|
Friday, 8:30 a.m. |
|
|
|
|
| Law at Sea |
chair / discussant |
David Bederman |
Law, Emory University |
lawdjb@law.emory.edu |
|
|
Objection! The International Whaling Commission and the Preservation of
Sovereignty (and Whales?)
|
Kurk Dorsey
|
History, University of New Hampshire
|
kd@cisunix.unh.edu |
|
|
Abstention Granted! Science, Doctrinal Innovation, and the "Abstention Principle" in Modern Ocean Law Reform |
Harry N. Scheiber |
Jurisprudence and Social Policy, University of California at Berkeley
|
scheiber@uclink.berkeleu.edu |
|
|
discussant |
Elizabeth Bogwardt |
Law, University of Utah |
lizborg@uclink.berkeley.edu |
|
Friday, 8:30 a.m. |
|
|
|
|
| Race, Citizenship, and Liberty in Global Contexts |
chair |
Christopher Waldrep |
History, San Francisco State University |
cwaldrep@sfsu.edu |
|
|
“La decision de casarse con un chino . . .”: Contesting Citizenship, Race, and Gender in Mexico, 1900-1940 |
Kif Augustine-Adams |
Law, Brigham Young University |
adamsk@lawgate.byu.edu |
|
|
In Pursuit of the Other Freedom: Gandhi and the Discourse of Law in Modern India |
Mithi Mukherjee |
History, University of Colorado at Boulder |
mithi.mukherjee@colorado.edu |
|
|
Legislating People into Existence: The Idea of Citizenship in Nineteenth-Century Chilean Legal and Political Thought (1812-1925) |
Hugo A. Maureira |
History, Georgetown University |
ham6@georgetown.edu |
|
|
discussant |
Thomas J. Davis |
History, Arizona State University |
tjdavis@asu.edu |
Friday, 8:30 a.m. |
|
|
|
|
| Marriage, Sexuality, and Women's Rights in American History |
chair |
Norma Basch |
History, Rutgers University |
nbasch@mindspring.com |
|
|
"Immoral Purposes": Prostitution, Concubinage, and Legal Definitions of Morality |
Ariela Dubler |
Law, Columbia University |
aduble@law.columbia.edu |
|
|
Bentham in America (At Last): Married Women's Property Rights and Reform of the Common Law |
Kathleen Sullivan |
Political Science, Ohio University |
sullivak@ohio.edu |
|
|
Marriage and the American Constitutional Order, 1900-1950 |
Gretchen Ritter |
Government, University of Texas at Austin |
ritter@mail.utexas.edu |
|
|
discussant |
Julie Novkov |
Political Science, University of Oregon |
novkov@oregon.uoregon.edu |
|
Friday, 8:30 a.m. |
|
|
|
|
| Rights, Entitlements, and Regulation in the Progressive Era |
chair/discussant |
Thomas Haskell |
History, Rice University |
thaskell@rice.edu |
|
|
Crystal Eastman and the Internationalist Beginnings of American Civil Liberties |
John Witt |
Law, Columbia University |
jwitt@law.columbia.edu |
|
|
Helping Ourselves: Disaster Relief and the Origins of the American Welfare State |
Michele Landis Dauber |
Law, Stanford University |
mldauber@law.stanford.edu |
|
|
discussant |
Ajay Mehrotra |
Law, Indiana University |
amehrotr@indiana.edu |
|
Friday, 10:30 a.m. |
|
|
|
|
|
Perspectives on Latin American Legal History |
chair |
Charles Venator-Santiago |
Politics, Ithaca College |
csantiago@ithaca.edu |
|
|
Case Decisions as Sources in Mexican Legal History |
Matthew C. Mirrow |
Law, Florida International University |
mirowm@fiu.edu |
|
|
Iglesia me llamo: Church Asylum, Crime, Law, and Daily Life in Colonial Latin America, 1500s-1700s. |
Victor Uribe-Uran |
History and Law, Florida International University |
Uribev@fiu.edu |
|
|
Brazil and the United States: Civil Rights Law at the Half-Century Mark |
Robert Cottrol |
Law, George Washington University |
bcottrol@law.gwu.edu |
|
|
discussant |
Peter Reich |
Law, Whittier Law School |
preich@law.whittier.edu |
|
Friday, 10:30 a.m. |
|
|
|
|
| Legal Bonds and Broken Homes |
chair |
Michael Grossberg |
History and Law, Indiana University |
grossber@indiana.edu |
|
|
Breaking Promises: Legislative Divorce, Marital Contracts, and Constitutional Limitation in Nineteenth-Century America |
Sandra F. VanBurkleo |
History, Wayne State University |
svanbur@earthlink.net |
|
|
Legal and Extra-Legal Aspects of Family Violence in Colonial New England |
Elaine Crane |
History, Fordham University |
ecrane@fordham.edu |
|
|
discussant |
Sharon Block |
History, University of California, Irvine |
sblock@uci.edu |
|
|
discussant |
David Langum |
Law, Samford University |
djlangum@samford.edu |
|
Friday, 10:30 a.m. |
|
|
|
|
| Law Reform in Nineteenth-Century England |
chair |
Barbara Shapiro |
Rhetoric, University of California at Berkeley |
bshapiro@socrates.berkeley.edu |
|
|
Exploring the Borderline between Criminal and Civil Law Reform, 1830-1850 |
Michael Lobban |
Law, University of London |
m.j.lobban@qmul.ac.uk |
|
|
The Bank of England and the Reform of the English Criminal Law, 1800-1835 |
Randall McGowen |
History, University of Oregon |
rmcgowen@oregon.uoregon.edu |
|
|
The Transformation of the Preliminary Inquiry in England, 1800-1850 |
Bruce Smith |
Law, University of Illinois |
smithb@law.uiuc.edu |
|
|
discussant |
James Oldham |
Law, Georgetown University |
oldham@law.georgetown.edu |
|
Friday, 10:30 a.m. |
|
|
|
|
|
Crime, Prosecution, and Politics in Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century New York City |
chair |
Michael Willrich |
History, Brandeis University |
willrich@brandeis.edu |
|
|
Gender, Civility, and Crime Control: Public Responses to Intimate Homicide in the Metropolis, 1880-1920 |
Carolyn Ramsey |
Law, University of Colorado |
Carolyn.Ramsey@colorado.edu |
|
|
Anthony Comstock and Moral Reconstruction: Obscenity Prosecutions in 1870s New York |
Donna Dennis |
Law, Rutgers University |
ddennis@kinoy.rutgers.edu |
|
|
The Politics of Criminal Justice Reform and the Origins of the Penal State in Progressive New York City |
Allen Steinberg |
History, University of Iowa |
allen-steinberg@uiowa.edu |
|
|
discussant |
Lawrence Friedman |
Law, Stanford University |
lmf@stanford.edu |
|
Friday, 10:30 a.m. |
|
|
|
|
|
Social Science and Legal Pragmatism in the New Deal and World War II
|
chair |
Sally Clarke |
History, University of Texas, Austin |
sclarke@mail.utexas.edu |
|
|
Knowledge and Policy: Pragmatism, Law, and Social Science in New Deal America |
Jessica Wang |
History, University of California, Los Angeles |
jwang@ssc.ucla.edu |
|
|
The Politics of Merit: The Campaign for a Federal Legal Service, 1938-43
|
Daniel Ernst |
Law, Georgetown University |
ernst@law.georgetown.edu |
|
|
Legally Yours: Morris Ernst, Birth Control, and the Role of the Lawyer in a Social Movement |
John Balz |
American Studies, University of Texas, Austin |
jpbalz@hotmail.com |
|
|
discussant |
John Henry Schlegel |
Law, State University of New York at Buffalo |
schlegel@acsu.buffalo.edu |
|
|
discussant |
Bartholomew Sparrow |
Government, University of Texas, Austin |
bhs@mail.la.utexas.edu |
|
Friday, 2:00 p.m. |
|
|
|
|
|
Federal Tax Policy in the Great Depression |
chair |
Joseph Thorndike |
Tax Analysts, Arlington, Virginia |
joe_thorndike@tax.org |
|
|
The Rise and Fall of Publicity of Income Tax Information in the 1930s |
Marjorie Kornhauser |
Law, Tulane University |
mkornhause@law.tulane.edu |
|
|
Tax, Corporate Governance, and Norms: Lessons from the New Deal |
Steven Bank |
Law, University of California, Los Angeles |
bank@law.ucla.edu |
|
|
Tax Justice New Deal Style: FDR, the Treasury Department, and Family Taxation in the 1930s |
Dennis Ventry |
O'Melveny & Myers LLP |
dv327@nyu.edu |
|
|
discussant |
Reuvan Avi-Yonah |
Law, University of Michigan |
aviyonah@umich.edu |
|
Friday, 2:00 p.m. |
|
|
|
|
|
Comparative Perspectives on the Evolution of Corporate Governance |
chair |
David Abraham |
Law, University of Miami |
dabraham@law.miami.edu |
|
|
Dividends and Politics |
Brian Cheffins |
Law, University of Cambridge |
brc21@cam.ac.uk |
|
|
Corporate Finance and Governance in the Heyday of the German Industrialization: New Evidence and New Perspectives |
Caroline Fohlin |
Economics, Johns Hopkins University |
fohlin@jhu.edu |
|
|
The Icarus Effect |
David Skeel |
Law, University of Pennsylvania |
dskeel@law.upenn.edu |
|
|
discussant |
Adam Winkler |
Law, UCLA |
winkler@law.ucla.edu |
|
Friday, 2:00 p.m. |
|
|
|
|
| Presidential Panel: Herbert Johnson and the Writing of American Constitutional History |
chair |
Harry N. Scheiber |
Law, University of California at Berkeley |
scheiber@law.berkeley.edu |
|
|
Some Thoughs on Herb Johnson's Favorite Court
|
Kent Newmyer |
Law, University of Connecticut |
knewmyer@law.uconn.edu |
|
|
Herbert Johnson: A Legal Historian's
Work and Times |
Tony Freyer |
Law, University of Alabama |
tfreyer@law.ua.edu |
|
|
Herbert Johnson as Editor |
Hamilton Bryson |
Law, University of Richmond |
bryson@uofrlaw.richmond.edu |
|
|
discussant |
Herbert Johnson |
History, University of South Carolina
|
janeherb@dnet.net |
|
Friday, 2:00 p.m. |
|
|
|
|
| Race, Land, and Citizenship in Hawaii and the Mainland U.S. |
chair/discussant |
William Forbath |
Law, University of Texas |
wforbath@mail.law.utexas.edu |
|
|
Native Identity, Citizenship
and Land Allotment in the Early Twentieth Century U.S. |
Ariela Gross |
Law, University of Southern California |
agross@law.usc.edu |
|
|
Preparing to be Colonized:
Land Tenure and Legal Strategy in Nineteenth-Century Hawaii |
Stuart Banner |
Law, UCLA |
banner@law.ucla.edu |
|
|
The Boundaries of Citizenship:
Asian Americans and U.S. Citizenship Policy, 1868-1935 |
Lucy Salyer |
History, University of New Hampshire |
Lucy.Salyer@unh.edu |
|
|
discussant |
Sarah Gordon |
Law and History, University of Pennsylvania |
sgordon@law.upenn.edu |
|
Friday, 4:30-6:00 p.m.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Plenary Session: Law and Religious Pluralism |
moderator |
Douglas Laycock |
University of Texas Law School |
dlaycock@mail.law.utexas.edu
|
|
|
Law and Religious Tolerance:
Islamic normativity as a constitutional principle |
Baber Johansen |
Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris
|
johansen@ehess.fr |
|
|
Historical Facts and Fictions of the Separation of Church and State |
John Witte |
Emory University School of Law
|
jwitte@law.emory.edu |
|
|
Toleration, Pluralism and Research on Religion in America |
Carol Weisbrod |
University of Connecticut Law School
|
cweisbro@law.uconn.edu |
|
Saturday, 8:30 a.m. |
|
|
|
|
|
Adaptations to Romano-canonical Procedure in the Middle Ages: Customary law, Inquisitio and Lombard law |
chair |
James Brundage |
History, University of Kansas |
jabrun@ku.edu |
|
|
Local Knowledge and the Rise of Customary Law in Champagne, 1150-1300 |
Richard Keyser |
History, Western Kentucky University |
rick.keyser@wku.edu |
|
|
Inquisitorial Procedure and the Testimony of Children in the Middle Ages: The Case of Ermessenda Sabater |
Marie Kelleher |
History, California State University, Long Beach |
mkellehe@csulb.edu |
|
|
Ut feratur definitiva sententia: Judicial Duel, Lombard Law and Truth in a Fourteenth Century Legal Treatise |
Jasonne Grabher O'Brien |
History, Fairleigh Dickinson University |
jgobrien@fdu.edu |
|
|
discussant |
Richard Helmholz |
Law, University of Chicago |
dick_helmholz@law.uchicago.edu |
|
Saturday, 8:30 a.m. |
|
|
|
|
|
Naming Needs, Redefining Rights: Reform, Reaction, and the Politics of Work and Family in the Twentieth-Century U.S. |
chair |
Christopher Tomlins |
History, American Bar Foundation |
clt@abfn.org |
|
|
Transforming Family and State: Women’s Vision for Universal Childcare, 1966-1971 |
Deborah Dinner |
Law and History, Yale University |
deborah.dinner@yale.edu |
|
|
The Invisible Woman: Gender, Race, and the Family in the Affirmative Action Debates, 1964-1980 |
Serena Mayeri |
Law and History, Yale University |
serena.mayeri@yale.edu |
|
|
Routing Progressive Constitutionalism? Family-Based Republicanism in 1920s American Policy and Law |
Rebecca Rix |
History, Yale University |
rebecca.rix@yale.edu |
|
|
discussant |
Laura Kalman |
History, University of California, Santa Barbara |
kalman@history.ucsb.edu |
|
Saturday, 8:30 a.m. |
|
|
|
|
| Texas Supreme Court Historical Society: Texas Supreme Court History Project |
chair |
Joseph McKnight |
Law, Southern Methodist University |
jmcknigh@mail.smu.edu |
|
|
Constitutional Issues in Reconstruction Texas, 1866-1882 |
Hans Baade |
Law, University of Texas |
hbaade@mail.law.utexas.edu |
|
|
Review of State Regulations in the Progressive Era, 1900-1911 |
Mark Steiner |
South Texas College of Law |
msteiner@stcl.edu |
|
|
discussant |
Gordon Bakken |
History, California State University at Fullerton |
gbakken@fullerton.edu |
|
Saturday, 8:30 a.m. |
|
|
|
|
| New Meanings of Property in Legal History |
chair/discussant |
R. Ben Brown |
Center for the Study of Law and Society, University of California at Berkeley |
rbbrown@uclink.berkeley.edu |
|
|
Property, Marriage, and Emancipation in Ghana, 1860-1920 |
Dylan Penningroth |
History, Northwestern University |
dcp@northwestern.edu |
|
|
Squatters or settlers?: British colonial land settlement and peri-urban development in Africa and the Caribbean |
Robert Home |
Law, Anglia Polytechnic University, Chelmsford, UK |
r.home@apu.ac.uk |
|
|
discussant |
Adrienne Davis |
Law, University of Alabama
|
davisad@email.unc.edu |
|
Saturday, 8:30 a.m. |
|
|
|
|
|
Roundtable: Ethical Problems and Legal Rules Surrounding the Use of Lawyers' Papers as Historical Sources
|
chair |
Victoria Saker Woeste
|
History, American Bar Foundation
|
vswoeste@abfn.org |
|
|
participant |
David Kirsch |
Business, University of Maryland
|
|
| |
participant |
Rayman Solomon |
Law, Rutgers University-Camden
|
raysol@camlaw.rutgers.edu |
|
|
participant |
Michael Widener |
Law Library, University of Texas
|
mwidener@mail.law.utexas.edu |
| |
participant |
Susan Carle |
Law, American University |
scarle@wcl.american.edu |
|
Saturday, 10:30 a.m. |
|
|
|
|
|
Law and Revolution in Comparative Context |
chair |
Charles Donahue |
Law, Harvard University |
scohen@law.harvard.edu |
|
|
Separating Powers in the English Revolution: Judicial Discretion and Parliamentary Reform |
Bernadette Meyler |
Law, Cornell University |
bameyler@yahoo.com |
|
|
A Revolution in Commerce: French Absolutism and the Rise of “le Commerce” as Social Function |
Amalia Kessler |
Law, Stanford University |
aAKESSLER@LAW.STANFORD.EDU |
|
|
The Making of the Haitian Constitution of 1801 |
Malick Ghachem |
Clerk, U.S. Court of Appeals, 11th Circuit |
mwghachem@hotmail.com |
|
|
discussant |
Harold Berman |
Law, Emory University |
hberman@law.emory.edu |
|
Saturday, 10:30 a.m. |
|
|
|
|
|
The Making of Civil Rights Law Revisited |
chair |
Davison Douglas |
Law, William and Mary |
dmdoug@wm.edu |
|
|
Transformations in Civil Rights Lawyering and Politics, 1920-40 |
Kenneth Mack |
Law, Harvard University |
kmack@law.harvard.edu |
|
|
The Work of Civil Rights in the 1940s |
Risa Goluboff |
Law, University of Virginia |
rlg3t@virginia.edu |
|
|
discussant |
Martha Biondi |
History, Northwestern University |
m-biondi@northwestern.edu |
|
|
discussant |
Mark Tushnet |
Law, Georgetown University |
tushnet@law.georgetown.edu |
|
Saturday, 10:30 a.m. |
|
|
|
|
|
Defining Gender, Judging Sex: Legal Rules and Popular Judgment in Early Twentieth-Century America |
chair/discussant |
Karen Engle |
Law, University of Texas, Austin
|
|
|
|
The "'New' Unwritten Law": Chicago Husband-Killers 1900-1930 |
Marianne Constable |
Rhetoric, University of California at Berkeley |
mc@socrates.berkeley.edu |
|
|
“Dementia Americana”: Insanity and the Unwritten Law in the Trials of Harry Thaw |
Martha Umphrey
|
Law, Jurisprudence, and Social Thought, Amherst College
|
mmumphrey@amherst.edu |
|
|
discussant |
Susan Heinzelman |
English, University of Texas, Austin |
sheinz@ccwf.cc.utexas.edu |
|
Saturday, 10:30 a.m. |
|
|
|
|
|
Moral Judiciary in the Gilded Age |
chair |
Felice Batlan |
Law and History, Tulane University Law School |
fbatlan@law.tulane.edu |
|
|
The Tastes and Habits of an Aristocracy: The New York Bar and the Elected Judiciary in the Gilded Age |
Renee Lettow Lerner |
Law, George Washington University |
rlerner@law.gwu.edu |
|
|
The Moral Common Law of the Gilded Age Anticodifiers |
Lewis Grossman |
Law, American University |
lewisg@wcl.american.edu |
|
|
Lochner Era Revisionism, Revised |
David Bernstein |
Law, George Mason University |
dbernste@gmu.edu |
|
|
discussant |
Robert Gordon |
Law, Yale University |
robert.w.gordon@yale.edu |
|
Saturday, 10:30 a.m. |
|
|
|
|
| English Justice and Its Problems in the Fifteenth Century |
chair |
Victoria List |
History, Washington and Jefferson College |
vlist@washjeff.edu |
|
|
Patterns and Problems in Fifteenth-Century Litigation:
A View from the Year Books |
David Seipp |
Law, Boston University |
dseipp@bu.edu |
|
|
Greasing Justice in Fifteenth Century England:
Sir John Fastolf’s Litigation and Will Contest |
Jonathan Rose |
Law, Arizona State University |
Jonathan.Rose@ASU.edu |
|
|
discussant |
David Millon |
Law, Washington and Lee University |
millond@wlu.edu |
|
Saturday, 12:30 -1:45 p.m. |
|
|
|
|
| Annual Luncheon |
|
|
|
|
|
Saturday, 2:00 p.m. |
|
|
|
|
| Legal and Social Order in Early Modern France |
chair/discussant |
Julie Hardwick |
History, University of Texas, Austin
|
jhardwick@mail.utexas.edu |
|
|
The Judicial Terror in the Criminal Courts of Provincial France, 1793 – 94 |
Robert Allen |
History, Stephen F. Austin State University |
rballen@sfasu.edu |
|
|
Sharing the Wealth: Marriage and Inheritance in Early Modern Paris |
Janine Lanza |
History, Wayne State University |
jmlanza@wayne.edu |
|
Saturday, 2:00 p.m. |
|
|
|
|
|
Law, Politics, and Reform in U.S. Legal History: Authors Meet Readers |
chair |
Barry Cushman |
Law and History, University of Virginia
|
|
|
|
author |
Edward Purcell |
Law, New York Law School |
epurcell@nyls.edu |
|
|
author |
Charles McCurdy |
History, University of Virginia |
cwm@virginia.edu |
|
|
reader |
Clyde Spillenger |
Law, University of California, Los Angeles |
spilleng@law.ucla.edu |
|
|
reader |
Alfred Brophy |
Law, University of Alabama |
abrophy@law.ua.edu |
|
Saturday, 2:00 p.m. |
|
|
|
|
|
The Bloody Code: Its Relation to Reform of the Criminal Law and Reformers |
chair |
David Lieberman |
Law and JSP, University of California at Berkeley |
dlieb@law.berkeley.edu |
|
|
Reforming the English Judicial System from Beneath 1750-1850 |
Peter King |
History, University College Northampton |
pete.king@northampton.ac.uk |
|
|
Policing and Prosecution in London: the Bow Street Magistrates' Court, 1770-1790 |
John Beattie |
History and Criminology, University of Toronto |
j.beattie@sympatico.ca |
|
|
The Condemned of the Old Bailey, 1714-1837: Statistical
Perspectives |
Simon Deveraux |
History, University of Victoria |
simon_devereaux@yahoo.com |
|
|
discussant |
Norma Landau |
History, University of California, Davis |
nblandau@ucdavis.edu |
|
Saturday, 2:00 p.m. |
|
|
|
|
| Defining and Redefining State Protection of Children in Twentieth-Century U.S. Law |
chair
|
Charles McClain
|
Legal Studies, University of California at Berkeley;
|
cmcclain@law.berkeley.edu |
|
|
The American Family, the State, and the Rise of Compulsory Attendance Laws, 1890-1940 |
Tracy Steffes |
History, University of Chicago |
tlsteffe@midway.uchicago.edu |
|
|
Can the Nation be a Parent?
Delinquency, Federalism, and the Limits of Progressive Juvenile Justice
|
David Tanenhaus |
History and Law, University of Nevada, Las Vegas |
tanenhaus@ccmail.nevada.edu |
|
|
Legal Thought on the Child and the State: 1967-1980 |
Ethan Sribnick |
History, University of Virginia |
egs6e@virginia.edu |
|
|
discussant |
E. Wayne Carp |
History, Pacific Lutheran University
|
carpw@plu.edu |
|
Saturday, 4:00 p.m. |
|
|
|
|
| Texts and Evidence in Medieval Contexts |
chair |
Daniel Klerman |
Law, University of Southern California |
dklerman@law.usc.edu |
|
|
Torture and the Medieval City: Evidence from the Law Code of Toulouse |
Christopher K. Gardner |
History, George Mason University |
cgardne4@ gmu.edu |
|
|
Summa est: Analysis of Glosses on Legal Procedure and Terminology in a Cambridge Manuscript of Ivo of Chartres' Panormia (Cambridge, UL Ff iv 41) |
Bruce C. Brasington |
History and Political Science, West Texas A&M University |
bbrasington@mail.wtamu.edu |
|
|
Of the Worshipful Warrior: Criminal Sanctuary in the Central Middle Ages |
Tricia Olson |
Law and History, Emory University |
Filpriros@aol.com |
|
|
discussant |
Geoffrey Koizol |
History, University of California at Berkeley |
gkoz@uclink4.berkeley.edu |
|
Saturday, 4:00 p.m.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Still Embarrassing After All These Years? The Future of Second Amendment Scholarship |
chair |
David Thomas Konig |
History, Washington University |
dtkonig@artsci.wustl.edu |
|
|
Embarrassing Interpretations of the Second Amendment: Beyond the Myth of Constitutional Consensus |
Saul Cornell |
History, Ohio State University |
Cornell.14@osu.edu |
|
|
Whose is the Embarrassment?: The Framers and their Historians confront the Right of Revolution |
Robert Churchill |
Humanities, University of Hartford |
churchill@hartford.edu |
|
|
The Embarrassment of Reconstruction: The Second Amendment and State Formation After the Civil War |
Carole Emberton |
History, Northwestern University |
c-emberton@northwestern.edu |
|
|
discussant |
Sanford Levinson |
Law, University of Texas |
slevinson@mail.law.utexas.edu |
|
Saturday, 4:00 p.m. |
|
|
|
|
| Regulation and Political Economy in the Telephone Industry |
chair |
Catherine Fisk |
Law, University of Southern California |
fisk@law.duke.edu |
|
|
Nickel-in-the-Slot: The Political Economy of Urban Telephony, 1894-1907
|
Richard John |
University of Illinois at Chicago
|
rjohn@uic.edu |
|
|
The Second Industrial Revolution in court: building and attacking national patent monopolies in the telephone industry, 1876-1897 |
Christopher Beauchamp |
History, Cambridge University, England |
crb27@cam.ac.uk |
|
|
discussant |
George Priest |
Law, Yale University |
george.priest@yale.edu |
|
|
discussant |
Milton Mueller |
School of Information Studies, Syracuse University |
mueller@syr.edu |
|
Saturday, 4:00 p.m. |
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|
|
Presidential Panel: Scandinavian Perspectives in Legal History |
chair |
Gregory Alexander |
Law, Cornell University |
greg-alexander@postoffice.law.cornell.edu |
|
|
“An American Dilemma” and the Scandinavian Dream: The Citizen meets Modernity and the Strong Nation State – A Study in Comparative Legal Cultures |
Kjell Modeer |
Law, Lund University, Sweden |
Kjell_A.Modeer@jur.lu.se |
|
|
Vilhelm Lundstedt – a biographical sketch |
Jan-Olof Sundell |
Law, Stockholm University, Sweden |
jan-olof.sundell@juridicum.su.se |
|
|
discussant |
Martin Shapiro |
Law, University of California at Berkeley |
shapirom@law.berkeley.edu |
|
|
discussant |
Rolf Nygren |
Law, Uppsala University, Sweden |
RNY@jur.uu.se |
|
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