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Date: Tue, 31 Aug 1993 08:12:32 -0500
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From: Sharon Michalove <mlove@ux1.cso.uiuc.edu>
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Subject: Legal History Conference Program
From: IN%"H-LAW@UICVM.BITNET" "Legal History discussion list" 30-AUG-1993
14:05:02.60
American Society for Legal History Annual Meeting
October 21-23, 1993
Memphis, Tennessee
The speaker at the Plenary Session on Friday (October 22) will be
Professor Paula Giddings, and her topic will be the career of Ida B.
Wells Barnet, a Mississippi-born, African-American woman who ran a
national crusade against lynching from her homebase in Memphis back in the
early years of this century.
To pre-register please contact:
Prof. Michael de L. Landon
Secretary Treasurer, ASLH
Department of History
University of Mississippi
University, Mississippi 38677
The deadline for pre-registration is October 18.
Draft Program
Friday, October 22
A. 8:30-10:00
1. Aspects of the Law of Nuisance in Mid-Nineteenth Century America.
2. Legality and Legitimacy in the English Revolution of 1688.
3. Gay and Lesbian Rights in Recent American History.
B. 10:15-12:00
1. Anglo-American Influence on Sources of Law Abroad.
2. Legal History, Literary History: Eighteenth-Century Intersections.
3. Reparations
C. 1:15-3:00
1. The Proper Protection of Women: Theories of Property and
Self-Ownership in Nineteenth-Century Women's Political and Intellectual
History
2. What did Medieval English Villagers Mean by "Customary Law"?
3. Property Rights and Economic Development in the Early Republic
Saturday, October 23
A. 8:45-10:15
1. How Legal Anthropologists Think About History.
2. Regulating the Lives of the Later Medieval English and Urban and Rural
Dwellers.
3. Brennan and Marshall.
B. 10:30-12:00
1. Origins of the Eleventh Amendment.
2. Canadian Legal History and Race Discrimination
3. The Voices in the Classroom: Bringing Different Visions to Bear on the
Teaching of Legal History.
C. 1:30-3:15
1. Courts and Torts, In Work and Out: Hidden Classes of Injury in
Victorian America.
2. Seditious Libel and Partisan Politics in Colonial America
3. Defining and Evaluating the Concept of Race in American Legal History.
D. 3:30-5:15
1. Dimensions of Supreme Court History in the Nineteenth Century
2. Social Status and the American Criminal Law.
3. Class, Caste and Arms: Firearms Regulation in Comparative Perspective
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