Research in legal anthropology - News
CfP: Dialogue among Cultures: Peace, Justice and Harmony
Call for Papers"Dialogue among Cultures: Peace, Justice and Harmony" ISUD 8th World CongressInternational Society for Universal Dialogue (ISUD) Beijing International Studies UniversityBeijing (China) 23-28 July 2009 The ISUD is an international association of philosophers devoted to promoting the discussion of such fundamental issues as world peace, social justice, human rights, and dialogical interrelations of diverse cultures. Through this congress the Society hopes to stimulate philosophical reflection and discussion on topics related to the central theme of dialogue among cultures. Topics on philosophy of culture, cultural diversity and universality, globalization, ethics of peace, social equality, justice, and harmony are welcome, as are non-western or other philosophical perspectives. Papers presented at the congress will be published in the ISUD bi-annual proceedings. June 1, 2008: Deadline for abstract submission. August 15, 2008: Notification of acceptance and invitation to submit full paper. December 1, 2008: Full text of paper due. February 15, 2009: Notification of acceptance of paper. May 1, 2009: Accepted papers posted on ISUD website. Registration: May 1, 2009, early registration fee due($125); June 1, 2009, late registration fee accepted ($150). Send a 300-500 word abstract in English by regular post or email attachment in Word to the address indicated below.For more information on the congress please visit our web site: http://www.isud.org Contact: Dr. Marc LuchtDepartment of the Humanities, Francis Hall 229, Alvernia College 400 Saint Bernardine Street, Reading, PA 19607, USA Email: marc.lucht@alvernia.edu Web: http://www.isud.org
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CfP: Imagining and Constructing “terrorism” and “war on terror” (EASA 2008)
The workshop takes place at the biennial conference of the European Association for Social Anthropology to be held in Lubljana, Slovenia, 26-30 August, 2008 WO26 Imagining and Constructing "terrorism" and "war on terror" Julia Eckert, Max-Planck-Institut e for Social Anthropology, Eckert@eth.mpg.de Reetta Toivanen, Centre of Excellence in global Governance Research, University of Helsinki, Reetta.toivanen@helsinki.fi This workshop focuses on the cultural construction of terrorists and terrorist organisations as "the other". There is a lack of research about the processes in which `knowledge' about the `dangerous other' is produced. It is interesting to think about the methods currently in use against terrorism, whether international or national, and about the ways in which a cultural construction, the stereotype of a terrorist, as "the other", influences the politics in which human rights are restricted in order to produce security / stability / economic growth. The workshop calls for papers discussing the processes and meanings of the dominant constructions of 'terrorists' by decision makers, media, security agencies and international actors. At the same time, papers addressing the political and socio-cultural implications of the "war on terror" are welcomed. Key words: othering, war on terror, human rights, security agencies
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AAA CfP: Illegibility, Ambivalence, and the Political
Anthropologists have documented with increasing precision and insight the ways in which technologies of measurement, identification, and inclusion define certain social subjects as knowable and known, legible and registered, and as objects in need of intervention. Emanating from dispersed sites throughout 'civil society' and transnational networks, as well as traditional locations within the state, these technologies work by idetnifying the characteristics of particular groups, defining the meaning of social problems and conceivable remedies, and so containing the space of the political. This panel explores instances when subjects exceed or elude strategies of institutional knowledge production and the technologies of exclusion/inclusion and regulation they authorize. Through concrete ethnographic and geographic studies, can we understand uncertainty and ambivalence as a form of the political, rather than a condition of being incompletely or insufficiently 'political'? We wish to move away from the too-familiar celebrations—and condemnations—of hybridity, multiplicity, and liminality, on the one hand, or fixity, identity, and essence, on the other, that typically attend discussions of what we think of here as illegibility or ambivalence. To identify hybridity as a condition of political possiblity risks minimizing the traumatic injuries or political immobility that may attend or produce ambivalent attachments. Likewise, blanket assertions that "some essentialism is necessary" for politics risk separating a limited space of political authenticity from the complexity of real lives, and so reinscribing the authority of experts and diminishing or silencing those who exceed essentialist boudaries. Sensitive to these risks, this panel turns to concrete ethnographic investigations of illegibility, uncertainty, and ambivalence, keeping in mind that that these may be conditions of injury and abjection as well as possibility, and may attend rooted identities or places as well as fluid or unstable locations. What are the conditions of illegibility? What are the consequences for subjects who trouble or elude institutional modes of knowing, or who reside within or alongside illegible or ambiguous spaces? Finally, what are the politics of anthropological practice in these conditions? What models of collaboration or activism can we imagine to address the terrain of multiple political attachments, ambivalent identifications, and uncertain spaces? We seek papers addressing a broad range of sites, subjects, and locations, organized around the questions we pose about ambivalence and the political. In order to meet the AAA deadline of April 1, we need to receive abstracts of no more than 250 words by March 20, 2008. Please send abstracts to Brandt Peterson at peter699@msu.edu.
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Democracy, Disorder, and Discontent (SANA and AES Spring 2008 meeting)
The Society for the Anthropology of North America (SANA) and the American Ethnological Society (AES) announce a joint meeting for 2008:
SANA/AES Spring 2008 Meeting: Democracy, Disorder, and Discontent April 3-5, 2008 Wrightsville Beach, NC, Holiday Inn Sun Spree Resort Hotel
Submission deadline for panel and paper proposals: January 15, 2008 (Instructions for submitting paper and session proposals are below the description). The 2008 SANA/AES conference seeks panels and papers that creatively engage the discrepancies between the idea and the practice of democracy and that explore the forms of disorder and discontent engendered by these contradictions. What is democracy? Democracy is often understood as an expansion of individual freedoms, the spreading out of economic equality through participation in the market, and an alternative to excessive government regulation. Yet despite these optimistic claims, there remains an inherent tension between economic inequality and democratic politics. Emergent social and political orders in many parts of the world are characterized by growing inequality, and they are neither democratic nor secure. Furthermore, established rights, entitlements, and democratic principles in the United States itself have eroded, and wealth is increasingly redistributed upwards. We seek participants who address the tensions inherent in democratic processes and the disorder and discontent that arise from these disjunctures. Key questions include, but are not limited to, the following: How do race, gender, class, citizenship, and sexual orientation shape the ways that different kinds of people understand democracy and democratic participation in the age of neoliberalism? Within emergent and long-standing democracies, how is citizenship linked to new forms of inclusion and exclusion? How and to what extent do democracies justify incarceration, police brutality, military and paramilitary activities and other forms of violence, even as they create political opportunities to critique them? What are the possibilities and pitfalls of new oppositional discourses that focus on individual, social, and human rights? What sorts of alternative political projects are currently imaginable and unimaginable? __________________________________________
Keynote Speakers * AES Keynote: Ida Susser, AES President (2005-2007) * SANA Keynote: Hilary Cunningham (University of Toronto)
Plenary Panel Sessions * "War, Impunity, and Accountability" * "Race and Justice" __________________________________________
Instructions for Paper and Panel Submissions
Deadline for abstract and proposal submission: January 15, 2008 -- Panel and paper submissions should be sent to aes.sana08@gmail.com -- Please contact Lesley Gill with any questions, Lgill@american.edu -- Please visit: http://aesonline.org/AES_SANA08_Call_for_Papersto download the appropriate form to include with your paper or session proposal: We encourage you to think about creative as well as traditional formats for presenting your work. Guidelines are below. 1. Sessions will generally be scheduled for 1.5 hours (1 hour and 30 minutes), which allows time for 5 fifteen minute paper presentations and a discussant or discussion. 2. Paper presentations should be prepared with a fifteen minute time limit in mind. 3. Organized session submissions are encouraged, but individual papers are also welcome. Individually volunteered papers will be organized into sessions by the program committee according to theme. All paper proposals, whether submitted individually or as part of an organized session, will be evaluated individually. 4. Roundtable discussions can be a useful alternative to traditional sessions. Instead of formal paper presentations, these involve informal discussion of a theme. Participants would be encouraged to circulate papers prior to the conference and to make copies available either at the meetings or on-line for others to read. Roundtable discussions have the potential to include more participants than traditional sessions, although they would be limited to the same 1.5 hours. 5. Other types of sessions are also possible, including poster sessions and workshops. Contact conference organizers if you wish to submit proposals for these or other types of sessions. __________________________________
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CfP: Law and Development Conference, Bogota, August 2008
New Perspectives on Law and Development: Between renewed State Interventionism and Post-Dependency August 21, 22 2008 Facultad de Derecho, Universidad de Los Andes, Bogotá, Colombia The European Law Research Center at Harvard Law School and Los Andes University are delighted to announce a two day workshop on law and development to be held in the Faculty of Law, Universidad de Los Andes, Bogotá, Colombia on August 21 and 22, 2008. The workshop will be part of the 40th anniversary celebration of Los Andes Law School as well as the launching of the Doctorate in Law at the same institution. The conference will be divided into five themes: Identity, Development and the Nation State; Distribution and Development; Constitutionalization of Development; Globalization, the Role of the State and Development; Post Dependency and Development. We are still in the process of identifying participants who might be interested in this event. If you have suggestions as to whom we might include, please let us know! We would appreciate it if you could indicate your availability to participate as a panelist by responding to halviar@uniandes.edu.co by March 14 2008 with a one paragraph paper abstract. The preliminary program will be circulated in the beginning of May 2008. We expect to have some funds to help cover travel expenses for those who are not able to fund their participation from their home institutions. Please let us know by March 14, 2008 if you anticipate needing support. We look forward to seeing you in Bogotá next August. Sincerely, Helena Alviar
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CfP: Philosophy and the Law in Africa
Call for Papers: "Philosophy and the Law in Africa" International Conference Center for African Legal Studies, Department of Philosophy, University of Nigeria, Nsukka (Nigeria) 12-13 June 2008 __________________________________________________
Every law and legal system is an expression of the dominant values, beliefs and standards of action of the law makers or law givers of a society and, consequently, an expression of a philosophical or ideological position or perspective. In other words, laws express the philosophy of a people. It is one of the major tools in the transformation of a society in the pursuit of accepted and desired values and ideals; and, this is because laws and regulations, broadly speaking, determine the structure and effectiveness of the administrative framework a country, from the broad issues of governance and justice to the issue of the responsiveness of junior public servants. Approaching law from a philosophical standpoint raises interesting concerns for both areas of academic endeavour. Made available are different methodological tools and models of analysis that can be used to clarify problematic issues and expose shared difficulties and purposes. This is certainly true of the possible outcomes of philosophical investigation into the law in the African context and the aim of the conference is to highlight areas of philosophical concern and intersection with law, showing how both areas of intellectual endeavour can interact to resolve certain problematics and improve understanding of shared underlying concerns. The conference is also concerned with making philosophers, legal theorists, law makers, lawyers, social scientists and scholars in the humanities to appreciate, adopt and project the development perspective in creatively rethinking the legal systems and institutional frameworks in Africa, especially Nigeria, given the philosophical, historical, sociological context of modern African states with a view to creating the framework that will make the desired goals of development realizable. Based on the above, the following are areas for the call for papers: - Developing an African Concept of Law - African Philosophy and the Evolution of African Legal Thought - Philosophy in Legal Education - Gender, Law and Philosophy - Customary Law and Legal Reform - Ubuntu and the Law - Human Rights in Africa - The Concept of State - The Concept of Justice - Issues in Legal Pluralism - African Ideologies and the Law - The Concept of a Legal system - Law and Morality - Legislation and Culture - Adjudication and the Rule of Law - Indigenous Religions and the Law - African philosophy, ethics, customary law, and the major social challenges such as slavery, imperialism, globalization
Abstract Guidelines:
Proposals for papers falling into any of the above areas or on related issues should be between 300-400 words and sent to <jocagbakoba@yahoo.co.nz>, <nna@aber.ac.uk> or <esnwauche@afrilegstudies.com> as an e-mail attachment by 31st March 2008. Selected papers from the conference will be published in the 2008 volume of the African Journal of Legal Theory hosted by the Centre for African Legal Studies. The general aim of the conference would be to create a forum for on-going discussion between researchers in law and researchers in philosophy and through this encourage possible collaborative work between researchers in both areas.
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CfP: Soft Law Practices, EASA 2008 (Ljubljana)
CALL FOR PAPERS Workshop at the 10th Biennial Conference of the European Association of Social Anthropologists (EASA) Ljubljana, Slovenia, 26 - 30 August 2008 "SOFT LAW" PRACTICES, ANTHROPOLOGISTS AND LEGAL SCHOLARS 'Soft law' has undoubtedly acquired a prominent position in the making of a global legal order. Designating quasi-legal instruments, such as 'principles of conduct', 'guidelines', 'code of practices', 'declarations', it is widely used by non-state actors such as the IMF and the WTO and by transnational political institutions such as the UN, the EU and even the G8. This panel invites empirical (ethnographic) case studies of its concrete functioning within any politicised social field (migration policies, trade agreements, bioethics, security and anti-terrorism strategies, human rights etc). Relevant questions include: how does soft low operate in the realm of social relations, how is it concretely fabricated and by whom? From which sites do its principles and codes of practices emanate? What is the interconnection, if any, between hard and soft law? What is the social logic of their often unquestioned separation? To which extent can soft law be considered the product of a paradigmatic shift from the sovereignty of state law to the supranational legal order of 'fast capitalism'? Is soft law an expression of an increasing economisation of the juridical typical of neoliberal ideology? Who benefits from it and why? We also very much wish the panel to be taken as an opportunity to reflect upon the diversity and mutuality which exist between the disciplines of law and anthropology today, asking how they respectively contribute to the understanding of the contemporary transformation of law (and anthropology) and the production of a global legal order. Workshop convenors (contact information): Filippo M. Zerilli (University of Cagliari) zerilli@unica.it Marie-Benedicte Dembour (University of Sussex) m.dembour@sussex.ac.uk * * * To propose a paper submit an abstract (up to 250 words) at http://www.nomadit.co.uk/easa/easa08/panels.php5?PanelID=237 * * * Conference details at http://www.easa2008.eu/en/informacija.asp?id_meta_type=13 * * * Deadline for paper proposal is March 31st, 2008
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CfP: "Cross-Cultural Perspectives on Domestic Violence"
Call for Papers: "Cross-Cultural Perspectives on Domestic Violence" -- For the annual meetings for the American Anthropological Association, Nov. 19-23,2008, in San Francisco.
We are seeking papers for a panel that will open up for anthropological reflection issues surrounding domestic violence in cross-cultural contexts. Anthropology has been relatively silent about the many theoretical and practical issues surrounding domestic violence. Indeed, only a few anthropological works deal directly with the problem of violence within families, even though anthropology as a discipline has much to offer any discussion of domestic violence. We seek papers that would consider the problems of domestic violence as it relates to gender roles, family structure, social structure, legal context, social norms, institutional and informal responses to domestic violence, human rights and international discourse about violence against women. Papers could discuss or critique such topics as: • The problems of defining domestic violence in a culturally sensitive way without excusing forms of violence against women. • The trend in the United States and elsewhere to focus on "Intimate Partner Violence" as the definitive form of domestic violence, thus downplaying other forms of violence against women within extended families and multi-generational homes found in cross-cultural contexts. • The "exoticization" of certain forms of violence against women, such as honor killing, dowry deaths, or female genital mutilation, which are often portrayed as products of a barbaric or primitive "other" culture. • Gendered violence as it arises in various discourses, practices and institutions of the state, and the ways in which they are challenged by individuals and organizations. This could include the types of violence that is perpetuated in national or international legal codes. • The place of domestic violence in national and international discourses about human rights. • How the occurrence of domestic violence is affected by other types of social conflict, such as inner-city violence, ethnic strife, armed conflict and war. • How the principles of cultural relativism has prevented anthropologists from tackling the issues surrounding violence in the family. Any topics relating to domestic violence from a cross-cultural perspective will be considered. please submit all abstracts to Kim Shively (shively@kutztown.edu) by March 15, 2008. Thank you.
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Online publication on "Traditional and Informal Justice Systems"
Access to Justice in Sub-Saharan Africa Published in 2001
This publication is based on a study written by Joanna Stevens for Penal Reform International in December 1998, entitled Traditional and Informal Justice Systems in Africa, South Asia and the Caribbean. It focuses primarily on traditional and informal justice systems in sub-Saharan Africa, reflecting the wealth of material available from the region in contrast to the paucity of up-to-date material from Asia and the Caribbean.
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International IDEA - New book release
Traditional Justice and Reconciliation after Violent Conflict Learning from African Experiences Published 6 February 2008 This comparative study examines the role of traditional justice mechanisms, in dealing with the legacy of violent conflict in Africa. It focuses on five countries – Burundi, Mozambique, Rwanda, Sierra Leone and Uganda – as the basis for outlining conclusions and options for future policy development in the areas of post-conflict reconstruction, democracy building and development. The publication cautions against unrealistic expectations of traditional structures and offers an evidence-based assessment of both the strengths and the weaknesses of traditional conflict management mechanisms within the broader framework of post-conflict social reconstruction efforts. » Read more |
| International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance (International IDEA).
Tel: +46 8 698 37 00, Fax: +46 8 20 24 22 | E-mail: publications@idea.int | Web: www.idea.int International IDEA, Strömsborg, SE-103 34 Stockholm, Sweden © 2008, International IDEA. All rights reserved. | |
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CfP: Journal of Legal Anthropology
Call for Papers and Special Forums: JOURNAL OF LEGAL ANTHROPOLOGY (Peer-Reviewed) Publishers: Caribbean Law Online and the Anthropologies-in-Translation Group. http://www.caribbeanlawonline.com/
We invite papers which engage with theoretical, empirical and methodological debates in legal anthropology for our inaugural issue to be published online in May 2008. Submissions may include articles up to 8000 words or essays up to 4000 words in length. We also invite expressions of interest in editing or contributing to special debate forums.Please contact: Narmala Halstead, Editor Email: n.halstead at uel.ac.uk Heather Horst, Book Reviews Editor Email: hhorst at berkeley.edu
Mission Statement:
The Journal of Legal Anthropology publishes ethnographic writing and related work on a wide range of issues exploring the significance and presence of legal phenomena in human life worlds. Moving beyond the political, the journal considers, in broad terms, how the legal may enter into social constructions of the persons and how the legal may change meaning in terms of particular 'everyday' interpretations. Through articles, essays and book reviews, the Journal of Legal Anthropology provides spaces for papers and debates which develop theoretical and ethnographic and other approaches to understanding the salience of the legal across a range of social and cultural contexts.The Journal of Legal Anthropology will also create special forums where anthropologists, linguists, historians and legal practitioners can engage with each other. These forums will take the forms of interactive discussion sections or invited short comments to connect academics in related disciplines and practitioners interested in dialogue. The journal will, thus, provide a forum for engagement between anthropologists, historians, linguists, doctors as well as legal practitioners and others. International in scope, we hope it will be accessible beyond a specialist audience, widening what is understood within the discipline of anthropology as legal and positioning the legal as also 'socio-cultural' in terms of contemporary anthropology. The journal is produced by anthropologists interested in making anthropology accessible (translatable) in other settings and disciplines, and by legal practitioners with support from academics working in human rights, conflict and related areas. The journal will be published twice per year, with plans to move to a quarterly publication.Call for Papers:
Through a broad remit, the journal considers how humans are known through the law and the ways they know, re-make and un-make the law to demonstrate forms of legal anthropology through a variety of understandings, practices and experiences. It considers the intersections between the legal and the social intersect and how this may allow for potential sites of contradiction vis-à-vis contemporary debates and multiple life-worlds. For instance, howdoes language intervene to form particular contexts between legal phenomena and socio-cultural settings? What are the different cultural settings where notions of tradition and change bound and un-do particular constructions and applications of the legal? This will encompass cultural, political and judicial settings in local and local-global contexts.We invite papers on variety of topics and subject areas which may include indigenous issues, property rights, local knowledge, cultural practices and the changing boundaries of public and private in different kinds of spaces. Papers may also focus on other contemporary sites which include processes of transnationalism and the cross-border movement of people.Themes may include:
* Intersections between the law and movement of people* Citizenship and human rights* Cultural interpretations and the law in diverse settings* Connections between different legal settings in terms of 'local knowledge' and cultural practices.* Domestic violence and movement of people: new kinds of 'legal empowerment vs. 'community mandate.'* Changing forms of community practices* Re-appropriation/redefining of the law in social relations* Legal aspects of media and technology in society* Online spaces and their boundaries* Legal definitions of bodies and personhood
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Democracy, Disorder, and Discontent (SANA and AES Spring 2008 meeting)
The Society for the Anthropology of North America (SANA) and the American Ethnological Society (AES) announce a joint meeting for 2008:
SANA/AES Spring 2008 Meeting Democracy, Disorder, and Discontent April 3-5, 2008 Wrightsville Beach, NC Holiday Inn Sun Spree Resort Hotel
Submission deadline for panel and paper proposals: January 15, 2008 (Instructions for submitting paper and session proposals are below the description)
The 2008 SANA/AES conference seeks panels and papers that creatively engage the discrepancies between the idea and the practice of democracy and that explore the forms of disorder and discontent engendered by these contradictions. What is democracy? Democracy is often understood as an expansion of individual freedoms, the spreading out of economic equality through participation in the market, and an alternative to excessive government regulation. Yet despite these optimistic claims, there remains an inherent tension between economic inequality and democratic politics. Emergent social and political orders in many parts of the world are characterized by growing inequality, and they are neither democratic nor secure. Furthermore, established rights, entitlements, and democratic principles in the United States itself have eroded, and wealth is increasingly redistributed upwards.
We seek participants who address the tensions inherent in democratic processes and the disorder and discontent that arise from these disjunctures. Key questions include, but are not limited to, the following: How do race, gender, class, citizenship, and sexual orientation shape the ways that different kinds of people understand democracy and democratic participation in the age of neoliberalism? Within emergent and long-standing democracies, how is citizenship linked to new forms of inclusion and exclusion? How and to what extent do democracies justify incarceration, police brutality, military and paramilitary activities and other forms of violence, even as they create political opportunities to critique them? What are the possibilities and pitfalls of new oppositional discourses that focus on individual, social, and human rights? What sorts of alternative political projects are currently imaginable and unimaginable? __________________________________________
Keynote Speakers
* AES Keynote: Ida Susser, AES President (2005-2007) * SANA Keynote: Hilary Cunningham (University of Toronto)
Plenary Panel Sessions
* "War, Impunity, and Accountability" * "Race and Justice" __________________________________________
Instructions for Paper and Panel Submissions
Deadline for abstract and proposal submission: January 15, 2008
-- Panel and paper submissions should be sent to aes.sana08@gmail.com -- Please contact Lesley Gill with any questions, Lgill@american.edu -- Please visit: http://aesonline.org/AES_SANA08_Call_for_Papers to download the appropriate form to include with your paper or session proposal:
We encourage you to think about creative as well as traditional formats for presenting your work. Guidelines are below.
1. Sessions will generally be scheduled for 1.5 hours (1 hour and 30 minutes), which allows time for 5 fifteen minute paper presentations and a discussant or discussion. 2. Paper presentations should be prepared with a fifteen minute time limit in mind. 3. Organized session submissions are encouraged, but individual papers are also welcome. Individually volunteered papers will be organized into sessions by the program committee according to theme. All paper proposals, whether submitted individually or as part of an organized session, will be evaluated individually. 4. Roundtable discussions can be a useful alternative to traditional sessions. Instead of formal paper presentations, these involve informal discussion of a theme. Participants would be encouraged to circulate papers prior to the conference and to make copies available either at the meetings or on-line for others to read. Roundtable discussions have the potential to include more participants than traditional sessions, although they would be limited to the same 1.5 hours. 5. Other types of sessions are also possible, including poster sessions and workshops. Contact conference organizers if you wish to submit proposals for these or other types of sessions. __________________________________
THE MOST RECENTLY UPDATED INFORMATION ABOUT THE AES/SANA 2008 CONFERENCE WILL BE POSTED AT:
http://aesonline.org/AESSANA2008
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legal anthropology
- anthropology of law
- antropologia juridica
- pluralisme juridique
- anthropologie juridique
- anthropologie du droit
- Rechtspluralismus
- legal pluralism
- Rechtsanthropologie
- Rechtsethnologie
- African
legal
pluralism
- customary
law
in Africa
- le pluralisme
juridique
africain
- le droit
en Afrique
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