4th Annual CEENELS Conference: Legal Innovativeness in Central and Eastern Europe

  • Бесплатное участие: да

14 июня15 июня 2019

Форма участия: Очная

Срок подачи заявок: 01.03.2019

Организаторы: National Research University “Higher School of Economics”, Faculty of Law in Moscow in collaboration with the University of Graz, Faculty of Law under the patronage of the Review of Central and Eastern European Law

Контактное лицо: Dmitry Poldnikov, Vladislav Starzhenetskiy, Bulat Nazmutdinov

emal: [email protected]

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Central and Eastern Europe is a cultural site which has been described mainly as being a recipient of legal theories, concepts, doctrines and institutions originating in Western Europe and, more recently, also the United States. This process of legal transplanting started arguably at least in the 19th century alongside a process of modernisation, as evidenced by the reception of Western European codes of law, starting from the Code civil, and Western European forms of legal scholarship, such as the German Pandektistik or the French School of Exegesis. This phenomenon did not stop in the 20th century, and it can even be shown to have only intensified after the fall of actually existing socialism, with all Central and Eastern European countries joining the European Convention of Human Rights and many of them also joining the EU. Moreover, the reception of Western-centric, especially Anglo-American legal theories has also become visible in the field of jurisprudence, with H.L.A Hart and Ronald Dworkin being the standard references for legal theorists in the region. These changes in the understanding of legality as well as the appropriations of the ways of practicing and conceptualising law have more often than not taken place with little attention being paid to either the historical trajectory of the region or to the inner grammars of the respective legal traditions existing within this space.

Against this backdrop, the aim of the 4th CEENELS conference is to revisit and react to these trends by bringing to the fore original legal and jurisprudential constructionsstemming from our region responding to the particular conditions of Central and Eastern Europe. We invite papers discussing any original legal developments within the region, covering either a historical dimension or the contemporary legal landscape. Thus, we are particularly interested in original legal institutions, as well as original concepts in legal theory, sociology of law or doctrinal legal research (‘legal dogmatics’). Papers dealing with the interaction of Central and Eastern European legal cultures with international and supranational legal orders are also welcome.

Potential topics of interest could include the following:

  • analyses of original innovations in legal theory or a specific branch of law (private law, administrative law, criminal law, constitutional law etc.), in a historical and comparative perspective;
  • specific legal institutions that developed locally in Central and Eastern Europe in response to specific social, economic and political dynamics;
  • originality of Central and Eastern European countries in their appropriation of legal institutions from abroad (phenomenon of legal acculturation);
  • analyses of the interaction of Central and Eastern European legal cultures with supranational and international legal orders;
  • innovative developments in legal theory, philosophy of law and sociology of law, originating in the region;
  • alternative legal methodologies, e.g. using literary arguments in the courtroom or using cognitive science to explain legal concepts;
  • revolutionary and other radical critiques of law in Central and Eastern Europe
  • analyses of the current constitutional changes in Central and Eastern Europe against the backdrop of the broader comparative and historical context: towards a ‘new constitutionalism’?
  • Central and Eastern European contributions to the development of public international law (related, for instance, to the concept of crimes against humanity, human rights protection, etc.)
  • the legal order and the state of exception: traditions of Central and Eastern Europe and global trends
  • regulations versus the rule of law: regional genealogy of a global issue;
  • positivism (legal formalism, normativism) as a legal lingua franca for Central and Eastern Europe?
  • legal dialogue between Central and Eastern European states and other legal actors (especially supranational legal orders of the EU and ECHR);
  • the legal identity of Central and Eastern Europe and legal innovations in the region
  • law and new technologies in Central and Eastern Europe: how do CEE legislatures, judges and legal academics coping with these new challenges? are they original and innovative in the solutions proposed, or mainly rely on what their colleagues in the West are doing
  • challenges for the legal profession and legal professionalism in Central and Eastern Europe.
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