal studies, sociology, and/or women’s and gender studies.  Papers may be theoretical or empirical in nature.

Topics may include (but are not limited to):

- Surveillance, bodies, and forms of citizenship
- Sexuality/ies and surveillance
- Masculinity/ies and surveillance
- Gendered resistance to surveillance
- Gender and urban CCTV
- Surveillance and the intersectionality of gender, race, and class
- Queer and trans perspectives on, and experiences with, surveillance
technologies
- Media/cinematic representations of surveillance
- Relationships between the watchers and being watched

Interested contributors should send a 300-500 word abstract and 200 word
bio to genderedlens@gmail.com no later than September 15, 2012.

Those invited to contribute to the collection will be notified in October
2012 and full papers will be due in April 2013.

Contact Information:

Emily van der Meulen
evandermeulen@ryerson.ca
Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology
Ryerson University, Toronto, Canada

Call for Papers: Charleston Law Review

Call for Papers:

The Charleston Law Review, invites submissions for its annual General Issue. We welcome an article or essay addressing any topic of the authors choosing.

This year’s General Issue will be published in Winter 2012. We therefore ask that work be submitted no later than September 1, 2012. Submissions will be reviewed on a rolling basis beginning June 1, 2011.

Contact Information:

Morgan Peterson
Editor in Chief
vmpeterson@charlestonlaw.edu
(828) 284-0378

Call for Papers: AALS International Human Rights

Call for Papers:

The International Human Rights Section of the American Association of Law Schools (AALS) has issued a call for papers for its January 2013 Annual Meeting.  The topic is International Human Rights in Times of Conflict and the call is specifically for New Voices in Human Rights.  The deadline to submit a paper is September 4, 2012 and papers should be sent to Professor William Dunlap at Quinnipiac University. 

Contact Information:

william.dunlap@quinnipiac.edu

http://lawprofessors.typepad.com/international_law/2012/05/aals-international-human-rights-call-for-papers.html

Call for Papers: International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics

Call for Papers:

This special issue of IJFAB aims to contribute to the ongoing conversations around ethics and policy in aging and long-term care. We invite essays written from a feminist perspective on any topic related to aging and long-term care.

Possible topics include:

• What characterizes a feminist approach to aging and/or long-term care and what contributions can it make to theory and policy?

• How do feminist views about “family” affect long-term care approaches?

• What is the structure of income provision for the aged in a particular country or region and what are its ethical implications?

• What are the ethical implications of different kinds of support systems for the dependent elderly?

• How is long-term care labor gendered and what ethical concerns does this raise?

• How can a feminist vision of long-term care accommodate cultural and religious traditions that place special responsibilities for long-term care on women and girls?

• What are the implications of the feminization of labor migration on the provision of long-term care needs around the world?

• What is the structure of labor and or economic policy in a given country or region and what are its ethical implications for family caregivers?

• How are representations of old age gendered and “performed” in the media and in the arts, and what are the ethical and health implications?

Submission instructions for authors are available at www.ijfab.org. Papers should be submitted in Microsoft Word, as email attachments to IJFAB@sunysb.edu.

The submission deadline for this issue is September 15, 2012.

Contact Information:

www.ijfab.org

http://www.ijfab.org/cfp.html

 

7th Annual Conference of the European Policy for Intellectual Property (EPIP) Association

Date(s) of Conference:

September 27-28, 2012

Location:

University of Leuven, Belgium

Description:

The conference aims to explore and stimulate debate regarding open innovation and creation, and to examine the interaction between open innovation and proprietary IP mechanisms. Is the IP rationale under pressure in view of these changing innovation dynamics? Are IP strategies ‘in motion’ in response to these emerging trends of increased openness?

Contact Information:

epip2012@law.kuleuven.be

http://www.epip.eu/conferences/epip07/

Revelation and Interpretation – Legal Interpretation of Religious Texts

Date(s) of Conference:

September 11-12, 2012

Location:

NYU School of Law

Description:

Religions and religious legal systems base their beliefs, practices and norms of behavior on canonical texts which typically claim to have originated in revelation or in other forms of divine inspiration. This kind of legitimization is entailed with a process of interpretation of the canonical texts, and sometimes generates a creation of a comprehensive hermeneutic system. In this conference we want to focus on legal interpretation of religious texts, in order to explore the characters and methodologies of such interpretation whether within a particular tradition or on a comparative basis between different traditions. We are also interested in exploration of similarities and differences of legal interpretation found in religious vs. secular legal frameworks.

Call for Papers:

Here are some of the questions that we hope will be addressed:

1. What are the presuppositions regarding the text and its language that allow and enable interpretation? Does religious interpretation assume a special quality of divine language (for example: a language that is very precise or a language that is multi-layered and may hold multiple meanings)?

2. What form of interpretation is considered by each tradition to be most appropriate for canonical texts, a literal and formalistic approach or purposive and substantive one?

3. Should legal interpretation of religious texts purport to reconstruct the original meaning of the text or should it be creative or pragmatic in order to respond to the needs of contemporary reality?

4. Does religious interpretation require a certain interpretive authority? Are there certain preconditions for a person to become an interpreter of the sacred text or can any member aspire to become an interpreter of such texts?

5. Is interpretation vested in a centralized authority or formal institution or is it open to the local community? To the devout individual?

Submissions are invited on the themes outlined above. An abstract of 600 (max.) words should be sent to jlrs@biu.ac.il no later than March 15, 2012. Please indicate academic affiliation and attach a short CV. The conference committee will consider all the abstracts and will notify applicants of papers acceptance by April 30, 2012. The participants will be required to submit their papers by August 15, 2012. The final version must be no more than 13,000 words (footnotes included). Papers will go through a refereeing process and the successful ones will be published in the new Journal of Law Religion and State.

Contact Information:

jlrs@biu.ac.il

http://www.ssrn.com/update/lsn/lsnann/ann12002.html