LIN - 2007 - Netzwerk Recht und Gesellschaft

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LIN 2007 LIN LIN International Conference Law and Society in the 21st Century Transformations, Resistances, Futures Hum b o ld t-Universität zu Ber l in, 25-28 Ju l y 2007 JASL RCSL LAW A ND SOCIETY D SOCIETY association ass DGS-Sektion R E C H T S S O Z I O L O G I E V E R E I N I G U N G F Ü R Re So z

Transcript of LIN - 2007 - Netzwerk Recht und Gesellschaft

LIN2007LINLIN

International Conference

Law andSociety in the 21st CenturyTransformations, Resistances, Futures

H u m b o l d t - U n i v e r s i t ä t z u B e r l i n , 2 5 - 2 8 J u l y 2 0 0 7

JASLRCSLLAW AND SOCIETYD SOCIETYassociationass

DGS-Sektion

RECH

T S S O Z I OL O

GIE

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E IN I G U N G

F ÜR

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cboulanger
Vorabexemplar. Weitergabe nur mit Zustimmung der Veranstalter Kontakt: [email protected]

LAW AND SOCIETY ASSOCIATION

OFFICERS

President: Malcolm M . Feeley, Jurisprudence & Social Policy, University of California, Berkeley

President-Elect: Richard Lempert, Law and Sociology, University of Michigan

Secretary: Nancy Reichman, Sociology, University of Denver

Treasurer: Elizabeth Mertz, Anthropology and Law, University of Wisconsin

Editors: Law & Society Review: Herbert M. Kritzer, Political Science, University of Wisconsin

Book Reviews: Elizabeth Heger Boyle, Sociology and Law, University of Minnesota

Executive Officer: Ronald M. Pipkin, Legal Studies, University of Massachusetts

BOARD OF TRUSTEES

Class of 2007 Catherine R. Albiston, Law, University of California, Berkeley

Keebet von Benda-Beckmann, Anthropology, Max-Planck Institute

Mary L. Dudziak, History and Law, University of Southern California

Valerie Jenness, Criminology, Law and Society, University of California, Irvine

Stewart Macaulay, Law, University of Wisconsin

Neal Milner, Political Science, University of Hawai'i

Tom R. Tyler, Psychology and Law, New York University

Margaret Y.K. Woo, Law, Northeastern University

Class of 2008 Howard Gillman, Political Science, University of Southern California

Kaaryn Gustafson, Law, University of Connecticut

Christine B. Harrington, Politics, New York University

Susan F. Hirsch, Anthropology, George Mason University

Richard Lempert, Law and Sociology, University of Michigan

Sally Engle Merry, Anthropology, New York University

Mary Romero, Justice and Social Inquiry, Arizona State University

Mark C. Suchman, Law, University of Wisconsin

Class of 2009 Katherine Beckett, Sociology and Law, Societies, & Justice, University of Washington

Javier A. Couso, Law, Universidad Diego Portales

Catherine L. Fisk, Law, Duke University

Terence Halliday, Law, American Bar Foundation

Felicia Kornbluh, Law, Duke University

Anna-M aria Marshall, Sociology, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champagne

Bronwen Morgan, Law, University of Bristol

Brian Z. Tamanaha, Law, St. John's University

PAST PRESIDENTS

(64-65) Harry Ball, Sociology, Univ. of Hawai’i

(66-70) Robert B. Yegge, Law, Univ. of Denver

(70-72) Victor Rosenblum, Law, Northwestern Univ.

(72-75) Richard Schwartz, Law, Syracuse Univ.

(75-77) Samuel Krislov, Pol. Science, U. of Minnesota

(77-79) Charles Kelso, Law, Univ. of the Pacific

(79-81) Lawrence Friedman, Law, Stanford Univ.

(81-83) Herbert Jacob, Pol. Science, Northwestern U.

(83-85) Marc Galanter, Law, Univ. of Wisconsin

(85-87) Stewart Macaulay, Law, Univ. of Wisconsin

(87-89) Felice J. Levine, Psychology, AERA

(89-91) Richard Abel, Law, UCLA

(91-93) Joel Handler, Law, UCLA

(93-95) Sally Merry, Anthro., Wellesley College

(95-96) Susan Silbey, Sociology, MIT

(96-97) Carol Greenhouse, Anthro., Princeton Univ.

(97-98) David Engel, Law, Univ. at Buffalo

(98-99) Austin Sarat, LJST, Amherst College

(99-00) Frank Munger, Law, New York Law School

(00-01) Kitty Calavita, CL&S, UC Irvine

(01-02) Lynn Mather, Law, Univ. at Buffalo

(02-03) Lauren Edelman, JSP, UC Berkeley

(03-05) Howard Erlanger, Law and Sociology, U. of

Wisconsin, Madison

LAW AND SOCIETY ASSOCIATION

and

RESEARCH COMMITTEE ONSOCIOLOGY OF LAW (ISA)

JOINT MEETINGS

Co-SponsorsSocio-Legal Studies Association

Japanese Association of Sociology of LawVereinigung für Rechtssoziologie

Sociology of Law Section of the GermanSociological Association

HUMBOLDT-UNIVERSITÄT ZU BERLINBerlin, Germany

JULY 25-28, 2007

Final Program

Vorabexemplar. Weitergabe nur mit Zustimmung der Veranstalter Kontakt: [email protected]

GREETINGS TO ALL PARTICIPANTS FROM THECONFERENCE HOSTS AT HUMBOLDT UNIVERSITY

Dear guests: Humboldt University, the Faculty of Law and the city of Berlin are pleased andproud to host this truly global conference on "Law and Society in the 21st Century," ameeting which has fostered overwhelming interest all over the world.

We are doing our best to make the proceedings and the days in Berlin as comfortable andas inspiring as possible. Our goal is to create a framework for multifaceted experiences,for contacts and new acquaintances, for collaboration and exchange. We hope you willenjoy your stay, and take something home with you.

Many people have made this event possible - staff and sponsors, supporters both in spiritand substance - and we thank each and every one of them for their contribution.

While you are here, we hope you will have the opportunity to get to know Berlin and itsvivid and inspiring social, scientific and cultural atmosphere. You will find many signs of itshistory: the palaces of the Prussian time surrounding the university; the places of memorialof the terror of the Hitler regime; the remains of the German Democratic Republic.Humboldt University did not only make history with its structure as a moderncomprehensive university founded in 1810. It also played very different, and sometimesvery problematic, roles throughout history. In the GDR, it was the leading university, andthus involved in many of her activities. After the German unification in 1990, it underwentfundamental changes, to again become, just as before 1933, one of the outstandinguniversities of Germany. It hosts scholars and students from around the world, and is apartner to many institutions abroad. The Faculty of Law particularly aims at internationalperspectives; it hosts projects and institutions in European Law, International Law andcomparative legal studies and is committed to the historical, philosophical and socialcontext of law. Because of this focus, our academic home is an appropriate setting for suchan international conference. We wish all participants exciting days in Berlin.

LOCAL ORGANIZING COMMITTEE

Thomas Raiser, chairHumboldt Universität

Susanne Baer,Humboldt-Universität

Keebet von Benda-Beckmann,Max-Planck-Institut für Ethnologische Forschung

Kai-D. Bussmann,Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-W ittenberg

Helen Hartnell,Freie Universität Berlin, Golden Gate Univ. and

UC Berkeley

Stefan Machura,University of W ales, Bangor

Konstanze Plett,Universität of Bremen

Hubert Rottleuthner,Freie Universität Berlin

Reinhard Singer,Humboldt-Universität

Thomas Scheffer,Freie Universität Berlin

Michael Wrase,Humboldt-Universität

Local Organizing OfficeChristian Boulanger, Local Organizer

Student Assistants:Johanna Künne

Charlotte Schöne

A GREETING TO ALL PARTICIPANTS FROM THEBERLIN 2007 PROGRAM CHAIRS

Dear Friends and Colleagues: Welcome to Berlin 2007. This conference, sponsored byscholarly associations from several parts of the world, promises to be the largest and mostdiverse socio-legal studies event ever organized.

We expect well over 2000 participants from at least 70 countries. Many disciplines andapproaches are represented. There are papers and presentations covering almost everyaspect of the relationship between legal systems and society and at every level from thelocal to the international. This strong response to the call for participation shows thegrowing interest in socio-legal studies around the world and the strength of the disciplinesstudying the relationship between law and society.

The program includes hundreds of sessions on every topic imaginable. In addition, the

Program Committee selected Law and Society in the 21st Century: Transformations,Resistances, and Futures as the theme for the event and organized 18 featured sessionsto develop this theme. These sessions will be held at special time slots: Thursday at 16:30

and Friday at 10:15. In addition, there will be a special plenary on The Globalization ofConstitutional Law on Thursday at 18:30-19:30.

Berlin 2007 represents a highpoint in international collaboration in socio-legal studies. Theconference is sponsored by six associations: Law and Society Association, ResearchCommittee on Sociology of Law (ISA), Socio-Legal Studies Association of the UnitedKingdom, Japanese Association of Sociology of Law, Vereinigung für Rechtssoziologie andSociology of Law Section of the German Sociological Association. An InternationalProgram Committee, including representatives of all six associations and with participantsfrom eleven counties, has worked for almost two years to develop the program you havein front of you.

We are proud of the program we have assembled and hope that you find the eventenjoyable and profitable.

BERLIN 2007 PROGRAM COMMITTEE

Anne Boigeol, co-chairDavid Trubek, co-chair

Mona Lynch, associate chair

Reza BanakarJoxerramon Bengoetxea

María Inés BergoglioRuth BuchananCary Coglianese

David EngelMalcolm Feeley ex officio

Ben Fleury-SteinerLawrence Friedman ex officio

Lisa FrohmannJames GibsonTerry HallidayValerie Hans

Menachem Hofnung

Jacek KurczewskiStefan MachuraInga Markovits

Sally MerryBronwen Morgan

Mayasuki MurayamaVittorio Olgiati

Ron Pipkin ex officioKonstanze Plett

Greg ShafferRobin StrykerDavid Wilkins

Barbara Yngvesson

SPECIAL THANKS

LSA and RCSL wish to express gratitude to those organizations and individuals whose substantialsupport have contributed to our efforts to make this meeting a great success. Our thanks to the ProgramCommittee, named on the preceding page, for creating the excellent program about to begin.

Our thanks as well to the Local Organizing Committee, also named on the preceding pages, for theirexcellent preparations. We are extremely pleased to have Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin as our hostand deeply appreciate their hospitality. In particular, we wish to thank Susanne Baer and ThomasRaiser for their institutional support and cooperation throughout all stages of the planning. We are alsograteful for the assistance of university administrators Eva-Maria Kolb and Ursula Grawert. The staffof the Local Organizing Office, ably directed by Christian Boulanger and assisted by Johanne Künneand Charlotte Schöne, have worked tirelessly for many months on this event.

Local sponsors of the meeting whom we wish to thank are Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (GermanResearch Foundation), Bundesministerium für Justiz (German Federal Ministry of Justice), DieSenatsverwaltung für Justiz Berlin (Berlin Senate Department of Justice), Die Bibliotheksgesellschaft- Freunde und Förderer der Juristischen Fakultät der Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin e.V.(Association of Friends and Supporters of the Law Department of the Humboldt University),Vereinigung für Rechtssoziologie (Association for Sociology of Law), Sektion Rechtssoziologie inder Deutschen Soziologischen Gesellschaft (Section for the Sociology of Law in the GermanSociological Association), and the Hertie School of Governance.

LSA especially is grateful to the American Academy in Berlin for allowing use of their facility and toRachel Marks for her help with arrangements. We also appreciate the work of Zander & Partner inBerlin for their hotel and local event arrangements. For their generous sponsorships of the meeting, wethank Routledge-Cavendish / Taylor & Francis Group and to Wiley-Blackwell.

The fund raising initiatives for this meeting to help insure broad representation from many regions of theworld are described on the next page. We very much appreciate the voluntary contributions from theseindividuals:

Michael Adler

Penelope Andrews

Frances L. Ansley

Fran Ansley

Harry Arthurs

Susan Bandes

Robin Barnes

Linda Beale

Bethany Berger

Sarah M. Blandy

Jacobus Bomhoff

Christopher Brummer

Annie Bunting

Kay-Wah Chan

Davina S. Cooper

Rhonda Copelon

Shari Diamond

Joao Paulo Dias

Diane Eades

Graham Ellison

Chuck Epp

Howard Erlanger

Malcolm Feeley

Martina Feilzer

Eric Feldman

William Felstiner

Alexander Fischer

Richard Fischl

Frode Flemsaeter

Ruth Fletcher

Caroline Anne Forrell

Masahiro Fujita

Marsha Garrison

Bryant Garth

Erika George

Thomas Ginsburg

Rashmi Goel

Elizabeth Gorman

Samuel R. Gross

Pierre H. Guibentif

Neil Gunningham

Gregory Hagen

Terry Halliday

Joel F. Handler

Christine Harrington

Beth Harris

Christine Hassentab

Tetty Havinga

Christine M. Hegel

John and Ann Heinz

William Henderson

Didi Herman

F. Andrew Hessick

Susan Hirsch

Elizabeth Holzer

Alexandra Huneeus

Takashi Iida

Nevenka Ivanovska

Alex Jettinghoff

Donald M. Jones

Robert A. Kagan

Robert Kidder

Manako Kinoshita

Ernestine Kohne-Hoegan

Chulwoo Lee

Richard Lempert

Chrysanthi Leon

Paulo T. Lessa Matos

Stewart Macaulay

Peter Manning

Lynn Mather

Jason Mayerfeld

Lester Mazor

Michael McCann

Fergus E. McNeill

Errol Meidinger

Neal Milner

Setsuo Miyazawa

Noga Morag-Levine

Frank Munger

Masayuki Murayama

Karen B. Murray

Marc A. Musick

Robert Nelson

Larry E. Nesper

Rainer Nickel

Alan Norrie

Maureen Norton-Hawk

Susan Olson

Nancy Periales

Lisa Phillips

Ron Pipkin

Konstanze Plett

Doris Marie Provine

Lawrence Repeta

Peter Robson

Jose R. Rodriguez

Ilan Saban

Carol Sanger

Stuart Scheingold

Leslie Sebba

Carroll Seron

Gregory Shaffer

Corey Shdaimah

Susan Silbey

Jonathan Simon

Jerome H. Skolnick

Els Sol

Mark Suchman

Brian Tamanaha

Veronica Taylor

Joseph Thome

David Trubek

Louise Trubek

Wibo van Rossum

Joanna K Weinberg

Marley Weiss

Sally E Wheeler

John Valery White

David Wilkins

Toni Williams

Sophia Wilson

Barbara Yngvesson

Jung Young-Hoa

We also want to acknowledge and thank the Graduate Student Activity Planning Committee for the

GSA program, Building Dialogue in Sociolegal Studies: Jon Goldberg-Hiller (chair), Tom Baker,

Davina Cooper, Akira Fujimoto, Katharina Heyer, Stefan Machura, Morag McDermott, Bronwen

Morgan, Masayuki Murayama, Konstanze Plett, and Wes Pue. In addition, we wish to recognize the

sponsoring organizations who, along with LSA and RCSL, provided graduate student travel support for

this meeting: Socio-Legal Studies Association, Japanese Association for Sociology of Law,

Vereinigung für Rechtssoziologie and the Sociology of Law Section of the German Sociological

Association.

FUNDING FOR INTERNATIONAL PARTICIPATION

The Law and Society Association is very pleased to welcome many scholars from Africa, Asia, Latin

America, Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union who are able to attend through our substantial

fundraising efforts. Two years ago, the Association developed a program facilitating international research

collaboratives (IRCs) and contributed $15,000 toward bringing scholars to the Baltimore (2006) and Berlin

(2007) meetings. In addition, the Association raised $20,000 in voluntary contributions to the International

Travel Fund. Finally, the US National Science Foundation Law and Social Sciences Program awarded the

Association $122,400 to bring scholars to the Berlin meeting (NSF grant, SES 0647809). The Association

is very grateful to all those who generously contributed toward making this a very international meeting.

Their names are listed on the preceding page.

This funding initiative was sufficient to provide travel support for seventy scholars from around the world

to attend the conference. The Association particularly appreciates their contribution of knowledge and

expertise to these proceedings. Most are participating in International Research Collaboratives and some

are speaking in the featured sessions as well. They represent twenty-four countries and work in a wide

variety of fields. We have listed them below, including their countries of origin and their IRC or featured

session (FS). Their willingness to attend the conference and the generosity of individual donors, the Law

and Society Association and the NSF that made it possible have all contributed to making this a very exciting

and special conference, one that will facilitate the development of a global law and society field.

Reem Al-Botmeh, Palestine, IRC Palestinian Reform & Transition

Tatiana Alfonso, Colombia, IRC Counter-Hegemonic Globalization

Helena Alviar, Colombia, IRC After Public Interest Law

Pratiksha Baxi, India, FS Gender Violence & Human R ights

Rawan Bazbazat, Palestine, IRC Palestinian Reform & Transition

Farid Benevides, Colombia, FS Crime & Punishment

Maria Ines Bergoglio, Argentina, IRC Latin Amer. Judicialized Politics

Jose A.F. Costa, Brazil, IRC Comp. Disputing Behavior

Javier Couso, Chile, IRC Latin Amer. Judicialized Politics

Fabiano Engelmann, Brazil, IRC Lawyers & State Power

Louis Frankenthaler, Israel, FS Torture & the Security State

Kristina Galstyan, Armenia, IRC Public Opinions & Courts

Mauricio Garcia-Villegas, Colombia, FS Economic & Social Rights;

IRC Law- Europe & Latin Amer.

Roberto Gargarella, Argentina, IRC Law- Europe & Latin Amer.

Kusha Haraksingh, Trinidad, IRC South Asian Legal History

Mushirul Hasan, India, IRC Islamic Law

He Weidong, PR of China, IRC International Trade & Human R ights

Edmundo Hendler, Argentina, IRC Lay Participation

Mark Heywood, South Africa, IRC Comp. Legal Consciousness

Edit Kajtar, Hungary, IRC Social Europe

Winnie Kamau, Kenya, IRC Gender & Judging

Vasil Kenkishvili, Georgia, IRC Public Opinions & Courts

Asem Khalil, Palestine, IRC Palestinian Reform & Transition

Beatriz Kohen, Argentina, IRC Gender & Judging

Nikolay P. Kovalev, Kazakhstan, IRC Lay Participation

Csilla Kollonay Lehoczky, Hungary, IRC Social Europe

Sida Liu, PR of China, IRC East Asian Legal Professionalism

Jose Reinaldo De Lima Lopes, Brazil, IRC Law-Eur. & Latin Amer.

Maira Rocha Machado, Brazil, IRC State Transnat'l Transformations

Kevin Malunga, South Africa, FS Economic & Social Rights

Olya Melen, Ukraine, IRC Public Opinions & Courts

Paula Meneses, M ozambique, IRC Counter-Hegemonic Globalization

Bruno Miragem, Brazil, Comp. Consumer Over-Indebtedness

Qudsia Mirza, United Kingdom, FS Racism & Racial M inorities

Gabriella Mischkowski, France, FS Gender Violence & Human R ights

Prabhu Mohapatra, India, IRC South Asian Legal History

John C. Mubangizi, South Africa, IRC Comp. Legal Consciousness

Beata Nacsa, Hungary, IRC Social Europe

Paulo Garcia Neto, Brazil, IRC Law- Europe & Latin Amer.

Soogeun Oh, South Korea, IRC Comp. Consumer Over-Indebtedness

Daniel Palacios, Brazil, IRC Lawyers & State Power

Dejan Pavlovic, Serbia, IRC Public Opinions & Courts

Piers Pigou, South Africa, FS Transitional Justice

Qi Ming, PR of China, IRC Comp. Consumer Over-Indebtedness

Diana Rodriguez, Colombia, IRC Lawyers & State Power

Cesar Rodriguez-Garavito, Colombia, IRC Counter-Hegemonic

Globalization

Barbara Rosenberg, Brazil, IRC State Transnational Transformations

Pablo Rueda, Colombia, IRC Latin Amer. Judicialized Politics

Maria Tereza Sadek, Brazil, IRC Comp. Disputing Behavior

Maria Paula Saffon, Colombia, IRC Law- Europe & Latin Amer.

Marek Safjan, Poland, FS Transitional Justice

Samil Salem, Palestine, IRC Palestinian Reform & Transition

Michelle Ratton Sanchez, Brazil, IRC State Transnat'l Transformations

Angela Santamaria, Colombia, IRC Lawyers & State Power

Alvaro Santos, M exico, IRC Social Europe

Cecilia MacDowell Santos, Brazil, IRC Counter-Hegemonic

Globalization

Hani Sayed, Egypt, FS Transnational Legal Orders

Grazyna Skapska, Poland, FS Transitional Justice

Catalina Smulovitz, Argentina, IRC Latin Amer. Judicialized Politics

Maximo Sozzo, Argentina, IRC Urban Social Control

Abdras Toth, Hungary, IRC Social Europe

Jose O. Serra van-Dúnem, Angola, IRC Counter-Hegemonic

Globalization

Virginia Vecchioli, Argentina, IRC Lawyers & State Power

Alexandre Veronese, Brazil, IRC Comp. Disputing Behavior

Oscar Vieira, Brazil, IRC After Public Interest Law

Wang Shu Liang, PR of China, IRC Internat'l Trade & Human R ights

Wang Zhenmin, PR of China, IRC East Asian Legal Professionalism

Murray Wesson, South Africa, IRC Comp. Legal Consciousness

Yang Pengfei, PR of China, IRC Internat'l Trade & Human R ights

PROGRAM BOOK AND MEETING NOTES

The Program Book has four major sections: summary schedule [pages, i-xxiv]; program [pages 1-120];index of participants [pages 121-135]; and participant contact [pages 136-177]. A university campus mapis located at the back of this book. Changes to the program after July 1 are in the Program Addendum,included in your conference bag.

Meeting RoomsMeeting rooms are located in four buildings, designated on the campus map by letters; these letters form partof the room number to identify the building in which the session will be held: M=Main Building; L=LawFaculty; S=Seminar Building; and T=Theology Building; e.g. “[L326]” is Law Faculty building, room 326.For the location of rooms within each building, see the copies of floor diagrams in the “ConferenceLogistics” supplement which is also in your conference bag.

Book Exhibit and Poster SessionsThe Book Exhibit is located in the Seminar Building, first floor, rooms S1 102 and 103. The Book Exhibitwill be open 8:30-17:30 Wednesday and Thursday, 8:30 - 14:00 on Friday and Saturday. Posters are in thelobby of the Law Faculty.

Lunches, Coffee Breaks, and ReceptionsLunches are provided to registrants and require a separate ticket for each day (it is advisable to store thesetickets in the plastic holder behind your name badge to have them available when needed). Lunches aredistributed in the courtyard of the Main Building and at other locations noted in the “Conference Logistics”supplement. Given the short interval between the morning and afternoon sessions, participants should pickup lunches as soon as possible. Please dispose of lunch refuse in designated containers. Complimentarycoffee and other beverages will be available during the break between the two morning sessions (10:00-10:15) and between the last two afternoon sessions (16:15-16:30). The campus also offers several coffeeshops and a restaurant.

With the generous support of our hosts and local organizations, receptions will be held on Wednesday,Thursday, and Saturday evenings: The Welcome Reception on Wednesday will be in the Main BuildingCourtyard. On Thursday, following the Plenary, conference participants are invited to a Plenary Reception,to be held at the nearby Maritim pro Arte Hotel, Friedrichstrasse 151, and sponsored by the German FederalMinistry of Justice and the Berlin Senate Department of Justice. Finally, a Farewell Reception at 18:30on Saturday will be held at the Hertie School of Governance, Schlossplatz 1, sponsored by Humboldt-Universität, the Hertie School, the Vereinigung für Rechtssoziologie, and the DGS-SektionRechtssoziologie. Name badges are required for admission to all receptions. Due to the large conferenceattendance the capacity of facilities for receptions may be strained. Patience is urged.

Child CareChild care is by advance registration. The facility is located on the campus map upper right (K =Kindergarten). It is a 10-minute walk from the Seminar Building.

Award Announcements and PresentationsThe announcement and presentation of annual prizes awarded by LSA, RCSL, SLSA, and DGS-SektionRechtssoziologie will be Friday12:30-13:30 in the Senatssaal room of the Main Building. All meetingregistrants are invited to attend. The Awards Booklet is in your conference bag.

Graduate Student ActivityThe GSA program is Friday, beginning 13:30 in Seminar Building, S1 101 (by pre-registration; ticket willbe in your badge envelope).

ToursFor those who registered for Tours, ticket(s) will be in your name badge envelope. The assembly anddeparture arrangements for each tour are included in the “Conference Logistics” supplement.

Fun RunSaturday morning 6:30, meet at the Info Tent in the Main Building Courtyard. Easy jog along the riverSpree, passing lovely views and interesting buildings; back by 7:30!

Sociolegal CinemaFilms will be shown throughout the day on Saturday in the Kinosaal, Main Building. A separate flyerannouncing films and show times is in your conference bag.

Tuesday, July 24

8:30 - 18:00 WG Law and Ur ban Space—Business Meeting [S1.301]

9:30 - 18:30 Fitzpatrick Festschrift [S1.204]

10:00 - 17:30 LSA Trustees Meet ing [Re gent Ho tel]

15:00 - 19:00 Reg is tra tion [GF - Seminar Build ing]

Wednesday, July 25

7:45 - 17:30 Reg is tra tion [GF- Seminar Build ing]

8:30 - 17:30 Book Ex hibit [S1.102 & S1.103]

8:30 - 18:15 Paper Posters on display, Law Faculty lobby

8:15 - 10:00 Sessions

1101 Constitutional Courts and Judicial Review: Changing Perspectives (Sponsored byCRN01 Constitutional Ethnography/CRN13 African Law and Society) [Room M 1072]

1102 Governing Labour: Values, Approaches, and Techniques (Sponsored by CRN08Labor Rights) [Room S1.308]

1103 Judicial Review in South Asia (Sponsored by CRN22 South Asia) [Room S1.201]

1104 Legal Development and Institutional Reform (Sponsored by CRN24 Rule of Law,State Building, and Transition) [Room S1.204]

1105 Consumer Credit Regulation (Sponsored by IRC Comparative Socio/LegalApproaches to Consumer Overindebtedness, Debt Adjustment, and Insolvency) [Room S1.205]

1106 Public Attitudes toward Advice Providers and the Court (Sponsored by IRCComparative Disputing Behavior) [Room S1.605]

1107 Legal Consciousness in Comparative Perspective: Theoretical and MethodologicalIssues (Sponsored by IRC Legal Consciousness in Comparative Perspective)[Room S1.406]

1108 Public Interest Law in Global Context (Sponsored by IRC After Public Interest Law:A Global Perspective on Lawyering Strategies for Social Transformation) [RoomS1.307]

1109 Access to Justice and the Judiciary [Room S1.403]

1110 Administrative Justice [Room S1.405]

1111 Barriers to Gender Concepts Traveling in the Global World [Room S2.102]

1112 Civil Liberties and Civil Rights in the Nineteenth and Twentieth-Century UnitedStates and Norway [Room L 326]

1113 Civilizing Parenthood [Room S1.404]

1114 Courts, Governance, and the Emergent European Legal Field [Room M Senatssaal]

1115 Discourse and the Construction of Meaning in Global Norm-Making [Room T 013]

1116 Economic Crime Prevention and Intervention in Companies [Room L140/142]

S c h e d u l e o f E v e n t s

Wednesday, July 25 i

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

1117 Equality, Anti-Discrimination, and Positive Action [Room S1.503]

1118 Government Secrecy [Room M 3059]

1119 Insecure Privacy: The Balance between Personal Privacy and State Security Interests[Room S1.401]

1120 Issues in Multi-Occupied Residential Developments: International Comparisons[Room M 3092]

1121 Judicial Reforms in Central and Eastern European Countries: Ideas, Actors, Processes[Room S1.301]

1122 Law and Gendered Labor [Room T 113]

1123 Law and Social Movements: Legal and Political Structures (Sponsored by CRN21 Lawand Social Movements) [Room S1.608]

1124 Legal Doctrines in Brazil under the Impact of Globalization [Room S1.504]

1125 Perceptions of Justice (Sponsored by WG Legal Profession) [Room L E42]

1126 Philosophies of Law [Room S1.505]

1128 Public Response and Assessment of the State's Policy [Room L E44/46]

1129 Roundtable–Judges in Action: On Normativity in Its Practice, Institutionalization, and Materiality [Room M 1070]

1130 Race Crimes and the Response of the Criminal Justice System [Room S2. Reutersaal]

1132 Supreme Court: Decision Making Process [Room L 139a]

1133 The Decline of Public Adjudication [Room L 229]

1134 The Impact of Lay Participation on Law Reform [Room M 3086]

1135 Women in Times of Peace and War [Room S1.501]

1136 The Power of Constitutional Courts [Room S1.101]

1137 Transitional Stages in Current Constitutional Transitions? An InternationalComparative Overview [Room S1.601]

1138 Weber's Legitimacy (I): Formal Rationality as a Basis of Institutional Coherence[Room T 008]

1139 What is Alternative about Alternative Governance? Governing by Accident, Withoutthe State, Without Law? [Room L 144]

10:00 - 10:15 Cof fee Break

10:15 - 12:00

1201 Contemporary Issues in Refugee and Asylum Law in Comparative Perspective(Sponsored by CRN02 Citizenship and Immigration) [Room M 1070]

1202 Author Meets Reader–Labour Laws and Global Trade, by Bob Hepple (Sponsored byCRN08 Labor Rights) [Room S1.503]

1203 Law, Markets, and Society: Beyond Protectionism and Property I (Sponsored byCRN14 Culture, Society, and Intellectual Property) [Room L E44/46]

1204 Language and Law I: Law, Language, and the Political Order (Sponsored by CRN16Language and Law) [Room S1.308]

1205 Collective Human Rights I–Theorizing Collective Rights (Sponsored by CRN25Collective Human Rights) [Room S1.204]

1206 Experiments, Survey-Experiments, and Surveys in the Psychology of Law (Sponsoredby CRN28 Realist and Empirical Legal Methods) [Room S1.401]

ii Wednesday, July 25

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

S c h e d u l e o f E v e n t s

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

1207 Gender, Representation, and Judicial Selection: Criteria, Processes and Practices(Sponsored by IRC Gender and Judging) [Room S1.608]

1208 The Family, Law, and Communal Identity in Colonial South Asia (Sponsored by IRCColonial South Asian Legal History and CRN22 South Asia) [Room S1.501]

1209 Transnational Transformations of the State I (Sponsored by IRC TransnationalTransformations of the State and CRN28 Realist and Empirical Legal Methods)[Room S1.406]

1210 Alternative Forms of Regulatory Governance [Room S1.403]

1211 Author Meets Reader–Law as a Means to an End, by Brian Z. Tamanaha [Room S1.601]

1212 Blurring Boundaries: Crime, Punishment, and the Law [Room S2.102]

1213 Citizenship, Participation, and Democracy [Room S1.505]

1214 Crime and Social Transformation [Room M 1072]

1215 Developments of the Financial Market [Room L 140/142]

1217 Epistemic Communities and Law [Room M Senatssaal]

1218 Global Challenges in Health Care [Room S1.404]

1219 The Impact of Hidden Racism and Sexism [Room S2. Reutersaal]

1220 International and Comparative Law Approaches to Minority and Indigenous Peoples'Rights [Room M 3059]

1221 Israeli Law and the Social (Trans)Formation of Minorities and Disadvantaged Groups[Room S1.205]

1222 Law and Mental Health [Room L 229]

1223 Law, Policy, and Governance [Room T 013]

1224 Legal Education [Room L E42]

1225 Legal Reform and Social Change in Palestine [Room S1.605]

1227 Predicting Juvenile Rule-Violating Behavior: Longitudinal Study of Legal Reasoning,Attitudes, Peers, and Personal Attributes [Room M 3086]

1228 Public-Private Hybrids and the New Governance in Japan, Britain, the US, and theGlobal Arena [Room S1.504]

1231 Securities Regulation, Corporate Governance, and Corporate Finance: GlobalMarkets, Law, and Culture [Room S1.301]

1232 Sex Work, Sexual Offences, and Official Ideas of Gender [Room S1.201]

1233 The Future of Corporate Governance [Room L 139a]

1234 The Impact of Globalization on the Turkish Economy and Society [Room M 3092]

1235 The Legal Construction of Property Rights and Markets [Room S1.405]

1236 The Morality and Politics of Search Engines and User-Generated Content [Room T113]

1237 Three German Perspectives on Law: Religion, Philosophy, and Literature [Room T008]

1238 Violence, Justice, and Irreplaceability: Walter Benjamin and Legal Thought(Sponsored by CRN26 Law and Social Theory) [Room L 326]

1239 Feminism, Law, and Families (Sponsored by WG Gender and Law) [Room S1.101]

12:00 - 12:30 Lunch Break

S c h e d u l e o f E v e n t s

Wednesday, July 25 iii

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

12:30 - 14:15

1301 Roundtable–Labor, Migration, and Social Welfare (Sponsored by CRN02 Citizenshipand Immigration and CRN08 Labor Rights) [Room M 3092]

1302 Toward a Regulatory State Model, or Still Varieties of Regulatory Models?(Sponsored by CRN05 Regulatory Governance) [Room S1.101]

1303 Contradiction, Persistence, Challenge: The Status of Capital Punishment in the UnitedStates (Sponsored by CRN11 The Cultural Lives of Capital Punishment)[Room S2. Reutersaal]

1304 Cases on Law, Governance, and Development I (Sponsored by CRN24 Rule of Law,State Building, and Transition) [Room S1.608]

1305 Author Meets Reader–Prisons of Poverty, by Loic Wacquant (Sponsored by CRN27Prisons and Prisoners) [Room M 3086]

1306 Bankruptcy Filing Rates and the Reasons Therefore (Sponsored by IRC ComparativeSocio/Legal Approaches to Consumer Overindebtedness, Debt Adjustment, andInsolvency) [Room L 144]

1307 Comparing Roles of Lawyers and Litigation in Disputing Process (Sponsored by IRCComparative Disputing Behavior) [Room S1.503]

1308 East Asian Legal Professionalism: Legal Education (Sponsored by IRC LegalProfessionalism in East Asian Context) [Room S1.601]

1309 Administrative Law in the European Union: Lessons for Americans? [Room S1.501]

1310 Assessing the Independence of Institutions [Room S1.504]

1311 Author Meets Reader–Human Rights & Gender Violence, by Sally Merry [Room M 1070]

1312 Biopirates, Bollywood, and Tarot Cards: New Directions/MisDirections in IntellectualProperty Law [Room M 1072]

1313 Civil Population in Lawlessness State [Room S2.102]

1314 Disputing "Religious Law" in the 21st Century [Room T 008]

1315 Democracy and Violence [Room S1.204]

1316 Displaced Children: Children's Rights and Education amidst Immigration, Exile, andDisaster [Room T 113]

1317 EuroJELS: Empirical Research around the Globe [Room L E42]

1318 Globalisation of American Law? Theoretical Debates and Empirical Evidence fromEurope [Room M 3059]

1319 Governing the Ungovernable [Room S1.307]

1320 Interrogating Bentham [Room M Senatssaal]

1321 Judicial Readings of Race, Ethnicity, and Religion [Room T 013]

1322 Law and Politics [Room S1.605]

1323 Law, Social Movements, and Social Change [Room S1.301]

1325 Mass Media and Public Opinion [Room S1.405]

1326 National and International Law and Indigenous Peoples [Room S1.505]

1328 Punishment and Control: Theoretical Perspectives [Room S1.406]

1329 Regulating Political Finance Regimes (I) [Room S1.404]

1330 Roundtable–The Jury and Democracy: The Implications of Jury Service for Politicaland Civic Engagement [Room L140/142]

iv Wednesday, July 25

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

S c h e d u l e o f E v e n t s

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

1331 Dispute Resolution in Japan: A Comparative Perspective on Selective Adaptation[Room S1.201]

1332 Service Panel–How to Thrive as a Junior Faculty Member [Room S1.205]

1333 The Future of Legal Pluralism [Room L 139a]

1335 The Legal Regulation of Art and Fashion [Room S1.403]

1337 Tragedy as Law, Law as Tragedy [Room L 326]

1338 War, Public Violence against Women, and What Can Be Done About It [Room S1.308]

1339 Feminism, Politics, and Policy (Sponsored by WG Gender and Law) [Room L E 44/46]

14:15 - 14:30 Break

14:30 - 16:15

1401 Cause Lawyering and Clinical Legal Scholarship: An Open Exchange (Sponsored byCRN03 Cause Lawyering and CRN19 Teaching in Law and Society) ) [Room L E42]

1402 Evasion of Labour Law by Employers and the Law's Response: Comparative andHistorical Perspectives (Sponsored by CRN08 Labor Rights [Room L140/142]

1403 Comparative Constitutional Borrowing among the Juristocracy (Sponsored by CRN13African Law and Society) [Room S1.503]

1404 Struggles for Political Freedom: Africa (Sponsored by WG Legal Profession andCRN20 The Legal Complex and Struggles for Political Liberalism) [Room S1.601]

1405 State Building (Sponsored by CRN24 Rule of Law, State Building, and Transition)[Room M Senatssaal]

1406 Empirical Methods Showcase II (Qualitative): Using Interviews to Study Race(Sponsored by CRN28 Realist and Empirical Legal Methods) [Room S1.101]

1407 Women Judges/Feminist Judges–Different Voices? (Sponsored by IRC Gender andJudging) [Room L 144]

1409 Advances in Behavioral Law and Economics [Room M 1070]

1410 Alternative Governance in Cross-Sectoral and Comparative Perspective [Room M1072]

1411 Unpacking Law Firm Culture [Room S1.204]

1412 Author Meets Reader–Split Decisions: How and Why to Take a Break from Feminism,by Janet Halley [Room M 3086]

1413 Colonial and Postcolonial Violence [Room S1.307]

1414 Constructing Identities: Immigration Law, Transnational Crime, and Anti-Terrorism[Room T 013]

1415 Defining the Role of Lawyers toward the State [Room T 113]

1416 Democratic Participation [Room S2.102]

1417 Emerging Questions in Technology and Law [Room M 3059]

1418 Global Lawmaking: Process, Legitimacy, Limits [Room L E44/46]

1419 Institutionalizing a Potential Palestinian State [Room S1.308]

1420 International Criminal Law in the Twenty-First Century: New Directions andPractical Challenges [Room S1.605]

1421 Judicial Independence: Discussions and Perspectives [Room L 326]

1422 Law, Legal Networks, and Bureaucracies [Room S1.608]

S c h e d u l e o f E v e n t s

Wednesday, July 25 v

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

1423 Law, Society, and Taxation I: Competing Concepts of Equity [Room S1.205]

1424 Legal Professional Values and Identities I (Sponsored by WG Legal Profession)[Room S1.301]

1425 Legal Recognition of Same-Sex Relationships [Room T 306]

1426 Money Matters: Exploring Some Recent Strategies for Achieving "Fair"Post-Separation Financial Outcomes [Room S1.405]

1427 Public Authority Liability: Developing Issues in Tort Law [Room L 139a]

1428 Punishment, Regulation, and Risk [Room S1.504]

1429 Roundtable–Comparative Perspectives on Race, Slavery, and Social Exclusion:Thoughts on the 200th Anniversary of the End of the Slave Trade [Room T 406]

1430 Roundtable–The Narratives of Transitional Justice: Between the Personal and thePolitical [Room S1.501]

1431 Service Panel–How to Get a Job [Room S1.406]

1432 Socio-Legal Dimension of Eastern Europe Unification with European Union [Room S2. Reutersaal]

1433 The Future of American Disability Law [Room S1.403]

1434 The Headscarf and Other Religous Symbols: How Should States Treat Those Signs inthe Public Sphere? [Room T 008]

1435 The Legitimacy of "War on Terror" [Room S1.401]

1436 The Right for Safe Environment [Room S1.404]

1437 Towards Typology of Legal Pluralism [Room M 3092]

1438 Weber's Legitimacy (II): The Difference between an Order and a Legitimate Order[Room S1.201]

1439 Contemporary Sporting Themes and Issues (Sponsored by WG Law and PopularCulture) [Room S1.405]

16:15 - 16:30 Cof fee Break

16:30 - 18:15

1501 Cause Lawyering) [Room S1.601]

1502 Alternative Regulation in Health Care I: EU and US Perspectives (Sponsored byCRN05 Regulatory Governance) [Room S1.406]

1503 Documentary Film: "Morristown, Tennessee: Looking at Globalization from Below"(Sponsored by CRN08 Labor Rights) [Room S1.301]

1504 Author Meets Reader–Competing Equalities: Law and the Backward Classes in India,by Marc Galanter (Sponsored by CRN22 South Asia) [Room S1.101]

1505 Self-Determination (Sponsored by CRN25 Collective Human Rights) [Room S1.605]

1506 The Experience of Incarceration in North America, the U.K., and Germany(Sponsored by CRN27 Prisons and Prisoners) [Room M 1072]

1507 Law, Social Movements, and Transnational Mobilization in the Global South(Sponsored by IRC Law and Counter-Hegemonic Globalization) [Room M 3059]

1508 Roundtable–East Asian Legal Professionalism (Sponsored by IRC LegalProfessionalism in East Asian Context) [Room L 144]

1509 Transnational Transformations of the State II (Sponsored by IRC TransnationalTransformations of the State) [Room M 3086]

vi Wednesday, July 25

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

S c h e d u l e o f E v e n t s

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

1510 Access to Justice without the Court? [Room S1.403]

1511 Author Meets Reader–Governing through Crime: How the War on Crime TransformedAmerican Democracy and Created a Culture of Fear, by Jonathan Simon [Room M1070]

1512 Author Meets Reader–The Politics of Sexual Harassment: A Comparative Study of theUnited States, the European Union, and Germany, by Kathrin Zippel [Room M 3092]

1513 Communicating about the Law: Debates, Narratives, and Dialogues [Room S2.102]

1514 Comparative Perspectives on Legal Mobilization [Room S1.405]

1515 Cultural Rights [Room S1.504]

1516 Digital Transformations: Free Association, Free Speech, and Privacy in the 21stCentury? [Room T 306]

1517 Discrimination, Solidarity, and "Symbolic Segregation": Gender Issues in HumanRights Discourse and Legal Education [Room S1.608]

1518 Governance, Exclusions, and the Geographies of Law [Room S1.503]

1520 International Criminal Courts: Past and Future [Room S1.204]

1521 Judges in Society Room L 140/142]

1522 Law and Social Theory (Sponsored by CRN26 Law and Social Theory) [Room S1.307]

1523 Legal Discourse: The Search for Legitimacy [Room S1.308]

1524 Legal Professional Values and Identities II (Sponsored by WG Legal Profession)[Room S1.401]

1525 Market Access, Intellectual Property Rights, and Competition Policy [Room S1.404]

1526 Media's Reach: How Popular Conceptions of Law Shape Legal Processes [RoomS1.405]

1527 Public Participation in Alternative Governance in Italy and the US: Representation,Consultation, Collective Intelligence, and Public Discourse [Room T 406]

1528 Race and National Identity [Room S1.205]

1529 Roundtable–Teaching Interdisciplinary Courses on Historic Trials [Room T 013]

1530 Security and the State in Comparative Perspectives [Room L 229]

1531 Service Panel–International Institute for the Sociology of Law: Networking andOrganisation of Scientific Meetings [Room L E42]

1532 Socio-Legal Studies in Comparative Perspective: Struggles and Opportunities[Room L E44/46]

1533 Studying Law through Discourse Theories: Habermas and Derrida [S2. Reutersaal]

1534 The History of International Law and the Influence of Roman Law [Room T 113]

1535 The Legal Contestation of American Indian Authenticities [Room T 008]

1536 Theoretical, Methodological, and Empirical Approaches in Criminology [RoomS1.201]

1537 Toward a Sociology of the Juridical Field: Pierre Bourdieu´s Theory of Law [Room M Senatssaal]

1538 Law and International Migration [Room S1.501]

1539 What is Legal Culture? [Room L 139a]

18:30 - 20:00 Wel come Re cep tion [Main Build ing Court yard]

S c h e d u l e o f E v e n t s

Wednesday, July 25 vii

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Thursday, July 26

7:45 - 17:30 Reg is tra tion [GF- Seminar Build ing]

8:30 - 17:30 Book Ex hibit [S1.102 & S1.103]

8:30 - 18:15 Paper Posters on dis play, Law Faculty lobby

8:15 - 10:00 Sessions

2101 Killing States and Their Killing Practices (Sponsored by CRN11 The Cultural Lives of Capital Punishment) [Room S1.406]

2102 Law and New Governance: Building Theory from Practice (Sponsored by CRN05Regulatory Governance) [Room S1.605]

2103 The Legal Complex and Political Liberalism: Case Studies (Sponsored by WG LegalProfession and CRN20 The Legal Complex and Struggles for Political Liberalism)[Room L E44/46]

2104 Cases on Law, Governance, and Development II (Sponsored by CRN24 Rule of Law,State Building, and Transition) [Room S1.204]

2105 Empirical Methods Showcase III: Quantitative Content Analysis of Legal CaseMaterials (Sponsored by CRN28 Realist and Empirical Legal Methods)[Room L 140/142]

2106 The City, Security, and Outsiders' Exclusion between Europe and the Americas(Sponsored by IRC Urban Social Control in Comparative Perspective) [Room M 1072]

2107 Gender, Otherness, and Bias in Judging (Sponsored by IRC Gender and Judging)[Room S1.405]

2108 Justice Systems and the Public in Different Societies and in Different Time-Frames(Sponsored by IRC/CRN06 Public Opinion and the Courts) [Room S1.301]

2109 Attitudes toward Adversarial Legalism in Europe and the US: Analyses of NewComparative Survey and Archival Data [Room L 326]

2110 Calculating Subjects: The Politics of Risk [Room S1.404]

2111 The Changing Structure of Law Firms in a Global Economy [Room L E42]

2112 Censorious Languages, Public Discourses, and Political Speech in Constitutional LawEnforcement [Room S1.401]

2113 After Sovereignty I [Room T 013]

2114 Comparing Constitutional Change: The Case of Judicial Activism [Room L 139a]

2115 Coping with Multiple Levels of Governance in Law and Development: FromRegionalism to Federalism to Decentralisation to Cities [Room S1.501]

2116 Courts in Action: The Production of (In)Justice [Room S1.601]

2118 Cultural Rights in the Internet Age [Room T 113]

2119 Security and the Empowered State [Room S1.403]

2120 Globalizing Property: Cultural and Economic Dimensions [Room S1.503]

2121 International Organizations-in-Action: Behavior, Accountability, and Reform[Room M Senatssaal]

2122 Juvenile Detention Centres: The Perspective of Young Offenders [Room S1.505]

2123 Language and Discourse: Issues in Legal Decisionmaking [Room L 229]

viii Thursday, July 26

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

S c h e d u l e o f E v e n t s

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

2124 Law, Society, and Taxation II: Encouraging Development in Poorer Countriesthrough Tax Policies [Room S1.308]

2125 FEATURED SESSION—Presidential Panel on Empirical Research: Legitimacy,Morality, and Law [Room S1.101]

2126 Lower Courts, Guilty Pleas, and Legitimacy [Room M 3086]

2127 Managing Religious Pluralism through Law [Room T 008]

2129 New Form of Families and Law [Room M 3059]

2131 Protection of Minors: Media Policy and the Formation of "the Child" [Room S1.608]

2132 Regulating Political Finance Regimes (II) [Room L 144]

2133 Rights, Capital, and Capitalism [Room S2.102]

2134 Roundtable–Rape, Affirmative Consent, and Sexual Autonomy [Room M 3092]

2135 Social Theory and the Law: Niklas Luhmann's Socio-Legal Thinking [Room S1.205]

2136 Studies in the Pure Sociology of Law [Room S1.201]

2137 Theoretical Perspectives on Legal-Economic Issues [Room S1.402]

2138 Transformations in the Legal Profession [Room S1.502]

2139 Transnational Policing of State Conduct: NGOs and Transnational Institutions in theDevelopment and Operation of an International Field Supposed to Regulate States[Room S2. Reutersaal]

2140 Wars on People, Wars on Terror: The Social Construction of Race and Citizenship inComparative Perspective [Room M 1070]

2141 Legal Culture, Reflective Law, and Legal Reasoning in Luhmann's System of ModernLaw [Room S1.307]

10:00 - 10:15 Cof fee Break

10:15 - 11:15 Meet the Ed itor, Law & So cial In quiryCoffee & Cakes [S1. 102]

10:15 - 12:00 Sessions

2201 Cause Lawyers and Social Transformation (Sponsored by CRN03 Cause Lawyering)[Room S1.308]

2202 Regulation and New Governance (Sponsored by CRN05 Regulatory Governance)[Room S1.605]

2203 Law, Language, and Forensic Evidence (Sponsored by CRN16 Language and Law)[Room S1.601]

2204 Human Rights: Global Legal Pluralism Revisited (Sponsored by CRN23 InternationalHuman Rights) [Room M 1070]

2205 Indigenous Peoples, Land, and Autonomy (Sponsored by CRN25 Collective HumanRights) [Room M 3086]

2206 Political Economy of Consumer Bankruptcy and Overindebtedness (Sponsored byIRC Comparative Socio/Legal Approaches to Consumer Overindebtedness, DebtAdjustment, and Insolvency) [Room S1.204]

2207 Law's Violence in Colonial India (Sponsored by IRC Colonial South Asian LegalHistory) [Room S1.505]

2208 Employment Protection and Non-Standard Work in European Member States and inthe US (Sponsored by IRC Social Europe and CRN08 Labor Rights) [Room S1.504]

S c h e d u l e o f E v e n t s

Thursday, July 26 ix

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

2209 A World System Perspective on the Globalization of Law: Competition between LegalFields as Components of Hegemonic Battles [Room S1.101]

2210 Author Meets Reader–Die Leidenschaft des Denkens, by Joachim Radkau [Room L140/142]

2211 Author Meets Reader–The Language of Law School: Learning to "Think Like aLawyer," by Elizabeth Mertz [Room L E44/46]

2212 Challenges of Legal Reform in the Former Soviet Union [Room S1.205]

2213 After Sovereignty II [Room T 013]

2214 Comparative Corporate Governance: Methodology [Room S1.503]

2215 Controlling Capitalism in a Post-Scandal World [Room S2.102]

2216 Critical Approaches to Race and Individualism [Room S1.406]

2217 Political Theology, Ethics, and Law [Room T 008]

2218 Democracy, Legitimacy, and the European Union [Room M 3092]

2219 Front Lines of Punishment: Insights from Field Research [Room S1.501]

2220 Governing Nanotechnology: A Small Matter? [Room M 1072]

2221 International Institutions and the Environment [Room S1.301]

2222 Intersex: A Challenge to Traditional Views on Gender [Room S1.405]

2223 Law and Social Movements: Actors and Strategies [Room L 139a]

2224 Law, Society, and Taxation III: International and Comparative Tax Issues[Room S1.404]

2225 Leon Petrazycki's (1867-1931) Challenge to Law and Society Studies Today [Room M Senatssaal]

2226 Love in the Public Sphere [Room S1.608]

2227 Method in Our Madness: Methodological Issues in Law and Society [Room M 3059]

2228 Naming, Framing, Shaming: Law and Social Control of Transgressions [Room S1.307]

2229 New Constitutionalism and the Reconstitution of Capital: The Neo-LiberalTransnational Legal Order, Its Limits, and Prospects [Room L E42]

2230 Policing the Periphery [Room S1.403]

2231 Property Rights and Land Tenure in Law and Development in ComparativePerspective: From Ghana to South Africa to Turkey [Room L 326]

2232 Race and Slavery: Historical Problems and Contemporary Context [Room T 306]

2233 Religion as Constraint and Tool for Women's Rights [Room T 113]

2234 Role of Law and War on Terrorism [Room L 144]

2235 Roundtable–The Impact of Intellectual Property Law upon 21st Century Society [Room T 406]

2236 Striving for Sustainability through Law [Room S1.402]

2237 The Popular/Legal Imagination (Sponsored by WG Law and Popular Culture)[Room S2. Reutersaal]

2238 Transitional Justice in Times of Conflict [Room S1.502]

2239 Urban Governance and Legality from Below [Room S1.201]

2240 Feminism and the Production of Legal Knowledge (Sponsored by WG Gender andLaw) [Room S1.604]

x Thursday, July 26

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

S c h e d u l e o f E v e n t s

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

2241 Property and Society: Theorizing Obligations in Ownership [Room S1.401]

12:00 - 12:30Lunch Break

12:30 - 14:15

2301 Law and New Approaches to EU Governance (Sponsored by CRN05 RegulatoryGovernance) [Room M Senatssaal]

2302 Law, Markets, and Society: Beyond Protectionism and Property II (Sponsored byCRN14 Culture, Society, and Intellectual Property) [Room S1.307]

2304 Law and Development: The China Consensus? (Sponsored by CRN24 Rule of Law,State Building, and Transition) [Room S1.308]

2305 Punishment and Society: The Moral Community and the Limits of Sanction(Sponsored by CRN27 Prisons and Prisoners) [Room S2. Reutersaal]

2306 Comparing Access to Justice in Canada, Brazil and Japan (Sponsored by IRCComparative Disputing Behavior) [Room S1.504]

2307 Lawyers in Transition II (Sponsored by IRC Legal Professionalism in East AsianContext) [Room L 144]

2308 Comparative Legal Consciousness: National Studies (Sponsored by IRC LegalConsciousness in Comparative Perspective) [Room S1.501]

2309 American Lawyers and the Betrayal and Defense of Legality since 9/11 [Room S1.101]

2310 Author Meets Reader–The Citizen and the Alien: Dilemmas of ContemporaryMembership, by Linda Bosniak [Room L 139a]

2311 Author Meets Reader–Outlawed Pigs: Law, Religion, and Culture in Israel, byDaphne Barak Erez [Room S1.605]

2312 Challenges to Justice: Case Studies from Around the World [Room M 3086]

2313 After Sovereignty III [Room T 013]

2314 Judges and Courts (Sponsored by WG Comparing Legal Cultures) [Room L 140/142]

2315 Corruption in Global Business: A Dilemma between Culture of Trust and NationalLegal Control [Room S1.406]

2316 Rights and Courts [Room S1.608]

2317 Crimmigration Crisis? The Convergence of Immigration and Crime Control [RoomS1.601]

2318 European Integration: Minorities, Multiculturalism, Discrimination, and SocialProtection [Room L E44/46]

2319 Globalization and Families [Room S1.403]

2320 Governing Science and Technology [Room M 3092]

2321 Is Gender Arguable? Regulatory and Theoretical Approaches [Room S2.102]

2322 Justice Issues in Comparative Perspective [Room M 1070]

2323 New Perspectives on the Rule of Law (Sponsored by CRN26 Law and Social Theory)[Room S1.204]

2324 Law, Society, and Taxation IV: Justice, Religion, and Tax Policy [Room T 008]

2325 Limitations of the Rational Actor Model in Legal Decision Making [Room L E42]

2326 Making Law and Making Use of Law in the Middle East: Ethnographic Perspectives[Room S1.404]

S c h e d u l e o f E v e n t s

Thursday, July 26 xi

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

2327 Migration, Ethnicity, and the "Good Citizen" [Room S1.502]

2328 Negotiation and Mediation: How It Could Work for Just and Better Results [RoomS1.505]

2329 New French Bentham Studies [Room M 1072]

2330 Political Finance Regulation in Western Democracies [Room S1.402]

2331 Property, Citizenship, and Social Entreprenuerism in a Global Marketplace I [RoomS1.201]

2332 Re-Assessing Constitutional Standards: The Quest for Methodological Approaches[Room L 326]

2334 Roundtable–Are We Reflexive? Race and the Law and Society Association [RoomS1.205]

2335 Roundtable–The Social Problèmatique of the Europeanization Process: What is Left?[Room S1.301]

2336 Service Panel–How to Publish a Book [Room S1.401]

2337 Topics on Corporate Transparency [Room S1.405]

2338 Transformations: Indigenous Peoples and the Modern State [Room L 229]

2339 Use of Torture in Time of Emergency [Room M 3059]

2340 WG Gender and Law IV: The Epistemology of Consent in Rape Law (Sponsored byWG Gender and Law) [Room T 113]

2341 Law and the Facts of Law's Environment [Room T 306]

14:15 - 14:30 Break

14:15 - 15:15 Cambridge Uni versity Press Reception to Mark the Launch ofThe Practice of Hu man Rights: Tracking Law Between the Global andthe Local edited by Mark Goodale and Sally Engle Merry [S1. 102]

14:30 - 16:15

2401 Managing Legal Risk (Sponsored by CRN05 Regulatory Governance) [Room L E42]

2402 Language and the Criminal Law (Sponsored by CRN16 Language and Law) [Room S1.406]

2403 Investigating Practices of Gender Equity: Indian Women, Courts, and Arbitration(Sponsored by CRN22 South Asia and CRN23 International Human Rights) [RoomS1.601]

2404 Roundtable–The Rule of Law, State-Building, and Transition (Sponsored by CRN24Rule of Law, State Building, and Transition) [Room S1.204]

2405 Contemporary Issues for Indigenous Peoples (Sponsored by CRN25 Collective HumanRights) [Room S1.608]

2406 Democracy in the Transnational Private Sector: Citizenship, Sovereignty, Solidarity,and the Cultural Status of States [Room S1.308]

2407 Studies of Pre-Bankruptcy Debt Collection (Sponsored by IRC ComparativeSocio/Legal Approaches to Consumer Overindebtedness, Debt Adjustment, andInsolvency) [Room S1.201]

2408 The First Women Judges: Experiences, Surveys, and Contexts (Sponsored by IRCGender and Judging) [Room L 140/142]

2409 Europeanization of Welfare and Employment Law (Sponsored by IRC Social Europeand CRN08 Labor Rights) [Room S1.504]

xii Thursday, July 26

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

S c h e d u l e o f E v e n t s

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

2410 Comparative and Historical Perspectives on Law Reform [Room S1.505]

2411 Author Meets Reader–Same Sex, Different States: When Same-Sex Marriages CrossState Lines, by Andrew Koppelman [Room T 113]

2412 Charting Waters in Katrina's Wake: Unresolved Contradictions of Race, Class,Property, Citizenship, Markets, and Renewal [Room S1.101]

2413 Comparative and Historical Perspectives on Witness Testimony and Witnessing[Room S2. Reutersaal]

2414 Competing Frameworks for Understanding "New Governance": Constitutionalism,Regulation, Ethics, or Discourse? [Room S1.605]

2415 Contextualizing Transitional Justice [Room M Senatssaal]

2416 Disputing "Religious Law" in the 21st Century: Islam [Room T 013]

2417 Economic Rights: Globalization and Non State Actors [Room S1.403]

2418 Fat, The New Black? Public Health vs. Civil Rights in the War on Obesity[Room S1.205]

2419 Globalization and the Future of Public Law [Room T 406]

2420 Human Rights and Criminal Law [Room M 3092]

2421 Islamic Law around the World [Room T 306]

2422 Jurisdictional Disputes among Constitutional Actors [Room L 326]

2423 Family Lawyers and Dispute Resolution Processes in a Responsible Parenting PolicyEnvironment: A New Divorce Profession? (Sponsored by WG Legal Profession)[Room L E44/46]

2424 Law as Epistemic Culture [Room S1.405]

2425 Litigation and its Discontents [Room M 1072]

2426 Managing Refugees: Rights Law and Administration [Room M 3059]

2427 Multiple Institutional Levels at Work: The Embeddedness of Work, Workers, andLabor Markets in Regulatory Regimes [Room S1.503]

2428 Negotiating the Religion/Secular Law Divide around the World [Room T 008]

2429 New Approaches to Old Gender Studies Topics [Room S1.404]

2430 Politics and the Judicial Process [Room S1.301]

2431 Preventive Measures in the War on Terror [Room S2.102]

2432 Race in Multi-Racial America [Room L 139a]

2433 Recognizing and Redefining Victims: Social, Cultural, and Legal Contexts[Room L 229]

2434 Roundtable–Human Rights and Access to Justice for Women in Prison [Room S1.307]

2435 Security and Human Rights [Room S1.502]

2436 Speaking of Death [Room M 1070]

2437 Three Comedies and a Tragedy: Representations of Law in Popular Culture[Room S1.401]

2438 Transnational Risk Governance and the Law [Room S1.402]

2439 Violence Against Women: Global Perspectives [Room S1.604]

2440 Legalization and Its Discontents: Histories, Trajectories, and the Vagaries of NationalPolicies [Room S1.501]

S c h e d u l e o f E v e n t s

Thursday, July 26 xiii

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

2441 Roundtable–Law in its Social Environment: The Implications of Luhmann's Theory[Room M 3086]

16:15 - 16:30 Cof fee Break

16:15 - 17:15 Wiley-Blackwell Re ception to Meet the New Ed itorsWine, Beer & Canapes [Room S1. 102]

16:30 - 18:15

2501 FEATURED SESSION—Presidential Panel on Empirical Research: EmpiricalResearch on Contracts (Sponsored by CRN28 Realist and Empirical Legal Methods)[Room S1.101]

2502 FEATURED SESSION—New Governance and Its Critics (Sponsored by CRN05Regulatory Governance) [Room M 1070]

2503 FEATURED SESSION—After Public Interest Law (Sponsored by IRC After PublicInterest Law: A Global Perspective on Lawyering Strategies for SocialTransformation) [Room M 1072]

2504 FEATURED SESSION—Law, Counter-Hegemonic Globalization, and Post-ColonialDiversity: Latin America and Africa (Sponsored by IRC Law and Counter-HegemonicGlobalization) [Room M 3059]

2505 FEATURED SESSION—Racism and Racial Minorities in Democratic States[Room T 008]

2506 FEATURED SESSION—New Insights on Disputing Behavior: ComparativePerspectives (Sponsored by IRC Comparative Disputing Behavior) [Room T 013]

2507 FEATURED SESSION—Roundtable: Gender, Violence, and Human Rights [RoomS2. Reutersaal]

2508 FEATURED SESSION—Transnational Legal Orders and Their Effects:Transformations, Resistances, and Trajectories [Room S1.205]

2509 FEATURED SESSION—Transitional Justice: Memory and Reconciliation[Room M Senatssaal]

18:30 - 19:30

2601 PLENARY—Globalization of Constitutional Law [Room M Audimax]

19:45 - 21:00 Re cep tion [Maritim proArte Ho tel, Friedrichstrasse 151]

Friday, July 27

7:45 - 14:00 Reg is tra tion [GF- Seminar Build ing]

8:30 - 14:00 Book Ex hibit [S1.102 & S1.103]

8:30 - 18:15 Paper Posters on dis play, Law Faculty lobby

8:15 - 10:00 Sessions

3101 Context and Cause Lawyering: Culture, Identity, and Their Consequences (Sponsoredby CRN03 Cause Lawyering) [Room S1.307]

3102 Technologies of Risk Governance (Sponsored by CRN05 Regulatory Governance)[Room S1.406]

xiv Friday, July 27

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

S c h e d u l e o f E v e n t s

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

3103 Non-Enforcement of Labor Rights: www.Where?Why?What Is To Be Done?(Sponsored by CRN08 Labor Rights) [Room L 139a]

3105 Debt Adjustment Programs (Sponsored by IRC Comparative Socio/Legal Approachesto Consumer Overindebtedness, Debt Adjustment, and Insolvency) [Room S1.204]

3106 Varieties of Disputing Behavior and their Determinants (Sponsored by IRCComparative Disputing Behavior) [Room S1.608]

3107 Access to Justice: Law and Social Justice in Comparative Perspectives [Room L 326]

3108 Acknowledgment of Group Identity: For Better or for Worse? [Room S1.308]

3109 Author Meets Reader–Judicial System Transformation in the Globalizing World:Korea and Japan, by Choi & Rokumoto (eds) [Room L 144]

3110 Children Encountering Justice: Interrogations, Confessions, and Criminalization[Room S1.505]

3111 Citizens and Experts [Room S1.301]

3112 Comparative Corporate Governance: Law and Finance [Room L E42]

3113 Conjunctural Politics Gendered: Federalism, Neo-Liberalism, and Redistribution[Room S1.201]

3114 Constructions of Identity in Community Relations [Room M 1070]

3115 Courts at Work [Room L E44/46]

3116 Dealing with an Objectionable Past: A Comparison across Countries [Room MSenatssaal]

3117 Dispute Resolution in China: A Comparative Perspective on Selective Adaptation[Room S1.601]

3118 Empowering Democratic-Styled Constitutions [Room S1.604]

3119 Family and Power [Room S1.403]

3120 Fractures in the American Capital Punishment Machinery [Room S1.205]

3121 Governance by Marking and Branding [Room M 3086]

3122 Israeli Legal Geography: Internal and External Walls [Room S1.501]

3123 Key Actors in Latin American Justice and Justice Reform [Room S1.502]

3124 Law and the Transformations of Place [Room S2.102]

3125 Law, Society, and Compliance Behavior [Room S1.605]

3126 Avoidance, Enforcement, and Legitimacy of the Tax System [Room L 140/142]

3127 Legal Persons and Imagined Bodies: Three Perspectives [Room S1.504]

3128 Legal Plurality in Unexpected Circumstances [Room T 008]

3129 Making Soft Law and "New Governance" Approaches Effective: Remedies,Opportunity Structures, Stability, and Contextual Criteria [Room M 1072]

3130 Minorities, Asylum Seekers, and Discrimination [Room T 013]

3131 Property Rights: Structures of Property [Room L 229]

3133 Regulating Natural Resources: Authority versus Rights [Room M 3059]

3134 Roundtable–The Future of "Separate but Equal" Across Race, Sex, and SexualOrientation [Room S2. Reutersaal]

3135 Service Panel–World Cycle on the Ways of Law [Room M 3092]

3136 Technologies, Justice, and Law [Room S1.101]

S c h e d u l e o f E v e n t s

Friday, July 27 xv

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

3137 The International Circulation of Expertise and the Restructuring of National LegalFields: Asian Examples [Room S1.503]

3138 Theoretical Approaches to Globalization [Room T 330]

3139 Torture and the War on Terror [Room S1.401]

3140 Transnationalism, Law, and Governance: Conceptualizing Non-State Actors and theState [Room S1.402]

3141 Women/Gender in the Legal Profession (Sponsored by WG Legal Profession) [RoomS1.405]

3142 Unmasking the Far Right: Racism, Regulation, and Resistance [Room T 306]

3143 Who's Watching, Who's Listening? Parent-Child Relationships and the Law [Room T 406]

10:00 - 10:15 Cof fee Break

10:15 - 12:00

3201 FEATURED SESSION—Presidential Panel on Empirical Research: Law in the RealWorld [Room S1.101]

3202 FEATURED SESSION—Islamic Legal Frameworks: Contrasting IslamicAdaptations: Norms and Law across Europe and North America (Sponsored by IRCIslamic Institutions and Legal Frameworks in New Lands) [Room T 008]

3203 FEATURED SESSION—Roundtable: Reaction of Constitutional Courts to SocialChange [Room M 1070]

3204 FEATURED SESSION—Roundtable: Revisiting the Sacred/Secular Divide: The LegalStory [Room T 013]

3205 FEATURED SESSION—Roundtable:Torture and the Security State [Room M 1072]

3206 FEATURED SESSION— Legal Culture and Judicialization in Latin America(Sponsored by IRC Legal Culture and the Judicialization of Politics in Latin America)[Room S1.205]

3207 FEATURED SESSION—Roundtable: European Welfare and Employment Policies: A Global Social Model? (Sponsored by IRC Social Europe and CRN08 Labor Rights)[Room M Senatssaal]

3208 FEATURED SESSION—Roundtable: Transformation in Crime and Punishment:From Local to Global [Room M 3059]

3209 FEATURED SESSION—Roundtable: Economic and Social Rights and Development[Room S2. Reutersaal]

12:00 - 12:30 Lunch Break

12:30 - 13:30 Prize Pre sen ta tions [Room M Senatssaal]

13:30 - 17:30 Grad u ate Stu dent Ac tiv ity [Room S1.101]

Sociolegal Tours [for those pre-registered]

13:30 - 14:30

RCSL Business Meeting [Room M Senatssaal]IRC Gender and Judging–Business Meeting [Room L 229]

WG Gender and Law: Business Meeting [Room L 326]

WG (EASL) Anthropology of Law and Rights–Business Meeting [Room L 140/142]

xvi Friday, July 27

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

S c h e d u l e o f E v e n t s

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

New Governance and the Law - Business Meeting [Room S1.608]

CRN23 International Human Rights–Business Meeting [Room S1.605]

Law & Policy Editorial Board Meeting [Room L 139a]

Israeli Law and Society [Room L E42]

Editorial Board Meeting for Regulation & Governance [Room L 144]

14:30 - 16:30

RCSL Board Meeting [Room M Senatssaal]

Saturday, July 28

6:30 - 7:30 Fun Run [Info Tent - M Court yard]

7:45 - 16:00 Reg is tra tion [GF- Seminar Build ing]

8:30 - 14:00 Book Ex hibit [S1.102 & S1.103]

8:30 - 14:00 Paper Posters on dis play, Law Faculty lobby

8:30 - 18:00 Sociolegal Cinema [M Kinosaal]

8:15 - 10:00 Sessions

4100 Socio-Legal Cinema [Room M Kinosaal]

4101 Alternative Regulation in Health Care II: Current Issues (Sponsored by CRN05Regulatory Governance) [Room S1.308]

4102 Labor Law and New Governance (Sponsored by CRN08 Labor Rights) [Room S1.406]

4103 Punishment and Society: The Varieties of Penal Forms in Late Modernity (Sponsoredby CRN27 Prisons and Prisoners) [Room S2. Reutersaal]

4104 The Impact of Internationalized Courts within Particular States and Communities(Sponsored by CRN23 International Human Rights) [Room L 140/142]

4105 "New Collectives": Twenty-First Century Applications of Collective Human Rights(Sponsored by CRN25 Collective Human Rights) [Room S1.608]

4106 The Public's Confidence in Courts and Legal System: A Comparative Approach(Sponsored by IRC/CRN06 Public Opinion and the Courts) [Room S1.301]

4107 Transnational Transformations of the State IV (Sponsored by IRC TransnationalTransformations of the State) [Room M 1070]

4108 Children In and After Divorce [Room S1.204]

4109 Citizenship, Exclusion, and Technologies of the State [Room S2.102]

4110 Constitutional Rights: Legal Guarantees vs Educational Policies? [Room L39a]

4111 Constructing Citizens: Inclusion, Integration, and Blood [Room S1.401]

4112 Critiquing Law Reform Initiatives to Address Women's Inequalities [Room L E44/46]

4113 Culture and Rights: Conflicts over Localization [Room T 113]

4114 Current Developments in Law and Society in East Asia: An Inaugural Session [RoomS1.101]

4115 Employment Contracts and Their Absence [Room S1.405]

S c h e d u l e o f E v e n t s

Saturday, July 28 xvii

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

4116 Ethics and Regulation I [Room L229]

4117 Health Governance in Public Health: Emerging Issues and Institutions [Room M 3086]

4118 History for an Era of "Transformations, Resistances, Futures": Four Inflections[Room S1.605]

4119 Human Rights inside Prisons [Room S1.201]

4120 Law Challenging Sovereignty [Room S1.403]

4121 Lawyers and the Construction of Europe: Methodological and Empirical Findings[Room M 1072]

4122 Lay Argumentation and Judicial Procedure [Room M Senatssaal]

4123 New Issues in the Law of Consumer Credit [Room S1.505]

4124 New Trends of Policing and Security Measures in Information Societies [Room LE42]

4125 Owners, Judges, and the Decline of Public Interest: Expropriation in the XXI Century(Sponsored by WG Law and Urban Space) [Room S1.205]

4126 Reconfiguring the Language of Rights [Room L326]

4127 Reframing Globalization: Are Economic Integration and Legal Convergence Real orImagined? [Room S1.307]

4128 Responsibility and the Limits of Law [Room T 008]

4129 Roundtable—-Beyond the Teaching-Service Mission: Developing the ResearchPotential of Law School Clinics in the United States [Room L 144]

4130 Roundtable—Feminism, Restorative Justice, and Violence Against Women [Room S1.601]

4131 The Many Faces of European Harmonization: "Hard" Law, "Soft" Law, LegalCulture, and Privatized European Norms [Room S1.402]

4132 Service Panel–How to Do Field Work in Another Country [Room M 3092]

4133 The Challenge of Multiculturalism and Interdisciplinarity to Constitutional Rights[Room S1.501]

4134 The Intersection of Bioethics and Law [Room T 013]

4135 The Role of Culture in Alternative Governance: Society, Community, and Citizenship[Room S1.504]

4136 Theorizing Rights, Ethics, and Deviance [Room S1.404]

4137 Timing It Right in Law and Development: Creating Interim Institutions, EvaluatingReadiness, Acknowledging Ongoing Evolution [Room S1.503]

4138 The Limits and Opportunities of Rights: New Directions and Applications [Room T306]

4139 International Criminal Tribunals and the European Court of Human Rights:Socio-Legal Approaches (Sponsored by WG Legal Profession) [Room M 3059]

10:00 - 10:15 Cof fee Break

10:15 - 12:00

4201 Roundtable—Towards a Socio-Legal Study of Risk and Insurance (Sponsored byCRN05 Regulatory Governance) [Room S1.205]

4202 Voices from Within/Voices from Without: New Participants in the Death PenaltyDebate in the United States (Sponsored by CRN11 The Cultural Lives of CapitalPunishment) [Room S1.405]

xviii Saturday, July 28

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

S c h e d u l e o f E v e n t s

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

4203 Mobilization Strategies of the Legal Complex (Sponsored by WG Legal Profession and CRN20 The Legal Complex and Struggles for Political Liberalism) [Room L 140/142]

4204 Developing Criminal Justice (Sponsored by CRN24 Rule of Law, State Building, andTransition) [Room S1.301]

4205 Studying How Institutions Mediate Law: New Legal Realist Methods (Sponsored byCRN28 Realist and Empirical Legal Methods) [Room S1.101]

4206 Judicialized Repayment Plans (Sponsored by IRC Comparative Socio/LegalApproaches to Consumer Overindebtedness, Debt Adjustment, and Insolvency) [Room S1.204]

4207 International Business Disputes and ADR (Sponsored by IRC Comparative DisputingBehavior) [Room S1.502]

4208 Transnational Legal Consciousness (Sponsored by IRC Legal Consciousness inComparative Perspective) [Room S1.201]

4209 After Jacques Derrida and Niklas Luhmann: The (Im-)Possibility of a Social Theoryof Justice [Room M Senatssaal]

4210 Author Meets Reader–Gerechtigkeit in Lueritz, by Inga Markovits (Justice in Lueritz:A History of Law in East Germany) [Room M 1072]

4211 Author Meets Reader–The Theoretics of Race in the Post-Civil Rights Era: ReviewRace, Sex, and Suspicion: The Myth of the Black Male, by D. Marvin Jones [Room S1.401]

4212 Cutting Edge Methodology in Law and Society Research [Room T 113]

4213 Cultural and Legal Cliteracy [Room S1.308]

4214 Concepts and Approaches in Law and Society in East Asia: An Inaugural Session[Room S1.403]

4215 Diversity in the Legal Profession [Room L39a]

4216 Feminism, Secularism, and Religion [Room T 008]

4217 Historical and Contemporary Perspectives on Lay Participation [Room L229]

4218 How Courts Contribute to the Building of Democracy [Room L326]

4219 Identity, Rights, and Community: New Directions in the Study of Law in EverydayLife [Room M 3092]

4220 Law, Community, and Conflict [Room S2.102]

4221 Law, Society, and Taxation VI: Doctrinal Aspects of Current Tax Controversies[Room S1.608]

4222 Lay Decision-Making in the Justice System [Room M 3059]

4223 WG Comparative Legal Cultures–Between Tradition and Social Change (Sponsoredby WG Comparing Legal Cultures) [Room S1.406]

4224 Normative Constructions at Work [Room T 013]

4225 Perceptions, Attitudes, and Representations: How People View Courts, Law, andJustice [Room L 144]

4226 Race, Law, and Performance Identity [Room S1.605]

4227 Reflecting on Time and Space in Socio-Legal Theory [Room S1.404]

4228 Restructuring the Governance [Room S1.503]

4229 Roman Law on the Colonial Periphery [Room S1.307]

4230 Roundtable–Gender, Culture, and Legal Education [Room LE42]

S c h e d u l e o f E v e n t s

Saturday, July 28 xix

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

4232 Roundtable–Presidential Power in Context [Room M 1070]

4233 The Costs of Culture [Room M 3086]

4234 The Limits and Opportunities of Rights: No Road Forward or Progressive SocialChange? [Room S2. Reutersaal]

4235 The Significance of Labels at International Law [Room L E44/46]

4236 Theorizing Justice [Room S1.504]

4237 Use of Law During and After War [Room S1.601]

4238 Images of Justice in Times of Political Instability (Sponsored by WG Law and PopularCulture) [Room S1.501]

4240 Labour Rights and New Governance in the European Union (Sponsored by IRC Social Europe and CRN08 Labor Rights) [Room S1.505]

12:00 - 12:30 Lunch Break

12:30 - 14:15

4301 The Conceptualization and Promotion of Plaintiff's Claiming (Sponsored by CRN03Cause Lawyering) [Room S1.201]

4302 Roundtable—Law and Society Approaches to Intellectual Property (Sponsored byCRN14 Culture, Society, and Intellectual Property) [Room S2. Reutersaal]

4303 Cases on Law, Governance, and Development III (Sponsored by CRN24 Rule of Law,State Building, and Transition) [Room S1.502]

4304 Rule of Law Defined, Received, and Resisted (Sponsored by CRN24 Rule of Law, State Building, and Transition) [Room T 113]

4306 Roundtable–Punishment and Society: The New Punitiveness (Sponsored by CRN27Prisons and Prisoners) [Room M Senatssaal]

4307 Gender, Feminism, and Family Law Judging (Sponsored by IRC Gender and Judging) [Room S1.404]

4308 Industrial Relations in the Member States Under the Impact of Europeanization andGlobalization (Sponsored by IRC Social Europe and CRN08 Labor Rights) [RoomL39a]

4309 Latin American Judicialized Politics (Sponsored by IRC Legal Culture and theJudicialization of Politics in Latin America) [Room S1.307]

4310 Author Meets Reader–Against Prediction: Profiling, Policing, and Punishing in anActuarial Age, by Bernard E. Harcourt [Room S1.401]

4311 Comparative Corporate Governance: Law in Context [Room S1.504]

4312 Disputing "Religious Law" in the 21st Century: Rights and Identities [Room T 008]

4313 Cultural Rights: A Challenge to Law and Society (AISLF-CR03) [Room S1.608]

4314 Debating Discipline and Method in Socio-Legal Studies [Room M 3059]

4315 Does Law Really Help against So-Called Domestic Violence? A ComparativePerspective [Room S1.405]

4316 Ethics and Regulation II [Room L229]

4317 Graduate Student Activity Roundtable–Professional Issues for North AmericanAcademies [Room M 1070]

4318 How Do We Monitor Crime and with What Consequence? [Room S2.102]

xx Saturday, July 28

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

S c h e d u l e o f E v e n t s

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

4319 Immigration Law, Anti-Immigrant Discourse, and Immigrant Sanctuary inComparative Perspective [Room L 144]

4320 Infrastructure Commons and Open Access: Environment, Information, the Internet,and Beyond [Room S1.403]

4321 Administrative and Political Aspects of Taxes [Room S1.601]

4322 Law, Society and Luhmann: Deconstruction and Reconstruction [Room M 3086]

4323 Networks and States: The Intersection between Religion, Identity, and Boundaries[Room T 013]

4324 Overcoming Poverty? [Room S1.503]

4325 Perspectives on Multiple Legal Orders: Socio-Legal Dimensions of PrivateInternational Law [Room M 3092]

4326 Refusals, Transitions, and Postapartheid Law [Room M 1072]

4327 Reproducing Law: Technology, Transformation, and Tradition [Room L326]

4328 Rethinking Canadian Sex Worker Policy: Reflections on Regulation, Rights, andResistance [Room S1.308]

4329 Rights, Remedies, and Justice in National and International Courts [Room LE42]

4330 Roundtable–Incredible Governance: Conspiracy Thinking and Another Politics[Room S1.101]

4331 Roundtable–Network on Constitutional Jurisprudence and Socio-Legal Knowledge[Room S1.205]

4332 What Is Flesh: New Critiques and Theories on Body Ownership, Conception, Trade,Theft, and Display [Room S1.501]

4333 Service Panel–How to Publish a Peer Reviewed Journal Article [Room S1.605]

4334 The Other Other: Students and Legal Anthropologists in a Classroom [Room S1.301]

4335 The Social Dimension of Contracts [Room L 140/142]

4336 Theory and Practice of Governance [Room S1.604]

4337 Roundtable–Diversifying Gender? Comparative Feminist Legal Scholarship(Sponsored by WG Gender and Law) [Room S1.406]

4338 Culture, Identities, and the Contemporary Law School: Transformation, Resistance,and Legal Education (Sponsored by WG Legal Profession) [Room L E44/46]

4339 When Constitutions Entrench Class: Justice Denied or Justice Aspired To? [Room S1.505]

4340 IRC Comparative Legal Consciousness: Post-Apartheid South Africa (Sponsored byIRC Legal Consciousness in Comparative Perspective) [Room S1.204]

14:15 - 14:30 Break

14:30 - 16:15

4401 Atypical Workers in a Different Key: Young, Old, Female, and the Law of Work(Sponsored by CRN08 Labor Rights) [Room S1.201]

4402 Author Meets Reader–On the Courthouse Lawn: Confronting the Legacy of Lynchingin the Twenty-first Century, by Sherrilyn Ifill (Sponsored by CRN13 African Law and Society) [Room S2. Reutersaal]

4403 Framing Regulatory Problems as Human Rights Issues (Sponsored by CRN23International Human Rights) [Room S1.502]

S c h e d u l e o f E v e n t s

Saturday, July 28 xxi

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

4405 Responsible Lending (Sponsored by IRC Comparative Socio/Legal Approaches toConsumer Overindebtedness, Debt Adjustment, and Insolvency) [Room T 013]

4406 Disputing Behavior and Socio-Political Changes (Sponsored by IRC ComparativeDisputing Behavior) [Room S1.604]

4407 Circuits of Law across the British Empire (Sponsored by IRC Colonial South AsianLegal History and CRN22 South Asia) [Room S1.405]

4408 East Asian Legal Professionalism: Judiciary in Transition (Sponsored by IRC LegalProfessionalism in East Asian Context) [Room S1.307]

4409 Transnational Transformations of the State III (Sponsored by IRC TransnationalTransformations of the State) [Room L326]

4410 Author Meets Reader–Stranger Than Fiction: Lori Andrews and Harriet WashingtonMeet Readers [Room S1.301]

4411 Comparative Critical Visions of Law in the Twentieth Century: Europe and LatinAmerica [Room T 008]

4412 Courts and the State [Room L229]

4413 The Reasonable Person in Criminal Law [Room L 144]

4414 Dispute Resolution in Comparative and Cross-Cultural Perspectives [Room S1.403]

4415 Economy and Society: Theoretical Perspectives [Room M 3059]

4416 Fighting Racial Discrimination with European Union Law: Limits and Possibilities[Room M 1072]

4417 Gender, Labor, and Law [Room S1.505]

4418 How Appealing: Examing the Appeals Process [Room S1.504]

4419 Human Rights under State of Emergency [Room L39a]

4420 Law, Land, and Property in Colonial and Postcolonial Contexts [Room S1.205]

4421 Law, Society, and Taxation VIII: Culture, Family, and Taxes [Room S2.102]

4422 Legal Change and Climate Change [Room L E44/46]

4423 National Security and the Administrative State [Room S1.101]

4424 Obstacles to Successful Transition in Eastern Europe and Elsewhere [Room M 3086]

4425 Property, Citizenship, and Social Entrepreneurism in a Global Marketplace II [Room M 3092]

4426 Race and the Perception and Practice of Fairness in Law and Legal Institutions[Room S1.406]

4427 Regulatory Challenges in Comparative Perspective [Room LE42]

4428 Resource Rights and Self-Determination for Indigenous People [Room M 1070]

4429 Roundtable–Bringing the Nation-State Back In: Sovereignty and Identity, Law andLegitimacy [Room M Senatssaal]

4431 Roundtable–The New Formalism [Room S1.204]

4432 Property and Technological Change in the Twentieth Century [Room S1.308]

4433 The CSI Effect: Empirical, Theoretical, and Cultural Perspectives [Room S1.401]

4434 The Legal and Ethical Issues of Biobank Research in Different Contexts [RoomS1.602]

4435 Theoretical and Empirical Study on Legal Assistance for Transformation Countries[Room S1.404]

xxii Saturday, July 28

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

S c h e d u l e o f E v e n t s

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

4436 Threats to Justice in Crime Control Policy: Causes and Remedial Possibilities [RoomS1.503]

4437 Un/Thinking Belonging: Imprints of Law on Adoption, Queer Flesh, and Strangers[Room S1.501]

4438 Transgender and Feminist Perspectives on Degendering Law (Sponsored by WGGender and Law) [Room S1.605]

16:15 - 16:30 Cof fee Break

16:30 - 18:15

4501 CRN08 Comparative and International Perspectives on Labor Rights (Sponsored byCRN08 Labor Rights) [Room T 013]

4502 Language and the Rule of Law (Sponsored by CRN16 Language and Law) [RoomS1.405]

4503 Human Rights and Grass Roots Social Movements (Sponsored by CRN23International Human Rights) [Room M 3086]

4504 Institutional Design, Enforcement, and Development (Sponsored by CRN24 Rule ofLaw, State Building, and Transition) [Room S1.201]

4505 Collective Human Rights VI–Roundtable-Discussion Session on Collective HumanRights (Sponsored by CRN25 Collective Human Rights) [Room S2.102]

4506 New and Emerging Bankruptcy Systems (Sponsored by IRC Comparative Socio/LegalApproaches to Consumer Overindebtedness, Debt Adjustment, and Insolvency) [Room T 113]

4507 Mapping the Experiences of the U.S. Bar by Practice Setting [Room S1.502]

4508 East Asian Legal Professionalism: Lawyers in Transition I (Sponsored by IRC LegalProfessionalism in East Asian Context) [Room L39a]

4510 Author Meets Reader–The First Women Lawyers: A Comparative Study of Gender, Law, and the Legal Professions, by Mary Jane Mossman [Room S1.404]

4511 Constructing "Criminalization" in Intimate Relationships [Room S1.403]

4512 Criminal Law as a Tool of Transitional Justice [Room M 3059]

4513 CRN28 Law and Society in the Law School Curriculum: New Legal Realism Panel(Sponsored by CRN28 Realist and Empirical Legal Methods) [Room S1.605]

4514 Selective Adaptation Theory: Comparative Perspectives on Dispute Resolution [RoomS1.501]

4515 Empire's Law: American Exceptionalism, the Bush Regime, and Legality [RoomS1.101]

4516 Former Long Term Prisoners: Resettlement, Rebuilding, and Resistance [RoomS1.401]

4517 Globalization's Effect on Human Rights [Room S1.601]

4518 Graduate Student Activity Roundtable–Professional Issues for European/UK/EastAsian Academies [Room M 1072]

4519 How Judges Judge or Should Judge [Room L229]

4520 Innovations and Challenges in Penal Policy [S2. Reutersaal]

4521 Legal Approaches to Fighting Racism: Problems and Possibilities [Room M 1070]

4522 Legal Culture [Room S1.504]

S c h e d u l e o f E v e n t s

Saturday, July 28 xxiii

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

4523 The 50th Anniversary of "12 Angry Men" [Room S1.301]

4524 Organizational Law and Entrepreneurship [Room L 144]

4525 WG Comparative Legal Cultures–Politics, Justice, and Crime (Sponsored by WGComparing Legal Cultures) [Room S1.204]

4526 Regulation and Developing Economies [Room S1.503]

4527 Regulation, Risk, and Resistance: The "Effectiveness" and "Influence" ofPre-Sentence Reports in the Sentencing Decision Process [Room S1.308]

4528 Rethinking the Sacred/Secular Divide [Room T 008]

4529 Roundtable–Contemporary Perceptions of Democratization and Human Rights inIraq and Afghanistan [Room M Senatssaal]

4530 Roundtable–Human Rights Law as Challenge for the "Cultures" of DifferentDisciplines [Room L E44/46]

4531 Tensions between the Economic and Social Dimensions of Alternative Governance:From CSR to ISO to OMC [Room M 3092]

4532 The "Transformatory Potential" of Lustration and Restitution [Room LE42]

4533 The International Circulation of Expertise and the Restructuring of National LegalFields: Latin America [Room S1.406]

4536 Trends and Discussions in Family Law [Room S1.505]

4538 Women's Labour Market Participation: Achievements and Shortcomings acrossEurope–How Legal Rules Can Work as Incentives or Disincentive for EmploymentIntegration [Room S1.608]

4539 WG Comparing Legal Cultures–Case Studies (Sponsored by WG Comparing LegalCultures) [Room L326]

18:30 - 20:00 Clos ing Re cep tion [Hertie School of Governance, Schlossplatz 1]

Sunday, July 29

10:00 - 17:30 Meeting of LSA/CLSA 2008 Pro gram Committee [Amer i can Acad emyin Berlin]

xxiv Sunday, July 29

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

S c h e d u l e o f E v e n t s

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Tuesday, July 24

8:30 - 18:00

WG Law and Ur ban Space—BusinessMeet ing [S1.301]

9:30 - 18:30

Fitzpatrick Festschrift [S1.204]

10:00 - 17:30

LSA Trustees Meet ing [Regent Hotel]

15:00 - 19:00

Reg is tra tion [GF - Sem i nar Build ing]

Wednesday, July 25

7:45 - 17:30

Reg is tra tion [GF- Sem i nar Build ing]

8:30 - 17:30

Book Ex hibit [S1.102 & S1.103]

8:15 – 18:30

Poster Papers (1100)

[Law Faculty Lobby]

1)) Beatriz Irene Alvarado, University ofArizona, and Bruce Sales, University ofArizona

How is Justice Different than Fairness? A Studyof Using a University Sample

2) Nadege Beaune, EHESS/INALCOThe Indian Judge as an Environmental Promoter: A Case Study of Judicial Action against Noise

3)Cornelia Brentano, Chapman UniversityChild Custody Litigation and FamilyAdjustment: The Role of Procedural andDistributive Justice

4) Trevor G. Buck, De Montfort UniversityTribunal Justice: Precedent, Law Reporting, andthe Upper Tribunal in the UK

5) Alyssa DiRusso, Samford UniversityHe Says, She Asks: Gender, Language, and theLaw of Precatory Words in Wills

6) Dina Hadad, University of Wales,Aberystwyth

Human Rights Protection under Current States of Emergency: Challenges after 9/11

7) Laura Kessler, University of UtahPaid Family Leave in U.S. Law Schools:Findings and Open Questions

8) John Bernhard Kleba, InstitutoTecnológico de Aeronáutica, and EvansonChege Kamau, Forschungsstelle fuerEuropaeisches Umweltrecht

Access to Genetic Resources, TraditionalKnowledge and Benefit-Sharing: Law andPractice in Brazil and Kenya

9) Vladimir Garcia Magalhães, Universidade Católica de Santos

International Agreements in EnvironmentalSubject as Means of a Egalitarian Globalization

10) Fernanda Luiza Fontoura de Mederiros,Universidade Federal de Santa Catarinaand Letícia Albuquerque, UniversidadeFederal de Santa Catarina

The Barra Grande Hydroelectric Power Plant: ACase of Environmental Injustice

11) Saori Nambu, Yokohama City UniversityOyako-Shinju (Forced Parent-Child suicide) inJapan

12) Kristin B. Sandvik, Harvard UniversityMobilization and Cooption in RefugeeResettlement

13) Wendy E. Scott, Syracuse UniversityInternational, Comparative, and ForeignDisability Law Research

14) Luiza Soghomonyan, “For Family andHealth” Pan- Armenian Association

For Family and Health: Pan-ArmenianAssociation and HIV/AIDS in Armenia

15) Arthur G. Svenson, University ofRedlands

Physician-Assisted Suicide and the Law in theUnited States: “To Be or Not to Be” in thisFederal Republic

Sessions

8:15 - 10:00

1101 Constitutional Courts and JudicialReview: Changing Perspectives(Sponsored by CRN01 ConstitutionalEthnography and CRN13 African Lawand Society)

[Room M 1072]

Gordon Silverstein, University of California,Berkeley

ChairMark Kende, Drake University

Racial Equality in the South AfricanConstitutional Court and the U.S. Supreme Court

Galya Benarieh Ruffer, NorthwesternUniversity

Can European Courts Cure the Social Deficit?The Ambivalence of “Soft Law” FundamentalRights

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

1 July 24-25 8:15 - 10:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Miguel Schor, Suffolk UniversityMapping Comparative Judicial Review

Alexei Trochev, Queen’s UniversityJudicial Self-Presentation by New Courts: DoAudiences Matter to the Russian ConstitutionalCourt?

1102 Governing Labour: Values, Approaches,and Techniques (Sponsored by CRN08Labor Rights)

[Room S1.308]

Judy Fudge, University of VictoriaChair

Adelle Blackett, McGill UniversityContextualizing Trade Liberalization, LabourLaw, and Development

Ruth Dukes, University of GlasgowProperty Paradigms in Employment Relations

Judy Fudge, University of VictoriaGoverning the Employment Relationship in theNew Economy: Labour and Social Rights

Rosemary J. Owens, University of AdelaideEqual and Opposite? Transforming AustralianLabour Law in the 21st Century

Francesca Scamardella, University of theStudies of Naples, “Federico” II

Reflexive Law behind Globalization: A NewPerspective

Neil H. Buchanan, George WashingtonUniversity /New York University

Discussant

1103 Judicial Review in South Asia(Sponsored by CRN22 South Asia)

[Room S1.201]

Oliver David Mendelsohn, La TrobeUniversity

ChairRohit De, Yale University/Sidney Sussex

CollegeConstitutional Dictatorships andUnconstitutional Democracies: Courts andPolitical Crisis in South Asia

Alexander Fischer, University of LondonThe Court and the Silent Revolution: HaveIndian Judges Heard the Lower Castes?

Sunita Parikh, Washington UniversityInterbranch Bargaining and Judicial Review inIndia

Arun Thiruvengadam, National University ofSingapore

Trans-Judicial Influence in South Asia

Jayanth Krishnan, William Mitchell Collegeof Law

Discussant

1104 Legal Development and InstitutionalReform (Sponsored by CRN24 Rule ofLaw, State Building, and Transition)

[Room S1.204]

Tom Ginsburg, University of IllinoisChair

Silvia Inclan, Universidad NacionalAutónoma de México and Alba Ruibal,Instituto de Investigaciones Jurídicas -UNAM

Judicial Reform in Argentina and Mexico:Legitimacy and Power Building as IncentivesShaping Institutional Change

Mary Fran T. Malone, University of NewHampshire

Citizens and the Law in Central America

Majid Mohammadi, Binghamton UniversityAmerican and European Judicial Aid to theMiddle East: Priorities, Opportunities, andChallenges

Yasunobu Sato, University of TokyoThe Recent Development of Modernization ofDispute Processing in Vietnam

William Twining, University College Londonand University of Miami School of Law

Law and the Millennium Development Goals

1105 Consumer Credit Regulation(Sponsoredby IRC ComparativeSocio/Legal Approaches to ConsumerOverindebtedness, Debt Adjustment,and Insolvency)

[Room S1.205]

Iain Ramsay, University of KentChair/Discussant

Sefa Franken, University of TilburgThe Politics of the Federalization of ConsumerCredit Regulation in the European Union and theUnited States

Souichirou Kozuka, Sophia University, andLuke Nottage, University of Sydney

Re-Regulating Consumer Credit in Japan: ThePolitics and Economics of Contemporary LawReform

Lois Ruth Lupica, University of MaineConsumer Finance and the Reinforcement ofClass Structures

Richard Wiener, University of Nebraska,and Susan Block-Lieb, FordhamUniversity

A Cross-Cultural and Empirical Approach toStudying Credit Card Regulation

1106 Public Attitudes toward AdviceProviders and the Court (Sponsored byIRC Comparative Disputing Behavior)

[Room S1.605]

Albert Wayne Currie, Department ofJustice, Canada

Chair

2 Wednesday, July 25 8:15 - 10:00

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Masaki Abe, Osaka City University, HiroshiOtsuka, Nara Women’s University,Ken’ichi Baba, Kobe University, NobuoKanomata, Keio Gijuku University andShiro Kashimura, Kobe University

Citizens’ Experience of Utilizing Third-PartyAdvice Providers for Resolving EverydayDisputes in Contemporary Japan

Manako Kinoshita, Doshisha UniversityThe Attitudes of Japanese People towards Court

Albert Klijn, Netherlands Council for theJudiciary

Public Opinion About Sentencing and the(Dutch) Judiciary: A Gap to Bridge?

Miek Laemers, Radboud Universiteit,Nijmegen

Popular Perceptions, Experiences, and Opinionsand the Administration of Justice

Alexandre Veronese, Universidade FederalFluminense

Court-Based Access to Justice Projects in Brazil:Between Social Work and Legal Services

1107 Roundtable — Legal Consciousness inComparative Perspective: Theoreticaland Methodological Issues (Sponsoredby IRC Legal Consciousness inComparative Perspective)

[Room S1.406]

This roundtable dis cusses what it means to study le -

gal con scious ness from a com par a tive per spec tive.

Researchers from dif ferent coun tries and from dif -

ferent scholarly backgrounds will en gage in a de -

bate about im por tant the o ret i cal and meth od olog i-

cal is sues. Par ticipants will look back at their own

research and will look forward to con sider po tential

new approaches to socio-legal research.

Rosie Harding, Keele UniversityChair

Hadar Aviram, Tel Aviv University/University of California, Hastings

ParticipantDavid Cowan, University of Bristol

ParticipantMarc Hertogh, University of Groningen

ParticipantLaura Beth Nielsen, American Bar

Foundation/Northwestern UniversityParticipant

Jerome Pelisse, University of ReimsParticipant

1108 Public Interest Law in Global Context(Sponsored by IRC After Public InterestLaw: A Global Perspective onLawyering Strategies for SocialTransformation)

[Room S1.307]

Thomas M. Hilbink, University ofMassachusetts, Amherst

Chair/DiscussantRuth M. Buchanan, York University

International Institutions and TransnationalAdvocacy: The Case of the North AmericanAgreement on Labour Cooperation

Titi M. Liu, University of WashingtonA Politics of Rights in the Chinese Context?Public Interest Litigation as Legal Mobilizationin China

Mary Beth Lyon, Villanova UniversityChanging Tactics: Globalization and the U.S.Unauthorized Immigrant Worker Movement

Jeremy Perelman, Harvard University, andKatharine Young, Harvard University

The Zakari Case: Rights as Footprints

1109 Access to Justice and the Judiciary[Room S1.403]

Jeffrey W. Stempel, University of Nevada,Las Vegas

Chair/DiscussantAbu Haniffa Abdullah, International Islamic

University MalaysiaDoes The Law Prevent Acess To Justice?

João Paulo Dias, University of Coimbra,João Pedroso, University of Coimbra,António C. Ferreira, University ofCoimbra, and Teresa Maneca-Lima,University of Coimbra

The Role of Public Prosecutors in Portugal in theAccess to Law and Justice: The Case of Familyand Labour Laws

Elsa Mary Anne Kelly, Chinese University ofHong Kong

The Experience of Self-Representation in CivilLitigation in Hong Kong: An Empirical Study

1110 Administrative Justice[Room S1.405]

Michael E. Adler, University of EdinburghChair

Morag A. McDermont, University of BristolContracts, Risk, and Trust: Achieving Justice inSocial Housing Allocations in a Changing World

Brian Thompson, University of LiverpoolPublic Services Ombudsmen and AdministrativeJustice

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

3 Wednesday, July 25 8:15 - 10:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Richard W Whitecross, University ofEdinburgh and Michael E. Adler,University of Edinburgh

Transforming the Administrative JusticeLandscape of Scotland: The Implications of theUK Wide Reform for Scotland

Sara Elisabeth Stendahl, GöteborgUniversity

Discussant

1111 Barriers to Gender Concepts Travelingin the Global World

[Room S2.102]

Eileen McDonagh, Northeastern UniversityChair/Discussant

Man Chung Andy Chiu, James CookUniversity

Engendering Postcolonial Hong KongHan-Chinese Socio-Legal Philosophy

Adarsh Ramanujan, National LawUniversity, Jodhpur, and Rajarshi Sen,National Law University, Jodhpur

Equal “Rites”: Bringing Homosexuality Out ofthe Closet

Ngambouk P. Vitalis, Central EuropeanUniversity

Ritual, Bodily Violence and the Production ofSociolegal Resistance in Southwest Cameroon

1112 Civil Liberties and Civil Rights in theNineteenth and Twentieth-CenturyUnited States and Norway

[Room L 326]

Risa Goluboff, University of VirginiaChair/Discussant

Donna I. Dennis, Rutgers University,Newark

Free Speech and Civil Liberties inNineteenth-Century America: Perspectives fromthe History of Obscenity

Lynda Dodd, American University“The President’s Commission on Civil Rightsand the Growth of a Litigation SupportStructure, 1939-1954"

Christine M. Hassenstab, NorwegianUniversity of Science and Technology

Implications of Intersectionality in theSterilization Laws of Indiana (1907) and Norway(1934)

Laura Weinrib, Princeton UniversityThe Incorporation of Nonpolitical Speech intothe American Civil Liberties Agenda, 1927-1933

1113 Civilizing Parenthood[Room S1.404]

Daphna Hacker, Tel Aviv UniversityChair

Richard Collier, University of Newcastleupon Tyne

Remaking the “Father Figure”? Divorce, Law,and the “New Politics” of Fatherhood

Isabella Quadrelli, University of UrbinoFatherhood Identity After Divorce

Helen Reece, University of LondonThe Degradation of Parental Responsibility

Robert van Krieken, University of SydneyThe Civilizing of Parenthood and the LegalRegulation of Post-Separation Custody: Towarda Comparative Analysis

1114 Courts, Governance, and the EmergentEuropean Legal Field

[Room M Senatssaal]

Agnes T.M. Schreiner, University ofAmsterdam

Chair/DiscussantStine Andersen, European University

InstituteResponsive Enforcement in the EuropeanCommunity

Sabine Frerichs, Otto-Friedrich Universityof Bamberg

Judicial Governance in the European LegalField: A Political Economic Perspective

Diana Panke, Free University BerlinThe European Court of Justice: FacilitatingCompliance against the Resistance of MemberStates

Reinhard Slepcevic, Institute for AdvancedStudies

Making European Law Work through Courts:The Importance of National Differences

1115 Discourse and the Construction ofMeaning in Global Norm-Making

[Room T 013]

Aeyal Gross, Tel-Aviv UniversityChair/Discussant

Fleur E. Johns, University of SydneyPerforming Power: The Deal, Corporate Rule,and the Constitution of Global Legal Order

Alejandro Lorite, American University inCairo

“Human Security”: The End of Human Rights by Other Means

Grzegorz Makowski, Warsaw UniversityGlobal Anticorruption Policy: A New BetterLaw or Constructing Social Problem (Polishcase)

Inger-Johanne Sand, University of OsloWhat Is the Context of Inter- and TransnationalLaw Today?

Maki Tanaka, Oxford UniversityMultidirectional Processes for the Constructionof Knowledge in International Lawmaking:Nongovernmental Input in the Drafting of theDisability Rights Convention

4 Wednesday, July 25 8:15 - 10:00

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

1116 Economic Crime Prevention andIntervention in Companies

[Room L 140/142]

Susanne Karstedt, Keele UniversityChair/Discussant

Kai Bussmann, University Halle, WittenbergThe Impact of US Crime Prevention Regulationson the National, Foreign, and Global Economy

Sebastian Matschke,Martin-Luther-UniversitätHalle-Wittenberg

The Comparison between US and German Crime Prevention Legislation

Markus M. Werle, University of HalleBusiness Culture: Culture of Prevention

Diana Ziegleder, Martin-Luther UniversityHalle-Wittenberg

Private vs. Public Policies against EconomicCrime in Germany

1117 Equality, Anti-Discrimination, andPositive Action: Various Approaches

[Room S1.503]

Susan Sturm, Columbia UniversityChair/Discussant

Barbara G. Bello, University of MilanoIntersections of Different Grounds ofDiscrimination in a Perspective of Sociology and Law: Multiple Discriminations in theMulticultural Europe

Paul Hodapp, University of NorthernColorado

Positive Action and Democracy

Li-Ju Lee, Chung Yuan Christian UniversityRealizing the Constitutional Mandate of GenderEquality in Taiwan: Possibilities and Constraints

Patricia Seith, Columbia UniversityA Network Approach to Antidiscrimination Law

1118 Government Secrecy[Room M 3059]

Richard C. Schragger, University of VirginiaChair/Discussant

Kathleen Clark, Washington University,St. Louis

Confidentiality Norms and Government Lawyers

Amanda Frost, American UniversityThe State Secrets Privilege and Separation ofPowers

Gia B. Lee, University of California, LosAngeles

Presidential Secrecy and the Candor Rationale

David Goldberg, deeJgeeresearch/Consultancy

Advocating less government secrecy: somebalance about balance

David. C. Vladeck, GeorgetownUniversity

Litigating National Security Cases in theAftermath of 9/11

1119 Insecure Privacy: The Balance betweenPersonal Privacy and State SecurityInterests

[Room S1.401]

Jennifer Chandler, University of OttawaChair

Jennifer Chandler, University of OttawaThe Privacy-Security Trade-Off: Are WeIncreasing or Reducing National Security WhenWe Reduce Individual Privacy Protection?

Lilian Edwards, University of SouthamptonPrivacy and Security Online: A Competing orCoherent Agenda?

Jay P. Kesan, University of Illinois, andRajiv Shah, University of Illinois

Setting Software Defaults

Andrea M Matwyshyn, University ofPennsylvania/ University of Cambridge

Data Leakage and the Corporate Cyborg

Hiram Meléndez-Juarbe, University ofPuerto Rico

Privacy and/or Security in Puerto RicanConstitutional Law

Lilian Edwards, University of SouthamptonDiscussant

1120 Issues in Multi-Occupied ResidentialDevelopments: InternationalComparisons

[Room M 3092]

Sarah Blandy, University of LeedsChair

Sarah Blandy, University of LeedsResidents’ Experiences in Multi-OwnedDevelopments with Differing Legal Frameworks

Alice Christudason, National University ofSingapore

Owners’ Share Values and Voting Rights inCollective Sale of Mixed-Use StrataDevelopments in Singapore

Jennifer Elizabeth Dixon, University ofAuckland, and Marjorie Ruth van Roon,University of Auckland

Private Governance and Sustainability:Balancing Public and Private Rights andResponsibilities

Ann Dupuis, Massey University, andJennifer Elizabeth Dixon, University ofAuckland

Governing Multi-Owned ResidentialDevelopments in New Zealand: New Forms ofPrivate Governance

Douglas Robertson, University of StirlingDisinterested Developers, EmpoweredManagers, Vulnerable Owners: Power Relationsin Multi-Occupied Private Housing in Scotland

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

5 Wednesday, July 25 8:15 - 10:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Feng Wang, University of SouthernCalifornia

The Determinants of the Effectiveness ofChinese Homeowners’ Associations (HOAs) inSolving Neighborhood Issues

1121 Judicial Reforms in Central and EasternEuropean Countries: Ideas, Actors,Processes

[Room S1.301]

Ramona Coman, Université libre deBruxelles

Policy Network Formation in the RomanianJudicial Reform

Cristina Dallara, University of BolognaWhen Domestic Politics Matter: JudicialReforms in Romania and Serbia

Thierry Delpeuch, Ecole NormaleSupérieure de Cachan

Credit Conflict Resolution as Indicators of theRole of Commercial Justice in Changes inEconomic Activities in Bulgaria and Romania

François Frisonroche, CERSA CNRSComparative Judicial Reforms Progress in 5Balkanics Countries (Albania, Macedonia,Bulgaria, Romania, and Moldova)

Ole Hammerslev, University of SouthernDenmark

Reform Strategies around the Bulgarian Courts

Marcin Matczak, University of OxfordJudicial Formalism and Judicial Reform: AnExample of Central and Eastern Europe

Vesselina Tzankova, Université PaulCézanne Aix-en-Provence

Judicial Reforms in CEEC: A Shift toward aNew Conception of European Legal Norms

1122 Law and Gendered Labor[Room T 113]

Susanne Burri, University of UtrechtChair/Discussant

Oduware I. Bridget, University of BeninGender Inequality in Domestic Workers inNigeria

Catharina Calleman, Umeå UniversityDomestic Services in Sweden in Light of theEnlargement of the EU

Machiko Osawa, Japan Women’s UniversityLabor Law Change, Female EmploymentPatterns, and Work Life Balance in Japan

Chandima D. Perera, University of BremenILO Standards, Gender, and Globalization in theField of Textile Industry in Sri Lanka

1123 Legal and Political Structures(Sponsored by CRN21 Law and SocialMovements)

[Room S1.608]

Lynn Jones, Northern Arizona UniversityChair/Discussant

Chris Ashford, University of Sunderland,and Mark O’Brien, University of theWest of England, Bristol

Subcultures, Public Order, and the HumanRights Zeitgeist

Jackie Dugard, University of theWitwatersrand

Building the South African Phiri Water RightsCase: A Law and Social MovementCollaboration

Anne Revillard, ISP CachanCan Family Law be a Site of Gender Justice?France and Quebec’s Framing of Women’sRights

Joe Neil Rollins, Queens CollegeAmerica the Heterosexual: Sexuality, Nation,and Citizenship in Asylum Cases

Yvonne Zylan, Hamilton CollegePassions We Like...And Those We Don’t: HateCrimes Legislation and the DiscursiveConstruction of Sexual Identity

1124 Legal Doctrines in Brazil under theImpact of Globalization

[Room S1.504]

Leonel Cesarino Pessoa, CentroUniversitario Nove de Julho

ChairBethania Assy, State University of Rio de

JaneiroThe Indifference That Tolerates the Differences:Misrecognition, Social Invisibility, andMutilation of Human Dignity - Some Remarksfor the Brazilian Case

Araminta de Azevedo Mercadante,Universidade de Sao Paulo

Multilateralism and Regionalism versusBilateralism: The Position of Brazil in theMercosul and in the WTO.

Soraya Nour, Centre Marc Bloch /Sophiapol

International Protection of Human Rights andMinorities: Impact on Brazil

Leonel Cesarino Pessoa, CentroUniversitario Nove de Julho

Interpretation Theory and Pragmatic Theory

1125 Perceptions of Justice (Sponsored byWG Legal Profession)

[Room L E42]

Tamara Hervey, University of SheffieldChair/Discussant

Tawhida Ahmed, University of SheffieldConceptualising the EU’s Protection of MinorityRights: Interpreting Existing Law

Joanna M. Shapland, University ofSheffield

Victims’ and Offenders’ Perceptions ofRestorative Justice within Criminal Justice

6 Wednesday, July 25 8:15 - 10:00

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Corey S. Shdaimah, University ofMaryland

Protecting Children and Punishing Poor Families

1126 Philosophies of Law [Room S1.505]

Mina Suk, Johns Hopkins UniversityChair/Discussant

Simone Glanert, Cornell UniversityAutonomy in Law: Three PhilosophiesCompared

Christopher Skeaff, NorthwesternUniversity

The Conditions for Rule; Rules that Condition.Reading the Ambivalence of Authority inSpinoza

Prue Vines, University of New South WalesApologies, Justice, and Moral Responsibility:The Relationship between Law and Privateversus Public Apologies

1128 Public Response and Assessment of theState’s Policy

[Room L E44/46]

Imelda Maher, University College, DublinChair/Discussant

Felicia Herrschaft, Goethe UniversityFrankfurt

The Concept of Deliberative Democracy andGovernance in Precarious States likeAfghanistan

Alenka Kuhelj, University of LjubljanaRise of National and Religious Intolerance inPost-Communist EU States

Helen Rethimiotaki, University of AthensThe Change of Greek Asministrative Practicewithin the Context of European Integration

Uriya Shavit, Frankfurt UniversityArab Intellectual Responses to The AmericanInvasion of Iraq: Democratioization and thePhantom of Imperalism

1129 Roundtable—Judges in Action: On Normativity in Its Practice,Institutionalization, and Materiality

[Room M 1070]

In a rapidly chang ing world, new con texts and

forms of normativity widen the spec trum. The so ci-

ology of law should take such nor mative aspects

into ac count, be cause they could have ef fects even

on highly in sti tu tion al ized tra di tional forms of le-

gality and ju risdiction. The same is true for the

text-book methods of le gal reasoning which ground

on the assumption of ideal con ditions: From a

purely an alytical point of view they may be right;

though in ev eryday judicial work legal methods are

much more agile and judges are much more innova-

tive when they de velop their professional practice

identity and when they face acute le gal problems

they have to solve. Le gal prac tice at courts, car ried

out by judges, is certainly not the field where one

would ex pect nor ma tive in no va tion to take place.

However, the plas ticity of the nor mative and the

flexibility of the norm practioners give fas cinating

examples of the alterability and the ad justability of

at the same rel atively sta ble in stitutions. The ses sion

brings em pir i cal and the o ret i cal works which ad-

dress var i ous di men sions in nor ma tive prac tice at

le gal courts.

Martin Morlok, Heinrich-Heine-UniversityDuesseldorf

ChairThorsten Berndt, University of Constance

ParticipantRalf Kölbel, Friedrich Schiller University Jena

ParticipantKye Il Lee, Heinrich-Heine University

DuesseldorfParticipant

Peter Stegmaier, Radboud University,Nijmegen

Participant

1130 Race Crimes and the Response of theCriminal Justice System

[Room S1.604]

Christine S. Scott-Hayward, New YorkUniversity

ChairGerard Coffey, University of Limerick, and

Jennifer Schweppe, University of LimerickStructuring Judicial Sentencing Discretion inRace Crimes

Kay Goodall, University of StirlingWhat’s “Hate” Got to Do with It?Racially-Aggravated Offences in British Law

Gavin Phillipson, University of DurhamCriminalising Incitement to Religious Hatred:Useful, Invidious, or Superfluous?

1132 Supreme Court: Decision MakingProcess

[Room L 139a]

Brent Boyea, University of Texas, ArlingtonChair/Discussant

Pamela C. Corley, Vanderbilt University,Amy Steigerwalt, Georgia State University,and b, Northern Illinois University

The Chief Justice of the United States: Uniter orDivider?

Jeffrey David Hockett, University of TulsaEarl Warren and Brown v. Board of Education:A Non-Instrumental Account

Richard L. Pacelle, Georgia SouthernUniversity, Brett W. Curry, GeorgiaSouthern University, and Bryan W.Marshall, Miami University

Creating the Living Law and Maintaining theConstitutional Shield: Decisionmaking on theModern Supreme Court

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

7 Wednesday, July 25 8:15 - 10:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Christopher E. Roberts, University ofWashington and Heather Fralick,University at Albany, SUNY

Building a Judicial Resume: Has LitigationExperience Become a Necessity?

1133 The Decline of Public Adjudication[Room L 229]

Minna Kotkin, Brooklyn Law SchoolChair

Margaret A. Berger, Brooklyn Law SchoolDaubert’s Negative Impact on PublicAdjudication

Minna Kotkin, Brooklyn Law SchoolInvisible Settlements, Invisible Discrimination

Scott Moss, Marquette UniversityIlluminating Secrecy: A New EconomicAnalysis of Confidential Settlements

Elizabeth Schneider, Brooklyn Law SchoolThe Dangers of Summary Judgment: Gender and Federal Civil Litigation

Ann McGinley, University of Nevada, LasVegas

Discussant

1134 The Impact of Lay Participation on Law Reform

[Room M 3086]

Murray N.M. Levine, SUNY at BuffaloChair/Discussant

Hiroshi Fukurai, University of California,Santa Cruz, and Kaoru Kurosawa, TokyoUniversity

Impact of Popular Legal Participation on ForcedConfessions and Wrongful Convictions inJapan’s Bureaucratic Court

Nikolay P. Kovalev, Queen’s UniversityBelfast

Ethnic Tensions and Trial by Jury in Russia

Stephen Landsman, DePaul UniversityMiscarriages of Justice as the Impetus forReforms Increasing Lay Participation inCriminal Trials

Dmitry I. Nurumov, The Organization forSecurity and Co-operation in Europe

Kazakhstani New Lay Participation System inCriminal Trials: Legal Framework and Prospects

1135 Women in Times of Peace and War [Room S1.501]

Jutta Stender-Vorwachs, University ofHannover

ChairHanife Biserka Bastalic, University of

HanoverWomen in Times of War

Lars Knorr, University of HanoverWomen in Research and Education

Natalia Theissen, University of HanoverWomen, Mass Media, and Personality Rights

1136 The Power of Constitutional Courts[Room S1.101]

Hans Vorländer, Technische UniversitätDresden

ChairAndré Brodocz, Technische Universität

DresdenTrust as a Power Resource of ConstitutionalCourts

Claudia Creutzburg, University ofTechnology, Dresden

Competing Powers in the Multi-Level PoliticalSystem of the European Union

Dietrich Herrmann, Technische UniversitätDresden

Self-Assertion of Constitutional Courts inComparative Perspective: France, USA, andGermany

Steven Schäller, Technische UniversitätDresden

Argumentative Strategies of the German FederalConstitutional Court: Precedents inConstitutional Jurisprudence

1137 Transitional Stages in CurrentConstitutional Transitions? AnInternational Comparative Overview

[Room S1.601]

Vittorio Olgiati, University of UrbinoChair

Said A Arjomand, SUNY at Stony BrookIslamic Constitutionalism

Simon-Hoey Lee, Tsinghua UniversityLaw in Transition: A Case Study on Hong Kongafter Ten Years of Handover

Marina Victorovna Nemytina, NewEconomic School

Law of Russia: Transformation of PrivateInterests into Public Ones

Anders Fogelklou, Uppsala UniversityConstitutional Courts as Legal Transplants:Latvia, Russia, Thailand, and Turkey

Xiaohong Yu, Columbia UniversityLegislative-Judicial Relations in China: A GameTheoretical Approach

Anna Jonsson, Uppsala UniversityDiscussant

1138 Weber’s Legitimacy (I): FormalRationality as a Basis of InstitutionalCoherence

[Room T 008]

Oliver W. Lembcke, Friedrich SchillerUniversity Jena

Chair

8 Wednesday, July 25 8:15 - 10:00

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Bärbel R Dorbeck-Jung, University ofTwente

Challenges to Max Weber’s Conceptualisation of Legal Certainty in the Area of EconomicGlobalization

Liesbeth Huppes-Cluysenaer, University ofAmsterdam

Two Concepts of Formal Law Confused: TheDecline of Institutions

Robert Knegt, Universiteit van Amsterdam

Legitimacy, Argumentative Anticipation, andRepresentations of Order

Olaf Tans, Free University of AmsterdamFrom Ethos to Nomos: A Discourse Perspectiveon Max Weber’s Legitimacy Theory

Liesbeth Huppes-Cluysenaer, University ofAmsterdam

Discussant

1139 What is Alternative about AlternativeGovernance? Governing by Accident,Without the State, Without Law?

[Room L 144]

Stepan Wood, York UniversityChair

Cormac S. MacAmhlaigh, EuropeanUniversity Institute

Resurrecting the Leviathan: Re-IntroducingPolitical Theory to the Post-NationalConstellation

Margaret Shannon, SUNY, Buffalo /University of Freiburg

Accidental Governance through AccidentalParticipation: Is Intentionality Necessary forSustainable Forestry?

Sanne Taekema, Tilburg UniversityThe Point of Law: Comparing the Functionalityof State and Non-State Rules

Detlef von Daniels, University of ErfurtInstances of Transnational Justice: FIFA in theDock

10:00 - 10:15

Cof fee Break

10:15 - 12:00

1201 Contemporary Issues in Refugee andAsylum Law in Comparative Perspective(Sponsored by CRN02 Citizenship andImmigration)

[Room M 1070]

Annie Bunting, York UniversityChair

Michael J. Churgin, University of TexasCanada and the United States Cooperation inImmigration/Asylum Since 9/11

Sarah Craig, University of Glasgow, andMaria Fletcher, University of Glasgow

More Than an Attempt to Re-Argue the Issues?Reviewing the UK’s Asylum and ImmigrationTribunal

Rebecca Hamlin, University of California,Berkeley

Who Is a Refugee? Administrative and FederalCourt Interaction in the United States, Canada,and Australia

Jeff Handmaker, Institute of Social StudiesLitigating Refugee Rights in South Africa

Jaya Ramji-Nogales, Temple University,Andrew Schoenholtz, GeorgetownUniversity, and Philip G. Schrag,Georgetown University

Refugee Roulette: Consistency and Disparity inAsylum Adjudication

Dagmar Soennecken, University of OxfordDiscussant

1202 Author Meets Reader—Labour Lawsand Global Trade, by Bob Hepple(Sponsored by CRN08 Labor Rights)

[Room S1.503]

Katherine Stone, University of California,Los Angeles

ChairBob Hepple, Cambridge University

AuthorHarry Arthurs, York University, Bruno

Caruso, University of Catania, and JuliaLopez, Pompeu Fabreu

Readers

1203 Law, Markets, and Society: BeyondProtectionism and Property I(Sponsored by CRN14 Culture, Society,and Intellectual Property)

[Room L E44/46]

Shubha Ghosh, Southern MethodistUniversity

Chair/DiscussantJohn Cross, University of Louisville

The Unequal Competitive Position of TraditionalKnowledge in the Marketplace of Ideas

Edson Ricardo Saleme, Catholic Universityof Santos

New Order and Poor StatesPeter Yu, Michigan State University

The TRIPs Enforcement Puzzle

1204 Law, Language, and the Political Order(Sponsored by CRN16 Language andLaw)

[Room S1.308]

Syugo Hotta, Ritsumeikan UniversityChair/Discussant

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

9 Wednesday, July 25 10:15 - 12:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Cecile Brich, University of LeedsHow Naive Was Foucault? Autopsy of a FailedResistance Movement

Diana Eades, University of New England,Australia

What the F***? Offensive Language andNeocolonial Control

Aleksandra Ewelina Matulewska, AdamMickiewicz University, KarolinaKaczmarek, Adam Mickiewicz University,and Przemyslaw Wiatrowski, AdamMickiewicz University

The Methods of Expressing Obligation andProhibition in English, Hungarian, and PolishStatutory Instruments: Comparative Analysis ofDeontic Modality

Nancy Schweda Nicholson, University ofDelaware

Interpreting at the International CriminalTribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY):Linguistic Realities and Cultural Challenges

Diana Yankova, New Bulgarian UniversityThe Text and Context of EU Directives

1205 Theorizing Collective Rights (Sponsoredby CRN25 Collective Human Rights)

[Room S1.204]

Amy Maguire, University of NewcastleChair

Solomon Ayele Dersso, South AfricanInstitute for Constitutional Law

Minority Rights under International HumanRights Law: From Liberal Individualism toMulticulturalism and Beyond

Ciarán MacGiolla Bhéin, Forbairt FeirsteIdentity in Ireland: Loss and Reinvention

Miodrag Jovanovic, University of BelgradeAre There Universal Collective Rights?

Sandra Segaram Paramalingam, KeeleUniversity

The Concept of Social Identity in Internationaland Constitutional Law

1206 Empirical Methods Showcase I:Experiments, Survey-Experiments, andSurveys in the Psychology of Law(Sponsored by CRN28 Realist andEmpirical Legal Methods)

[Room S1.401]

Mark C. Suchman, University of Wisconsin,Madison

ChairShari Seidman Diamond, Northwestern

University, and Janice Nadler, AmericanBar Foundation/Northwestern University

Psychological Research: UnderstandingResponses to Law

Tom Tyler, New York University

Using Surveys in Psychology

Robert MacCoun, University of California,Berkeley

A Factorial Survey Experiment on PublicInferences about the Ideological Motivations ofSocial Scientists

Janice Nadler, American BarFoundation/Northwestern University

Discussant

1207 Gender, Representation, and JudicialSelection: Criteria, Processes andPractices (Sponsored by IRC Genderand Judging)

[Room S1.608]

Reg Graycar, University of SydneyChair

Sally Jane Kenney, University of MinnesotaFemocrats and Judicial Selection: InsidersWorking Within for More Women Judges

Jennifer Koshan, University of CalgaryThe Women’s Court of Canada: An Experimentin Feminist Judging

Kate Malleson, University of LondonRethinking the Merit Principle in JudicialSelection

Margaret S. Williams, Goucher CollegeWomen’s Representation on High Courts inOECD Countries

Beverley Baines, Queen’s UniversityDiscussant

1208 The Family, Law, and CommunalIdentity in Colonial South Asia(Sponsored by IRC Colonial SouthAsian Legal History and CRN22 SouthAsia)

[Room S1.501]

Sylvia Vatuk, University of Illinois, ChicagoChair/Discussant

Nandini Chatterjee, University ofCambridge

Personal Laws and Civil Family Laws of India:A Shared History

Chandra Mallampalli, Westmont CollegeMarital Law and Religious Identity in Madras,1872-1915

Mitra Sharafi, University of Wisconsin,Madison

Zoroastrian Husbands and Wives: The ParsiChief Matrimonial Court of Bombay, 1900-1930

Malavika Kasturi, University of TorontoThe Sacred, The Legal and the Domestic,Genealogies, Ascetic Families and PropertyFeuds in Late Colonial India

10 Wednesday, July 25 10:15 - 12:00

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

1209 Transnational Transformations of theState I (Sponsored by IRC TransnationalTransformations of the State and CRN28Realist and Empirical Legal Methods)

[Room S1.406]

Nancy Reichman, University of DenverChair/Discussant

Nitsan Chorev, Brown UniversityThe Judicial Transformation of the State: TheCase of U.S. Trade Policy, 1974-2004

Heinz Klug, University of WisconsinCreating Opportunities or Bowing to Pressure?Implementing TRIPS in Post-Apartheid SouthAfrica

Michelle Ratton-Sanchez, Getulio VargasFoundation, Gregory C Shaffer, LoyolaUniversity, Chicago, and BarbaraRosenberg, Barbosa, Müssnich & Aragão

Brazil’s Response to the Judicialized WTORegime: Strengthening the State throughDiffusing Expertise

Aseema Sinha, University of Wisconsin,Madison

Federalism and Global Governance: WorldTrade Organization and Decentralization in India

1210 Alternative Forms of RegulatoryGovernance

[Room S1.403]

Joe Rees, Virginia TechChair

Mary Condon, York UniversityRisk Regulation and Citizen Empowerment inCanada

Judith van Erp, Erasmus UniversiteitRotterdam

Reputational Sanctions

Tetty Havinga, Radboud UniversityNijmegen, and Ida Wiegman, RadboudUniversity, Nijmegen

Product Liability, Insurance, and the PrivateRegulation of Food Safety

Joe Rees, Virginia TechNuclear Safety and Market Competition:Challenges for Industry Self-Regulation

Koen Van Aeken, University of Tilburg,Benny Carlé, SCK - The Belgian NuclearResearch Centre, and Catrinel Turcanu,Université Libre de Bruxelles

A Dynamic View on the Acceptance of LegalNorms: Unintended Empirical Results from theRealm of Food Safety Regulation

1211 Author Meets Reader—Law as a Meansto an End, by Brian Z. Tamanaha

[Room S1.601]

Randy E Barnett, Georgetown UniversityChair

Brian Z. Tamanaha, St. John’s UniversityAuthor

Dennis Michael Patterson, RutgersUniversity, Ralf Poscher, Ruhr UniversityBochum, and Lawrence B. Solum,University of Illinois

Readers

1212 Blurring Boundaries: Crime,Punishment, and the Law

[Room S2.102]

Anthony T. Amatrudo, University ofSunderland

Chair/DiscussantPaul Almond, University of Reading

Investigating Public Perceptions of LegalResponses in Work-Related Fatality Cases

Andrew Gilbert, Anglia Ruskin UniversityConfusing Trafficking with Smuggling: TheOffence of Human Trafficking for SexualExploitation in English Law

Salif Nimaga, Humboldt Universität zuBerlin

The Selectivity of International Criminal Law

Flavia P. Puschel, Getulio VargasFoundation Law School, São Paulo

The Punitive Function of Civil Responsibility inBrazilian Law: Proposal for an EmpiricalInvestigation

1213 Citizenship, Participation, andDemocracy

[Room S1.505]

Eileen McDonagh, Northeastern UniversityChair/Discussant

Paul Van Aerschot, University of HelsinkiOn Participation, Empowerment, and IndividualRights in Social Policy

Jennifer Fredette, University of WashingtonMaking Friends, Making Enemies: Simulacra ofthe Islamic Woman in Western LiberalDemocracies

JoAnne Myers, Marist CollegeThe Entrenchment of Second Class Citizens:Public Policy, Law, and Homosexuals

JoAnne Myers, Marist CollegeThe Markers of Citizenship: Identity in a Liberal Democracy

Inge Vander Vlies, University of AmsterdamInfluence of Trans-National ProfessionalNetworks on Parliamentary Legislation

1214 Crime and Social Transformation[Room M 1072]

Anna Umberg, University of HamburgChair

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

11 Wednesday, July 25 10:15 - 12:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Mariusz K. Cichomski, University ofWarsaw

From “Benkiel” to “Mafia”: On Transformationof Local Crime Groups into DevelopedStructures Case Study

Alessandra Dino, Università Degli Studi diPalermo

Mafia-Style Organized Crime Changes andTransformations in the Globalization Age

Tapan Ranjan Mohanty, Danish Universityof Education

Mercinaries of Mass Murder: An Inquiry into aCorporate Crime

Ester Massa, University of Bologna, andDario Melossi, University of Bologna

Second Generations in Italy between CultureConflict and Deviance: A Self-Report Study

Werner Ruether, Universität BonnCultural Conflicts in Cyber-Society and theImportance of Analyzing Global Aspects ofCyber-Crime

1215 Developments of the Financial Market[Room L140/142]

Klaus F. Roehl, Ruhr-Universitaet BochumChair

Elizabeth Brown, University of St. ThomasRegulatory Structures for Financial Services: ACost-Benefit Analysis

Angela K. Littwin, Harvard UniversityBeyond Usury: An Empirical Approach toRegulating Credit Cards in Low-IncomeCommunities

Yuwa Wei, Griffith UniversityAsset Backed Securitization: A New Mechanismof Reforming China’s Financial Sector

Neta Ziv, Tel Aviv UniversityCredit Cooperative Societies in Early IsraeliStatehood: Financial Institutions as a Mirror ofSocial Transformation

1217 Epistemic Communities and Law[Room M Senatssaal]

Keebet von Benda-Beckmann, Max PlanckInstitute for Social Anthropology

ChairFranz von Benda-Beckmann, Max Planck

Institute for Social AnthropologyOn the Transnationalisation of Ideas about Law:Legal Anthropology and Legal Pluralism asGlobalising Discourses

Richard W. Rottenburg,Martin-Luther-UniversitätHalle-Wittenberg

Development and Trust in Numbers

Markus Weilenmann, Office for ConflictResearch in Developing Countries

How to Promote the Rule of Law andDemocracy in Africa? A Legal AnthropologicalCase Study of the Normative Working Methods

of Epistemic Communities within InternationalDevelopment Agencies

Melanie Gay Wiber, University of NewBrunswick

An Epistemic Community’s Work is Never Done

Bill Felstiner, Cardiff UniversityDiscussant

1218 Global Challenges in Health Care[Room S1.404]

Tamara Hervey, University of SheffieldChair

Han-Hsi Liu, University of WashingtonWho Plays the Critical Role in Patient Dumpingin Taiwan? Money, Physicians, or “Guanxi”

Manjari Mahajan, Cornell UniversityLaw, Public Health and Citizenship: Science inthe Courts in South Africa’s AIDS Epidemic

Michael A. Rosentreter, WissenschaftlichesInstitut der Ärzte Deutschlands (WIAD)

The Effect of a German Health Law on theUtilisation of Medical Services

Eric Van Rite, University of California, SanDiego

Standardizing Safety in Global Healthcare:Agendas, Initiatives, and Governance of theWorld Alliance for Patient Safety

1219 The Impact of Hidden Racism andSexism

[Room S2. Reutersaal]

Victoria Frances Nourse, University ofWisconsin

Chair/DiscussantDonna Coker, University of Miami and

Lindsay Harrison, Jenner & BlockThe Story of Wanrow: The “Reasonable Man”and the Law of Self-Defense

Lynn Eckert, Marist CollegeA Critique of the Ascendance of Content andViewpoint Neutrality: Conflating Hate Speechand Pornography with Dissident Speech

Maureen Norton-Hawk, Suffolk UniversityUnintended Consequences: The GenderedImpact of the United States’ War on Drugs inEcuador

Shoshana Pollack, Wilfrid LaurierUniversity

Gender and Punishment: The Regulation ofCriminalized Women through FeministPsychological Discourses

1220 International and Comparative LawApproaches to Minority and IndigenousPeoples’ Rights

[Room M 3059]

Lillian Aponte Miranda, FloridaInternational University

Chair

12 Wednesday, July 25 10:15 - 12:00

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Hari Osofsky, University of OregonThe Geography of Justice Wormholes:Dilemmas from Property and Criminal Law

Lillian Aponte Miranda, FloridaInternational University

The Impact of Corporate Actors on IndigenousLand Rights: Meeting the Challenges ofDesigning Human Rights Responsibilities

Lua K. Yuille, University of OregonMinority Rights and Religious Claims:Challenges and Potentials of Intersectionality

1221 Israeli Law and the Social(Trans)Formation of Minorities andDisadvantaged Groups

[Room S1.205]

Ariela Gross, University of SouthernCalifornia

Chair/DiscussantAlexandre (Sandy) Jonathan Kedar, Haifa

UniversityConstructing Marginality through Illegality:Israeli Law and the Bedouins of the Negev

Sagit Mor, Haifa UniversityReduced Minimum Wage for Disabled People: A Path to Work or a Poverty Trap?

Noya Rimalt, Haifa UniversityWomen Conscientious Objectors in Israelbetween the Limits of Law and Its Possibilities

Ilan Saban, University of HaifaLaw’s Erosive Power upon a Certain “Control”System: The Arab Minority in Israel 1976-2000

1222 Law and Mental Health[Room L 229]

Sidney Watson, Saint Louis UniversityChair/Discussant

Mary Donnelly, University College CorkThe Promise of Participation by LegallyIncapable Adults in HealthcareDecision-Making: Rhetoric or Reality?

Ezra Hasson, University of NottinghamCapacity to Marry: Law, Medicine, andConceptions of Insanity

Claire Murray, University College CorkExplorations of Gender Issues in the Irish MentalHealth System

Fumie Suga, Hosei University, TokyoWhere Should They Be Put to Be Placed? ThePossible Phenomenon of Juridification withinFamilies through Adult Guardianship System

1223 Law, Policy, and Governance[Room T 013]

Gretchen Ritter, University of Texas, AustinChair/Discussant

Kimberley Johnson, Columbia UniversityThe Diffusion of Failure: Tax Credits andEmployment Policy in the U.S. and the U.K.

Kimberly J Morgan, George WashingtonUniversity

Shifting Governance Patterns in Old-AgeEntitlements: Private Actors and the Politics ofMedicare

Patricia Strach, University at Albany, andKathleen S Sullivan, Ohio University

Power and Citizenship in Welfare Provision byLaw and Policy

Linda A. Tvrdy, Columbia UniversityEqual Rights and Common Law Legal Culture in Reconstruction North Carolina

1224 Legal Education[Room L E42]

Carlos Alberto Lista, Universidad Nacionalde Córdoba

ChairNicole Graham, Griffith University and Rob

McQueen, Griffith UniversityMarket(Ed)!! The Nike Law School Revisited

Robert Granfield, State University of NewYork at Buffalo

Does Law School Public Service Matter? Results on the Impact of Mandatory Pro Bono Programs

Mara Lee Merlino, University of Nevada,Reno, James Richardson, University ofNevada, Reno, and Jared Chamberlain,University of Nevada, Reno

Science in the Law School Curriculum: ASnapshot of the Legal Education Landscape

Luis F. Perez Hurtado, Stanford UniversityTraining the Next Generation of Lawyers:Characteristics, Interests, and Expectations ofMexican Law Students

Lisa G. Lerman, Catholic University, DCDiscussant

1225 Legal Reform and Social Change inPalestine

[Room S1.605]

Asem Khalil, Birzeit UniversityChair

Feras Abdel-Raheem Milhem, BirzeitUniversity

Legal Transplant and Socio-Legal Change:Palestinian Experience

Rawan Bazbazat, Birzeit UniversityPolitics, Law and Palestinian Cultural Symbols

Mudar Kassis, Birzeit UniversityThe Primacy of Democracy over DemocraticLegal Reform

Jamil Elias Salem, Birzeit UniversityLegal Reform of the Palestinian Economy:Illusions and Reality

Maysa Zorob, Birzeit UniversityLaw and Social Change in Palestine

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

13 Wednesday, July 25 10:15 - 12:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

1227 Predicting Juvenile Rule-ViolatingBehavior: Longitudinal Study of LegalReasoning, Attitudes, Peers, andPersonal Attributes

[Room M 3086]

Rosemary L. Barberet, City University ofNew York

Chair/DiscussantEllen S. Cohn, University of New

Hampshire, Cesar J. Rebellon, Universityof New Hampshire, and Karen VanGundy, University of New Hampshire

Longitudinal Model to Test Legal Attitudes asMediators between Legal Reasoning andRule-Violating Behavior

Cesar J. Rebellon, University of NewHampshire, Karen Van Gundy, Universityof New Hampshire, and Ellen S. Cohn,University of New Hampshire

Differential Association and Delinquency:Examining the Role of Cognitive DevelopmentalFactors

Cesar J. Rebellon, University of NewHampshire, Karen Van Gundy, Universityof New Hampshire, and Ellen S. Cohn,University of New Hampshire

Explanations of Correlations between One’sOwn Delinquency and Peer Delinquency: LifeStage and Moral/Legal Reasoning

Karen Van Gundy, University of NewHampshire, Cesar J. Rebellon, Universityof New Hampshire, and Ellen S. Cohn,University of New Hampshire

Cognitive Development and the Stress Process:A Study of Adolescent Rule Violation

Karen Van Gundy, University of NewHampshire, Cesar J. Rebellon, Universityof New Hampshire, and Ellen S. Cohn,University of New Hampshire

Cognitive Development and the Stress Process:An Analysis of Adolescent Rule Violation

1228 Public-Private Hybrids and the NewGovernance in Japan, Britain, the US,and the Global Arena

[Room S1.504]

Margit Cohn, Hebrew University, JerusalemChair/Discussant

Andrea Andrei, Union UniversityThe Structure of the InternationalAnti-Doping-Regime in the Framework ofGlobal Administrative Law

Anne Bottomley, University of KentContemporary Issues in Contract, Regulation,and the Control of “The Social”

Hitoshi Ushijima, Chuo UniversityPublic-Private Dichotomy and Partnership inJapan: Emerging New Forms of Governance

Doreen McBarnet, Oxford UniversityNew Governance and New CorporateAccountabilities: Corporate Social

Responsibility Beyond Law, Through Law, andFor Law

1231 Securities Regulation, CorporateGovernance and Corporate Finance:Global Markets, Law, and Culture

[Room S1.301]

Joan M. Heminway, University of TennesseeChair

Olufunmilayo Arewa, NorthwesternUniversity

Sarbanes-Oxley and Global Capital Markets

Erica Beecher-Monas, Wayne StateUniversity

Striving for Accountability: An InternationalPerspective on Sarbanes-Oxley and the SEC’sAdventures in Corporate Governance

Caroline Bradley, University of MiamiGaming the System: Virtual Worlds and theSecurities Markets

Joan M. Heminway, University of TennesseeInsider Trading Regulation in Germany, Japan,and the United States: Cultural Dependence orConvergence?

Melissa B. Jacoby, University of NorthCarolina, Chapel Hill

Courts, Creditors, and the Construction ofCorporate Governance

Steven M. Davidoff, Wayne State UniversityDiscussant

1232 Sex Work, Sexual Offences, and OfficialIdeas of Gender

[Room S1.201]

Heather Douglas, University of QueenslandChair/Discussant

Charles Olufemi Adekoya, University ofGhent

Evolving Innovative and Effective Response tothe Scourge of Rape as a Form of SexualViolence against Women in Nigeria

Susanne Y. P. Choi, Chinese University ofHong Kong

Criminalisation or Prevention? Sex Work andHIV Prevention Work in China

Reem W. M. Mohamed, AmericanUniversity in Cairo

Rape and Gender Ideology in Egypt

1233 The Future of Corporate Governance[Room L 139a]

Peter Carstensen, University of WisconsinChair/Discussant

Neil J. Andrews, Victoria University19th Century Stock Exchange Regulation and Its Effect on 21st Century Corporate Governance

Jing Leng, University of Hong KongCorporate Governance of Chinese PrivateEnterprises at the Crossroads

14 Wednesday, July 25 10:15 - 12:00

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Soogeun Oh, Ewha Womans UniversityA Recursive Theory of National Lawmaking:Site- Switching in Korean Corporate InsolvencyReforms 1992-2007

Fenner L. Stewart, York UniversityBetter Socializing Corporate Governance: TheBerle and Dodd Debate 75 Years Later

Lisa Monique Fairfax, University ofMaryland

Shareholder Democracy: Panacea or Pandora’sBox?

1234 The Impact of Globalization on theTurkish Economy and Society[Room M 3092]Rana Eskinat, Anadolu University

ChairRana Eskinat, Anadolu University

Liberalization of Turkish Economy

Dogan Gokbel, Anadolu UniversityRespond of Turkish Tax System toGlobalization: Rewriting Turkish CooparateIncome Tax Law and Income Tax Law

Neval Okan, Anadolu UniversityEffects of Globalization on Turkish Law:Anti-Dumping Law

Filiz Tepecik, Anadolu UniversityPrivatization of Health Sector in Turkey

Ayse Tulin Yuruk, Anadolu UniversityIndustrial Property Protection in Turkey

1235 The Legal Construction of PropertyRights and Markets

[Room S1.405]

Noga Morag-Levine, Michigan StateUniversity

ChairPéter Cserne, University of Hamburg

Contract Regulation between Paternalism andFreedom of Contract: A (Behavioral) Law andEconomics Perspective

Jonathan Levine, University of MichiganThe Legal Construction of the Market Default inthe U.S. Land-Use Debate

Noga Morag-Levine, Michigan StateUniversity

The Problem of Pollution Hotspots: PollutionMarkets, Coase, and Common Law

Jonathan R. Nash, Tulane UniversityThe Unknowing Race to Capture: StrategicResponses to Grandfathering

1236 The Morality and Politics of SearchEngines and User-Generated Content

[Room T 113]

Steven A. Hetcher, Vanderbilt UniversityChair

Ann Bartow, University of South CarolinaThe Gendering and Sex of Online Information

Steven A. Hetcher, Vanderbilt UniversityThe Fairness of YouTube

1237 Three German Perspectives on Law:Religion, Philosophy, and Literature

[Room T 008]

Francis J. Mootz III, Pennsylvania StateDickinson University

Chair/DiscussantLarry Cata Backer, Pennsylvania State

UniversityOn Faith, Reason, and Law

Francis J. Mootz III, Pennsylvania StateDickinson University

Law’s Hermeneutic Ontology

Wolfgang Müller, Dickinson CollegeHuman Laws and Human Dilemmas in Bernhard Schlink’s “The Reader”

1238 Violence, Justice, and Irreplaceability:Walter Benjamin and Legal Thought(Sponsored by CRN26 Law and SocialTheory)

[Room L 326]

Mariana Valverde, University of TorontoChair

Tatiana Flessas, London School ofEconomics

Memory-Palaces of Modernity: The ArcadesProject and the New Museum

Joe Hermer, University of TorontoAuthenticity and the Trace of Law

Christopher L. Tomlins, American BarFoundation

The Threepenny Constitution (and the Questionof Justice)

Mariana Valverde, University of TorontoEurope and Its Ghosts: Historical Memory andPostcolonial Justice

1239 Feminism, Law, and Families(Sponsored by WG Gender and Law)

[Room S1.101]

Gillian Calder, University of VictoriaChair

Susan B. Boyd, University of BritishColumbia

Absent Voices? Feminist Knowledge and ChildCustody Decisions Involving Race, Class, andGender

Emma Cunliffe, University of BritishColumbia

Getting Away With Murder? Mothers, Murder,and the Media

Elisabeth Holzleithner, University of ViennaConstructions of Autonomy: Parents, Children,and Forced Marriage

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

15 Wednesday, July 25 10:15 - 12:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Fiona Raitt, University of DundeeFilling the Vacuum: Strategies of Speech andSilence

Mary Jane Mossman, York UniversityDiscussant

12:00 – 12:30

Lunch Break

12:30 - 14:15

1301 Roundtable—Labor, Migration, andSocial Welfare (Sponsored by CRN02Citizenship and Immigration andCRN08 Labor Rights)

[Room M 3092]

This roundtable ex amines the so cial costs of mobil-

ity in a de regulated world. In what way do new im-

migration laws and re quirements at tached to so cial

rights in the Eu ropean Un ion transform “cit izen-

ship” as member states struggle to re tain at least

some of the fea tures of the wel fare state? How do

the changes in Europe compare to the United States

where immigration is poorly reg ulated and target la-

bor markets almost not at all? Ad dressing recent

trends in Eu rope and the United States we of fer a

critical view of Eu rope’s emerging so cial vi sion of

cit i zen ship and the wel fare state.

Galya Benarieh Ruffer, NorthwesternUniversity

ChairDavid Abraham, University of Miami

ParticipantJoel Handler, University of California, Los

AngelesParticipant

Lea VanderVelde, University of IowaParticipant

William E. Forbath, University of Texas,Austin

Participant

1302 Toward a Regulatory State Model, orStill Varieties of Regulatory Models?(Sponsored by CRN05 RegulatoryGovernance)

[Room S1.101]

Bojan Bugaric, University of LjubljanaChair

Francesca Bignami, Duke UniversityThe Persistence of Regulatory Difference inFrance and the United States

Bojan Bugaric, University of LjubljanaEuropean vs. American Style of Regulation:Convergence or Variety of Styles?

Dominique M. Custos, University of Caen/Loyola University

Is There an Undergoing Process ofAmericanization via Europeanization of FrenchRegulatory Structures and AdministrativeProcedure?

David Levi-Faur, University of HaifaVarieties of Regulatory Capitalism

Jacques Ziller, European UniversityInstitute

Common Law v. Civil Law and Private Law v.Public Law Divides

1303 Contradiction, Persistence, Challenge:The Status of Capital Punishment in theUnited States (Sponsored by CRN11 The Cultural Lives of Capital Punishment)

[Room L E44/46]

David Garland, New York UniversityChair

Susan A. Bandes, DePaul University/Uiversity of Chicago

The Heart Has Its Reasons: Abolition as aChange of Heart

David Garland, New York UniversityThe Forms and Functions of American CapitalPunishment

Timothy V. Kaufman-Osborn, WhitmanCollege

Capital Punishment and the Paradox of LethalInjection

1304 Cases on Law, Governance, andDevelopment I (Sponsored by CRN24Rule of Law, State Building, andTransition)

[Room S1.608]

Julio Faundez, University of WarwickChair/Discussant

Richard C. Crook, University of LondonLegal Pluralism and Access to Justice: LandDisputes in Ghana and Cote d’Ivoire

Luciana Gross Cunha, Fundação GetulioVargas

Judicial Administration in Brazil: Disseminationof Information and Transparency

Martin W. Lau, SOASAfghanistan’s Legal Needs and ForeignAssistance Efforts

Marina Svensson, Lund UniversityHeritage Management on the ChineseCountryside: Living Culture and the Law

Jaap Timmer, Leiden UniversityAccess to Justice in Indonesia: SomeMethodological Considerations

16 Wednesday, July 25 12:30 - 14:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

1305 Author Meets Reader—Prisons ofPoverty, by Loic Wacquant (Sponsoredby CRN27 Prisons and Prisoners)

[Room M 3086]

Paul Mason, Cardiff UniversityChair

Loic Wacquant, University of California,Berkeley

AuthorDario Melossi, University of Bologna, and

Richard Sparks, University of EdinburghReaders

1306 Bankruptcy Filing Rates and theReasons Therefore (Sponsored by IRCComparative Socio/Legal Approaches toConsumer Overindebtedness, DebtAdjustment, and Insolvency)

[Room L 144]

Jean Braucher, University of ArizonaChair/Discussant

Wolfram Backert, Technische UniversitätChemnitz, Götz Lechner, TechnischeUniversität Chemnitz, Katja Maischatz,Technische Universität Chemnitz andDitmar Brock, Technische UniversitätChemnitz

Consumer Bankruptcy in Germany

Stephanie Ben-Ishai, York University and SaulSchwartz, Carleton University

Access to the Consumer Bankruptcy Process

A. Michael Green, University of Wales, Bangor

What Happens When the Glass Breaks?

Ronald J. Mann, University of Texas, Austin

A Comparative Analysis of Filing Rates and theSeverity of Consumer Bankruptcy Law

1307 Comparing Roles of Lawyers andLitigation in Disputing Process(Sponsored By IRC ComparativeDisputing Behavior)[Room S1.503]Jacek M. Kurczewski, Warsaw University

ChairMichael E. Adler, University of Edinburgh

and Richard W Whitecross, University ofEdinburgh

Can Self-Representation in Tribunals be Made toWork?

Atsushi Bushimata, Fukuoka University, and Tsuneo Niki, Osaka University

Mobilizing Lawyers in Japanese Social Context:For What?

Daniel H. Foote, University of Tokyo, ShozoOta, University of Tokyo, Mikio Kawai,Toin Yokohama University, YasuhiroWada, Osaka Prefecture University,Yuriko Kaminaga, Senshu University,Akira Moriya, Kansai Gakuin University,

Shusuke Kakiuchi, University of Tokyo,Tomohiko Maeda, Sapporo University,Kiyoshi Hasegawa, Tokyo MetropolitanUniversity, Takashi Iida, Seikei University,Masahiro Fujita, National GraduateInstitute for Policy Studies, MasahiroSakai, University of Tokyo, Hideaki Irie,University of Tokyo, and Daisuke Mori,University of Tokyo

Behavior, Decision-Making, and Evaluation byJapanese Civil Litigants and Their Lawyers

Manuel Gomez, Florida InternationalUniversity/Stanford University

All in the Family: The Influence of SocialNetworks on Dispute Processing

Carl Baar, York UniversityDiscussant

1308 East Asian Legal Professionalism: LegalEducation (Sponsored by IRC LegalProfessionalism in East Asian Context)

[Room S1.601]

Julian Dierkes, University of BritishColumbia

ChairRikiya Kuboyama, Waseda University

A Comparative Study of Law School Reform inJapan and Korea.

Eri Osaka, Surugadai UniversityWomen in the New Legal Training System:Achievements and Problems

Richard Wu, University of Hong KongReform of Professional Legal Education in Hong Kong: A New Model for China and Asia?

Wang Zhenmin, Tsinghua UniversityProblems and Reforms of Legal Education inChina

1309 Administrative Law in the EuropeanUnion: Lessons for Americans?

[Room S1.501]

Michael Asimow, University of California,Los Angeles

ChairMichael Asimow, University of California,

Los AngelesAdjudication in the European Union

Lucas Bergkamp, Hunton & WilliamsCreating Regulations, Directives and Soft Law in the European Union

Ronald Levin, Washington University,Frank Emmert, Indiana University Schoolof Law – Indianapolis, and ChristophFeddersen, UTC

Judicial Review in the Administrative Law of the European Union

Herwig C.H. Hofmann, University ofLuxembourg

EU Administrative Law - The Framework ofIntegrated Administration in Europe

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

17 Wednesday, July 25 12:30 - 14:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

1310 Assessing the Independence ofInstitutions

[Room S1.504]

Malgorzata Fuszara, University of WarsawChair/Discussant

Jolanta Arcimowicz, University of WarsawCivil Service in Poland: Legal Regulations andPolitical Obstacles

Lisa Hilbink, University of MinnesotaDo “Judges for Democracy” Live Up to TheirName? Empirical Insights from Spain

Hans-Joachim Lauth, University of Hagen,and Jenniver Sehring, University of Hagen

Rule of Law and Informal Institutions in NewDemocracies

Angela Melville, University of ManchesterWhose Bidding? Assessing the Independence ofLaw Reform Commissions

1311 Author Meets Reader—Human Rights & Gender Violence, by Sally Merry

[Room M 1070]

Elizabeth Schneider, Brooklyn Law SchoolChair

Sally Merry, New York UniversityAuthor

Jane K. Cowan, University of Sussex, CarolJ Greenhouse, Princeton University, SusanF. Hirsch, George Mason University andNadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian, HebrewUniversity

Readers

1312 Biopirates, Bollywood, and Tarot Cards:New Directions/MisDirections inIntellectual Property Law

[Room M 1072]

Laura A. Foster, University of California,Los Angeles

ChairJulie D. Cromer, Thomas Jefferson School of

LawFitting Square Pegs into the Intellectual PropertyBlack Hole

Allison Elizabeth Fish, University ofCalifornia, Irvine and Anuranjan Sethi,Trilegal

Movies, Yoga, and Hierarchies of CulturalPiracy: Comparing the Different Treatment ofthe Unauthorized Use of Different CreativeForms

Laura A. Foster, University of California,Los Angeles

Patent Law’s Progress?: DeconstructingNarratives of the Scientific Expert

Namita Malhotra, Alternative Law ForumIf the Modern Pirate Had a Sister: ExploringCopyright, Gender, and Sexuality in the IndianContext

William T. Gallagher, Golden GateUniversity

Discussant

1313 Civil Population in Lawlessness State[Room S2.102]

Tamar Pitch, University of PerugiaChair

Ibrahim Badamasi Kamara, Forum forHuman Rights

Characterizing the Sierra Leone Conflict:Violence, Human Rights, and Gender

Pathik Gandhi, NALSAR University of Lawand Aditya Swarup, NALSAR Universityof Law

Out of Sight : Forced Disappearances and theIndian State

David Restrepo Amariles, OñatiInternational Institute for the Sociology ofLaw

Human Rights and Ethnic Identity in aSociological Perspective: The Case of the UrbanIndigenous Population in Colombia

1314 Disputing “Religious Law” in the 21stCentury: Contending Perspectives

[Room T 008]

Arskal Salim, Max Planck Institute forSocial Anthropology, Martin Ramstedt,Max Planck Institute for SocialAnthropology

Co-ChairsKeebet von Benda-Beckmann, Max Planck

Institute for Social AnthropologyReligion, Juridification, and Dispute Resolution

Salim A. Farrar, International IslamicUniversity, Malaysia

Responding to the “Human Rights” Discourse“Islamically”: In Search of a “Humane”Dialogue

Arnold S. Rosenberg, Thomas JeffersonSchool of Law

Motivational Law

John R. Bowen, Washington UniversityDiscussant

1315 Democracy and Violence[Room S1.204]

Gary LaFree, University of MarylandChair

Susanne Karstedt, Keele UniversityLiberty, Equality, and Justice: DemocraticValues and Physical Integrity in Criminal Justice

Gary LaFree, University of Maryland andLaura Dugan, University of Maryland

Democracy and Global Terrorism Attacks andFatalities

18 Wednesday, July 25 12:30 - 14:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Cynthia Lum, George Mason University,and Gary LaFree, University of Maryland

Policing and Democratization: A Study of Police Attitudes in 31 Nations

Margaret Wilson, University of SurreyBehavioural Structures in PoliticalAssassinations

Sheryl Van Horne, Pennsylvania StateUniversity

Discussant

1316 Displaced Children: Children’s Rightsand Education amidst Immigration,Exile, and Disaster

[Room T 113]

Erika Renee George, University of UtahChair/Discussant

Roberta Bosisio, University of Studies ofMilan, and Paola Ronfani, University ofStudies of Milan

The Denied Rights of Immigrant Children inItaly

Kristi Bowman, University of MississippiRebuilding Schools, Rebuilding Communities:The Civic Role of Mississippi Public Schoolsafter Katrina

Fabrizio Pappalardo, University of UrbinoThe Legislation Concerning Asylum Children:The Case of “Unaccompanied Minors”

Rosemary C. Salomone, St. John’sUniversity

Language, Schooling, and National Identity: The Implications of Transnationalism, Globalization,and Mass Migration

1317 EuroJELS: Empirical Research aroundthe Globe

[Room L E42]

Theodore Eisenberg, Cornell UniversityChair/Discussant

Albert Wayne Currie, Department ofJustice, Canada

The Legal Problems of Everyday Life

Kuo-Chang Huang, Academia SinicaHow Legal Representation Affects CaseOutcomes: An Empirical Perspective fromTaiwan

Joyce Sadka, Instituto TecnologicoAutonomo de Mexico

Litigation and Settlement: New Evidence fromLabor Courts in Mexico

1318 Globalisation of American Law?Theoretical Debates and EmpiricalEvidence from Europe

[Room M 3059]

Sigrid Quack, Social Science ResearchCenter Berlin

Chair

John W. Cioffi, University of California,Riverside

Corporate Governance Reform, LegalLiberalism, and the Foundations of the NewFinance Capitalism in Germany

Philipp Klages, Max-Planck-Institute for the Study of Societies

Reinventing the Corporation: The Role of Jurists for the Liberalization of Corporate Law inGermany and the United States

Britta Rehder, Max-Planck-Institute for theStudy of Societies

Adversarial Legalism Goes Europe: HowGermany Responds to Class Action

Robert A. Kagan, University of California,Berkeley

Discussant

1319 Governing the Ungovernable[Room S1.307]

Helen Carr, University of KentChair/Discussant

David Cowan, University of Bristol, HelenCarr, University of Kent and CarolineHunter, Sheffield Hallam University

Governing the Ungovernable: A Case Study

Linda Mulcahy, University of LondonGoverning the Ungovernable in the Trial: AnExamination of the Ways in Which CourtArcitecture Renders the Public Docile in theTrial

Karen Bridget Murray, York UniversityNeo-Feudal Relations and the Rise of theSubsistence Classes

George Pavlich, University of AlbertaThe Ungovernable Sovereign

1320 Interrogating Bentham[Room M Senatssaal]

David Lieberman, University of California,Berkeley

Chair/DiscussantMark Canuel, University of Illinois, Chicago

Bentham, Utility, and the Romantic Imagination

Stephen Engelmann, University of Illinois,Chicago

Bentham and Governmentality

Philip Schofield, University College LondonBentham’s Defence of Judicial Torture

1321 Judicial Readings of Race, Ethnicity,and Religion[Room T 013]Jonathan Goldberg-Hiller, University of

HawaiiChair

Lieve Gies, Keele UniversityVeiling in English Schools: DisentanglingChoice, Equality, and Difference

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

19 Wednesday, July 25 12:30 - 14:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Didi Herman, University of Kent“It is difficult to imagine a more ill-starredadoption placement than that of a KuwaitiMuslim’s son with an Orthodox Jewish couple”:Judicial responses to a complicated personalnarrative

Stewart Motha, University of KentVeiled Women and the “Affect” of Religion inDemocracy

Anastasia Vakulenko, University of DundeeIslamic Dress in Human Rights Jurisprudence:Deflating the Cultural Difference

1322 Law and Politics[Room S1.605]

Angelica Cuellar, Universidad NacionalAutonoma de Mexico

ChairKarina M. Ansolabehere, Facultad

Latinoamericana de Ciencias SocialesLaw and Policy: Legal Culture inRepresentatives, Judges, Prosecutors andLawyers

Fernando Castañeda Sabido, CiudadUniversitaria

Democracy, Law, and Social Inclusion inMéxico

Arturo Chavez, Universidad NacionalAutonoma de Mexico

Notes to Understand the Relation between Lawand Social Conflict

Oscar Correas, Universidad NacionalAutonoma de Mexico

The Criminalization of Social Protest in Mexico

and Latin America

Angelica Cuellar, Universidad NacionalAutonoma de Mexico

Tradition of Knowledge and Structures ofInterpretation

Antonio Azuela, Universidad NacionalAutonoma de Mexico

Discussant

1323 Law, Social Movements, and SocialChange

[Room S1.301]

Stuart Wilson, University of theWitwatersrand

Chair/DiscussantTiago De Garcia Nunes, Onati International

Institute for the Sociology of Law andDavid Sánchez Rubio, University of Seville

The National Movement of Housing Vindicationin Brazil (MNLM) and the Struggle for HumanRights

Madalena Duarte, University of CoimbraCan Law be Emancipatory? The Role of Law inthe Social Movement’s Struggles

Idil Elveris, Istanbul Bilgi UniversityChallanges in Establishing a Pro Bono Networkin Turkey

Tim Howard, Northeastern UniversityCause Lawyers and Social Change: FramingFlorida Tobacco Liability Litigation

Myrta Morales-Cruz, University of PuertoRico

Community Lawyering in Puerto Rico:Promoting Empowerment and Self-Help

1325 Mass Media and Public Opinion[Room S1.405]

Barbara Heitzmann, University of FrankfurtChair

William Thomas Haltom, University ofPuget Sound and Michael WilliamMcCann, University of Washington

Gunning for Justice and Pressing for Reform:How U. S. Newspapers Report Disputes overFirearms

Marett Leiboff, Queensland University ofTechnology

Thank God You’re Here: Performativity and theLimits of Copyright Law

Asya Ostroukh, Kuban State UniversityThe Correlation between Law and PublicOpinion in Contemporary Russia

1326 National and International Law andIndigenous Peoples

[Room S1.505]

L. Jane McMillan, St. Francis XavierUniversity

Chair/DiscussantElena Cirkovic, York University

Fragmentation of International Law andIndigenous Peoples’ Claims toSelf-Determination

Gerardo Juan Munarriz, University ofWarwick/University of British Columbia

Indigenous Peoples Struggles and theJanus-Faced Nature of International HumanRights Law

Mark NB Thomas, Queensland University of Technology

“To all mankind addressed”: Death in Custody -Tragedy . . . but is it Beckett or Shakespeare?

Chih-Wei Tsai, University of WashingtonKnowing Democracy: The Embeddedness ofIndigenous Self-Determination

1328 Punishment and Control: TheoreticalPerspectives

[Room S1.406]

Kevin T. Walby, Carleton UniversityChair

Richard Dubé, Université du Québec àMontréal

Cognitive Innovations in the Field of CriminalLaw: Deconstructing Modern Theories ofPunishment and the Idea of Incarceration

20 Wednesday, July 25 12:30 - 14:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Mia Dambach, Sydney UniversityShifting Paradigms towards a Culture of Controlwithin Juvenile Justice in NSW, Australia

Ghassem Ghassemi, Max Planck Institutefor International and Foreign CriminalLaw

Punishment and Society; Interactions ofCriminal Punishment and Society in Iran

Heather Schoenfeld, NorthwesternUniversity

The Delayed Emergence of Penal Modernism inFlorida, 1865 - 1965

Veronique Voruz, University of LeicesterPsychoanalysis and Criminology: Strategies ofResistance

1329 Regulating Political Finance Regimes (I)[Room S1.404]

Assaf Meydani, Academic College ofTel-Aviv Yaffo

ChairMenachem Hofnung, Hebrew University of

JerusalemDo they Matter? Expenses Ceilings in ElectoralCampaigns

Jonathan Mendilow, Rider UniversityPublic Party Funding and Bottom-Top PartyCommunications: Maine, Arizona,and theEuropean Experience

Karl H. Nassmacher, Carl von OssietzkyUniversity

A Model Law for Party Funding?

1330 Roundtable—The Jury and Democracy:The Implications of Jury Service forPolitical and Civic Engagement

[Room L140/142]

Alexis de Toqueville praised jury service for its role

in ed u cat ing cit i zens about self-gov ern ment. Yet

until recently, the value of jury ser vice in pro moting

deliberative de mocracy was no more than an un -

tested the ory. The only claim that supporters of the

jury sys tem could make was that ju rors gen erally

have more fa vorable views of the justice sys tem.

Fortunately, the Jury and De mocracy Pro ject is be -

ginning to shed light on how jury ser vice affects in-

di vid u als’ par tic i pa tion in the po lit i cal and civic life

of their communities. Re search from this project has

found that the act of de liberating as a ju ror resulted

in in creased po lit i cal and civic en gage ment. These

findings raise questions about the societal implica-

tions of jury service in the United States and in other

common law countries. It also raises questions

about the po tential so cietal impact on those coun -

tries that have re cently in troduced jury tri als and

other forms of lay par ticipation in the justice

system.

Valerie Hans, Cornell UniversityChair

Eugene (Perry) Deess, New Jersey Instituteof Technology

Participant

Edmundo D. Hendler, Federal Judiciary ofBuenos Aires

ParticipantSangjoon Kim, Supreme Court of South

KoreaParticipant

Stephen C. Thaman, Saint Louis UniversityParticipant

1331 Dispute Resolution in Japan: AComparative Perspective on SelectiveAdaptation

[Room S1.201]

Masao Nakamura, University of BritishColumbia

ChairMasao Nakamura, University of British

ColumbiaJapanese Corporate Governance Practices in thePost-Bubble Era: Implications

Mayumi Saegusa, Waseda University andLesley Jacobs, York University

Tobacco Control and Health Policies in Japan

Richard William Schwindt, Simon FraserUniversity and Devin McDaniels,University of British Columbia

Competition Policy, Capacity Building, andSelective Adaptation: Lessons from the JapaneseExperience

Yoshitakda Wada, Waseda UniversitySelective Adaptation of New ADR Model inJapan

Ilan Vertinsky, University of BritishColumbia

Discussant

1332 Service Panel—How to Thrive as aJunior Faculty Member

[Room S1.205]

This invaluable session will bring to gether a host of

faculty at var ious stages in their ac ademic ca reers to

share their in sights and tips concerning the world of

the newly hired.

Mario Barnes, University of MiamiChair

Vanessa Barker, Florida StateUniversity/Princeton University

ParticipantTom Ginsburg, University of Illinois

ParticipantAnn Lucas, San Jose State University

Participant

1333 The Future of Legal Pluralism[Room L 139a]

Paul Schiff Berman, University ofConnecticut

Chair

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

21 Wednesday, July 25 12:30 - 14:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Elena Baylis, University of PittsburghParallel Courts

Paul Schiff Berman, University ofConnecticut

A Pluralist Approach to International Law

Janet Koven Levit, University of TulsaBottom-Up Transnational Lawmaking: The Caseof International Trade Finance

Colin B. Picker, University of Missouri,Kansas City

International Law as Mixed Jurisdiction?

1335 The Legal Regulation of Art andFashion

[Room S1.403]

Mark James, Salford Law SchoolChair/Discussant

Vikki Bell, University of London, and MarioDiPaolantonio, York Universit

Contemporary Art and Justice Processes inArgentina

Shubha Ghosh, Southern MethodistUniversity

Competitive Norms in Intellectual Property

Agnieszka A. Machnicka, EuropeanUniversity Institute

Legal Protection for Fashion Designs in theEuropean Union and the United States

Shin-yi Peng, National Tsing Hua UniversityCultural Autonomy and Trade Liberalization

1337 Tragedy as Law, Law as Tragedy[Room L 326]

Jennifer L. Culbert, Johns HopkinsUniversity

ChairJennifer L. Culbert, Johns Hopkins

UniversityTragedy and the World: The Banality of Evil and the Laws of Men

Susan Sage Heinzelman, University of Texas,Austin

“King Lear and the ‘Aweful’ Majesty of theLaw”

Katrin Pahl, Johns Hopkins UniversityQueer Law and Its Tragedy: Penthesilea

Christoph Menke, UniversitätPotsdam/Philosophie

Discussant

1338 War, Public Violence against Women,and What Can Be Done About It

[Room S1.308]

Margaret Denike, Carleton UniversityChair/Discussant

Elisabetta Bertolino, University of LondonBeyond the Gender Divide in the Human Rightsand Violence Discourse

Katharina Braig, Humboldt UniversityBerlin

Compensation for Victims of Sexual ViolenceDuring Armed Conflicts

AnnJanette Rosga, University of Colorado,Boulder

Peacekeeping and the Gender of Security

1339 Feminism, Politics and Policy(Sponsored by WG Gender and Law)

[Room L 229]

Rosemary Auchmuty, University ofWestminster

ChairKevat Nousiainen, University of Helsinki

Combining Disciplinary Knowledge: Gender andPower in Law and Politics

Anicee M. Van Engeland, Institut d’EtudesPolitiques

Gender and New Governance: Iranian Womenand Legal Pluralism

Karin Van Marle, University of PretoriaThe Sex of Knowledge

Claire Young, University of BritishColumbia

What Feminism Brings to Tax ExpenditureAnalysis: Tax Subsidies for Retirement Savings

Maria Drakopoulou, University of KentDiscussant

14:15 – 14:30

Break

14:30 - 16:15

1401 Roundtable—Cause Lawyering andClinical Legal Scholarship: An OpenExchange (Sponsored by CRN03 CauseLawyering and CRN19 Teaching in Lawand Society)

[Room L E42]

Cause law yer ing and clin i cal le gal schol ar ship have

much to share with the other, but there has been lit -

tle con tact as each has de veloped and matured. Most

clinical teach ers are cause law yers in prac tice, if not

in name, as their moral and political commitments

infuse their dock ets and syllabi. Much cause law-

yer ing schol ar ship ex am ines the struc ture of law-

yer-cli ent re la tion ships and the trans mis sion of

moral and po lit i cal com mit ments to new gen er a -

tions of lawyers and to a broader pub lic. As teachers

at the in tersection of these movements in le gal

scholarship, participants in this roundtable hope to

fos ter di a logue be tween cause law yer ing and clin i -

cal legal scholars in or der to en rich our scholarship

and encourage more reflective teaching

Corey S. Shdaimah, University of MarylandChair

22 Wednesday, July 25 14:30 - 16:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Scott Cummings, University of California,Los Angeles

ParticipantSteve Meili, University of Wisconsin

Participant

1402 Evasion of Labour Law by Employersand the Law’s Response: Comparativeand Historical Perspectives (Sponsoredby CRN08 Labor Rights)

[Room L140/142]

Guy Davidov, University of HaifaChair

Harry Arthurs, York UniversityThe Art of the Possible: Evasion, Enforcement,and Compliance in the Field of Labour Standards

Kenneth M. Casebeer, University of MiamiOf Service Workers, Joint Employers, LegalConsciousness, and the University of Miami

Guy Davidov, University of HaifaPublic-Sector Subcontracting: HarshConsequences for Workers and Some PossibleSolutions

Simon Deakin, University of CambridgeRedefining the Employment Relationship toCounter Employer “Evasion”: The UKExperience in Comparative Perspective

Achim Seifert, University of FrankfurtEmployer Evasion Strategies vis-à-visCollective Bargaining in Germany

Julia Lopez, Pompeu FabreuDiscussant

1403 Comparative Constitutional Borrowingamong the Juristocracy (Sponsored byCRN13 African Law and Society)

[Room S1.503]

Penelope Andrews, City University of NewYork

Chair/DiscussantMark Kende, Drake University

The Constitutionality of Laws againstProstitution: A Comparative Perspective

Rainer Nickel, University of FrankfurtComparative Constitutional Borrowing amongthe Juristocracy: Towards a Common Core ofEuropean and Global Constitutional Law?

Brian Ray, Cleveland State UniversityStriking A Balance: The South AfricanConstitutional Court’s Socioeconomic RightsJurisprudence

1404 Struggles for Political Freedom: Africa(Sponsored by WG Legal Profession andCRN20 The Legal Complex andStruggles for Political Liberalism)

[Room S1.601]

Lucien Karpik, Ecoles des Mines, ParisChair

Richard Abel, University of California, LosAngeles

Lawyers and the Legal Complex in the StruggleAgainst Apartheid, 1980-1994

Jeremy Gould, University of HelsinkiThe Limits of Liberalism: Legal Activism andStruggles for Democracy in Zambia

Terence Halliday, American Bar FoundationThe Fall of a “Big Man” Regime: The LawSociety of Kenya in the Transition fromAuthoritarian Politics

1405 State Building (Sponsored by CRN24Rule of Law, State Building, andTransition)

[Room M Senatssaal]

Christian Marc Boulanger,Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin

Chair/DiscussantPer Bergling, Umea University

Rule of Law in Development and State Building: Conflicting Visions and Approaches

Cheng-Yi Huang, University of ChicagoThe Crisis of Rechtsstaat in Taiwan:Governance, Democratic Legitimacy, andCitizen Participation in AdministrativeProcedure

Georg H. Schlueter, Thammasat University(Bangkok)

Combating Corruption in Thailand

Mark F. Massoud, University of California,Berkeley

Law in a Failed State: Grassroots Legal Groupsand Development in Sudan

Richard Lennart Otto Sannerholm, ÖrebroUniversity

Beyond Criminal Justice: New Approaches toRule of Law Promotion in Post-ConflictSocieties

David Kennedy, Harvard UniversityDiscussant

1406 Empirical Methods Showcase II (Qualitative): Using Interviews to StudyRace (Sponsored by CRN28 Realist andEmpirical Legal Methods)

[Room S1.101]

Patricia Ewick, Clark UniversityChair/Discussant

Jeannine Bell, Indiana UniversityGaining Access and Getting the Story Right:Methodological Issues in Qualitative Researchon Race and Law

Thomas W. Mitchell, University ofWisconsin

Using Qualitative Methods to Study Law andRace

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

23 Wednesday, July 25 14:30 - 16:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Laura Beth Nielsen, American BarFoundation/Northwestern University

Differing Perspectives on EmploymentDiscrimination: Results from Two EmpiricalStudies

David Wilkins, Harvard UniversityInterviewing Black Lawyers: Developing NewLegal Realist Methods

1407 Women Judges/FeministJudges—Different Voices? (Sponsoredby IRC Gender and Judging)

[Room L 144]

Gisela Shaw, University of the West ofEngland

ChairMarie-Claire Belleau, Université Laval and

Rebecca Johnson, University of VictoriaAs a Matter of Fact...: Recounting “the Facts” inJudicial Dissent

Rosemary Hunter, University of KentWhat (or Who) is a Feminist Judge?

Revital Ludewig, University of St. GallenGender Bias in the Juridical Decision MakingProcess: Real-Life Moral Dilemmas of Femaleand Male Judges

Ulrike Schultz, FernUniversität HagenDo Women Judge Better?

Kirsten Scheiwe, Universität HildesheimDiscussant

1409 Advances in Behavioral Law andEconomics

[Room M 1070]

Richard H. McAdams, University ofIllinois//University of Chicago

Chair/DiscussantMichael Kosfeld, University of Zurich and

Armin Falk, IZA & University of BonnThe Hidden Costs of Control

Dorothea Kuebler, Technical UniversityBerlin and Dirk Engelmann, RoyalHolloway, London,

Crowding Out Fair Behavior: A Study onMinimum Wages

Thomas S. Ulen, University of Illinois,Champaign

Law and the Pursuit of Happiness

Stephan W Tontrup, Max Planck Instituteand Andreas Glöckner, Max PlanckInsitute for Research on Collective Goods

Anticommens and the Endowment Effect

1410 Alternative Governance inCross-Sectoral and ComparativePerspective

[Room M 1072]

Morag A. McDermont, University of BristolChair/Discussant

Cristie L. Ford, University of BritishColumbia

Taking Context Seriously: Principles BasedSecurities Regulation as New GovernanceRegime

John Bellett Howe, University of MelbourneUnpicking “Light Touch” Labour Regulation inthe Era of Regulatory Capitalism

Vanessa Iafolla, University of TorontoUnderstanding Legal and InstitutionalResponsibilities: Money Laundering andTerrorism Financing Detection in a CanadianFinancial Institution

Alice Louise Klettner, University ofTechnology, Sydney

Areas for Future Reform of CorporateGovernance in Australia: Lessons from theJames Hardie Saga

1411 Unpacking Law Firm Culture[Room S1.204]

Lynn Mather, State University of New Yorkat Buffalo

Chair/DiscussantChristopher Jon Arup, Monash University

Disjuncture in the Legal Profession: PublicRegulation and Firm Policies

Elizabeth Chambliss, New York Law SchoolMeasuring Law Firm Culture

Joyce Sterling, University of Denver, BryantGarth, Southwestern Law School, andRonit Dinovitzer, University of Toronto

A Contemporary Picture of the Practice of Law:Views from the Inside

1412 Author Meets Reader—Split Decisions: How and Why to Take a Break FromFeminism, by Janet Halley

[Room M 3086]

Bridget J. Crawford, Pace UniversityChair

Janet Halley, Harvard UniversityAuthor

Ann Bartow, University of South Carolina,Adrienne Davis, University of NorthCarolina, Daria Roithmayr, University ofSouthern California, and DarrenRosenblum, Pace University

Readers

1413 Colonial and Postcolonial Violence[Room S1.307]

Elizabeth Kolsky, Villanova UniversityChair/Discussant

Caroline A Forell, University of OregonRebels’ Choices: Jane New and Ellen Murphy’sLives as Convicts, Thieves, Domestics, andWives in Colonial Australia

24 Wednesday, July 25 14:30 - 16:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Jinee Lokaneeta, Drew UniversityA Postcolonial Notion of Torture: Race,Gender, and Power in Abu Ghraib andMadras Commission Report

Eugene McNamee, University of UlsterIn the Midst of Death, We Are in Life:Bio-Politics and Beginning Again in Rwanda

1414 Constructing Identities: ImmigrationLaw, Transnational Crime, andAnti-Terrorism

[Room T 013]

Doris Marie Provine, Arizona StateUniversity

Chair/DiscussantAnke Allspach, York University

Suitable “Terrorists”: Canada’s NewImmigration and Refugee Protection Act

Anthony T. Amatrudo, University ofSunderland, and Paul T. Dougan,University of Sunderland

Groups or Associations? Transnational Crimeand Constructing Criminal Identities

Patrisia Macias, University of California,Berkeley

Policing Citizenship: Regulating Immigrantsthrough Rights and Crime

1415 Defining the Role of Lawyers toward theState

[Room T 113]

Laura J. Hatcher, Southern IllinoisUniversity

ChairPatricia Goedde, University of Washington

Public Interest Law Development in SouthKorea: Toward a New Legal Orthodoxy?

John D. Haskell, SOAS1, 2, 3 ... No More Legal Orders

Laura J. Hatcher, Southern IllinoisUniversity

Epistemic Communities and the Production ofLegal Ideology: The Federalist Society

Jothie Rajah, University of MelbourneCitizen Lawyer: Lawyers, Civil Society, and theRule of Law in Singapore

Rogelio Perez Perdomo, NationalMetropolitan University

Discussant

1416 Democratic Participation[Room S2.102]

Christoph Hoennige, University of PotsdamChair/Discussant

Jocelyn Benson, Wayne State UniversitySu Voto Es Su Voz: A Theoretical and PracticalModel for Accommodating Linguistic Minoritiesin Jeffersonian Democracies

Jean De Munck, Catholic University ofLouvain

Toward a Capability Approach of LegalEffectiveness: The Case of Social Rights inEuropean Union

Thorsten Thiel, Humboldt UniversityTheoretical Possibilities for PoliticalParticipation in the Process of EuropeanIntegration

Barbara Wejnert, University at BuffaloGlobalization, Democracy, and Gender Equality

1417 Emerging Questions in Technology andLaw

[Room M 3059]

Anna W. Shavers, University of NebraskaChair/Discussant

Susanne Beck, London School of EconomicsCriminal Law in Biotechnology

Keith Guzik, Bloomfield CollegeMining Menace: Exploring the Use of DataMining in the United States’ War on Terrorism

Smita Kheria, Queens University BelfastAuthorship and the Debate on Moral Rights inthe Digital Environment

Michael Nagenborg, University ofKarlsruhe, and Karsten Weber, Universityof Opole/ EUV Frankfurt

Future Technologies, Law, and Ethics

Marco Velicogna, Utrecht University /IRSIG-CNR

The Role of ICT in the Criminal Justice Chain:Four National Cases from the European Union

1418 Global Lawmaking: Process,Legitimacy, Limits

[Room L E44/46]

Stepan Wood, York UniversityChair

Susan Block-Lieb, Fordham University andTerence Halliday, American BarFoundation

Legitimacy and Global Lawmaking

Kota Fukui, Osaka UniversityContesting Planetary Systems of Justice: ToConsider the Allocation of Formal and InformalJustice at the Level of Transnational Legal Order

Cassandra A. Kirewskie, York UniversityThe Limits of International Law

Tomohiko Kobayashi, Kyoto UniversityDynamic Process of Transnational DisputeSettlement as an Autopoietic System? CaseStudies of Disputes involving WTO, NAFTA,and Domestic Laws

Swagata Naik, NALSAR University of Lawand Tejasvi Purusharth, Nalsar Universityof Law

Common Law: The New(?) World Order

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

25 Wednesday, July 25 14:30 - 16:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

1419 Institutionalizing a Potential PalestinianState

[Room S1.308]

Kim Van der Borght, University of HullChair

Reem Al Botmeh, Birzeit University andMudar Kassis, Birzeit University

The Role of the Palestinian Judiciary

Mahmoud Fayyad, Birzeit UniversityThe Role of the Current Government System inState-Building in Palestine

Asem Khalil, Birzeit UniversityConstitution-Making and State-Building: TheCase of Palestine

John Strawson, University of East LondonSocio-Legal Studies in Times of ColonialOccupation: Law and Society in Palestine

Kim Van der Borght, University of HullThe Role of Legal Education and Research inConstructing a Palestinian Legal Identity

1420 International Criminal Law in theTwenty-First Century: New Directionsand Practical Challenges

[Room S1.605]

Jenia Iontcheva Turner, Southern Methodist University

ChairSara Kendall, University of California,

BerkeleySpeaking Law “Globally”: The Jurisdiction ofInternational Justice in Sierra Leone

Jide O. Nzelibe, Northwestern Universityand Julian Ku, Hofstra University

Do International Criminal Tribunals Deter orExacerbate Humanitarian Atrocities?

Sonja Starr, Harvard UniversityExtraordinary Crimes at Ordinary Times:International Justice Beyond Crisis Situations

Jenia Iontcheva Turner, Southern Methodist University

Between Politics and Law: Defense CounselViews on International Criminal Trials

Laura A. Dickinson, University ofConnecticut

Discussant

1421 Judicial Independence: Discussions andPerspectives

[Room L 326]

Carlo Guarnieri, University of BolognaChair/Discussant

Jorge Almeida, University of Coimbra andJoão Paulo Dias, Centre for Social Studies /University of Coimbra

The Evolution of the Organization of theJudiciary and Its Independence in Portugal

Alain Bancaud, CNRSGlobalisation and Concurrence betweenJudiaciary Patterns

Élida de Oliveira Lauris Dos Santos,University of Coimbra

Judicial Independence in the Brazilian JudicialReform

Peter M. Koelling, Colorado JudicialDepartment

A Theory of Judicial Independence

Mark Carlton Miller, Clark UniversityThreats to Judicial Independence in the U.S.:Impeachment, Court-Stripping, and InspectorGeneral for the Courts

1422 Law, Legal Networks, andBureaucracies

[Room S1.608]

Charles Epp, University of KansasChair

Tom Burke, Wellesley College and JebBarnes, University of Southern California

How Organizations Translate Rights IntoPractices

Charles Epp, University of KansasThe Police Misconduct Litigation Network in the U.S. and Its Impact on Policing

Simon Halliday, University of Strathclydeand Colin Scott, University College Dublin

Liability as Regulation

Maurice Sunkin, University of Essex andKerman Calvo, University of Essex

Researching the Impact of Judicial Review onthe Quality of Local Authority Services inEngland and Wales

Steven Teles, Yale UniversitySocial Movement Insurgency in the FederalBureaucracy: The Case of the Reagan JusticeDepartment

1423 Law, Society, and Taxation I: CompetingConcepts of Equity

[Room S1.205]

Richard Schmalbeck, Duke UniversityChair/Discussant

Anthony C. Infanti, University of PittsburghTax Equity

J. Clifton Fleming, Jr., Brigham YoungUniversity and Robert J. Peroni,University of Texas

An Ability-to-Pay-Based Defense of TaxExpenditure Analysis

Joseph Dodge, Florida State UniversityThe Foundation and Application of theAbility-to-Pay Principle

Brian D Galle, Florida State UniversityFairness and Federalism in Taxation

26 Wednesday, July 25 14:30 - 16:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

1424 Legal Professional Values and IdentitiesI (Sponsored by WG Legal Profession)

[Room S1.301]

Hilary Sommerlad, Leeds MetropolitanUniversity

Chair/DiscussantAnita Bocker, Radboud University Nijmegen

and Leny De Groot-Van Leeuwen,Radboud University Nijmegen

Socialization Problems for Newcomers Enteringthe Judiciary

Ernestine Henriëtte Köhne-Hoegen, UtrechtUniversity

Dutch Judicial Training as a SocializationProcess

Hilary Sommerlad, Leeds MetropolitanUniversity

The Diversity Game: New Hierarchies andShifting Mechanisms of Exclusion and Inclusion

1425 Legal Recognition of Same-SexRelationships

[Room T 306]

Kathleen Hull, University of MinnesotaChair/Discussant

Ellen Ann Andersen, IUPUIThe Gay Divorcée: Same-Sex Marriage and theMeaning of Divorce

Scott Barclay, University at Albany, SUNYand Daniel Santore, University at Albany,SUNY

The Strange Absence of Gays in the Rhetoric ofthe Anti-Same Sex

Rosie Harding, Keele UniversityRecognition, Regulation, and Resistance:Lesbians’ and Gay Men’s Attitutdes to theIntroduction of Civil Partnership

Kelly Kollman, University of GlasgowEuropean Institutions, Transnational Networks,and National Same-Sex Unions Legislation:When Soft Law Hits Harder

Annette Nierobisz, Canadian Human RightsCommission, Mark Searl, CanadianHuman Rights Commission and CharlesTheroux, Canadian Human RightsCommission

Gaining Ground: The Role of the CanadianHuman Rights Commission in Advancing SexualOrientation Equality Rights in Canada

1426 Money Matters: Exploring Some RecentStrategies for Achieving “Fair”Post-Separation Financial Outcomes

[Room S1.405]

Ira M. Ellman, Arizona State UniversityChair

Marsha Garrison, Brooklyn Law SchoolWhat Obligations Should Cohabitation Produce?

Belinda Louise Fehlberg, University ofMelbourne and Mavis Maclean, OxfordUniversity

The Politics of Competing Interests: RecentChild Support Changes in England and Australia

Carol Rogerson, University of TorontoInformal Law Reform: Canada’s Experimentwith Spousal Support Advisory Guidelines

Grania R. Sheehan, Griffith University,John Dewar, Griffith University and AprilPetra Chrzanowski, Griffith University

Pension Splitting on Divorce in Australia: AnEvaluation of Post-Reform Legal Practice andSettlement Outcomes

Lisa Young, Murdoch UniversitySex, Lies, and Money: Australian Developmentsin the Recovery of Damages for Paternity Fraud

1427 Public Authority Liability: DevelopingIssues in Tort Law

[Room L 139a]

Margaret Isabel Hall, University of BritishColumbia

ChairHelge Dedek, McGill University

The Princeps in Court: Public Authority CivilLiability and Recent Developments in EuropeanLaw

Margaret Isabel Hall, University of BritishColumbia

Normalised Harms: Systemic Negligence andLimitations

Claire McIvor, University of BirminghamThe Misapplication of the Doctrine of VicariousLiability to Public Authority Defendants

Desmond Ryan, Trinity College DublinThe Influence of Human Rights Law on theTortious Liability of Public Authorities

Dan Squires, Matrix Chambers, LondonCompensation Culture and the ImpossibleDistinction between State Acts and Omissions

1428 Punishment, Regulation, and Risk[Room S1.504]

Dawn Moore, Carleton UniversityChair

Axel Dessecker, KriminologischeZentralstelle

Continued Detention of “Dangerous Offenders”:Local or Global?

Marie-Sophie Devresse, Université desSciences et Technologies de Lille 1

Individual, Technique, and Criminal JusticeSystem: Contemporary Transformations ofRegulation and Penal Strategies

Lisa M. Freeman, University of TorontoTerritoriality as Treatment: Spacial and RacialImplications of Drug Treatment Courts inToronto and Vancouver

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

27 Wednesday, July 25 14:30 - 16:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Dawn Moore, Carleton UniversityManaging Herself: Women, Risk, and DrugTreatment Court

1429 Roundtable—Comparative Perspectiveson Race, Slavery, and Social Exclusion:Thoughts on the 200th Anniversary ofthe End of the Slave Trade

[Room T 406]

This roundtable will con sist of legal scholars, le gal

his to ri ans and so cial sci en tists who will ex am ine the

legacy of slav ery and its on going impact on issues

of ra cial hi er ar chy and sub or di na tion. The dis cus -

sion will in clude com par a tive per spec tives on le gal

remedies for as the modern world comes to grips

with this history and its lin gering leg acy.

Paul Finkelman, Albany Law SchoolChair

Cecil Hunt, John Marshall Law SchoolParticipant

Charles R. Venator Santiago, Ithaca CollegeParticipant

Donna Young, Albany Law SchoolParticipant

1430 Roundtable—The Narratives ofTransitional Justice: Between thePersonal and the Political

[Room S1.501]

This roundtable con siders the role of narrative in

transitional jus tice. The speak ers will ad dress the

lim i ta tions of the le gal is tic and ther a peu tic nar ra -

tives that truth commissions have employed to

frame of fi cial mem o ries of atroc ity; the ex is tence of

a dis tinc tive lib eral nar ra tive of tran si tion which fol-

lows a par ticular genre; and the gendered na ture of

‘justice’ in the tran sitional context. Speak ers will

draw upon the narratives of tran sitional jus tice in

law, de lib er a tions of truth com mis sions, lit er a ture

and film, and consider the problems and ques tions

that come up within the tran sitional jus tice pro ject

which aims to in tegrate personal no tions of trauma,

ther apy and for give ness with le gal-po lit i cal in sti tu -

tions. Among the issues that will be ex plored: (1)

How can we think about the po tential role of truth

com mis sions in ves ti ga tions by con sid er ing how the

doc u men ta tion and rec ol lec tion of past in jus tice,

can ex pose the lim i ta tions of in her ited nar ra tives of

jus tice, rec on cil i a tion and prog ress; (2) What can

we learn from ac counts that, for one reason or an -

other, sub vert the proposed transitional structure,

such as stories of trauma, personal and col lective;

(3) in which manner are gender narratives of ten

missing from or sub stantially compromised in the

transitional justice fora, and what are the reasons for

and forms of these silences, exclusions and

compromised presences.

Kendall Thomas, Columbia UniversityChair

Aeyal Gross, Tel-Aviv UniversityParticipant

Fionnuala Ni Aolain, University ofMinnesota

ParticipantRuti G. Teitel, New York Law School

Participant

1431 Service Panel—How to Get a Job[Room S1.406]

Panel par ticipants at different stages of their ac a-

demic ca reers (ju nior and se nior faculty) will share

their ex periences, tips, & in sights of how to best ne -

go ti ate the ac a demic job mar ket.

Lawrence B. Solum, University of IllinoisChair

Dan Markel, Florida State UniversityParticipant

Amy Steigerwalt, Georgia State UniversityParticipant

1432 Socio-Legal Dimension of EasternEurope Unification with EuropeanUnion

[Room L 229]

Gracyna B. Skapska, Jagiellonian UniversityChair

Katalin Fuzer, University of Pécs andAndrzej Wojciech Bukowski, JagiellonianUniversity

Complex Urban Rehabilitation Programs in theFormation of a European Urban Policy: TheCase of CASE

Paulina Anna Polak, Jagiellonian University,Krakow and Kaja Gadowska, JagiellonianUniversity, Krakow

Barriers and Obstacles in the Process ofAwarding and Implementation of EU Funds inPoland

Jiri Priban, Cardiff UniversityCritical Theory and European Legality

1433 The Future of American Disability Law[Room S1.403]

Samuel Bagenstos, Washington UniversityThe Limits of the Civil Rights Model

Kaaryn Gustafson, University ofConnecticut

Parallel Disciplines: Critical Race Theory,Disability Studies, and the Disciplinary Gapbetween Them

Ani B. Satz, Emory UniversityThe Real Future of Disability Law

Anna Kirkland, University of MichiganDiscussant

28 Wednesday, July 25 14:30 - 16:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

1434 The Headscarf and Other ReligousSymbols: How Should States TreatThose Signs in the Public Sphere?

[Room T 008]

Kirsten Wiese, Humboldt UniversitätChair

Cengiz Barskanmaz, Humboldt University,Berlin

The Headscarf in the Postcolonial LegalCondition

Sabine Berghahn, Freie Universität Berlin,and Petra Rostock, Freie UniversitätBerlin

Conflicting Neutrality? Regulations Concerningthe Muslim Headscarf in German Federal Statesand Other European Countries

Felix Ekardt, University of BremenThe Headscarf, the Right, and the Good

Stephanie Aisha Fehr, University ofManchester

Religious Symbols in the UK: The LegalPerspective

Kirsten Wiese, Humboldt UniversitätContradicting Rights: Religious Freedom andGender Equality?

Elisabeth Holzleithner, University of ViennaDiscussant

1435 The Legitimacy of “War on Terror”[Room S1.401]

Laura Ford, Cornell UniversityChair

Mark J. Osiel, University of IowaDo the Geneva Conventions Really Matter?Detainee Mistreatment, Future Wars, and theProfession of Arms

Roel Pieterman, Erasmus UniversityRotterdam

Ideology and Precaution Against Terrorism andTechnology

Teresa Degenhardt, Ulster UniversityThe War on Terror and Punishment:Criminology Meets International Relations

Peter Halewood, Albany Law SchoolTorture, Terror, and the Body in Law

Anna Umberg, University of HamburgDiscussant

1436 The Right for Safe Environment[Room S1.404]

Michal Tamir, Sha’arei Mishpat College ofLaw

ChairSanghamitra Padhy, University of Southern

CaliforniaGreening Rights: A Socio Legal Analysis ofEnvironmental Rights in India

David Chaparro, IISJ OñatiONGs & Global Warming, reshaping legalconciuosness: The case of the Basque Country

Jessie Miranda Hohmann, University ofCambridge

The Right to Housing and Cultural Survival:What Can a Human Rights Approach to ClimateChange in the Arctic Offer?

Julien Pieret, Université Libre de BruxellesIs There Such a Right As a Right to Safety?

Nina Pippart, Otto-von-Guericke UniversitätMagdeburg

Environment(al) Security

1437 Towards Typology of Legal Pluralism[Room M 3092]

Keebet von Benda-Beckmann, Max PlanckInstitute for Social Anthropology

Chair/DiscussantSara A. Araujo, University of Coimbra

Legal Pluralism and Acess to Justice inMozambique

Wolfgang Gabbert, Leibniz UniversitätHannover

Recent Trends in Latin American LegalPluralism

Maria-Isabel Garrido Gomez, University ofAlcalá

Legal Systems in the Universe of Law

Yuksel Sezgin, University of WashingtonBuilding a Typological Theory of LegalPluralism through Analyses of Israeli, Egyptian,and Indian Personal Status Regimes

Fauzia Shariff, School of Oriental andAfrican Studies

Power Relations and Legal Pluralism: AnExamination of Resistance to Injustices Amongst the Santal Adivasi of India and Bangladesh

1438 Weber’s Legitimacy (II): The Differencebetween an Order and a LegitimateOrder

[Room S1.201]

Liesbeth Huppes-Cluysenaer, University ofAmsterdam

ChairOliver W. Lembcke, Friedrich Schiller

University, JenaFrom Belief to Obedience: Max Weber onLegitimacy and Legality

Devyani Prabhat, New York UniversityThe USA Patriot Act: Legitimacy, Authority,Domination, and Resistance—A ThirdDimensional Power Analysis

Robert Jan Sjoert Schwitters, University ofAmsterdam

Weber, Rationality, and Tort-Law

Niels F. van Manen, University ofAmsterdam

Legitimacy and Types of Legality

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

29 Wednesday, July 25 14:30 - 16:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

1439 Contemporary Sporting Themes andIssues (Sponsored by WG Law andPopular Culture)

[Room S1.405]

Peter W. Robson, University of StrathclydeChair

Jack Anderson, Queen’s University BelfastThe Business of Hurting People: A Socio-LegalAnaylsis of Professional Boxing

Andrew Blake, University of East LondonMan Bites Dog, Dog Bites Back: DangerousDogs and Dangerous Humans

Mark James, Salford Law SchoolTouting for Business: Controlling the Resale ofSports Tickets

Guy Osborn, University of Westminster andSteve Greenfield, University ofWestminster

Doing It for the Kids: The Regulation of ChildProtection in Sports

16:15 – 16:30

Cof fee Break

16:30 - 18:15

1501 Cause Lawyering at the RadicalMoment: 1968 Around the Globe(Sponsored by CRN03 CauseLawyering)

[Room S1.601]

Violaine Roussel, CNRS/Université ParisVIII

Chair/DiscussantThomas M. Hilbink, University of

Massachusetts, AmherstRadical Lawyering and the Birth of CriticalLegal Studies

Liora Israël, EHESS, ParisLeftist Social Movements and the Law after May 68 in France

Maria Malatesta, University of BolognaRadical Lawyers in Italy after 1968

1502 Alternative Regulation in Health Care I:EU and US Perspectives (Sponsored byCRN05 Regulatory Governance)

[Room S1.406]

Tamara Hervey, University of SheffieldChair/Discussant

Bärbel R Dorbeck-Jung, University ofTwente and Mirjan Oude Vrielink-VanHeffen, Tilburg University

What Can New Governance Learn fromTransparency Provisions in EU GovernanceRelated to Pharmaceuticals?

Scott L Greer, University of MichiganComing after the Court: Hard Law, Soft Law,and the Development of EU Health Governance

Nan D. Hunter, Brooklyn Law SchoolManaged Care As Governance

Louise Trubek, University of WisconsinRegulation through Information: The Fightagainst Cancer in the EU and US

Sidney Watson, Saint Louis UniversityGrafting Communitarian Values Onto theIndividual Autonomy Tree: A Discussion of theMassachusetts Health Reform Legislation

1503 Documentary Film: “Morristown,Tennessee: Looking at Globalizationfrom Below" (Sponsored by CRN08Labor Rights)

[Room S1.301]

This session will center on the screening of a new

hour-long film made by in dependent documentarist

Anne Lewis (Assoc Dir., Harlan County, USA; Dir.,

Fast Food Women). The film is about glob alization,

viewed through the lens of a mountain community

north of Knox ville, Ten nes see. Dy nam ics ex am ined

include capital flight and plant closings; low-road

eco nomic de vel op ment strat e gies pur sued by lo cal

(now globally-linked) elites in both Tennessee and

Mexico; migration from Mex ico into “new des tina-

tions” in the Southeastern U.S.; lo cal responses to

the arrival of La tino newcomers in such des tina-

tions; la bor or ga niz ing among im mi grants work ing

in a lo cal poultry plant; and ques tions about how

law re lates to all of the above. The film in cludes

footage from Ten nessee and Mex ico (both bor der

maquiladora zones and interior migrant-sending

communities), interviews with many kinds of work -

ers and their families, and others with rep resenta-

tives of in dustry and the state. A law professor who

has served as a close ad viser and col laborator on this

film since its in ception over eight years ago will

provide background about the film and its pro duc-

tion. Commentators have been invited to comment

on the film’s pol itics and technique and on its po ten-

tial strengths and weaknesses as an ed ucational tool

aimed at native-born working people in the U.S.

Frances Ansley, University of TennesseeChair

Muneer Ahmad, American UniversityWashington

ParticipantMyrta Morales-Cruz, University of Puerto

RicoParticipant

Frank Munger, New York Law SchoolParticipant

30 Wednesday, July 25 16:30 - 18:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

1504 Author Meets Reader —CompetingEqualities: Law and the BackwardClasses in India, by Marc Galanter(Sponsored by CRN22 South Asia)

[Room S1.101]

Jayanth Krishnan, William Mitchell Collegeof Law

ChairMarc Galanter, University of Wisconsin/

London School of EconomicsAuthor

Frank de Zwart, University of Leiden,Alexander Fischer, University of Londonand Oliver David Mendelsohn, La TrobeUniversity

Readers

1505 Self-Determination (Sponsored byCRN25 Collective Human Rights)

[Room S1.605]

Miodrag Jovanovic, University of BelgradeChair

Feargal E. MacIonnrachtaigh, QueensUniversity, Belfast

Language and Colonialism in Ireland:Power, Resistance, and Regeneration

Amy Maguire, University of NewcastleSelf-Determination in the Twenty-First Century:Lessons from Ireland and Indigenous Australia

Kristina Roepstorff, Freie Universität BerlinReconciling the Collective Right ofSelf-Determination with the Liberal Concept ofHuman Rights

1506 The Experience of Incarceration inNorth America, the U.K., and Germany(Sponsored by CRN27 Prisons andPrisoners)

[Room M 1072]

Amy E. Lerman, University of California,Berkeley

ChairDaniela Hosser, University of Hannover

Guilt and Shame as Predictors of Recidivism ofYoung Offenders

Jula Hughes, University of New BrunswickSentencing Reform in Canada: The Impact onAboriginal Prisoners

Amy E. Lerman, University of California,Berkeley

How Prisons Shape Politics: Two NaturalExperiments on Prison Effects

Karin D. Martin, University of California,Berkeley

A Model State Policy for the Treatment of theWrongfully Convicted

Paul Mason, Cardiff UniversityHow the Press Support Mass Incarceration inBritain

Jill McCorkel, Villanova UniversityDiscussant

1507 Law, Social Movements, andTransnational Mobilization in the Global South (Sponsored by IRC Law andCounter-Hegemonic Globalization

[Room M 3059]

Prabha Kotiswaran, London UniversityDangerous Sex, Invisible Labor: Mobilizing“Entertainment Workers” In India

Cesar Rodriguez-Garavito, U of the Andes/U of Wisconsin, Madison

Contesting the Global Governance of Labor:Law and the Transnational Labor Movement inthe Americas (1990-2005)

Boaventura de Sousa Santos, University ofCoimbra

The Third Globalization: The Rise of PoliticalTheology and Its Impact on Democracy and theRule of Law

José O. Serra van-Dúnem, Angolan Institutefor Social and Economic Research

Courts, Poverty, and Law in Africa: The Case ofAngola

Tatiana Andrea Alfonso Sierra, Universidadde los Andes

Development in Question: The StruggleOver Land, Development, and IndigenousRights in Colombia

1508 Roundtable—East Asian LegalProfessionalism (Sponsored by IRCLegal Professionalism in East AsianContext)

[Room L 144]

This Roundtable Ses sion is organized by the IRC

Le gal Pro fes sion al ism in East Asian Con text, which

is a pro ject or ganized by the In ternational Re search

Network on East Asian Le gal Pro fession. East

Asian so ci et ies are un de ni ably dif fer ent from the

so ci et ies in the West ern ad vanced econ o mies. A

socio-legal study of the con cept of “legal profes-

sionalism” in East Asian context will help in under-

standing: (1) whether there are any differences from

the con cept of “le gal pro fes sion al ism” as stud ied in

Western context; and (2) what such dif ferences (if

any) are. East Asian so cieties are also often said to

have sim i lar Con fu cian cul tural back ground. They

look sim ilar but are dif ferent. This pro ject also aims

at find ing out the sim i lar i ties and/or dif fer ences (if

any) in the concept of “legal professionalism” in the

different East Asian so cieties. This IRC project has

four re search streams: (a) le gal ed ucation, (b) law -

yers in tran sition, (c) ju diciary in tran sition and (d)

le gal pro fes sion al ism in East Asian con text. Re-

search re sult in Streams (a) to (c) will be pre sented

in Pa per Sessions. This session be longs to Stream

(d) and is in the form of a Roundtable Session, with

the o ret i cal dis cus sions fo cused on the con cept of

“le gal pro fes sion al ism” in East Asian con text. The

IRC Le gal Pro fessionalism in East Asian Context is

now in affiliation with a proposed CRN Law and

Society in East Asia.

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

31 Wednesday, July 25 16:30 - 18:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Dai-Kwon Choi, Seoul National UniversityChair

Takayuki II, Hirosaki UniversityParticipant

Yoshitakda Wada, Waseda UniversityParticipant

Zhenmin Wang, Tsinghua UniversityParticipant

Richard Wu, University of Hong KongParticipant

1509 Transnational Transformations of theState II (Sponsored by IRCTransnational Transformations of theState)

[Room M 3086]

Joanne Scott, University College LondonChair/Discussant

John Braithwaite, Australian NationalUniversity

Regulatory Capitalism and TransnationalTransformations of the State

David Levi-Faur, University of HaifaThe Transformation of the Modern State: FromBureaucratic to Regulocratic Governance

Michael Likosky, New York UniversityPrivatization: Transnational Origins,Contestations, and Concessions

Bronwen Morgan, University of BristolComparative Regulatory Regimes in WaterService Delivery: Emerging Contours of aGlobal Welfare State?

1510 Access to Justice without the Court?[Room S1.403]

Detlef von Daniels, University of ErfurtChair/Discussant

Jill E. Family, Widener UniversityStripping Immigration Judicial Review: TheCertificate of Reviewability

W. Mark C. Weidemaier, University ofNorth Carolina, Chapel Hill

The Public Nature of Private Disputing:Arbitrator Identity and Behavior in ClassArbitration

Eri Osaka, Surugadai UniversityAdministrative Compensation System and TortLitigation for Toxic Injuries in Japan

Kurt Paerli, University of Applied ScienceNorthwestern, Switzerland

HIV/Aids: Discrimination at Work andEmployment - Legal Concepts and Experiencesin Canada, France, Germany, Great Britain, andSwitzerland

1511 Author Meets Reader—Governingthrough Crime: How the War on CrimeTransformed American Democracy andCreated a Culture of Fear, by JonathanSimon

[Room M 1070]

Mona Lynch, San Jose State UniversityChair

Jonathan S. Simon, University of California,Berkeley

AuthorMarie Gottschalk, University of

Pennsylvania, Richard Sparks, Universityof Edinburgh, and Mariana Valverde,University of Toronto

Readers

1512 Author Meets Reader—The Politics ofSexual Harassment: A Comparative Studyof the United States, the European Union, and Germany, by Kathrin Zippel

[Room M 3092]

Kathleen Hull, University of MinnesotaChair

Kathrin Zippel, Northeastern UniversityAuthor

Susanne Baer, Humboldt University,Anna-Maria Marshall, University ofIllinois, Urbana-Champaign, and Angelikavon Wahl, San Francisco State University

Readers

1513 Communicating about the Law:Debates, Narratives, and Dialogues

[Room S2.102]

Matthias Baier, Lund UniversityLegal Rationalities and CommunicativeStructures

Bridgette Baldwin, Western New EnglandCollege and Davarian Baldwin, BostonCollege

Cultural Pluralism Revisited: The Case for theCriminal Defendant

Mathilde Cohen, ParisX-Nanterre/Columbia University

Giving Reasons in Court Practice:Decision-Makers at the Crossroads

Sabine Schielke, Aachen University ofTechnology

Experts as Authorities in Debates onBiotechnology

Valeria Verdolini, University of Milan/OnatiIISJ Institute

The Dialogical Nature of Civil Disobedience

Paul Hodapp, University of NorthernColorado

Discussant

32 Wednesday, July 25 16:30 - 18:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

1514 Comparative Perspectives on LegalMobilization

[Room S1.405]

Michael C. Tolley, Northeastern UniversityChair/Discussant

Rhonda Evans Case, East CarolinaUniversity

Footing the Bill? The Role of State Funding inShaping Bill of Rights Litigation in NewZealand

Satya Prateek, National University ofJuridical Sciences

Justicing the Family: Rethinking Personal LawReforms in India

Dagmar Soennecken, University of OxfordAssessing the Global Growth of Judicial Power:A Neo Institutionalist’s Take

1515 Cultural Rights [Room S1.504]

Aoife Nolan, Queens University, BelfastChair

Dilek Kurban, Turkish Economic and SocialStudies Foundation

Practicing Faith in the Shadow of Secularism:Delineation of a “Public Space” Devoid of theIndividual

Edward L. Rubin, Vanderbilt UniversityAssisted Suicide and the Transformation ofMorality

Christine EJ Schwöbel, King’s CollegeLondon

Overcoming Pride and Prejudice: Promoting aDialogue between the Cultures

Irene Strazzeri, University of FoggiaRecognition through Human Rights and Struggle for Recognition in the European Integration’sProcess: The Case of Turkey

Ceren Belge, University of WashingtonDiscussant

1516 Digital Transformations: FreeAssociation, Free Speech, and Privacy in the 21st Century?

[Room T 306]

Peter Yu, Michigan State UniversityChair

Adam Candeub, Michigan State UniversityMedia Conglomeration, the First Amendment,and Democracy’s Future

Anne Cheung, University of Hong KongRethinking the Concept of Privacy in theInternet Age of Transparency

Debora Halbert, Otterbein CollegePrivacy in Virtual Worlds: The Dimensions ofPrivacy Gaming and Virtual Communities

1517 Discrimination, Solidarity, and“Symbolic Segregation”: Gender Issuesin Human Rights Discourse and LegalEducation

[Room S1.608]

Mary Jane Mossman, York UniversityChair/Discussant

Beverley Baines, Queen’s UniversityGender and Human Dignity in Canadian HumanRights Jurisprudence

Kim Brooks, University of British Columbia,Jennifer Koshan, University of Calgary,Gillian Calder, University of Victoria,Sonia Lawrence, York University, andDebra Parkes, University of Manitoba

Taking a Break from Feminism? What’sHappened to Feminist Courses at Canadian LawSchools

Gillian Calder, University of VictoriaEmbodied Law: Theatre of the Oppressed in theLaw School Classroom

Karen Schucher, York UniversityAnti-Discrimination Law: Potential, Paradox,and Pitfalls

Daniel Torres de Melo Ribeiro, Universidade de São Paulo, Eliane Ramos Bastos,Universidade de São Paulo, and PriscilaCandido Ubriaco Oliveira, Universidade de São Paulo

Legal Education as an Assumption for HumanRights Effectiveness: The Experience of CapaoRedondo

1518 Governance, Exclusions, and theGeographies of Law

[Room S1.503]

Elizabeth Brown, San Francisco StateUniversity

ChairVictoria Maclean Babbit, University of

WashingtonSex and the Citizen: Trafficking, Deviance, andthe Moral Boundaries of Citizenship

Elizabeth Brown, San Francisco StateUniversity

A Nation of Good Homes Is Always a Nation ofStrength: Responsible Parents and theGeographies of Juvenile Delinquency

David Delaney, Amherst CollegeWorking the Margins: The Spatio-LegalConstitution of Marginality Regimes

Tony C Sparks, University of WashingtonAs Much Like Home as Possible: Privacy,Rights Talk, and Negative Freedom in Seattle’sTent City

Arzoo Osanloo, University of WashingtonDiscussant

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

33 Wednesday, July 25 16:30 - 18:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

1520 International Criminal Courts: Past andFuture

[Room S1.204]

Cynthia Alkon, Appalachian School of LawChair/Discussant

Salem Hikmat Nasser, DireitoGVInternational Law and Politics: InternationalCriminal Courts and Judgments

Harry M. Rhea, La Salle University/NationalUniversity of Ireland

The United States’ Role in InternationalCriminal Tribunals since WWI

Richard Schwartz, Yale UniversityLegal Evolution toward a World Rule of Law:The International Criminal Court

James G. Sloan, University of GlasgowEarly Jurisprudence of the International CrimnalCourt: A False Start?

Frederike Antonia van de Poll, University ofTuebingen

A Quest for Accountability: Evaluating theEffectiveness of the International AtrocitiesRegime and Its Fight Against Impunity

1521 Judges in Society[Room L 140/142]

Benoit Bastard, Centre National de laRecherche Scientifique

Chair/DiscussantJan Budniok, Johannes Gutenberg

Universitaet MainzGhanaian Judges: Career Trajectories andSelf-Understanding

Stephanie Domitrovich, Court of CommonPleas, Erie PA, Mara Lee Merlino,University of Nevada, Reno, and JamesRichardson, University of Nevada, Reno

The Factors Affecting the Appointment ofExperts by State Trial Judges: An ExploratoryStudy

Monica K. Miller, University of Nevada,Reno, Jared Chamberlain, University ofNevada, Reno, David Flores, University ofNevada, Reno and James Richardson,University of Nevada, Reno,

Exploring Causes and Effects of Judicial Stress

Anat Peleg, Bar-Ilan UniversityReluctant Partners: The Relationship betweenJudges and the Media in Israel

Murielle Coeurdray, Ecole NormaleSupérieure de Cachan

France in the 1990s: How Judges Came to thePrivate Sector and Why Their Skills WereValued

1522 Law and Social Theory (Sponsored byCRN26 Law and Social Theory)

[Room S1.307]

Martin Krygier, University of New SouthWales

ChairAndreas Rahmatian, University of Leicester

Property Rights and Narcissism: APsychoanalytical Approach

Theresa S. Reinold, German Institute forInternational and Security Affairs

Hegemony and International Law: On the Powerof Norms and the Norms of the Powerful

Andrew N. Sharpe, Keele UniversityStructured Like a Monster: UnderstandingHuman Difference through a Legal Category

1523 Legal Discourse: The Search forLegitimacy

[Room S1.308]

Frank Stuart Ravitch, Michigan StateUniversity

ChairAndrea Mubi Brighenti, University of

TrentoPlaying Justification in Parliamentary Debates

Janet Childerhose, McGill UniversityFraming Genetic Discrimination: What’s theProblem?

Patrizia Piemontese, LEIThe Law’s Speeches

Mina Suk, Johns Hopkins UniversityThe Trinitarian Pledge of Allegiance: In theName of “God,” Children, and Security

Anita Vaivade, Latvian Academy of CultureTerm “Value” in Legal Discourse

1524 Legal Professional Values and IdentitiesII (Sponsored by WG Legal Profession)

[Room S1.401]

Kim Economides, University of ExeterChair/Discussant

Kim Economides, University of Exeter andMajella O’Leary, University of Exeter

Storytelling and the Discovery of ProfessionalIdentity in Legal Organizations

Cynthia Fuchs Epstein, City University ofNew York and Mitra Rastegar, CityUniversity of New York

Competing Roles, Shifting Attachments: LawStudent Identities and the Choice of Careers inthe Public Interest

Lisa Webley, University of WestminsterFamily Solicitors and Family Mediators: Cuesfrom Professional Bodies About Values and

34 Wednesday, July 25 16:30 - 18:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

1525 Market Access, Intellectual PropertyRights, and Competition PolicyApproaches

[Room S1.404]

Peter Carstensen, University of WisconsinChair

Peter Carstensen, University of WisconsinThe New Economic Feudalism: The ExpansiveUse of Patent Licenses to Destroy MarketCompetition

Shubha Ghosh, Southern MethodistUniversity

Identifying Norms of Competition in IntellectualProperty Law

Marina Lao, Seton Hall UniversityDistribution Restraints: The “Free Rider”Explanation

Spencer W. Waller, Loyola University,Chicago and Brett Frischmann, LoyolaUniversity Chicago

Essential Facilities, Infrastructure, and OpenAccess

1526 Media’s Reach: How PopularConceptions of Law Shape LegalProcesses

[Room S1.405]

Jon B. Gould, George Mason UniversityChair/Discussant

Ben Depoorter, University of MiamiMeans End Litigation: Winning by Losing inCourt

Jay Gravett Hook, Harvard UniversityA Schema Limit on Hindsight Bias in ProbableCause Judgments

Daniel Stepniak, University of WesternAustralia

Seeing Justice Done: A Matter for the CourtsRather Than the Media

1527 Public Participation in AlternativeGovernance in Italy and the US:Representation, Consultation, CollectiveIntelligence, and Public Discourse

[Room T 406]

Faina Milman-Sivan, Ramat Gan LawSchool

ChairCharles S. Harris, Marymount University

Engaging All Stakeholders: The 9/11Commission and the Public Discourse Project

Marilena Macaluso, Università Degli Studidi Palermo

Electronic Consultations: Techniques,Opportunities, and Threats

Diana Mangalagiu, Reims ManagementSchool

Collective Intelligence for Decision Support inVery Large Stakeholder Networks: The FutureUS Energy System

Wesley G. Skogan, Northwestern UniversityRepresenting the Community in CommunityPolicing

Stephanie Tai, University of WisconsinDiscussant

1528 Race and National Identity[Room S1.205]

Laura Anne Bunt, Masaryk UniversityChair

Juliane Edler, York UniversityUnification, Race, and Legally Constituting theGerman Nation

Moria Paz, Harvard UniversityA Non-Territorial Ethnic Network Meets theState System

Akihiro Tsuchiya, Kyushu UniversityNaturalization and Ethnic Identity: MovingZainichi-Korean Identity

Gabriele Plickert, American Bar FoundationDiscussant

1529 Roundtable—Teaching InterdisciplinaryCourses on Historic Trials

[Room T 013]

Preparing a new course on “Political Tri als in His -

tory” at the Uni versity of To ronto, I dis covered that

there were nu merous in structors"out there" teaching

courses on this and re lated sub jects. These courses

are taught in law schools, his tory, so ciology and po -

litical science departments, and other points of the

academic compass. This round ta ble seeks to bring

such peo ple to gether. Our meeting will be an occa-

sion to discuss the courses we teach, compare notes

about what we seek to ac complish, what tri als we

inlcude, what works and does n’t. Look ing for ward,

we will perhaps seek other ways of work ing to -

gether. Partilcipants will be asked to cir culate be -

forehand their course syllabus or proposal for a new

course, an outline of their case book or other course

materials, and be pre pared to engage with col -

leagues on the subject.

Michael R. Marrus, University of TorontoChair

Leora Bilsky, Tel Aviv UniversityParticipant

Lorie Charlesworth, Liverpool John MooresUniversity

ParticipantHilary C. Earl, Nippising University

ParticipantUlmschneider Wralstad Georgia, Indiana

University - Purdue University, FortWayne

ParticipantJim Jaffe, University of Wisconsin

ParticipantJens Meierhenrich, Harvard University

Participant

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

35 Wednesday, July 25 16:30 - 18:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Devin Pendas, Boston CollegeParticipant

Kristen Rundle, University of TorontoParticipant

Richard Weisman, York UniversityParticipant

Ed Muir, Northwestern UniversityParticipant

Richard A. Wilson, University ofConnecticut

ParticipantKonrad Kwiet, University of Sydney

Participant

1530 Security and the State in ComparativePerspectives

[Room L 229]

Tamar Pitch, University of PerugiaChair/Discussant

Graham Ellison, Queen’s University BelfastSecurity Governance in Northern Ireland:Lessons from the Past for the Future

Rafael D. Pucci, Max-Planck-InstituteOrganized Crime in Brazil: The State to BeBlamed?

Vicente Riccio, Fundação Getúlio Vargas,and Marco Aurelio Ruediger, FundaçãoGetúlio Vargas

Law Enforcement Expenditures in Rio deJaneiro State, Brazil: A Case of Mismanagement

1531 Service Panel—International Institutefor the Sociology of Law: Networkingand Organisation of Scientific Meetings

[Room L E42]

Johannes B. Feest, Universitaet BremenChair

Susana Arrese, Oñati International Institutefor the Sociology of Law

ParticipantBill Felstiner, Cardiff University

ParticipantMalen Gordoa, International Institute for

the Sociology of LawParticipant

Manttoni Kortabarria, InternationalInstitute for the Sociology of Law

ParticipantCarlos Alberto Lista, Universidad Nacional

de CórdobaParticipant

Elvira Muñoz, International Institute for theSociology of Law

Participant

1532 Socio-Legal Studies in ComparativePerspective: Struggles andOpportunities

[Room L E44/46]

Helen E. Hartnell, Golden Gate University/Free University of Berlin

ChairRadha D’Souza, University of Westminster

Imperial Agendas, Global Solidarities, andSocio-Legal Scholarship on the “Third World”

Shozo Ota, University of TokyoSociolegal Studies as the Rational Basis forLegal Policy Making and Case LawDevelopment in Japan (Or the Lack Thereof)

Sally Wheeler, Queen’s University, BelfastSocio-Legal Studies in the UK

Michael Wrase, Humboldt University, BerlinSocio-Legal Studies in Germany: Struggles onthe “Borderline” between Disciplines andMainstream Legal Discourse

Lester J. Mazor, Hampshire CollegeDiscussant

1533 Studying Law through DiscourseTheories: Habermas and Derrida

[Room L 326]

Stathis Banakas, University of East AngliaChair/Discussant

Hugh W. Baxter, Boston UniversityHabermas, Democracy, and the “Post-NationalConstellation”

Trish Luker, Monash UniversityIntention and Iterability: On ReadingFingerprints as Signs of Identity

Ronaldo P. Macedo Jr., Fundação GetúlioVargas Law School

Constitution, Principles, and the Age ofInterpretation in Brazil

Sara Ramshaw, Queen’s University BelfastSupposing Justice is a Woman - What Then?Feminist Jurisprudence in the 21st Century

1534 The History of International Law andthe Influence of Roman Law

[Room T 113]

Hendrik Hartog, Princeton UniversityChair

Nikitas Hatzimihail, University of CyprusThe Historiography of Private International Law: History as Genealogy

Ahmet Karakocali, Anadolu UniversityThe Importance and Effects of Roman Law forthe Understanding of European Legal Systems

Arnulf Becker Lorca, Harvard UniversityVernacular Cosmopolitanisms in the History ofInternational Law

Duygu Ozer Saritas, Anadolu UniversityThe Place of Roman Law in Turkish LegalEducation

36 Wednesday, July 25 16:30 - 18:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Michael A. Rosentreter, WissenschaftlichesInstitut der Ärzte Deutschlands (WIAD)

Taxes under the Merovingian: Germanic TaxPractice under Sociological Aspects

1535 The Legal Contestation of AmericanIndian Authenticities

[Room T 008]

Eve Darian-Smith, University ofMassachusetts, Amherst

Chair/DiscussantSusan Gooding, University of Chicago

Recognizing Law in Native America:(Re)Formulating Critical “Post-Cold War”Problematics for the 21st Century

Nicholas Buchanan, Massachusetts Instituteof Technology

Making Histories: Expert Witnessing,Difference, and the Legal Production of theAmerican Indian Past

Justin B. Richland, University of California,Irvine

Sovereign Time, Storied Traditions: TheTemporalities of Hopi Legal Practice

1536 Theoretical, Methodological, andEmpirical Approaches in Criminology

[Room S1.201]

Lila Kazemian, City University of New YorkChair

Aaron Doyle, Carleton University, andKevin T. Walby, Carleton University

Assessing Fear of Crime Research after theInterpretive Turn

Stefanie Eifler, University of BielefeldThe Rationality of Everyday Crime

Lila Kazemian, City University of NewYork, David P. Farrington, University ofCambridge and Marc Le Blanc, Universityof Montreal

A Comparison of the Profiles of Desisters,Persisters, and Non-Offenders in Self-Reportsand Official Records

Jacqueline L. Schneider, University of South Florida

Market Reduction Approach

1537 Toward a Sociology of the JuridicalField: Pierre Bourdieu´s Theory of Law

[Room M Senatssaal]

Werner Gephart, Universität BonnChair/Discussant

Youssef Dennaoui, University of BonnBourdieu and Luhmann on the Legal Field andSystem: Comparative Perspectives

Werner Gephart, Universität BonnIntroduction: The Magic Force of Law or theSymbolic and Ritual Sources of Legal Validity(Durkheim, Mauss, Bourdieu)

Raja Sakrani, Université Paris IIThe Islamic Force of Law

Daniel Witte, Universität BonnThe Force of Law in Context: Implications andReflections of the General Theory of Fields

1538 Law and International Migration[Room S1.501]

Arnim Agrawal, Gujarat National LawUniversity and Uttara Bhansali, Universityof Rajasthan

Emerging Demographic Dynamics,Globalization, and Migration: The Socio-LegalAspects of Human Rights

Arvind K. Agrawal, University of Rajasthan, Jaipur

Globalization, Migration, Law, andMulticulturalism: A Socio-Legal Perspective

Luce Alessandra Giulia Bonzano, Universityof Milan

Looking for Asylum

Alicia Giron, Universidad NacionalAutónoma de México

Migration, Remittances, and MacroeconomicEnvironment

Hideki Tarumoto, Hokkaido UniversityRecent Development of a Legal Framework ofMigration in Japan

1539 What is Legal Culture?[Room L 139a]

Rachel Sieder, University of LondonChair/Discussant

Elena Oros, International Institute of SpaceLaw

Migrating Legal Culture: The TrafficRegulations for Mexican Migrants

Agnes T.M. Schreiner, University ofAmsterdam

Trento Project and Its Internal Legal Culture

Robert van Krieken, University of SydneyThe Concepts “Culture” and “Civilization” inComparative Studies of Law and Society

Jan Winczorek, Warsaw UniversityNiklas Luhmann and the Puzzles of LegalCulture

Michael D. Guttentag, University of Nevada, Las Vegas

The Law Instinct

18:30 - 20:00

Wel come Re cep tion[Main Build ing Court yard]

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

37 Wednesday, July 25 18:30 - 20:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Thursday, July 26

7:45 - 17:30

Reg is tra tion [GF- Seminar Build ing]

8:30 - 17:30

Book Ex hibit [S1.102 & S1.103]

8:30 - 18:15

Paper Posters on dis play, Law Facultylobby [see session 1100 for list]

8:15 - 10:00

Sessions

2101 Killing States and Their KillingPractices (Sponsored by CRN11 TheCultural Lives of Capital Punishment)

[Room S1.406]

David F. Greenberg, New York UniversityChair/Discussant

Botakoz S. Kassymbekova, Central Archiveof Tajikistan

Killing and Pardoning: Death Penalty as aPolitical Tool in Soviet Tajik Republic in1920s-30s

Everard Kidder Meade, University ofCalifornia, San Diego

Punishment and Prophylaxis: The Last Decadeof the Death Penalty in Mexico City, 1920-1931

Evi Joanni Girling, Keele UniversityGlobal Witnessing and the Limits ofPunishment: Footage from Iraq

Patrick W. Timmons, San Jose StateUniversity

Women and Their Death Sentences inNineteenth-Century Mexico

2102 Law and New Governance: BuildingTheory from Practice (Sponsored byCRN05 Regulatory Governance)

[Room S1.605]

Robert A. Kagan, University of California,Berkeley

ChairJoxerramon Bengoetxea, International

Institute for the Sociology of LawGovernance and Soft Law: Supra-State andInfrastate Interacting in a New Constitutionalism

Neil Anthony Gunningham, AustralianNational University

The New Collaborative EnvironmentalGovernance

Orly Lobel, University of San Diego andYuval Feldman, Bar-Ilan University

Behavioral, Institutional, and Socio-LegalAntecedents of Decentralized Enforcement inOrganizations: An Experimental Approach

Susan Sturm, Columbia UniversityCourts as Catalysts: The Role of the Judiciary inNew Governance

John Braithwaite, Australian NationalUniversity

Discussant

2103 The Legal Complex and PoliticalLiberalism: Case Studies (Sponsored by WG Legal Profession and CRN20 TheLegal Complex and Struggles forPolitical Liberalism)

[Room L E44/46]

Sida Liu, University of ChicagoChair/Discussant

Daniel M. Brinks, University of Texas,Austin

The Legal Complex and the Response to PoliceViolence in South America

Maria Gloria Bonelli, Universidade Federalde Sao Carlos

Brazilian Reception of the Legal ComplexGlobal Homogeneization: Case Study of Judgesand Business Lawyers in Sao Paulo

Carol A.G. Jones, University of GlamorganThe Legal Complex in Retreat: Post-ColonialHong Kong

Daniela Piana, University of FlorencePost Communist Legal Complex and EuropeanJudicial Cooperation

2104 Cases on Law, Governance, andDevelopment II (Sponsored by CRN24Rule of Law, State Building, andTransition)

[Room S1.204]

Linn A. Hammergren, The World BankChair/Discussant

Nadia Sonneveld, Leiden UniversitySix Years of Khul: The Local Impact of Egypt’sNew Divorce Law in Cairo

Bivitri Susanti, Indonesian Centre for Lawand Policy Studies

Reading the Progress of Reform in Indonesia:The Politics of Law Making in Indonesia afterNew Order Regime

Janine Ubink, Leiden University“Customary law and development. Insights fromland management in Ghana.”

Benjamin Van Rooij, Leiden UniversityCentral vs. Local: Environmental LawEnforcement Campaigns and Compliance inSouth-West China

38 Thursday, July 26 8:15 - 10:00

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Benjamin Van Rooij, Leiden University andJan Michiel Otto, Leiden University

The Many Meanings of Law and Development

2105 Empirical Methods Showcase III:Quantitative Content Analysis of LegalCase Materials (Sponsored by CRN28Realist and Empirical Legal Methods)

[Room L 140/142]

Mark C. Suchman, University of Wisconsin,Madison

ChairMary R. Rose, University of Texas, Austin

Quantitative Case Analysis of Juries

Robert L. Nelson, American BarFoundation/ Northwestern University,Laura Beth Nielsen, American BarFoundation/Northwestern University, andRyan Lancaster, University of Chicago

Uncertain Justice: The Determinants ofOutcomes in Federal EmploymentDiscrimination Litigation 1987-2003

John Hagan, Northwestern UniversityCoding Cases Without Courts: Using WitnessNarratives to Study Genocidal Victimization inDarfur

Mark Hall, Wake Forest UniversityDiscussant

2106 The City, Security, and Outsiders’Exclusion between Europe and theAmericas (Sponsored by IRC UrbanSocial Control in ComparativePerspective)

[Room M 1072]

Dario Melossi, University of BolognaChair

Giuseppe Campesi, University of FlorenceThe Control of “New Dangerous Classes”: ThePolice “Penal Sub-System” and Immigrants

Doris Marie Provine, Arizona StateUniversity

The City as a Site for Immigration Control

Máximo E. Sozzo, Universidad Nacional delLitoral

Insecurity, Police, and Democracy in Argentina

Michael Welch, Rutgers University /LondonSchool of Economics

Deportees in an Age of Anxiety: Exclusion andthe Threats to Security

2107 Gender, Otherness, and Bias in Judging(Sponsored by IRC Gender andJudging)

[Room S1.405]

Dermot Feenan, University of UlsterChair

Beverly Baines, Queen’s UniversityCritiquing Justice Wilson’s Opinions in Pelech,Morgentaler, and Hess

Anita Bocker, Radboud UniversityNijmegen, and Leny De Groot-VanLeeuwen, Radboud University Nijmegen

Newcomers in the Judiciary: Ethnic Diversityamong Judges in Old and New Countries ofImmigration

Reg Graycar, University of SydneyGender Race Bias and Perspective OR HowOtherness Colours Your Judgment

Lucinda Vandervort, University ofSaskatchewan

Judicial Bias, Sex, Gender, Race, and Class onthe Canadian Prairies: A Case Study

Marianne Githens, Goucher CollegeDiscussant

2108 Justice Systems and the Public inDifferent Societies and in DifferentTime-Frames (Sponsored byIRC/CRN06 Public Opinion and theCourts)

[Room S1.301]

Vasil Kenkishvili, Georgian Institute ofPublic Affairs

Chair/DiscussantMartina Yvonne Feilzer, University of

Wales, BangorThe Magic Bullet? Educating the Public aboutCrime and Criminal Justice

Mike Hough, King’s College LondonPublic Attitudes to Driving Offences InvolvingDeath

Mina Rauschenbach, Université de GenèveLaw as a Product of Emotion: The Rise of theVictim in Switzerland

2109 Attitudes toward Adversarial Legalismin Europe and the US: Analyses of NewComparative Survey and Archival Data

[Room L 326]

Anthony Sebok, Yeshiva UniversityChair

Michael Delli Carpini, University ofPennsylvania

Adversarial Legalism and ParliamentaryDemocracy: Attitudes towards the Juridificationof Politics in Germany and the US

Anthony Sebok, Yeshiva UniversityAdversarial Legalism and Beliefs About Fault: A Comparison of Attitudes About Responsibilityand Rights as the Basis of Law

Lars Tragardh, Ersta Skondal UniversityCollege

Attitudes towards Individual and MinorityRights: The Promise of Empowerment or theSpecter of Erosion of Social Trust and SocialSolidarity?

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

39 Thursday, July 26 8:15 - 10:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Tom Burke, Wellesley CollegeDiscussant

2110 Calculating Subjects: The Politics ofRisk

[Room S1.404]

Jonathan S. Simon, University of California,Berkeley

Chair/DiscussantBradley Bryan, University of Victoria

Insuring Subjects: Governing through ActuarialMoblization

Sarah Jain, Stanford UniversityRisk and Responsibility in Medical MalpracticeLitigation

Stuart John Murray, Ryerson UniversityCalculating Risk: The Politics of the Subject

Michael Orsini, University of OttawaContesting the Autistic Legal Subject:Neurodiverstiy vs Access to Treatment in theAutism Movement

2111 The Changing Structure of Law Firms in a Global Economy

[Room L E42]

Tanina Rostain, New York Law SchoolChair/Discussant

James R Faulconbridge, LancasterUniversity

Comprehending and Negotiating DynamicNational Business Systems: Insights from Global Law Firms

Marc Galanter, University of Wisconsin/London School of Economics, and SimonRoberts, London School of Economics

From Kinship to Magic Circle: the LondonCommercial Law Firm in the 20th Century

William D. Henderson, Indiana University,Bloomington

A Preliminary Analysis of Race and GenderDifferences in U.S. Corporate Law Firms: ByFirm Size, Geography, Firm Structure,Profitability, and Prestige

Daniel Muzio, Lancaster University, andJames R. Faulconbridge, LancasterUniversity

Organizing and Managing Legal Work inEngland: Exploring the Multiple Strategies ofFirms and Professional Experiences of Corporate Lawyers

2112 Censorious Languages, PublicDiscourses, and Political Speech inConstitutional Law Enforcement

[Room S1.401]

Matthias Baier, Lund universityChair/Discussant

Anthony T. Amatrudo, University ofSunderland, and Leslie Blake, Universityof Surrey

The Tense Relationship between the Prosecutionof Serious Crime in the UK and Article 8ECHR&FF

Claudia E. Haupt, University of CologneDelineating the Scope of Democratic PublicDiscourse: The German Federal ConstitutionalCourt and Neo-Nazi Demonstrations

Hanna Lerner, Columbia UniversityReligion and Constitution-Making: The Need for an Incrementalist Approach

Amy Gajda, University of IllinoisJournalistic Ethics and the Shrinking LegalConcept of News

2113 After Sovereignty I [Room T 013]

Catherine Kellogg, University of AlbertaChair

Peter Fitzpatrick, University of LondonSurpassing Sovereignty

Richard Joyce, University of LondonSovereignty after Sovereignty

George Pavlich, University of AlbertaSovereign Dissociations

Amy Swiffen, University of AlbertaBeing In and After Sovereignty: GiorgioAgamben’s Coming Community

2114 Comparing Constitutional Change: TheCase of Judicial Activism

[Room L 139a]

Laurent Scheeck, Université Libre deBruxelles

Chair/DiscussantBrent Boyea, University of Texas, Arlington

and Paul Brace, Rice UniversityAmerican State Constitutions and the Agenda ofState Supreme Courts

Chaihark Hahm, Yonsei UniversityBeyond “Law vs. Politics”: The ConstitutionalCourt’s Role in South Korea

Vittorio Olgiati, University of UrbinoProspective Constitutional Scenarios about LegalProfessionalism in Europe

Ming-Li Wang, National Central Universityand Li-Ju Lee, Chung Yuan ChristianUniversity

Architectural and Social Constraints on JudicialReview: A Study of Recent ConstitutionalChallenges to Taiwan’s Anti-cyberpornMeasures

40 Thursday, July 26 8:15 - 10:00

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

2115 Coping with Multiple Levels ofGovernance in Law and Development:From Regionalism to Federalism toDecentralisation to Cities

[Room S1.501]

Cynthia Alkon, Appalachian School of LawChair

Frank Altemöller, Freie Universität BerlinInternational Trade: Challenges for Regional and Global Governance

Yuriy Didevych, Kyiv National StateUniversity, Ukraine/ University ofRegensburg, Germany

Leasing and Leasing Funds in German andUkrainian Insolvency Law: A ComparativeAnalysis.

Khurram Iqbal, University of AgricultureDevolution of Power, Rural Livelihoods, and the State: A Case Study from Pakistan

Azlinor Sufian, International IslamicUniversity

Quality Housing for All: An Overview onRegulatory and Administrative Framework inMalaysia

Debora Halbert, Otterbein CollegeDiscussant

2116 Courts in Action: The Production of(In)Justice

[Room S1.601]

Milton Heumann, Rutgers UniversityChair/Discussant

Roger A. Fairfax, George WashingtonUniversity Law School

Procedural Legality and Structural Error

Kathleen Regina Barrett, Georgia StateUniversity

Corupted Courts: A Cross-National PerceptualAnalysis of Judicial Corruption

Marco Fabri, Italian National ResearchCouncil (IRSIG-CNR), and Philip M.Langbroek, Utrecht University

Is There a Right Judge for Each Case? AComparative Study in Six European JusticeSystems

Karrie Sandford, University of TorontoThe Everyday in Court: Conceptualizing LawAmidst the Informalities of Social Life

2118 Cultural Rights in the Internet Age[Room T 113]

Doris E. Long, John Marshall School of LawChair

John Cross, University of LouisvilleTraditional Knowledge as a “Commodity” inIntellectual Property Law

Doris E. Long, John Marshall School of LawRepatriation, Recapture, and Vanishing CulturalRights in the Information Age

Peter Mezei, Szeged UniversityCopyright, Fair Use, and Culture

Lars Smith, University of KentuckyHow the Internet Helps Preserve Lesser SpokenLanguages

Julie D. Cromer, Thomas Jefferson School of Law

Discussant

2119 Security and the Empowered State[Room S1.403]

Jolanta Arcimowicz, University of WarsawChair

Sandra Braman, University of Wisconsin,Milwaukee

Information, Policy, and Power in theInformational State

Monique Marks, University of KwaZuluNatal

The Right to Safety and the Question of PoliceReform in Post-Apartheid South Africa

Andrew J. Goldsmith, Flinders UniversityWhither the United Nations in Nation-Building?The Case of Policing Reform in Timor Leste

Laura Ford, Cornell UniversityDiscussant

2120 Globalizing Property: Cultural andEconomic Dimensions

[Room S1.503]

Stepan Wood, York UniversityChair

Mohsen al Attar, York UniversityTransnational Law and the Constitution ofHegemony

Nicole Aylwin, York UniversityPushing the Boundaries of Global Recognition:Traditional Medicinal Knowledge, Recognition,and Regulation

Michiel Kohne, Wageningen UniversityProperty Rights to Land and IndigenousGovernance: A Case from Bolivia

Luisa J. Steur, Central European UniversityThe Adivasi Gothra Maha Saba in Kerala andthe Limits of the Indigenous Rights Framework

Chidi Oguamanam, Dalhousie UniversityDiscussant

2121 International Organizations-in-Action:Behavior, Accountability, and Reform

[Room M Senatssaal]

Christopher Jon Arup, Monash UniversityChair/Discussant

Camila L. Asano, University of SaoPaulo/Conectas Human Rights

How States Behave in International Institutions:The Case of the UN Commission on HumanRights

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

41 Thursday, July 26 8:15 - 10:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Evorah Lusci Costa Cardoso, BrazilianCenter of Analysis and Planning(CEBRAP) and University of São Paulo(USP)

Inter-American Court of Human Rights as aPublic Sphere: Participation of Non-State Actorsvia Amicus Curiae and Public Audiences

Alicia Cebada, Univerisdad Carlos IIIReinforcement of Accountability within theInternational Legal Order, in Particular the Roleof Non-Governmental Organizations,Individuals, and Monitoring Bodies

Richard Barron Parker, Hiroshima ShudoUniversity

A Proposal for a Reformed and StrengthenedUnited Nations Security Council

2122 Juvenile Detention Centres: ThePerspective of Young Offenders

[Room S1.505]

Mechthild Bereswill, Criminology ResearchInstitute of Lower Saxony

ChairMechthild Bereswill, Criminology Research

Institute of Lower SaxonyThe Pains of Imprisonment: Coping with Prisonfrom a Biographical Perspective

Mark Halsey, University of MelbourneOn Confinement: Client Perspectives of SecureCare and Imprisonment

Anke Neuber, Criminological ResearchInstitute of Lower Saxony

Anti-Violence Trainings in Juvenile DetentionCentres and Biographical Learning Processes:Interviews with Young Male Offenders inGermany

Shadd Maruna, Queens University BelfastDiscussant

2123 Language and Discourse: Issues in LegalDecisionmaking

[Room L 229]

Joseph Sanders, University of HoustonChair

Elizabeth Britt, Northeastern UniversityUncertainty, Probability, and Common Sense:People v. Collins as Origin for the NewEvidence Scholarship

Takanori Kitamura, Tokai University andYasuko Fukaya, Tokai University

Interactional Analysis of Judgmental Processesin the Long-term Care Insurance System inJapan

Thomas Scheffer, Freie Universität BerlinDiscussant

2124 Law, Society, and Taxation II:Encouraging Development in PoorerCountries through Tax Policies

[Room S1.308]

Lisa Philipps, York UniversityChair/Discussant

Karen Brown, George WashingtonUniversity

Development and the Caribbean Experience

Kim Brooks, University of British ColumbiaDenying Tax Sparing Provisions: Another Wayfor High-Income Countries to Dictate the TaxPolicy of Low-Income Countries?

Allison Christians, University of WisconsinAccess and Capture in Development-CenteredTax Systems

Michael Knoll, University of PennsylvaniaTaxes and Competitiveness

2125

FEATURED SESSION-PresidentialPanel on Empirical Research:Legitimacy, Morality, and Law

[Room S1.101]

Tom Tyler, New York UniversityChair

John Darley, Princeton UniversityIntuitive Moral Judgments and Public Supportfor the Law

Robert MacCoun, University of California,Berkeley

Moral Outrage and Opposition to Policies thatReduce the Harms of Risky Behaviors

Tom Tyler, New York UniversityLegitimacy and the Rule of Law

Jojanneke van der Toorn, New YorkUniversity, Tom Tyler, New YorkUniversity and John Jost, New YorkUniversity

Justice or Justification? Alternate Routes toLegitimacy

2126 Lower Courts, Guilty Pleas, andLegitimacy

[Room M 3086]

Lynn Mather, State University of New Yorkat Buffalo

Chair/DiscussantSharyn Roach Anleu, Flinders University,

and Kathy Mack, Flinders UniversityDetachment and Engagement: Guilty Pleas andJudicial Demeanor in the Lower Courts"

Kathy Mack, Flinders University andSharyn Roach Anleu, Flinders University

Pleading Guilty: The Dynamics of CourtAppearances

Cyrus Tata, Strathclyde UniversityTransformation, Resistance, and Legitimacy:The Menace of the “Innocent Guilty Plea”

42 Thursday, July 26 8:15 - 10:00

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

2127 Managing Religious Pluralism throughLaw

[Room T 008]

Frank Stuart Ravitch, Michigan StateUniversity

Chair/DiscussantDaniel Brudney, University of Chicago

Equal Status and Mutual Concern

Maria Catherine Cahill, EuropeanUniversity Institute

Neutrality or Indifference: Law’s Beliefs aboutReligious Truth

Victoria P. Foreman, University ofCalifornia, Santa Barbara

Illegal Sacraments: The Impact of Gonzalez v. OCentro Espirita Beneficente Uniäo do Vegetal on Religious Free Exercise in the United States

Kathleen M. Moore, University ofCalifornia, Santa Barbara

The Quran and American Politics: The CulturalLogic of Symbols and Public

2129 New Form of Families and Law[Room M 3059]

Benoit Bastard, Centre National de laRecherche Scientifique

Chair/DiscussantAmanda Kathleen Baumle, University of

Houston and D’Lane Compton, TexasA&M University

Legislating “the Family”: The Effect of StateFamily Laws on the Presence of Children inSame-Sex Households

Jackie Jones, University of West of EnglandCommon Constitutional Traditions andSame-Sex Marriage in the EU, USA, and Canada

Vicki Schultz, Yale University, and MichaelW. Yarbrough, Yale University

Same-Sex Marriage and the Division ofHousehold Labor: A Cautionary Tale

Joanna Smigielska, University of WarsawTransformations and Threats to theContemporary Family in Poland

Michal Tamir, Sha’arei Mishpat College ofLaw, and Dalia Cahana-Amitay, Beit-BerlCollege

The Hebrew Language Has Not Created a Titlefor Me: A Legal and Sociolinguistic Analysis ofNew-Type Families in Israel

2131 Protection of Minors: Media Policy andthe Formation of “the Child”

[Room S1.608]

Kati Hannken-Illjes, Freie Universität BerlinChair

Nick M. Lee, Warwick University‘What do you do when you have sex?’ :Curiosity, secrecy and child media protection

David Oswell, Goldsmiths, University ofLondon

Internet Child Protection Regulation andChildren’s Media(ted) Rights: A GenealogicalAccount

Estrid Sorensen, Technical University BerlinDiscourses of “The Child” in Discussions andExercises of German Computer GameClassification

2132 Regulating Political Finance Regimes II[Room L 144]

Menachem Hofnung, Hebrew University ofJerusalem

ChairT. Cynthia Barrow-Giles, University of the

West IndiesThe State of Political Party Financing in theCommonwealth Caribbean

Nick Duncan, Tiri, and Claudio Abramo,Transparencia Brasil

The Accuracy of the Perception of the Quality of Institutions and Perceived Political Corruptionand Some Implications for Reform Policy

A. Jan Kutylowski, Technische Universität,Dresden

Political Finance, Corruption, and PoliticalParties in a Post-Communist Polity, with Special Reference to Poland

Marcin Walecki, European UniversityInstitute

The Europeanization of Political Parties and theImpact of External Actors on Regulating TheirFunding

2133 Rights, Capital, and Capitalism[Room S2.102]

James Hunt, Mercer UniversityChair/Discussant

Julio Cesar Butuhy, Centro UniversitarioSenac de Sao Paulo, Celso Ramos DeOliveira, Centro Universitario Senac deSao Paulo, and Marcelo Traldi Fonseca,Centro Universitário SENAC de São Paulo

Tourism and Law: The Consumer Defense CodeAplicated in the Brasil Hotels

Thomas Meyer, Deutsche Gesellschaft fürtechnische Zusammenarbeit mbH

Social Market Economy as a Guiding Principlefor GTZ Policy Advisory Projects on LegalReform in South East Europe

Sophia Mihic, Notheastern IllinoisUniversity

Life, Death, and Human Capital: IlliberalLiberalism in the Jursiprudence of Privacy

Constanze Semmelmann, University of StGallen

Social Aspects in EC Competition Law

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

43 Thursday, July 26 8:15 - 10:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

2134 Rape, Affirmative Consent, and SexualAutonomy

[Room M 3092]

Jane Moriarty, University of AkronChair

Richard Klein, Touro Law SchoolParticipant

Jane Larson, University of Wisconsin,Madison

ParticipantDan Subotnik, Touro Law School

Participant

2135 Social Theory and the Law: NiklasLuhmann’s Socio-Legal Thinking

[Room S1.205]

Klaus A. Ziegert, University of SydneyChair

Pierre Guibentif, Universidade Nova deLisboa

Evolution of Theory: The Production ofLuhmann’s Work in a Comparative Approach

Jiri Priban, Cardiff UniversityTime of Constitution-Making: On theDifferentiation of the Legal, Political, and Moral Systems

Ralf Rogowski, University of WarwickLaw and Industrial Relations in Luhmann’sWorld Society

Klaus A. Ziegert, University of SydneyWorld Society and Social Change: Adaptabilityas a Problem of the Asymmetrical Performanceof Functional Systems

2136 Studies in the Pure Sociology of Law[Room S1.201]

Mark Cooney, University of GeorgiaChair

Mark Cooney, University of GeorgiaThe Praiseworthy Murder

Joseph H. Michalski, King’s UniversityCollege at The University of WesternOntario

The Social Geometry of Police Encounters withYoung Citizens

James Tucker, University of New HampshireSuicide and Posthumous Justice

2137 Theoretical Perspectives onLegal-Economic Issues

[Room S1.402]

Erica Beecher-Monas, Wayne StateUniversity

ChairNeil J. Andrews, Victoria University

Transformation and Resistance in Capitalism:The Futures of Corporate Governance in HongKong Listed Companies

Amitai Aviram, University of IllinoisBias Arbitrage

Linda M. Beale, Wayne State UniversityTax Shelters and the Tax Minimization Norm:How Does the Patenting of Tax AdviceTransform the (Global) Playing Field?

Ronaldo P Macedo Jr., Fundação GetúlioVargas Law School

Interpretation of Good-Faith in BrazilianContracts: The Legal Principles in a RelationalApproach

Syed A.H. Shah, Pakistan Institute ofDevelopment Economics

Old Revenue Laws and Their NegativeImplications in Pakistan

2138 Transformations in the Legal Profession[Room S1.502]

Anne Bloom, University of the PacificChair

Kasim Akbas, Anadolu UniversityA Frame For The Features of Legal Profession inTurkey

Robert A. Brooks, Worcester State CollegeBox Shopping in “Nike Town”: Patterns ofResistance and Rationalization amongTemporary Attorneys

Paula Fernando, University of CoimbraDiffused Interests: The Role of the PublicProsecution Promoting Access to Law andJustice

Reut Y. Paz, Humboldt University/ HelsinkiUniversity/ Bar Ilan University

Constructing a Gateway Between a Distant Godand a Cruel World; A Study on Theory andPractice of Jewish Classic Theoreticians ofInternational Law

Elizabeth Brown, University of St. ThomasDiscussant

2139 Transnational Policing of State Conduct: NGOs and Transnational Institutions inthe Development and Operation of anInternational Field Supposed toRegulate States

[Room S1.504]

Ron Levi, University of TorontoChair/Discussant

Pierre Yves Conde, Ecole NormaleSupérieure de Cachan

Building International Justice and InternationalLegal Norms of Acountability

Sara Dezalay, European University InstituteLawyering War or Talking Peace: On ConflictResolution at the 2007 World Social Forum

Sandrine Lefranc, NanterreFrom Post-Conflict Peacebuilding in Developing Countries to Alternative Dispute Resolution inthe North

44 Thursday, July 26 8:15 - 10:00

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Julien Seroussi, University of ParisThe Internationalization of UniversalJurisdiction: Law and Justice in the Habré Casein Senegal and Belgium

2140 Wars on People, Wars on Terror: TheSocial Construction of Race andCitizenship in Comparative Perspective

[Room M 1070]

Laura Gomez, University of New MexicoChair/Discussant

Muneer Ahmad, American UniversityWashington

No Right to Have Rights: Reflections onLitigation at Guantanamo Bay

Richard Warren Perry, San Jose StateUniversity

Profiling as Art of Government: Making UpPeoples, Tribes, Gangs, and Lifestyle Enclaves

Sherene H. Razack, University of TorontoRace, Space, and Law’s Response to WhiteSettler Violence

Carmela Murdocca, York UniversityThe Zone of Cultural Difference in Canada’ssentencing regime

2141 Legal Culture, Reflective Law, andLegal Reasoning in Luhmann’s Systemof Modern Law

[Room S1.307]

Hans-Gerg Moeller, Brock UniversityChair

Marc Amstutz, University of FribourgThe Society of Society in Legal Reasoning

Jennifer Hendry, European UniversityInstitute, Florence

On Legal Culture: A Systems-TheoreticalApproach

John Paterson, University of AberdeemReflecting on Reflections: The Socio-LegalScholar and Luhmann

Andreas Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos,University of Westminster

Absent Environment: Society and Its Shadows

Michael King, University of ReadingDiscussant

10:00 – 10:15

Cof fee Break

10:00 - 11:00

Meet the Ed itor, Law & So cial In quiryCoffee & Cakes [Room S1.102]

Sessions

10:15 - 12:00

2201 Cause Lawyers and SocialTransformation (Sponsored by CRN03Cause Lawyering)

[Room S1.308]

Jayanth Krishnan, William Mitchell Collegeof Law

Chair/DiscussantScott Barclay, University at Albany, SUNY

Prodded and Prompted: Media, Public Opinion,and Cause Lawyers in Same Sex Marriage

Salo Vinocur Coslovsky, MassachusettsInstitute of Technology

How Public Prosecutors Get to Be CauseLawyers: The Transformation of the BrazilianMinistério Público

Yoav Dotan, Hebrew University, JerusalemThe Boundaries of Social Transformationthrough Litigation: Women and Gay Rights InIsrael

Hyunah Yang, Seoul National UniversityPublic Interest Lawyering in South Korea: ALarge Vehicle for Social Change

2202 Regulation and New Governance(Sponsored by CRN05 RegulatoryGovernance)

[Room S1.605]

Louise Trubek, University of WisconsinChair

Hugh Collins, London School of Economics,and Claire Kilpatrick, London School ofEconomics

Comparing Reflexive Regulation and NewGovernance: Some Examples from EmploymentLaw

Kerstin Jacobsson, Stockholm University/South Stockholm University College, andChristina Garsten, Stockholm University

Post-Political Regulation

Colin Scott, University College DublinHow Reflexive is the Governance of Regulation?

Gerd Winter, University of BremenComparing Emissions Trading and EmissionsRegulation

Stephanie Tai, University of WisconsinDiscussant

2203 Law, Language, and Forensic Evidence(Sponsored by CRN16 Language andLaw)

[Room S1.605]

Diana Eades, University of New England,Australia

Chair/Discussant

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

45 Thursday, July 26 10:15 - 12:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Carole E. Chaski, ALIAS TechnologyLLC/Institute for Linguistic Evidence, Inc

Multilingual Forensic Author Identificationthrough N-Gram Analysis

Bethany K. Dumas, University of TennesseeLegal Construction of Ordinary Terms andPassive Constructions

Gillian Grebler, Independent ScholarCompelling Evidence but Is It Reliable? SpokenLanguage Evidence in the Fight againstTerrorism in Lodi, California

Hannes Kniffka, Bonn UniversityGiving Expert Testimony Here and Abroad (inForensic Linguistic Cases)

Frances E. Olsen, University of California,Los Angeles and Carole E. Chaski, ALIASTechnology LLC/Institute for LinguisticEvidence, Inc

A Diachronic Analysis of Judicial Language inDomestic Violence Rulings

2204 CRN23 Human Rights: Global LegalPluralism Revisited (Sponsored byCRN23 International Human Rights)

[Room M 1070]

Miia Halme, University of HelsinkiHuman Rights in ScaNet: Towards the BlackLetter of Law

Sally Merry, New York University, andBalakrishnan Rajagopal, MassachusettsInstitute of Technology

Global Legal Pluralism

Rachel Stern, University of California,Berkeley

Global Labels, Local Meaning: Environmental“Cause Lawyers” in China

Chantal Thomas, University of MinnesotaIllegal Markets and International Economic(Dis)Order

Robert Wai, York UniversityTransnational Private Law andContestation/Comity among Plural NormativeOrders

Pratiksha Baxi, Jawaharlal NehruUniversity, and Julia M. Eckert, MaxPlanck Institute for Social Anthropology

Discussants

2205 Indigenous Peoples, Land, andAutonomy (Sponsored by CRN25Collective Human Rights)

[Room M 3086]

Deirdre Howard-Wagner, University ofSydney

ChairSandra Brunnegger, London School of

EconomicsThe Colombian Constitutional Court: EarlyInstances in the Acknowledgment of IndigenousRights

Signa A. Daum Shanks, University ofWestern Ontario

Can the Notion of “Exclusive Use” Disappear inLaw? Predicting How an Aboriginal ClaimResponds to This Question

Ophir Sefiha, Arizona State UniversitySacred Mountains and Sacred Dollars: MultipleDiscourses Surrounding Snowmaking on the San Francisco Peaks

Kevin Williams, University of Newcastle,Australia

The Re-Interpretation of Australian IndigenousHistory and Law in the Age of theNeo-Conservatives

2206 Political Economy of ConsumerBankruptcy and Overindebtedness(Sponsored by IRC ComparativeSocio/Legal Approaches to ConsumerOverindebtedness, Debt Adjustment and Insolvency)

[Room S1.204]

José Reinaldo de Lima Lopes, FundaçãoGetúlio Vargas/Universidade de São Paulo

Chair/DiscussantAdam Feibelman, University of North

CarolinaConsumer Finance and Debt Relief in India

Johanna Niemi-Kiesilainen, UmeaUniversity and Ann-Sofie Henrikson,Umeå University

Over-Indebted Households and Law: Preventionand Rehabilitation in Europe

Jason Kilborn, University of North DakotaComparative Cause and Effect: ConsumerInsolvency and the Eroding Social Safety Net

Iain Ramsay, Kent Law School, Universityof Kent, UK

Overindebtedness and Its Regulation in the UK:Moral Panic or “A Moment of Modernization”?

2207 Law’s Violence in Colonial India(Sponsored by IRC Colonial SouthAsian Legal History)

[Room S1.505]

Anand Yang, University of WashingtonChair/Discussant

Elizabeth Kolsky, Villanova UniversityLaw and Violence on the Tea Plantations ofColonial Assam

Prabhu Prasad Mohapatra, University ofDelhi

From Contract to Status Or How Law ShapedLabour Relations in Colonial India

Anupama Rao, Columbia UniversityThe Burden of Caste: Personhood, Stigma, andthe Violence of Exclusion

Sudipta Sen, University of California, DavisManslaughter, Medicine, and the Law inBritish-India

46 Thursday, July 26 10:15 - 12:00

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

2208 Employment Protection andNon-Standard Work in EuropeanMember States and in the US(Sponsored by IRC Social Europe andCRN08 Labor Rights)

[Room S1.504]

Marley S. Weiss, University of MarylandChair

Armin Hoeland, Martin Luther University,Halle

Fairness-Control of Dismissals by LabourCourts: Legal Conception and Practical Effects

Csilla Kollonay Lehoczky, Central EuropeanUniversity

Employment Protection in the Post-SocialistAccession Countries: The Hungarian Case

Katherine Stone, University of California,Los Angeles

Employment Protection for Informal Workers inthe United States

Manfred Weiss, University of FrankfurtThe European Framework of EmploymentProtection

Beata Nacsa, Eotvos Lorand UniversityDiscussant

2209 A World System Perspective on theGlobalization of Law: Competitionbetween Legal Fields as Components ofHegemonic Battles

[Room S1.101]

Bryant Garth, Southwestern Law SchoolA World Systems Approach to LegalGlobalization

Ole Hammerslev, University of SouthernDenmark

The US and EU in Eastern Europe

Maria Malatesta, University of BolognaThe Italian Classic Model: Continuity andChange

Mikael Rask Madsen, University ofCopenhagen

Human Rights and Cold War: AbstractPrinciples as Concrete Strategies

Sigrid Quack, Social Science ResearchCenter Berlin

Euro Law Firms and National Models of LawFirm Practice

2210 Author Meets Reader—Die Leidenschaftdes Denkens, by Joachim Radkau

[Room L 140/142]

Thomas Raiser, Humboldt-Universität vonBerlin

ChairJoachim Radkau, University of Bielefeld

Author

Andreas Anter, University of Leipzig,Lawrence A. Scaff, Wayne State Universityand Keith Tribe, University of Sussex

Readers

2211 Author Meets Reader—The Language ofLaw School: Learning to “Think Like aLawyer," by Elizabeth Mertz

[Room L E44/46]

Marianne Constable, University ofCalifornia, Berkeley

ChairElizabeth Mertz, American Bar

Foundation/University of WisconsinAuthor

Marianne Constable, University ofCalifornia, Berkeley, Qudsia Mirza,University of East London, Steve Winter,Wayne State University, and JonathanYovel, University of Haifa / ColumbiaUniversity

Readers

2212 Challenges of Legal Reform in theFormer Soviet Union

[Room S1.205]

Kathryn Hendley, University of Wisconsin,Madison

ChairMeergul Bobukeeva, Kalys Consult

Alternative Dispute Resolution: A Thin Peace isBetter than a Good Quarrel

Kelley Cormier, University of Wisconsin,Madison

Creating a Culture of Commercial Contracting:Development Assistance in Kyrgyz Agriculture

Kathryn Hendley, University of Wisconsin,Madison

Are Russian Judges Still Soviet? An Analysis ofthe Effort to Introduce Adversarialism to theRussian Arbitrazh Courts

Stewart Macaulay, University of Wisconsin,Madison

Discussant

2213 After Sovereignty II[Room T 013]

Peter Fitzpatrick, University of LondonChair

Charles Andrew Barbour, University ofAlberta

Ever After: Suspended Sovereignty and HannahArendt

Catherine Kellogg, University of AlbertaHannah Arendt and the Political: Freedom AfterSovereignty

Elena Loizidou, University of London‘No Gods No Masters’: Anarchism and the otherart of life

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

47 Thursday, July 26 10:15 - 12:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Nathan Moore, University of LondonElsewhere ... Deleuze: Agamben ... A Politics OfSpace

Jacques de Ville, University of the WesternCape/Humboldt University

An Inquiry into the Pre-origins of Constitutionsthrough Derrida’s Declarations of Independence

2214 Comparative Corporate Governance:Methodology

[Room S1.503]

Gordon Smith, University of WisconsinChair

John Armour, University of Cambridge,Simon Deakin, University of Cambridge,Priya P Lele, University of Cambridge, and Mathias Siems, University of Edinburgh

How Legal Rules Evolve: Evidence from PanelData

Hans-Ueli Vogt, University of ZurichConvergence in Corporate Governance in Lightof Globalization

Peer C. Zumbansen, York UniversityFormalism and Functionalism in CorporateGovernance in Law and Development

Andreas Engert, Ludwig MaximilianUniversity, Munich, Pierre-Henri Conac,University of Luxembourg, and Chuck Ito,Chuo University

Discussants

2215 Controlling Capitalism in a Post-ScandalWorld

[Room S2.102]

Mariano-Florentino Cuellar, StanfordUniversity

Chair/DiscussantChris Brummer, Vanderbilt University

Not Only Networks: Natural Monopolies and the Future of Multilateral Securities Regulation

Alice Louise Klettner, University ofTechnology, Sydney

Moving from Unthinking Compliance toIntelligent Engagement in the Reform ofCorporate Governance

James Williams, York UniversityGoverning the Markets: Policing SecuritiesFraud in a Post-Enron World

2216 Critical Approaches to Race andIndividualism

[Room S1.406]

Daniela Hrzan, Humboldt University, BerlinChair/Discussant

Chris Andersen, University of AlbertaReductus ad Absurdum: The Analytical Povertyof Canadian Critical Race Theory

Cengiz Barskanmaz, HumboldtUniversity, Berlin

Race in the German Law

Devon W. Carbado, University of California,Los Angeles, School of Law

Acting White

William New, Beloit College, and MichaelMerry, Beloit College

Color Values: Three Recent Cases ConcerningSchool Segregation/Integration

Valter Silverio, Universidade Federal de SaoCarlos

Affirmative Action and the Debate on LegalClassification of Racial Identification in Brazil

2217 Political Theology, Ethics, and Law[Room T 008]

Gregor Noll, University of LundChair

Matilda Arvidsson, Lund UnivrsityLaw in the Time that Remains: EschatologicalPerspectives on Law

WIlliam MacNeil, Griffith UniversityMillion Dollar Terri: The “Culture of Life” andthe Right To Die

Gregor Noll, University of Lund, andJennifer Beard, University of Melbourne

Concerning True and False Penance: UNHCRRefugee Status Determinations and the Path toReform

Pamela Slotte, University of HelsinkiTalking about Human Rights and Human(e)Life: A Theological Ethicist Perspective onContemporary Human Rights and Human Rights Law

2218 Democracy, Legitimacy, and theEuropean Union

[Room M 3092]

Eileen A. Scallen, William Mitchell Collegeof Law

ChairElena Delia Bancu, University Stefan Cel

Mare, Laura Bouriaud, Univeristy StefanCel Mare and Margaret Shannon, SUNY,Buffalo / University of Freiburg

Changes in the Governance Process Related toNature Protection Policies: Natura 2000 Case inRomania

Virginia M. Brown Keyder, SUNYBinghamton/Bogazici University, Istanbul

A Modest Proposal: The EU as the 51st State

Alberto Febbrajo, University of MacerataModels of Transitional Justice in East EuropeanCountries

Martin Mendelski, ESCP-EAP BerlinWhere, When, and How the European UnionGenerates Institutional and Governance Change?A Comparative Study between First andSecond-Wave Candidates

48 Thursday, July 26 10:15 - 12:00

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Gregory J. Smith, York UniversityLuhmann and the Legitimacy of the EuropeanUnion

2219 Front Lines of Punishment: Insightsfrom Field Research

[Room S1.501]

Helen Codd, University of CentralLancashire

Chair/DiscussantArda Ibikoglu, University of Washington

Struggles for Control: Prison Strife in Turkeysince 1980’s

Sara Steen, University of Colorado, BoulderDiscretion and Risk Assessment in ParoleRevocation Decisions

Robert Werth, University of California,Irvine

Reformed Subjects and Unruly Agents: HowIndividuals Navigate, Enact, and StrategicallyEngage with Parole

Rosalie R. Young, State University of NewYork at Oswego

College Student and Prisoner Interaction: TheBenefits and Risks of Integrated Programming

Philip Russell Goodman, University ofCalifornia, Irvine

From Fire Camps to ‘Traditional’ Prisons:Conceptualizing Ways to Think Critically About Different Penal Settings

2220 Governing Nanotechnology: A SmallMatter?

[Room M 1072]

Diana M. Bowman, Monash University &KU Leuven and Graeme Hodge, MonashUniversity

Governing Nanotechnology withoutGovernment?

Bärbel R Dorbeck-Jung, University ofTwente

How Do Current Public Regulatory MeasuresRelated to Nanotechnology Respond to theProtective and Facilitating Jobs of Law?

Graeme Hodge, Monash University, DianaM. Bowman, Monash University & KULeuven and Karinne Ludlow, MonashUniversity

Regulating Nanotechnology: Old Challenges and New

Alan Petersen, University of PlymouthMolecular Visions: Scientists’ andPolicymakers’ Portrayals of the Benefits andRisks of Nanotechnologies

Douglas Sylvester, Arizona State University,Gary Marchant, Arizona State Universityand Kenneth Abbott, Arizona StateUniversity

“Dual-Use” Regulation and Nanotechnology

Geert van Calster, K.U.Leuven /OxfordUniversity

Nanotechnologies and Regulatory Innovation

Alison Anderson, University of Plymouth,Gary Marchant, Arizona State Universityand Kenneth Abbott, Arizona StateUniversity

Discussants

2221 International Institutions and theEnvironment

[Room S1.301]

David Levi-Faur, University of HaifaChair

Cristiane Derani, Catholic University ofSantos

Certification of Food Products: Environment,Economic Ethics, and Law

Neli Georgieva Dimitrova,Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin

The Environmental Policy of Bulgaria in theContext of the Adaptation to the EuropeanStandards: Economic Instrument’sApproach—Kyoto Protocol

Karen Ann Donahue, University of La VerneThe Law of the Sea 1800 to 1930: The Effects of the Second Billion People Added to the Planet

Karolina Zurek, European UniversityInstitute

Social Implications of Europeanisation of RiskRegulation:

2222 Intersex: A Challenge to TraditionalViews on Gender

[Room S1.405]

Michelle Cottier, University of ZurichChair/Discussant

Isabel Miko Iso, University of LucerneThe Making of “Intersexual” Bodies as a SideEffect of Castration and Sterilisation inPsychiatry

Ulrike Klöppel, Institut für Geschichte derMedizin, Charité Berlin

Who Has the Right to Change Gender Status?Drawing Boundaries between Inter- andTranssexuality

Konstanze Plett, University of BremenWhat Could Intersexed Persons Get Out from the Newly Acknowledged Right to One’s SexualIdentity?

2223 Law and Social Movements: Actors andStrategies

[Room L 139a]

Yvonne Zylan, Hamilton CollegeChair/Discussant

Steven Boutcher, University of California,Irvine

Pro Bono Publico, the Large Law Firm, andSocial Movements: A Relational Approach tothe Study of Cause Lawyering

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

49 Thursday, July 26 10:15 - 12:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Shauna Fisher, University of WashingtonFighting with Words in the Conflict overSame-Sex Marriage

Lynn Jones, Northern Arizona University,and Ryan Saxby, Northern ArizonaUniversity

A Frenzy of Arguments and Goals: MovementStrategies Opposing Snowmaking at an ArizonaSki Resort

Leila Kawar, New York UniversityVictims of Racism or the Proletariat of theProletariat: Immigrants’ Rights Law Reform inthe United States and France

Anna-Maria Marshall, University of Illinois,Urbana-Champaign

Law and Loathing: The Uneasy Role of Law inthe Environmental Justice Movement

2224 Law, Society, and Taxation III:International and Comparative TaxIssues

[Room S1.404]

David Grant Duff, University of TorontoChair/Discussant

J. Clifton Fleming, Jr., Brigham YoungUniversity and Robert J. Peroni,University of Texas

Rethinking Tax Expenditure Analysis and WhatIt Tells Us about the U.S. International IncomeTax Regime

Tracy Kaye, Seton Hall UniversityUnfair Tax Competition in the U.S. and the EU

Richard Schmalbeck, Duke UniversityHarmful Tax Competition, OECD Effort toPrevent, Role of Banking Practices

Walter Schwidetzky, University of BaltimoreGerman Law Classification of the US LimitedLiabilty Company (“LLC”) Doing Business inGermany

2225 Leon Petrazycki’s (1867-1931) Challengeto Law and Society Studies Today

[Room M Senatssaal]

Mavis Maclean, Oxford UniversityChair

Edoardo Fittipaldi, Università degli Studi diMilano

Bonae Fidei Possessor Fructus Consumptos SuosFacit: Tentative Answers to Some Questions Left Open by Petrazycki’s Economic Analysis of Law

Malgorzata Fuszara, University of WarsawLeon Petrazycki’s Theory and Women’s Rights

Jacek M. Kurczewski, Warsaw UniversityBronislaw Malinowski Misunderstood or HowLeon Petrazycki’s Concept of Law isUnwittingly Applied in Anthropology of Law

Krzysztof Edward Motyka, University ofInformation Technology and Managementin Rzeszow/Catholic University of Lublin

Law as Large as Life: Petrazycki’s Challenge toLegal Orthodoxy

Carol Weisbrod, University of ConnecticutPetrazycki and Legal Pluralism

2226 Love in the Public Sphere[Room S1.608]

Anne Dailey, University of ConnecticutChair

Anne Dailey, University of ConnecticutUncovering Law’s Cognitive Bias

Nina Pillard, Georgetown University, andNaomi J. Mezey, Georgetown University

Mother Love in the Public Sphere

Nomi Stolzenberg, University of SouthernCalifornia

Liberalism in a Romantic State

Martha Merrill Umphrey, Amherst CollegeLaw’s Bonds: The Erotics of Legal Legitimation

Nina Pillard, Georgetown UniversityDiscussant

2227 Method in Our Madness:Methodological Issues in Law andSociety

[Room M 3059]

Robert James Cottrol, George WashingtonUniversity

Chair/DiscussantBill Felstiner, Cardiff University

When Human Subjects Rules Do Not Apply

Bill Hebenton, University of Manchester,and Susyan Jou, National TaipeiUniversity

National Traditions in Criminology? Issues ofMethod

Seda Kalem, Istanbul Bilgi University, andIdil Elveris, Istanbul Bilgi University

Sitting In front of Authority Outside theCourtroom: Memoires from a Field Researchamong Judges in Istanbul

Nicole L. Waters, National Center for StateCourts and Cynthia G. Lee, NationalCenter for State Courts

Know Your Source: Uses and Abuses ofCommercial Jury Verdict Reporters

2228 Naming, Framing, Shaming: Law andSocial Control of Transgressions

[Room S1.307]

Ann Lucas, San Jose State UniversityChair

Ruchi Chaturvedi, Colgate UniversityThe Case Against the “Depraved” and the“Diabolical”: Political Workers and the Politicsof Capital Punishment in Kerala, South India

Tamara R. Lave, University of California,Berkeley

Constructing the Offender: Fear, Politics, and the U.S. Supreme Court

50 Thursday, July 26 10:15 - 12:00

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Ann Lucas, San Jose State UniversitySex Commerce and the State: Prostitutes as “BadSexual Citizens”

2229 New Constitutionalism and theReconstitution of Capital: TheNeo-Liberal Transnational Legal Order,Its Limits, and Prospects

[Room L E42]

Heinz Klug, University of WisconsinChair

Gavin W Anderson, University of GlasgowNew Constitutionalism, and the Prospects for aNew Constitutional Knowledge for the GlobalAge

Athena Claire Cutler, University of VictoriaA Commodity Form Theory of Law and theReconstitution of Global Capitalism

David Schneiderman, University of TorontoInvestment Rules, the Immobilized State, and the Difficulties of Counter-Hegemonic Resistance

Upendra Baxi, University of WarwickDiscussant

2230 Policing the Periphery[Room S1.403]

Michael Dutton, University of LondonChair

Elena Marchetti, Griffith UniversityPolicing Family Violence through the Use ofAustralian Indigenous Sentencing Courts

David McCallum, Victoria University,Melbourne

Policing Children: Juvenile Justice andPsy-Forensics

Rob McQueen, Griffith UniversityPolicing the Corporate in Colonial Society

Arzoo Osanloo, University of WashingtonPolicing Forgiveness in Islamic CriminalSanctioning - Or Not

2231 Property Rights and Land Tenure inLaw and Development in ComparativePerspective: From Ghana to SouthAfrica to Turkey

[Room L 326]

Anna Jonsson, Uppsala UniversityChair

Bernadette Atuahene, Illinois Institute ofTechnology

From Reparations to Restoration: LegitimizingProperty Rights When Past Theft Colors theDistribution of Property

Elizabeth Fortin, Sussex UniversityExperiential Knowledge of Tenure and LegalKnowledge of Tenure: Engagements with LandTenure Reform in South Africa

Elizabeth Gianola, University of California,Berkeley

African Land Tenure Security in ComparativePerspective: The Cases of Ghana and SouthAfrica

Tuna Kuyucu, University of WashingtonNeoliberalism and Urban Governance: “UrbanTransformation Projects” in Istanbul

Barbara M. Oomen, Utrecht UniversityDiscussant

2232 Race and Slavery: Historical Problemsand Contemporary Context

[Room T 306]

Jason A. Gillmer, Texas WesleyanUniversity

ChairAdrienne Davis, University of North

CarolinaSlavery’s Shadow Families: RethinkingMiscegenation Regulation

Jason A. Gillmer, Texas WesleyanUniversity

Base Wretches and Obliging Prostitutes: A Storyof Sex and Race, Violence and Compassion,During Slavery Times

Ariela Gross, University of SouthernCalifornia

What Is the Time of Slavery? The History andPolitics of Slavery in Contemporary LegalArgument

2233 Religion as Constraint and Tool forWomen’s Rights

[Room T 113]

Anu Pylkkänen, University of HelsinkiChair/Discussant

Aleksandra Herman, University of Warsaw.Holy “Mother” against Holy Father: HowProhibition by the Law of Canons Helped toEstablish the Alternative Church

Malgorzata Malinska, University of WarsawMarriage Contract as an Essence of Marriage ofNubian Women: Law and Practice in BallanaVillage

Siobhan Mullally, University College CorkFeminisms, Human Rights, and the Limits ofReligious Difference: International HumanRights Bodies, Reclaiming Universalism?

Parinas Parhisi, Goethe UniversityRights of Women in Iranian Constitutional Law

2234 Role of Law and War on Terrorism[Room L 144]

Tawia Ansah, New England School of LawChair

William Rose, Albion CollegeTheorizing the Exception: Law, Politics, andConstitutional Crises

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

51 Thursday, July 26 10:15 - 12:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Jacqueline E. Ross, University of IllinoisThe Place of Covert Policing in DemocraticSocieties: A Comparative Study of the UnitedStates and Germany

Rene Uruena, University of Helsinki / U deLos Andes

The UN’s 1267 Committee and the Hidden Roleof International Law in Anti-Terrorist Policy

Anna Umberg, University of HamburgDiscussant

2235 Roundtable—The Impact of IntellectualProperty Law upon 21st Century Society

[Room T 406]

This roundtable will of fer a critical and dy namic

discussion about the changing role and relevance of

intellectual prop erty law in the 21st cen tury. In a

dig i tal era char ac ter ized by tech no log i cal in no va -

tion and the growth of an in formation economy, in -

tellectual property has taken on new prac tical and

nor ma tive sig nif i cance. In creas ingly, in tel lec tual

property law is called upon to mediate the ten sions,

and face the challenges, presented by this shift ing

cultural and economic landscape. In this dis cussion,

participants will de scribe the ways in which their re -

search ex plores and de fines the impact of copyright,

trademark, and/or pat ent law upon various as pects

of our so ciety, from health to ed ucation, music to

jour nal ism, au thor ship to cul tural con sump tion.

This will provide the back drop for a wide-ranging

dis cus sion, iden ti fy ing and eval u at ing emerg ing

trends and common themes across disciplines and

sectors. Par ticipants will con sider the many ways in

which the reg u la tion of in tel lec tual prop erty is

transforming the future—and the many ways in

which it continues to resist that future.

Jennifer Chandler, University of OttawaChair

Giuseppina D’Agostino, York UniversityParticipant

Jeremy De Beer, University of OttawaParticipant

Johanna Gibson, Queen Mary UniversityParticipant

Gregory Hagen, University of CalgaryParticipant

2236 Striving for Sustainability through Law[Room S1.402]

Dayna N. Scott, York UniversityChair/Discussant

Anna-Karin Elisabeth KaaresdotterBergman, Lund University

A Norm Science Perspective on SustainableDevelopment

Lina Carlsson, Lund UniversityTheoretical Perspectives on ImplementationIssues in Public Procurement

Peter Dauvergne, University of BritishColumbia

The Globalization of Consumption: ExplainingGlobal Ecological Impacts

Gjalt Huppes, Leiden UniversitySustainability between Optimism and Realism:A Socio-Technical Framework

Ana Maria Nusdeo, Universidade de SaoPaulo

Public Policies and EnvironmentalSustainability: The Case of Guarapiranga Damin São Paulo City

2237 The Popular/Legal Imagination(Sponsored by WG Law and PopularCulture)

[Room L 229]

Steve Greenfield, University of WestminsterChair

Andreas Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos,University of Westminster

Fear in the Lawscape: Law and the City as theTerrain of Fear

Penny English, Middlesex UniversitySeek the Truth, But Keep It Hidden? The daVinci Code and Cultural Property

Julia H. Chryssostalis, University ofWestminster

Athens: The Boundless City and the Crisis ofLaw

Marie Fox, University of Keele, and MichaelThomson, Keele University

Pack-Sex? Masculinity/Sport/Sex

2238 Transitional Justice in Times of Conflict[Room S1.502]

Omar Drammeth, Norwegian University ofLife Sciences, and Pascal Kambale, OpenSociety Institute-DC

Co-ChairsAnnie Bird, Universal Giving/ UC Berkeley,

Warisha Farasat, Columbia University and Lubna A. Hammad, Al-Quds University

Re-Thinking Transitional Justice in Sierra Leone and Liberia

Warisha Farasat, Columbia UniversityTransitional Justice and Conflict in South Asia

Lubna A. Hammad, Al-Quds UniversityTransitional Justice in Palestine: AVictim-Centric Approach to Peacemaking

2239 Urban Governance and Legality fromBelow

[Room S1.201]

Kevin M. Stenson, Middlesex UniversityChair

Randy Lippert, University of WindsorUrban Security at a Distance or from Below?Private Urban Governance and Legality in Three Cities

Paul A Passavant, Hobart and WilliamSmith Colleges

Place Branding and the Neoliberalization of“Free Speech”

52 Thursday, July 26 10:15 - 12:00

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Kevin M. Stenson, Middlesex University,and John Lea, Middlesex University

Governing Crime from Above and Below

Kevin T. Walby, Carleton UniversityHunting for Harm: Knowledge Networks, LocalGovernance, and the Ottawa Needle HuntersProgram

2240 Feminism and the Production of LegalKnowledge (Sponsored by WG Genderand Law)

[Room S1.604]

Claire Young, University of BritishColumbia

ChairRosemary Auchmuty, University of

WestminsterSafe Revisions: Legal History without Feminism

Heather Douglas, University of QueenslandResponses to Breaches of Domestic ViolenceOrders

Anissa Lardjane, MSH/IUEIn the Shadows of Law: Listening to the Voiceof Women

Nora Markard, Humboldt UniversityWar and Gender: Sexual Violence and RefugeeLaw

Sharon Cowan, University of EdinburghDiscussant

2241 Property and Society: TheorizingObligations in Ownership

[Room S1.401]

Annelise Riles, Cornell UniversityChair

Gregory S. Alexander, Cornell UniversityThe Evolving Social Obligation of Ownership

Timothy K. Choy, Ohio State UniversityPrior obligations: attachments to ‘originality’ inpost-colonial Hong Kong

Eduardo Penalver, Cornell UniversityProperty Outlaws

Eva Pils, Chinese University of Hong KongSo Who Got Rich First? The Property LawDebate in China

Avital Margalit, Bar Ilan UniversityDiscussant

12:00 – 12:30

Lunch Break

12:30 - 14:15

2301 Law and New Approaches to EUGovernance (Sponsored by CRN05Regulatory Governance)

[Room M Senatssaal]

David M. Trubek, University of WisconsinChair

Kenneth Armstrong, University of LondonCeci N’est Pas OMC: The UnresolvedAmbiguities of EU Policy Coordination

Patrycja K. Dabrowska, University ofWarsaw

New Governance in the GMO Regulation in theEU

Tamara Hervey, University of SheffieldEU Governance of Health Care and the WelfareModernisation Agenda

Imelda Maher, University College, DublinAny New Governance? Juridification andNetworks in EC Competition Law

Stijn Smismans, University of TrentoNew governance - the solution for activeEuropean citizenship, or the end of citizenship?

Bob Hepple, Cambridge UniversityDiscussant

2302 Law, Markets, and Society: BeyondProtectionism and Property II(Sponsored by CRN14 Culture, Society,and Intellectual Property)

[Room S1.307]

Shubha Ghosh, Southern MethodistUniversity

Chair/DiscussantJuan Cifuentes, Attorney at Law

The Personal and Collective Rights ofTraditional Acknowledge in DR-CAFTA: TheIntellectual Property Challenge for CentralAmerica.

Doris E. Long, John Marshall School of LawOutsourcing Culture: The Role of the Diasporain the Commodification

Salvatore Poier, University of MilanBlack Beard’s Mouse: From Pirates to Hackers

Steven Wilf, University of ConnecticutThe Moral Lives of Intellectual Properties in19th Century America

2304 Law and Development: The ChinaConsensus? (Sponsored by CRN24 Ruleof Law, State Building, and Transition)

[Room S1.308]

Dongsheng Zang, University of WashingtonChair/Discussant

Donald C. Clarke, George WashingtonUniversity

The Ecology of Chinese Corporate Governance

Hakan Hyden, University of LundPutting Law in Context: Some Remarks on theImplementation of Law in China

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

53 Thursday, July 26 12:30 - 14:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Weidong Ji, Kobe UniversityRedefining Relations Between the Rule of Lawand the Market; Clues Drawn from Four BasicIssues Found in China Today

Randy Peerenboom, University ofCalifornia, Los Angeles

China and the East Asian Model: Threat to theWest or Model for the Rest?

Yuping Song, Henan University ofTechnology, and Jane K. Winn, Universityof Washington

Can China Promote Electronic CommerceThrough Law Reform?

2305 Punishment and Society: The MoralCommunity and the Limits of Sanction(Sponsored by CRN27 Prisons andPrisoners)

[Room S1.503]

Jonathan S. Simon, University of California,Berkeley

ChairDan Markel, Florida State University

Retributive Damages

Barbara A. Hudson, University of CentralLancashire

Punishment and Community: Into theWilderness

Alison Liebling, Cambridge Institute ofCriminology, and Ben Crewe, CambridgeUniversity

Values, Practices, and Outcomes in Public andPrivate Sector Corrections

Fritz Sack, University of HamburgGerman Criminal Policy and the “Punitive Turn”

2306 Comparing Access to Justice in Canada,Brazil and Japan (Sponsored by IRCComparative Disputing Behavior)

[Room S1.504]

Bert Niemeijer, Free University/Ministry ofJustice

ChairAlbert Wayne Currie, Department of

Justice, CanadaThe Incidence and Patterns of JusticiableProblems in Canada

Maria T. Sadek, Universidade de Sao PauloAccess to Justice: Small Claims Courts in Brazil

Iwao Sato, University of Tokyo, HiroshiTakahashi, Kobe University, NobuoKanomata, Keio Gijuku University, andShiro Kashimura, Kobe University

Citizens’ Access to Legal Advice inContemporary Japan: Self Help, Negotiation,and Third-Party Advice Seeking

Rosalie R. Young, State University of NewYork at Oswego

Discussant

2307 Lawyers in Transition II (Sponsored byIRC Legal Professionalism in East AsianContext)

[Room L 144]

Carol A.G. Jones, University of GlamorganChair

Akira Fujimoto, Shizuoka UniversityA Comparative Survey of Japan and US LawStudents: Motivation, Job Preference, and LegalConsciousness.

Takayuki II, Hirosaki UniversityShortage of Legal Services in North-NortheastJapan (North-Tohoku): A Gap between LegalPractice and Need

Sida Liu, University of ChicagoFrom Collaboration to Competition:International and Local Law Firms in China’sCorporate Law Market

Jae-Hyup Lee, Kyung Hee UniversityGrowth of Corporate Counsels in Korea

2308 Comparative Legal Consciousness:National Studies (Sponsored by IRCLegal Consciousness in ComparativePerspective)

[Room S1.501]

Marc Hertogh, University of GroningenChair

Lieve Gies, Keele UniversityLegal Consciousness, Media, and PublicConfidence in Legal Institutions

Marc Hertogh, University of GroningenLegal Equality and Legal Consciousness:Ordinary Citizens and Legal Professionals About Anti-Discrimination Law in the Netherlands

Dicle Kogacioglu, Sabanci UniversityLegal Professional Authority at a Crossroads:Technique vs. Mission in Turkey

Tobias Nowak, University of GroningenCommunity Law’s Expectations vs. theKnowledge, Experience, and Attitudes ofNational Judges

Jerome Pelisse, University of ReimsLegal Consciousness at the Workplace: FromCultural (French) Context to InstitutionalContext

2309 American Lawyers and the Betrayal and Defense of Legality since 9/11

[Room S1.101]

Richard Abel, University of California, LosAngeles

ChairRichard Abel, University of California, Los

AngelesThe Defense of Legality in the United Statessince 9/11

54 Thursday, July 26 12:30 - 14:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Lynne Henderson, University of Nevada, LasVegas

Deciding to Torture; Administration Lawyersand the Rule of Law

Peter Margulies, Roger Williams UniversityWhen to Push the Envelope: Legal Ethics andthe Rule of Law in National Security Strategy

2310 Author Meets Reader—The Citizen andthe Alien: Dilemmas of ContemporaryMembership, by Linda Bosniak

[Room L 139a]

Leti Volpp, University of California,Berkeley

ChairLinda Bosniak, Rutgers University

AuthorFrances Ansley, University of Tennessee,

Amy Bartholomew, Carleton University,Jacqueline Bhabha, Harvard University,and Guy Mundlak, Tel-Aviv University

Readers

2311 Author Meets Reader—OutlawedPigs:Law, Religion, and Culture in Israel,by Daphne Barak Erez

[Room S1.605]

Hadar Aviram, Tel Aviv University/University of California, Hastings

ChairDaphne Barak-Erez, Tel Aviv University

AuthorGad Barzilai, University of Washington,

Shai Lavi, Tel Aviv University, and MitraSharafi, University of Wisconsin, Madison

Readers

2312 Challenges to Justice: Case Studies fromAround the World

[Room M 3086]

Judith Fordham, Murdoch UniversityChair/Discussant

C. Christina Braidotti, NortheasternUniversity

Is Justice for the Argentine Jewish Communityan Unaffordable Luxury?

Carlos Alberto Lista, Universidad Nacionalde Córdoba

Appraising the Assessment Process of CriminalCourt Functionaries: The “Córdoba Model” inArgentina—A Case Study

Farida Nakayiza Nsanja, Directorate ofPublic Prosecution

Transitional Justice, a Challenge for the 21StCentury: Case for Northern Uganda

Badrinath K Rao, Kettering UniversityAll Shadow and Little Substance? Social Justiceand the Rule of Law in India

2313 After Sovereignty III[Room T 013]

George Pavlich, University of AlbertaChair

Oscar E. Guardiola-Rivera, University ofLondon

The Night of the World after Sovereignty: Music and Choice

Bryan Hogeveen, University of AlbertaEternal Peace and Violence…AfterSovereignty(?)

Stephen Humphreys, University ofCambridge

Polymorphous Sovereignty

Sundhya Pahuja, University of MelbourneSovereignty, Universality, and Development

2314 Comparing Legal Cultures—Judges and Courts (Sponsored by WG ComparingLegal Cultures)

[Room L 140/142]

Marina Kurkchiyan, University of OxfordChair/Discussant

David R. Applebaum, Rowan UniversityImmigrants, Judges, and Pedophiles

Oscar G. Chase, New York UniversityUnderstanding Judicial Ceremony inComparative Context

Riccardo Montana, Cardiff UniversityProsecutors and the Definition of the CrimeProblem in Italy: A Country without MoralPanic?

David Nelken, University of MacerataCourts and Delay: Beyond Managerialism

2315 Corruption in Global Business: ADilemma between Culture of Trust andNational Legal Control

[Room S1.406]

Markus M. Werle, University of HalleChair

Katharina Rasch, Free University of BerlinSociological and Social-PsychologicalPerspectives of Corruption and Trust

Peter Sass, University of Halle-WittenbergDifferentiated Management of Trust: AFramework for Business Strategies of Corruption Prevention

Markus M. Werle, University of HalleCorruption Prevention in Companies

Matthias Winzer, Martin-Luther-UniversityHalle-Wittenberg

Trust as a Societal Value and Its EconomicImpact

Kai Bussmann, University Halle, WittenbergDiscussant

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

55 Thursday, July 26 12:30 - 14:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

2316 Rights and Courts[Room S1.608]

Milton Heumann, Rutgers UniversityChair/Discussant

Liz Campbell, University College CorkFrom Liberalism to Communitarianism: TheErosion of Individual Rights in the IrishCriminal Process?

Maria-Victoria Perez-Rios, City Universityof New York

Finding the Perfect Fit to Prosecute HumanRights Violations in the Era of Judicialization

Harry M. Rhea, La Salle University/National University of Ireland

The Nuremberg Effect on ContemporaryInternational Criminal Justice

Wibo M. van Rossum, Erasmus UniversityRotterdam

Open Legal Concepts and Cultural Diversity

2317 Crimmigration Crisis? The Convergenceof Immigration and Crime Control

[Room S1.601]

Teresa Miller, State University of New Yorkat Buffalo

ChairJennifer Marie Chacon, University of

California, DavisDecriminalizing Migration

Nora V. Demleitner, Hofstra UniversityThe Re-Entry Movement: MarginalizingImmigrant Offenders?

Teresa Miller, State University of New Yorkat Buffalo

The Criminalization of Illegal Aliens

2318 European Integration: Minorities,Multiculturalism, Discrimination, andSocial Protection

[Room L E44/46]

Carl F. Stychin, University of ReadingChair/Discussant

Paul Blokker, University of LiverpoolDemocracy and Multi-Culturalism inPost-Enlargement Europe

Eberhard Eichenhofer,Friedrich-Schiller-Universität

Europeanization of Social Protection

Annick Masselot, University of CanterburyDeep Impact: Mapping the Impact ofAnti-Discrimination Law

2319 Globalization and Families[Room S1.403]

Anne Boigeol, IHTP/CNRSChair

Daphna Hacker, Tel Aviv UniversityFrom Moabian Ruth to Norly the Filipino:Intermarriage in Israel

Kazuyo Kubo, University of Illinois,Urbana-Champaign

Transcending Race and the Dilemma ofMulticulturalism: The Role of AdoptionAgencies in Transnational Adoption

Shu-chin Grace Kuo, National Chung-ChengUniversity

International Marriage and Intimate Citizenship:A Cultural Legal Study of Family Law inTaiwan

Kevin N. Maillard, Syracuse UniversityAfrican Children as the New Black: TheIncreasing Cachet of International Adoption

Malakeh Shahizaheh Anzabi, University ofTehran

Alternative Globalization: Fundamentalcommitment and cultural identity

2320 Governing Science and Technology[Room M 3092]

Joanna K. Weinberg, University ofCalifornia, San Francisco

ChairStefan K. Larsson, Lund University, and

Karsten Astrom, Lund UniversitySpatial Planning and Sociology of Law:Sustainable Development Issues in ConstructingInfrastructure for the Third Generation MobileTelephone System in Sweden

HC Niu, Tsing Hua University, TaiwanPartnership Approach in International HumanSubjects Research

Christine Rothmayr Allison, University ofMontreal, Canada

Courts and the Biotechnology Revolution inNorth-America and Europe

Joanna K. Weinberg, University ofCalifornia, San Francisco, and Joel W.Adelson, University of California, SanFrancisco

Social Governance of Scientific Research: TheCalifornia Research and Cures Initiative

2321 Is Gender Arguable? Regulatory andTheoretical Approaches

[Room S2.102]

Aneta Gawkowska, University of WarsawChair

Anne Bloom, University of the PacificThe Regulation of Sexual Identity in Tort Law

Adrian de Silva, University of BremenConcepts of Gender and Gender Regime in theParliament Debates on the Gender RecognitionBill and in the Gender Recognition Act

Aeyal Gross, Tel-Aviv UniversityGender Outlaws Meet the Law: Feminism andQueer Theory at the Borderlands

56 Thursday, July 26 12:30 - 14:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

2322 Justice Issues in ComparativePerspective

[Room M 1070]

Bernd Wegener, Humboldt UniversityChair

Juan C. Castillo, Universidad AcademiaHumanismo Cristiano, Chile

Justice Ideologies and Explanations of Povertyand Wealth in Chile

Jean-Yves Gerlitz, Humboldt University.and Percy Scheller, Humboldt University

Justice Beliefs in Germany 1991-2006

Hynek Jerabek, Charles University Pragueand Petr Soukup, Charles UniversityPrague

Generational Differences in the Conception ofSocial Justice and Problems of IntergenerationalSolidarity

Arye Rattner, Haifa University, and MeirYaish, University of Haifa

Empirical Findings on Socioeconomic Class andSocial Justice: The Case in Israel

Markus Schrenker, Humboldt University,and Bernd Wegener, Humboldt University

Assessing the Justice of Pensions: A FactorialSurvey

2323 New Perspectives on the Rule of Law(Sponsored by CRN26 Law and SocialTheory)

[Room S1.204]

Robert van Krieken, University of SydneyChair

Jean-Pierre Denape, University of LundThe Diplomat, the Merchant and the Soldier, orthe Contextual Theory of the Rule ofInternational Law

Martin Krygier, University of New SouthWales

The Rule of Law: Legality, Teleology, andSociology

Jose R. Rodriguez, Fundação Getulio Vargas /Centro Brasileiro de Análise ePlanejamento

What is Law Critique? Immanent Critique andProjects of Juridification

Brian Z. Tamanaha, St. John’s UniversityThe Good and Bad of the Rule of Law Ideal

Lena Lindgren, Lund UniversityReturn of the “L” Word: Reflections on theConcept of Legitimacy

2324 Law, Society, and Taxation IV: Justice,Religion, and Tax Policy

[Room T 008]

Kathryn A James, Monash UniversityChair/Discussant

Keith Blair, University of BaltimoreChurches, Politics, and 501(c)(3): Tax ExemptStatus

Stephanie R. Hoffer, NorthwesternUniversity

Taxation as Subsidization of Religion in theUnited States and Germany

Neil H. Buchanan, George WashingtonUuniversity /New York University

What Do We Owe Future Generations?

2325 Limitations of the Rational Actor Modelin Legal Decision Making

[Room L E42]

Richard Wiener, University of NebraskaChair/Discussant

Mandeep K. Dhami, University ofCambridge, and David R Mandel,University of Toronto

Trial by Judge or Jury: Calculation or Gamble?

Michael Holtje, University of Nebraska,Lincoln, and Richard Wiener, Universityof Nebraska

The Influence of Certainty, Valence, andEmotional State on Credit-Purchasing Decisions

Edward J. Janger, Brooklyn Law SchoolRationality, Consumer Credit, and BankruptcyReform: A Found Experiment

Thomas S. Ulen, University of Illinois,Champaign

Rationality and Happiness in Law andEconomics

Richard Wiener, University of NebraskaHow Do Real Rational Actors Feel About Law?

2326 Making Law and Making Use of Law inthe Middle East: EthnographicPerspectives

[Room S1.404]

Hussein A. Agrama, University of ChicagoChair

Hussein A. Agrama, University of ChicagoIs Egypt a Secular or Religious State?

Jessica Carlisle, SOASDivorce Damascus Style: Court Mediation andArbitration Strategies During Judicial DivorceCases

Zouhair Ghazzal, Loyola University,Chicago

From microstoria to ethnomethodology:crime-in-action in contemporary Syria

Christine Hegel, City University of NewYork

Between Custom and Code: Dispute Resolutionin an Egyptian Port

2327 Migration, Ethnicity, and the “GoodCitizen"

[Room S1.502]

Iker Barbero, University of the BasqueCountry

Chair/Discussant

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

57 Thursday, July 26 12:30 - 14:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Tamkin Hussain, State University of NewYork at Binghamton

Metonymy of Discord: Migrancy as the Art ofMiscount in a Countless World

Sangay K Mishra, University of SouthernCalifornia

South Asian immigrants in Los Angeles andNew York: The Gaze of Suspicion in Post-9/11U.S.

Pavel Valer Bellota, Universidad Nacional deSan Antonio Abad del Cusco

Constitutional Ethnography of Peru:Multicultural Society and Tendencies ofConstitutional Law

2328 Negotiation and Mediation: How ItCould Work for Just and Better Results

[Room S1.505]

Jean De Munck, Catholic University ofLouvain

Chair/DiscussantAdelheid Kuehne, Leibniz Universität

Condition Factors of Mediation: Results of anEmpirical Study

Rebecca Hollander-Blumoff, WashingtonUniversity

Just Negotiation

Myrto Leiss, University of Munich andWilliam A. Donohue, Michigan StateUniversity

Removing Barriers to Conflict Resolution

Ivan Pupolizio, University of BolognaThe Ideologies of Mediation

Orna Rabinovich, Haifa University andFaina Milman-Sivan, Ramat Gan LawSchool

The Next Phase of Mediation: BetweenRelationship and Identity, Satisfaction andAccountability

2329 New French Bentham Studies[Room M 1072]

Jean-Pierre Cléro, Université de Rouen andCentre Bentham

ChairMalik Bozzo-Rey, Université Paris 10 -

Nanterre and Centre BenthamJeremy Bentham’s Logic of the Will: Is ActingLogically to Act Morally?

Anne Brunon-Ernst, Université Paris 2 andCentre Bentham

When Foucault Reads Bentham

Anne Brunon-Ernst, Université Paris 2 andCentre Bentham, and Malik Bozzo-Rey,Université Paris 10 - Nanterre and CentreBentham

The Centre Bentham’s French Translation ofIntroduction to the Principles of Morals andLegislation

Marie-Laure Leroy, Centre BenthamBentham and the Vitality of Democracy

2330 Political Finance Regulation in WesternDemocracies

[Room S1.402]

Margit Cohn, Hebrew University, JerusalemChair

Diane R. Davidson, Elections Canada andMiriam Lapp, Elections Canada

Political Financing in Canada: Achieving aBalance

Eric Phelippeau, Université Paris 10Nanterre

Misfortunes of the Virtue: Impossible Regulation of the Financing of the French Political Life1970-1987

Carlo G. Rossetti, University of ParmaThe Parmalat Case-Political Finance Regulationin Western Democracies

2331 Property, Citizenship, and SocialEntreprenuerism in a GlobalMarketplace I

[Room S1.201]

Lisa A. Dolak, Syracuse UniversityChair

Tom Allen, University of DurhamThe Function of Property and the EuropeanConvention of Human Rights

Daniel Fitzpatrick, Australian NationalUniversity

Property Regulation through Private Ordering:Some Insights from Social Trauma in Aceh andEast Timor

Robin Paul Malloy, Syracuse UniversityProperty in a Market Context

Laura S. Underkuffler, Duke UniversityProperty, Polity, and Structural Inequality

2332 Re-Assessing Constitutional Standards:The Quest for MethodologicalApproaches

[Room L 326]

Pierre Guibentif, Universidade Nova deLisboa

Chair/DiscussantMehmet Fevzi Bilgin, Sakarya University

Democratic Legitimacy and Constitutions

Richard A. Paschal, Georgetown UniversityCongressional Power over Constitutional Factsand Standards of Review

Antonios Platsas, University of DublinInterpreting the European ConstitutionalTreaties: A Matter of Principle(s)?

Leah Soroko, University of TorontoModalities of Normative Coherence: HumanDignity in Constitutional Adjudication

58 Thursday, July 26 12:30 - 14:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Antje Wiener, University of BathMaking Normative Meaning Accountable in“International” Politics

2334 Roundtable—Are We Reflexive? Raceand the Law and Society Association

[Room S1.205]

Web ster’s Dic tio nary of fers two dis tinct def i ni tions

of the word re flexive. It de fines re flexive as

“marked by or ca pable of reflection” and, on the

other hand, “characterized by ha bitual and un think-

ing be havior.” This roundtable poses the question of

which definition best ap plies to law and so ciety

scholars when it co mes to race. The ses sion will pro-

vide par tic i pants an op por tu nity to dis cuss: 1) their

ex pe ri ences with the Law and So ci ety As so ci a tion

and LSA scholarship; 2) per ceptions of the cen tral-

ity of or marginalization of race in law and society

scholarship; 3) thoughts on fu ture di rections of the

As so ci a tion. While sev eral schol ars will lead the

discussion, the roundtable is intended as an open

discussion.

Kaaryn Gustafson, University ofConnecticut

ChairTaunya Banks, University of Maryland

ParticipantJeannine Bell, Indiana University

ParticipantLaura Gomez, University of New Mexico

Participant

2335 Roundtable—The Social Problèmatiqueof the Europeanization Process: What isLeft?

[Room S1.301]

The the ory of the Eu ro pean Eco nomic Con sti tu tion,

premised on the in terdependence of the Rechtsstaat,

the ordering of the European Economy, and the as-

signment of so cial pol icy to the nation states, has

contributed to the de coupling of so cial pol icy from

the European project (Christian Joerges, 2005).

This roundtable ex plores the claim of Eu rope’s Left

that the po tential of the theory of the Eu ropean Eco-

nomic Con stitution to guide the European project is

exhausted and that the erosion of the economic con -

stitution has not paved the way to ‘so cial Eu rope’ or

to the reconstruction of a European so cial de moc-

racy. We ex amine Joerges’ claim that nei ther the

open method of co-ordination nor the commitment

to a “so cial market economy” in the Con stitutional

Treaty nor the new “so cial rights” pro vide a concep-

tu ally suf fi cient and po lit i cally cred i ble ba sis for

this end. In particular, the OMC threatens the very

idea of constitutionalism, namely, the idea of law

mediated, and rule of law bound gov ernance.

Ellen Kennedy, University of PennsylvaniaChair

David Abraham, University of MiamiParticipant

Ulrich Preuss, Hertie School of GovernanceParticipant

Galya Benarieh Ruffer, NorthwesternUniversity

Participant

2336 Service Panel—How to Publish a Book[Room S1.401]

This session will bring to gether a host of very ex pe-

rienced authors to dis cuss, among other top ics, how

best to shop a manuscript around to presses, how to

deal with ed itors, and how to transform a dis serta-

tion into a pub lishable book.

Malcolm Feeley, University of California,Berkeley

ChairSally Merry, New York University

ParticipantMichael William McCann, University of

WashingtonParticipant

2337 Topics on Corporate Transparency[Room S1.405]

Michael Siebecker, University of FloridaChair

Matthew Bodie, St. Louis UniversityWorkers, Information, and CorporateCombinations: The Case for Non-BindingEmployee Referenda in TransformativeTransactions

Michael D. Guttentag, University of Nevada, Las Vegas

Toward an Inter-Disciplinary Model ofCorporate Disclosure

Michael Siebecker, University of FloridaAn Institutional Approach to Corporate Speech

Mark Fenster, University of FloridaDiscussant

2338 Transformations: Indigenous Peoplesand the Modern State

[Room L 229]

L Jane McMillan, St. Francis XavierUniversity

ChairL Jane McMillan, St. Francis Xavier

UniversityTransformations: Mi’kmaq TreatyImplementation and the Canadian State

Bruce Granville Miller, University of BritishColumbia

Treaties in 1855 and 2006: InternationalComparisons over Time and Space

Larry E. Nesper, University of Wisconsin,Madison

The Great Lakes Indian Fish and WildlifeCommission and the Politics of Multi-SovereignResource Management in Wisconsin

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

59 Thursday, July 26 12:30 - 14:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Chidi Oguamanam, Dalhousie UniversityTo Restore and Destroy: The KnowledgeDilemma at the Core of IndigenousTransformation

Lynette W. Russell, Monash UniversitySovereignty and the Commonwealth: Melbourne2006

Barbara Hocking, University of TasmaniaDiscussant

2339 Use of Torture in Time of Emergency[Room M 3059]

Bernard E. Harcourt, University of ChicagoChair

Aditi Bagchi, University of PennsylvaniaIntention, Torture, and the Concept of StateCrime

Thomas Crocker, University of SouthCarolina

Is Torture Necessary? Constitutional Culture inCrisis

Susanne Krasmann, Institute forCriminological Research

Outsourcing Torture

Elizabeth Rapaport, University of NewMexico

Discussant

2340 The Epistemology of Consent in RapeLaw (Sponsored by WG Gender andLaw)

[Room T 113]

Heather Douglas, University of QueenslandChair

Michele Alexandre, University of MemphisGirls Gone Wild and Rape Law: Insuring anUnbiased Application of “Reasonable Doubt”When the Victim Is Non-Traditional

Sharon Cowan, University of EdinburghKnowing When Yes Is Really Yes: CriminalLaw’s Construction of Consent in IntoxicatedRape

Lise Anne Gotell, University of AlbertaRisky Women and Canadian Sexual Assault Law

Vanessa Munro, King’s College LondonConstructing Consent: The Role of Narrative and Responsibility in Rape Trials

Emma Cunliffe, University of BritishColumbia

Discussant

2341 Law and the Facts of Law’sEnvironment

[Room T 306]

Chris Thornhill, University of GlasgowChair

Klaus Dammann, University of BielefeldLegal Risks as Transitory Risks: CognitiveExpectations Referring and Not Referring to theLegal System’s Environment

Christoph-Beat Graber, University ofLucerne

Can Modern Copyright Law Safeguard ArchaicCultural Expressions? Observations from a LegalSociology Perspective

Domenico Tosini, University of TrentoThe Autonomy of Law in the War on Terror: AContribution from Systems Theory

John Paterson, University of AberdeemDiscussant

14:15 – 14:30

Break

14:15 - 15:15

Cam bridge Uni ver sity Press Re cep tionto Mark the Launch of The Practice ofHuman Rights: Tracking Law Betweenthe Global and the Lo cal edited by Mark Goodale and Sally Engle Merry [RoomS1. 102]

14:30 - 16:15

2401 Managing Legal Risk (Sponsored byCRN05 Regulatory Governance)

[Room L E42]

Charles Epp, University of KansasChair/Discussant

Tom Baker, University of ConnecticutManaging Securities Litigation Claims

Tanina Rostain, New York Law SchoolCorporate In-House Counsel in the Age ofInternal Compliance

Margo Schlanger, Washington University,St. Louis

Claim Management and Deterrence

Susan S. Silbey, Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology

Discussant

2402 Language and the Criminal Law(Sponsored by CRN16 Language andLaw)

[Room S1.406]

Ronald Richard Butters, Duke UniversityChair/Discussant

Kate Haworth, University of NottinghamEvidence Transformed: UK Police Interviews

Syugo Hotta, Ritsumeikan UniversityAn Examination of Alleged Equality betweenProfessional and Lay Judges in Deliberation inthe Upcoming New Trial System in Japan

60 Thursday, July 26 14:30 - 16:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Mami Hiraike Okawara, Takasaki CityUniversity of Economics

Two Different Ways of Acknowledging “Intentto Murder” between Judges and Lay People

2403 Investigating Practices of GenderEquity: Indian Women, Courts, andArbitration (Sponsored by CRN22 South Asia and CRN23 International HumanRights)

[Room S1.601]

Julia M. Eckert, Max Planck Institute forSocial Anthropology

ChairSrimati Basu, DePauw University

Making Violence Speak: Reading Section 498“Torture” Cases as a Prism on the PoliticalEconomy of Marriage in India

Karine Bates, University of MontrealFrom Village to Court: An Ethnographic Studyof Women’s Access to Justice in India

Tamara Relis, Columbia University /LondonSchool of Economics

Collective Resolution of Human RightsViolations Against Women in India’s Women’sCourts

Gopika Solanki, McGill UniversityWho Shall be the Adjudicator? Multiculturalismand Gender Justice in India

Sylvia Vatuk, University of Illinois, ChicagoMaintenance for Divorced Muslim Women inIndia: Twenty Years of the Muslim Women Act

2404 The Rule of Law, State-Building, andTransition (Sponsored by CRN24 Ruleof Law, State Building, and Transition)

[Room S1.204]

This Roundtable serves as an organizing event for a

new CRN on Rule of Law, State-building and Tran-

sition, fo cusing on the emergence of new de velop-

ment-related le gal re search. “Law and de velop-

ment” re lated re search and prac tice have evolved

significantly since the 1970s and this ses sion will

consider the state of the field, as well as at tempt to

identify the key is sues, frames and approaches go -

ing for ward. The CRN aims to be broad enough to

encompass a wide range of ap proaches in various

regions of the world.

Veronica Taylor, University of WashingtonChair

Bryant Garth, Southwestern Law SchoolParticipant

Tom Ginsburg, University of IllinoisParticipant

Alexandra Huneeus, Stanford University/University of Wisconsin, Madison

ParticipantJohn Ohnesorge, University of Wisconsin

ParticipantJan Michiel Otto, Leiden University

Participant

2405 Contemporary Issues for IndigenousPeoples (Sponsored by CRN25 CollectiveHuman Rights

[Room S1.608]

Signa A. Daum Shanks, University ofWestern Ontario

ChairPhil Falk, Griffith University

Indigenous Australians and the NewAnti-Terrorism Laws: Pushing the Boundaries of Sedition—Fredom Fighters or Terrorists?

Bruce Feldthusen, University of OttawaThe Baker Did It: Tort Law and Sexual Abuse in Indian Residential Schools

Deirdre Howard-Wagner, University ofSydney

The Market Is the Only Thing That Is Universal:The Containing and Remapping of IndigenousRights

2406 Democracy in the Transnational PrivateSector: Citizenship, Sovereignty,Solidarity, and the Cultural Status ofStates

[Room S1.308]

Carol J. Greenhouse, Princeton UniversityChair/Discussant

Alfred C Aman, Indiana University,Bloomington

Bureaucracy, Contracts, and Democracy inAdministrative Law

Mariella Pandolfi, University of MontrealBio-Citizenship: A Critique of the HumanSecurity Doctrine

Honorio Velasco Maillo, UniversidadNacional de Educación a Distancia

Ubiquitous Corporations and Trusting Citizens

Marc Abeles, CNRSDiscussant

2407 Studies of Pre-Bankruptcy DebtCollection (Sponsored by IRCComparative Socio/Legal Approaches toConsumer Overindebtedness, DebtAdjustment, and Insolvency)

[Room S1.201]

Sefa Franken, University of TilburgChair/Discussant

Alexy Buck, Legal Services Research Centre,Nigel J. Balmer, Legal Services ResearcCentre, Pascoe Pleasence, Legal ServicesResearch Centre, and Ash Patel, LegalServices Research Center

A Helping Hand: The Impact of Debt Advice onPeople's Lives

Melissa B. Jacoby, University of NorthCarolina, Chapel Hill

Charting the Path from Mortgage Delinquency to Bankruptcy

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

61 Thursday, July 26 14:30 - 16:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Paul Joyce, Free Legal Advice Centres LtdParticipation of Debtors in Debt EnforcementProceedings and Effectiveness of Money Adviceas an Intervention

Bruno Miragem, Federal University of RioGrande do Sul and Rosângela LunardelliCavalazzi, Federal University of Rio deJaneiro

The Overindebtedness in Brazil: EmpiricalResearch Methodology and Case Analysis

2408 The First Women Judges: Experiences,Surveys, and Contexts (Sponsored byIRC Gender and Judging)

[Room L 140/142]

Sally Jane Kenney, University of MinnesotaChair

Jamie Cameron, York UniversityThe First Women Judges at the Supreme Courtof Canada and the Charter of Rights andFreedoms

Haesook Kim, Long Island UniversityOpening of the Judiciary in Korea: HwangYun-suk and the Pioneer Women Judges from1952-1990

Elaine Martin, Eastern Michigan UniversityU.S. Women Federal Court Judges Appointed byPresident Carter: Past and Present

Andrew D. Martin, Washington University,Lee Epstein, Northwestern University andChistina Boyd, Washington University

Untangling the Causal Effects of Sex on Judging

Jilda Aliotta, University of HartfordDiscussant

2409 Europeanization of Welfare andEmployment Law (Sponsored by IRCSocial Europe and CRN08 Labor Rights)

[Room S1.504]

Csilla Kollonay Lehoczky, Central EuropeanUniversity

ChairMilena Büchs, University of Southampton

and Mariely López-Santana, EuropeanUniversity Institute

New Governance and Decentralization inEmployment Policy

Kerstin Jacobsson, Stockholm University/South Stockholm University College, andHakan Johansson, Vaxjo University

Particular Needs Meet Universal WelfareNorms: The OMC on Social Inclusion in Sweden

Edit Kajtar, University of PecsDisability and Social Segregation - HowInclusive is the Hungarian Labor Market?

Andras Toth, Hungarian Academy ofSciences

Discussant

2410 Comparative and Historical Perspectiveson Law Reform

[Room S1.505]

Robert James Cottrol, George WashingtonUniversity

Chair/DiscussantLarry D. Barnett, Widener University

The Roots of Law

Magdalena Candioti, Universidad Nacionalde San Martín

Building a Judicial System: Judicial Reform inBuenos Aires in the First Postcolonial Years(1810-1830)

Anna Ziad Loutfi, Central EuropeanUniversity

The Dialectics of “Stabilisation” and “Reform”:Juristic and Feminist Approaches to Women’sPersonal Status in Hungarian Family Law,1880-1914.

Marcia A. Yablon, University of SouthCarolina

The Prohibition Hangover: Why We Are StillFeeling the Effects Of Prohibition

2411 Author Meets Reader—Same Sex,Different States: When Same-SexMarriages Cross State Lines, by AndrewKoppelman

[Room T 113]

Chai Feldblum, Georgetown UniversityChair

Andrew Koppelman, NorthwesternUniversity

AuthorJanet Halley, Harvard University, Nan D.

Hunter, Brooklyn Law School and G. N.Rosenberg, University of Chicago

Readers

2412 Charting Waters in Katrina’s Wake:Unresolved Contradictions of Race,Class, Property, Citizenship, Markets,and Renewal

[Room S1.101]

Audrey G. McFarlane, University ofBaltimore

ChairMichele Alexandre, University of Memphis

Love Don’t Live Here Anymore: EconomicIncentives for More Equitable Models of UrbanRedevelopment in Post-Katrina New Orleansand Beyond

D. Aaron Lacy, Barry UniversityThe Aftermath of Katrina: Race, UndocumentedImmigrants, and the Color of Money

Wendell Pritchett, University ofPennsylvania

Rebuilding New Orleans: The Dilemma ofEminent Domain

62 Thursday, July 26 14:30 - 16:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Terry Smith, Fordham UniversityKatrina: Electoral Consequences of FederalResponses to Regional Crises

John Valery White, Louisiana StateUniversity

A New Kind of Citizenship? Identity, Inclusion,and Community as Revealed by Katrina

Audrey G McFarlane, University ofBaltimore

Discussant

2413 Comparative and Historical Perspectiveson Witness Testimony and Witnessing

[Room L 144]

Felicia A. Kornbluh, Duke UniversityChair/Discussant

Constance Backhouse, University of OttawaSexually Abused Children as Witnesses: Lessons from History

James E. Baldwin, New York UniversityEvicting Immoral Neighbours in Ottoman Cairo:The Shari’ah Court and Social Regulation

Pawel A. Kociszewski, University of WarsawThe Institution of a Witness in the Legal Practice in Ancient Mesopotamia

2414 Competing Frameworks forUnderstanding “New Governance”:Constitutionalism, Regulation, Ethics, orDiscourse?

[Room S1.605]

Cristie L. Ford, University of BritishColumbia

Chair/DiscussantRebecca Curry, University of California,

BerkeleySoft Money’s Answer to “Soft Law”: CampaignFinance Regulation, Constitutionalism, and NewGovernance

Lance Gable, Wayne State UniversityGovernance of Public Health Emergencies:Ethics, Human Rights, and the Law

Ercument Gundogdu, York UniversityDiscoursal Production in Social Europe: SocialPolicy Work as Social Meaning Production

Anne Meuwese, University of ExeterEU Impact Assessment: Regulation orConstitutional Law?

2415 Contextualizing Transitional Justice[Room M Senatssaal]

Jo Dixon, New York UniversityChair

Jo Dixon, New York University, Erin Braatz,New York University and AlexandrePanayotov, New York University

Transitional Justice in Post-Communist andPost-Conflict Societies

Lynne A Haney, New York UniversityTransnational Politics of Punishment: NeoliberalPenality in the East and West

Ron Levi, University of Toronto and JohnHagan, Northwestern University

War Crimes and the Politics of Large Numbers

Joachim J. Savelsberg, University ofMinnesota

Transitional Justice and the Construction ofCollective Memories: Comparing InstitutionalMechanisms

2416 Disputing "Religious Law" in the 21stCentury: Islam

[Room T 013]

Martin Ramstedt, Max Planck Institute forSocial Anthropology

ChairArskal Salim, Max Planck Institute for

Social AnthropologyThe Shari-a Bylaws and Human Rights ofIndividual, Women, and Religious Minorities InIndonesia

Kerstin Steiner, University of MelbourneProtecting Human Rights under Religious Laws,National Laws, and International Law: CaseStudy of Freedom of Religion in Malaysia

Bertram Turner, Max-Planck-Institute forSocial Anthropology

Faith-Based Dispute Management inTransnational Communities

Wibo M. van Rossum, Erasmus UniversityRotterdam

Religious Law vs State Law: The Case of theTurkish Alevis

Said A Arjomand, SUNY at Stony BrookDiscussant

2417 Economic Rights: Globalization and NonState Actors

[Room S1.403]

Aditi Bagchi, University of PennsylvaniaChair

Erika Renee George, University of UtahThe Place of the Private Transnational Actor inInternational Law: From Law Breakers to LawMakers? Multinationals and Human Rights,Understanding Corporate Self-Regulation as Soft Law

Joanna Kyriakakis, Monash UniversityThe Rise of Extraterritorial Jurisdiction toAddress the Global Activities of MultinationalCorporations: Trends, Resistances, and Futures

Teresa Maneca-Lima, University ofCoimbra

A Decent and a Safety Work: A Right or aMirage?

Aoife Nolan, Queens University, BelfastEconomic and Social Rights Violations: Holding Non-State Actors to Account

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

63 Thursday, July 26 14:30 - 16:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Paulette S. Weiss, City University of NewYork

Globalizing Small Arms Legal Mechanisms:Prospects for Normative Transformation

2418 Fat, The New Black? Public Health vs.Civil Rights in the War on Obesity

[Room S1.205]

Anna Kirkland, University of MichiganChair

Paul Campos, University of ColoradoThe Legalization of Fat in the United States

Anna Kirkland, University of MichiganIdeologies of Fat Rights Claims in the U.S.

Abigail Saguy, University of California, LosAngeles, Kjerstin Elmen-Gruys, Universityof California, Los Angeles, and ShannaGong, University of California, LosAngeles

News Reporting on Obesity in the United Statesand France

William Thomas Haltom, University ofPuget Sound

Discussant

2419 Globalization and the Future of PublicLaw

[Room T 406]

Sujit Choudhry, University of TorontoRethinking Comparative Constitutional Law:Multinational Democracies, ConstitutionalAmendment, and Secession

David Fontana, George WashingtonUniversity

Secondary Constitutional Review: AmericanLessons from the New British System ofConstitutional Review

David Law, University of San DiegoGlobalization and the Future of ConstitutionalLaw

Wei-Hong Wang, National Taiwan NormalUniversity

When the Constitutionalism Meets the ModernInternational Law: A New Trend on the WorldConstitutionalism and Its Challenges

David Zaring, Washington & Lee UniversityChoice of Form in International Regulation

2420 Human Rights and Criminal Law[Room M 3092]

Farid Samir Benavides-Vanegas,Universidad Nacional de Colombia

ChairAndrea Birdsall, University of Edinburgh

Judicial Intervention Coming of Age? TheCreation of the International Criminal Court

Una Convery, University of UlsterLocked in the Past: The Custodial Disposal ofChildren in Northern Ireland

Margarida Garcia, Université du Québec àMontréal

Criminal Law and Human Rights: The Clash ofIdeas

Thomas H. Koenig, Northeastern University,and Michael Rustad, Suffolk University

“Hate Torts” To Fight “Hate Crimes”: Punishingthe Organizational Roots of Evil

Flavianne Fernanda B. Nobrega, FederalUniversity of Pernambuco

Torture and Impunity in Brazil: A FailedCriminal Investigation System

Elena Cirkovic, York UniversityDiscussant

2421 Islamic Law around the World[Room T 306]

Uriya Shavit, Frankfurt UniversityChair/Discussant

Ignatius C Achilefu, De Loyola AttorneysValidity of the Sharia Law and Its AttendantProblems: A Case Study on the Nigeria Situation

Shoaib Ghias, University of California,Berkeley

Constitutional Jurisprudence and the Aritculationof Islamic Law in Egypt and Pakistan

Mark Gould, Haverford CollegeKemal Faruki’s Reconstruction of Islamic Law:A Modernist Position in Islamic Jurisprudence

Ido Shahar, Tel Aviv UniversityOn the Sources of Dynamism in Shari’a Courts:A Neo-Institutional Perspective

Luqman Zakariyah, Muslim College LondonCertainty and Doubt in Islamic Criminal Law:An Analysis of the Legal Maxim “CertaintyCannot be Repelled by Doubt”

2422 Jurisdictional Disputes amongConstitutional Actors

[Room L 326]

Joxerramon Bengoetxea, InternationalInstitute for the Sociology of Law

Chair/DiscussantKathleen Regina Barrett, Georgia State

UniversityCollaboration versus Confrontation:Constitutional Courts under the Influence of theEuropean Court of Justice

Roda Mushkat, Brunel UniversityPredicting Authoritarian/Liberal PoliticalPractices within an International LegalFramework:Theory Meets Reality in HongKong

David S. Schwartz, University of WisconsinThe Impact of Federal Drug and AlcoholProhibition on Federalism and the JusticeSystem

64 Thursday, July 26 14:30 - 16:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

2423 Family Lawyers and Dispute ResolutionProcesses in a Responsible ParentingPolicy Environment: A New DivorceProfession? (Sponsored by WG LegalProfession)

[Room L E44/46]

Susan B Boyd, University of BritishColumbia

ChairCate Banks, Griffith University

Child Focused Family Law: Competing Visionsand Constraints

Rosemary Hunter, University of KentThe Family Court of Australia’s Children’sCases Pilot Program

Mavis Maclean, Oxford UniversityFamily Lawyers: The Work of the EnglishFamily Bar

Helen Rhoades, University of Melbourneand Hilary Astor, University of Sydney

Hybrid Professionals? Fashioning FamilyLawyers and Moulding Mediators

2424 Law as Epistemic Culture[Room S1.405]

Thomas Scheffer, Freie Universität BerlinChair

Bettina Lange, Keele UniversityDiscourse, Knowledge, and the Law: EUTechnology Norms in Environmental Regulation

Sindiso Mnisi, University of OxfordRedefining Expertise in Customary Law Casesin South Africa

Thomas Scheffer, Freie Universität BerlinKnowing How to Sleep Walk: On ExpertWitnessing and Distributed Authority in EnglishJury Trials

Helen Marie Wells, Keele UniversityDemonopolized and Democratized: Expertiseand the Speed Limit Enforcement Debate

2425 Litigation and its Discontents[Room M 1072]

Marc Galanter, University of Wisconsin/London School of Economics

ChairFelix W.H. Chan, University of Hong Kong

The Use of Statistics in Courtroom: AnEmpirical Experience from Hong Kong

Rebecca Scott Bray, University of SydneyMedico-Legal Evidence in Australian CriminalCourts: Expert Opinion and Injury/Death SceneInterpretation

Jeffrey W. Stempel, University of Nevada,Las Vegas

Litigation and Its Unanticipated Consequences:Campbell v. State Farm and the EvolvingAmerican Law of Punitive Damages

Julie Chi-hye Suk, Yeshiva UniversityThe French Disadvantage in EmploymentDiscrimination: The Limits of Civil Procedureand the Consequences of Criminalization

Ge Zheng, University of Hong KongSerendipitous Justice: A Study on WrongfulConvictions in China

2426 Managing Refugees: Rights Law andAdministration

[Room M 3059]

Catherine Dauvergne, University of BritishColumbia

Chair/DiscussantBihter Carhoglu, Free University, Berlin

The Role of Migrant Self-Organizations inPolitical Participation

Elizabeth Holzer, University of Wisconsin,Madison

Managing Refugees in the Shadow of RefugeeLaw

Paul Minderhoud, Radboud UniversityNijmegen, and Sophie Scholten, RadboudUniversity Nijmegen

Privatization of Immigration Control: The Roleof Private Transport Companies in ControllingImmigration

Kristin B. Sandvik, Harvard UniversityRefugee Resettlement and the Administration ofMarginality

Anna W. Shavers, University of NebraskaThe War on Terrorism as a Violation of theConvention and Protocol Relating to the Statusof Refugees

2427 Multiple Institutional Levels at Work:The Embeddedness of Work, Workers,and Labor Markets in RegulatoryRegimes

[Room S1.503]

Britta Rehder, Max-Planck-Institute for theStudy of Societies

Chair/DiscussantDaniel Adler, The World Bank and Vireak

Ann, Community Legal Education CenterJustice without the Rule of Law? The Challengeof Rights Based Industrial Relations inContemporary Cambodia

Simon Deakin, University of Cambridge,and Aristea Koukiadaki, University ofCambridge

The Reformulation of EU-Level Norms in theBritish System of Industrial Relations

Marie Meixner, IDHE ENS CachanRestructuring and Employee Participation:Evidence from the Banking Sector in France and Germany

Ozgur Oguz, Anadolu UniversityEmployees Rights and Contibutions inOccupational Health and Safety Law in Turkey

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

65 Thursday, July 26 14:30 - 16:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

2428 Negotiating the Religion/Secular LawDivide around the World

[Room T 008]

Hendrik Hartog, Princeton UniversityChair/Discussant

Manfred Aschke, University of GiessenReligion and Secular Law in the DistributedOrder of Modern Society

Mara Malagodi, University of LondonDebating Secularism in the Last HinduKingdom: Nepal’s Democratic Experience1990-2006

Frank Stuart Ravitch, Michigan StateUniversity

Masters of Illusion: The United States SupremeCourt and Religion

Eugene K.B. Tan, Stanford UniversityProfoundly Secular and Religious: ManagingReligion in Multi-Religious Singapore

Mark N.B. Thomas, Queensland Universityof Technology

Judge Not, Lest Ye Be Judged? Sacred Structure,Secular Error

2429 New Approaches to Old Gender StudiesTopics

[Room S1.404]

Laura Anne Bunt, Masaryk UniversityLawful Intimacies: Marriage, Race, and thePoetics of Violence in Twentieth Century Peru

Davina Cooper, University of KentCaring for Sex: The Conceptual Purchase of aWomen’s Bathhouse

Lynn Eckert, Marist College, andGeorganna Ulary, Marist College

Pornography: Commerce or Free Speech

Lisa Frohmann, University of Illinois,Chicago

Images and Identity: Immigrant BatteredWomen’s Representation of Identity inPhotography and Narrative

2430 Politics and the Judicial Process[Room S1.301]

Stephen Homewood, Middlesex UniversityChair

Joseph Corkin, Middlesex UniversityThe European Court of Justice’sProcess-Perfecting Judicial Shadow

Stephen Homewood, Middlesex UniversityTransparency and Environmental Justice: TheJudicial Approach in the UK

Maureen Spencer, Middlesex UniversityJudges and Politicians: The Experience of UKIndustrial Relations History

2431 Preventive Measures in the War onTerror

[Room S2.102]

Paul T. Dougan, University of SunderlandChair

Sasha Baglay, University of OntarioDealing with Non-Citizens Suspected ofTerrorism: Comparative Scenarios from Canada,the UK, and New Zealand

Jackson Herbert Mugerwa, Mugerwa LawOffice

Not for the Judiciary: Security Certificates andCanada’s War on Terror

Tamar Pitch, University of PerugiaSociety of Prevention

2432 Race in Multi-Racial America[Room L 139a]

Devon W. Carbado, University of California,Los Angeles

Chair/DiscussantBethany Berger, University of Connecticut

Red: Theorizing American Indian Race

Vinay Harpalani, New York UniversityFormal, Material, and Symbolic Dimensions ofRacialization: The Case of South AsianAmericans

Hans Ostrom, University of Puget SoundLangston Hughes and the Poetry of a DreamLegally Deferred

John Tehranian, University of UtahWhitewashed: America’s Invisible MiddleEastern Minority

Scott Leon Washington, PrincetonUniversity

A Quantitative History of Anti-MiscegenationLegislation in the United States, 1880-1940

2433 Recognizing and Redefining Victims:Social, Cultural, and Legal Contexts

[Room L 229]

Martina Yvonne Feilzer, University ofWales, Bangor

ChairFrederick John Desroches, St. Jerome’s

UniversityElder Abuse and Restorative Justice

Alina Ioana Apreotesei, Pazmany PeterCatholic University

The Victims of the Crimes under the Jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court

Lisa R. Pruitt, University of CaliforniaToward a Feminist Theory of the Rural

Lena Stadler, Universität BremenEx-Partner Stalking and Child Custody andVisitation Disputes

66 Thursday, July 26 14:30 - 16:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Judith Randle, University of California,Berkeley

Crime Victims and the Crisis of PenalModernism

2434 Roundtable—Human Rights and Accessto Justice for Women in Prison

[Room S1.307]

In this ses sion, Aus tra lian and Ca na di ans will fa cil i -

tate dis cussion and strategizing re garding tech-

niques to in crease access to jus tice and hu man rights

protections for women pris on ers. The co-fa cil i ta tors

have been col lab o rat ing on the de vel op ment of ac-

tiv ist, prac ti cal ser vice de liv ery, law re form, and ac-

ademic agenda aimed at in creasing oversight of ad -

herence to hu man rights protections. Building upon

the knowledge gained as a re sult of initiatives com-

menced in Can ada and continued in Australia, this

session will fo cus on the fur ther de velopment of a

global agenda and network for in ternational col lab-

o ra tion.

Toni Williams, University of KentChair

Jula Hughes, University of New BrunswickParticipant

Debbie Kilroy Oam, Sisters Inside Inc.Participant

Kim Pate, University of Ottawa & CanadianAssociation of Elizabeth Fry Societies

ParticipantRakhi Ruparelia, University of Ottawa

ParticipantKim Shayo Buchanan, University of

Southern CaliforniaParticipan

2435 Security and Human Rights[Room S1.502]

Liora Lazarus, University of OxfordChair

Benjamin Jervis Goold, University ofOxford, and Liora Lazarus, University ofOxford

Security and Human Rights: The Search for aLanguage of Reconciliation

Bernard E. Harcourt, University of ChicagoThe Rule of Law Under Pressure

Lucia Zedner, University of OxfordFixing the Future? The Pre-Cautionary Principleas Security Technology

2436 Speaking of Death[Room M 1070]

Jennifer L. Culbert, Johns HopkinsUniversity

Chair/DiscussantJennifer L. Culbert, Johns Hopkins

UniversityWhat Remains to Be Seen

Shai Lavi, Tel Aviv UniversityDead Rite: The Ritual Slaughter Debate in EarlyTwentieth Century Germany

Austin Sarat, Amherst CollegePardon Tales in the Killing State

Susan Schmeiser, University of ConnecticutSuicide by Execution

2437 Three Comedies and a Tragedy:Representations of Law in PopularCulture

[Room S1.401]

Marett Leiboff, Queensland University ofTechnology

Chair/DiscussantAlex Kosin, Humboldt University

The Cultural Meaning of the Lawyer Cartoon

Kimberlianne Podlas, University of NorthCarolina, Greensboro

Homerus Lex: Investigating Legal Culturethrough the Lens of The Simpsons

Charles Yablon, Yeshiva UniversityFailed Lawyers and the Great Satirical Tradition

2438 Transnational Risk Governance and theLaw

[Room S1.402]

Gerd Winter, University of BremenChair

Olaf Dilling, Universität BremenTransnational Production Networks: AChallenge to the Territorially-Based LegalSystem

Alexia Herwig, Universität Bremen, and LeoMaier, Universität Bremen

Beyond Legalisation: Developments inTransnational Food-Safety Governance

Alexandra Lindenthal, Universität BremenTransnational Private/Private RegulatoryPartnerships: The Case of FSC

Michael J. Warning, University of BremenLegitimizing Transnational BureaucracyNetworks and Their Law: Empirical Insightsfrom a Legal Perspective

Martin Herberg, Bremen UniversityTransnational Administrative Networks asActors of Global Governance

2439 Violence Against Women: GlobalPerspectives

[Room S1.604]

Steven Pierce, University of ManchesterChair/Discussant

Robin Barnes, University of ConnecticutManifest Destiny: Declaring the Causes andNecessity of Closing the Womb

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

67 Thursday, July 26 14:30 - 16:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Antoinette Clarke, Ohio Northern UniversityBattered Mothers, Shattered Lives: DomesticViolence and Liability for “Failure to Protect”Child Abuse

Donna Young, Albany Law SchoolDomestic Violence and the Spread of HIV/AIDSamong Married Women

Martin Chanock, La Trobe UniversityCulture and Violence Against women: thoughtsfrom a UN special consultation

2440 Legalization and Its Discontents:Histories, Trajectories, and the Vagariesof National Policies

[Room S1.501]

Susan C. Bibler Coutin, University ofCalifornia, Irvine

ChairHeath Cabot, University of California, Santa

CruzAsylum, Its Discontents, and Its Uses: PartialLegalities on Europe’s Hellenic Frontier

Susan C. Bibler Coutin, University ofCalifornia, Irvine

Robbed of a Different Life: AlternativeHistories, Interrupted Futures

Tina Gehrig, Swiss Federal AdministrativeCourt

Bureaucratic Biographies: LegalizationStrategies of Afghan Immigrants in Germany

Ester E Hernandez, California StateUniversity, Los Angeles

Becoming Legal: Latino Youth, Legalization,and Social Identity

Eve Darian-Smith, University ofMassachusetts, Amherst

Discussant

2441 Roundtable—Law in its SocialEnvironment: The Implications ofLuhmann’s Theory

[Room M 3086]

Each of the three presenters in this session has re-

cently pub lished books, either as sole or joint au -

thors, in troducing Niklas Luhmann’s theory. These

are: Michael King, and Chris Thornhill (2003),

Niklas Luhmann’s The ory of Politics and Law

(Basingstoke, Eng land: Palgrave/Macmillan) and

Hans-Georg Moeller (2006), Luhmann Explained.

From Soul to Sys tems (Chi cago and La Salle, Il li-

nois: Open Court). These three au thors come from

dif fer ent dis ci plines – law, pol i tics and phi los o phy

– and, as a result, each approaches Luhmann’s the-

ory from a dif ferent perspective, emphasising dif -

ferent aspects of the theory’s rich and complex con -

ceptual tapestry.For the purposes of this Round Ta-

ble discussion all three have been asked to elaborate

their par ticular pur chase on Luhmann’s theory as it

relates to the specific is sue of law’s re lationship

with its so cial en vi ron ment.

Andreas Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos,University of Westminster

ChairMichael King, University of Reading

ParticipantHans-Gerg Moeller, Brock University

ParticipantChris Thornhill, University of Glasgow

Participant

16:30 - 18:15

Cof fee Break

16:15 - 17:00

Meet the New Ed itors. Wiley-BlackwellJournals - Wine, Beer & Canapes[Room S1. 102]

16:30 - 18:15

2501

FEATURED SESSION—PresidentialPanel on Empirical Research:Empirical Research on Contracts

(Sponsored by CRN28 Realist andEmpirical Legal Methods)

[Room S1.101]Lawrence M. Friedman, Stanford University

ChairLisa Bernstein, University of Chicago

Empirical Research on Contracts

David Campbell, Durham University, UKWhat Do We Mean by the “Non-Use” ofContract?

Anna Gelpern, Rutgers University, Newarkand G. Mitu Gulati, Duke University

Public Symbol in Private Contract: A Case Study

Jonathan Yovel, University of Haifa /Columbia University

Dogmas of Empiricism and the Role ofImagination in Legal Realism

Stewart Macaulay, University of Wisconsin,Madison

Discussant

2502

FEATURED SESSION—NewGovernance and Its Critics(Sponsored by CRN05

Regulatory Governance)[Room M 1070]

Cary Coglianese, University of PennsylvaniaChair

Errol Meidinger, State University of NewYork at Buffalo

Competitive SupraGovernmental Regulation:How Can It Be Democratic?

68 Thursday, July 26 16:30 - 18:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Christine Parker, University of MelbourneThe Pluralisation of Business Regulation

Andras Sajo, Central European UniversityGlobal Governance and Local Constitutionalism

Joanne Scott, University College LondonLaw and New Governance in the EU

William Simon, Columbia University, andKathleen Noonan, University ofPennsylvania

The Rule of Law in the Experimentalist WelfareState: Lessons from American Child WelfareReform

Bronwen Morgan, University of BristolDiscussant

2503

FEATURED SESSION—After PublicInterest Law (Sponsored by IRCAfter Public Interest Law: A

Global Perspective on LawyeringStrategies for Social Transformation)

[Room M 1072]

Louise Trubek, University of WisconsinChair

Helena Alviar, Universidad de Los AndesThe Influence of Development Ideals on ClinicalLegal Education

Raymond A. Atuguba, University of GhanaRights and Law in the New Global Era of aRights-Based Approach to Development for theThird World: Grassroots Perspectives fromGhana.

Scott Cummings, University of California,Los Angeles

The Internationalization of Public Interest Law

Edwin Rekosh, Columbia UniversityConstructing Public Interest Law in Central andEastern Europe

Oscar V. Vieira, Getulio Vargas Foundation,Sao Paulo

Human Rights in Brazil

Jayanth Krishnan, William Mitchell Collegeof Law

Discussant

2504

FEATURED SESSION—Law,Counter-HegemonicGlobalization, and Post-Colonial

Diversity: Latin America and Africa(Sponsored by IRC Law andCounter-Hegemonic Globalization)

[Room M 3059]

Boaventura de Sousa Santos, University ofCoimbra

Unfinished Decolonization: Land and the Law of the New Basics

Cecilia MacDowell Santos, University of SanFrancisco /University of Coimbra

Xucuru do Ororubá: Indigenous Struggles, theState, and Post-Colonial Diversity in NortheastBrazil

Maria Paula G. Meneses, CoimbraUniversity

Traditional Authorities, Law, and EthnicIdentities in Mozambique: The Quest for aPost-Colonial State

Cesar Rodriguez-Garavito, University of theAndes/ University of Wisconsin, Madison

Law and Counter-Hegemonic Globalization:Toward a Theory of Transnational LegalMobilization

Angelina Snodgrass-Godoy, University ofWashington

Discussant

2505

FEATURED SESSION—Racism andRacial Minorities in DemocraticStates

[Room T 008]

Penelope Andrews, City University of NewYork

ChairTaunya Banks, University of Maryland

Moving beyond Racial Exhaustion andDisillusionment in 21st Century America

Qudsia Mirza, University of East LondonBritish Muslim Women and ReligiousDiscrimination Laws

Kendall Thomas, Columbia UniversityCompared to What?: Some (Cautionary)Thoughts on Comparative Critical Race Theory

Mark A Harris, LaTrobe UniversityMaking a space to be heard: The development of “Aboriginal Courts” in Australia

Heinz Klug, University of WisconsinDiscussant

2506

FEATURED SESSION—New Insightson Disputing Behavior:Comparative Perspectives

(Sponsored by IRC ComparativeDisputing Behavior)

[Room T 013]

Herbert M. Kritzer, University of Wisconsin,Madison

To Lawyer or Not To Lawyer: Is That theQuestion?

Masayuki Murayama, Meiji University andYoshiyuki Matsumura, Chiba University

Value Attitudes, Problem Experience, andDisputing Behavior

Bert Niemeijer, Free University/Ministry ofJustice, and Marijke Ter Voert, WODC,Ministry of Justice

Varieties in Disputing Behavior in DifferentCountries: Explanatory Strategies andMethodological Pitfalls

Pascoe Pleasence, Legal Service ResearchCentre

Civil Law Problems and the Individual: AnInternational Comparison

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

69 Thursday, July 26 16:30 - 18:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Hazel Genn, University College, London,and Erhard R. Blankenburg, VrijeUniversiteit

Discussants

2507

FEATURED SESSION—Roundtable:Gender, Violence, and HumanRights

[Room S1.204]

The ICTY and ICTR, in their land mark decisions,

recognized, for the first time, that rape and sexual

violence are in them themselves crimes against hu -

man ity and in stru ments of geno cide. Nev er the less,

sex ual vi o lence and hu mil i a tion are com mon acts in

war. The Uni ver sal Dec la ra tion of Hu man Rights

states in dividuals have the right to life, lib erty and

security of person (art. 3), it pro hibits slavery and

servitude (art 4) torture or cruel, in human or degrad-

ing treat ment or punishment (art 5). Yet sys tematic

rape and geno cide continue in Dalfur and else-

where, there is growing ev idence of the con nection

between par ticipating in war and acts of domestic

violence at home, and aid workers report women are

given a choice of trading food for sex or starving.

This session will fo cus on the re lationship be tween

gender and war. It will ex plore sexual vi olence as a

weapon of war and geno cide, the use of sex ual slav-

ery as a tool of war, the use of gen der violence in

mil i tary train ing and the re la tion ship be tween war

and gen der based vi olence at home. It will also ex -

amine responses to these hu man rights vi olations

through in ter na tional courts and rec on cil i a tion pro-

cedures in post-war ar eas ,as well as meth ods for ad -

dress the psychological trauma that re sults from this

vi o lence.

Konstanze Plett, University of BremenChair

Rhonda Copelon, City University of NewYork

ParticipantElizabeth Schneider, Brooklyn Law School

ParticipantGabriela Mischkowski, Medica Mondiale

E.V.Participant

Pratiksha Baxi, Jawaharlal NehruUniversity

Participant

2508

FEATURED SESSION—TransnationalLegal Orders and Their Effects:Transformations, Resistances,

and Trajectories[Room S1.205]

Gralf-Peter Calliess, University of BremenChair

Elizabeth Heger Boyle, University ofMinnesota

Religious and Secular Law in the Global System

Terence Halliday, American Bar FoundationArchitects of the State: International FinancialInstitutions and the Reconstruction of States inthe Global South.

Hani Sayed, American University inCairo

Development and the State of Exception

Gregory C. Shaffer, Loyola University,Chicago

The “Rule of Law” of the World TradeOrganization: Do the “Haves” Come OutAhead?

Peer C. Zumbansen, York UniversityRough Consensus and Running Code: A Theoryof Transnational Law Making

2509

FEATURED SESSION—TransitionalJustice: Memory andReconciliation

[Room M Senatssaal]

Jacek M. Kurczewski, Warsaw UniversityChair

Susanne Karstedt, Keele UniversityThe Endurance of Collective Memory: Germany1950-1980

Monika Nalepa, Rice UniversitySkeletons in the Closet: Transitional Justice inthe Post-Communist World

Piers Pigou, University of WitwatersrandTruth Recovery and Accountability in the SouthAfrican Transition: Challenges andOpportunities

Marek Safjan, Warsaw UniversityConstitutional Jurisprudence toward theCommunist Past (Expectations and Reality)

Gracyna B. Skapska, Jagiellonian UniversityCan We Do Justice to the Past? ComparativeEmpirical Analysis of Lustration,Decommunization, and Restitution in Russia,Poland, and Germany

Ruti G. Teitel, New York Law SchoolTransitional Justice Genealogy

18:30 - 19:30

2601

PLENARY—Globalization ofConstitutional Law

[Room M Audimax]

Constitutional law is closely connected with na -

tional identity as is ev idenced in the U.S. de bate

about the le gitimacy of the Su preme Court’s cit ing

foreign case law and has therefore for a long time

70 Thursday, July 26 18:30 - 19:30

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

been less in fluenced by glob alization than other

fields of law. This has changed. Processes of de-na-

tion al iza tion of con sti tu tional law are widely rec og -

nized and dis cussed in ju risprudence and compara-

tive law. The aim of the session is to ex plore this de-

velopment from a so cial sci ence per spective. It will

discuss on a macro-sociological level the global

eco nomic, po lit i cal so cial pro cesses in flu enc ing the

in ter na tion al iza tion of con sti tu tional law and on a

mi cro-so cio log i cal level the struc tures sup port ing

these de vel op ments, e.g. the in ter na tional com mu-

nity of con stitutional judges and their con ference

ac tiv i ties or the role of in ter na tional draft ing

specialists and NGOs

Brun-Otto Bryde, Federal ConstitutionalCourt /University of Giessen

ChairJavier A. Couso, Universidad Diego Portales

ParticipantJutta Limbach, Goethe-Institut

ParticipantFrancois Venter, North-West University

Participant

19:45 - 21:00

Re cep tion [Maritim proArte Ho tel,Friedrichstrasse 151]

Sponsored by Bundesministerium für Justiz(German Federal Ministry of Justice) and DieSenatsverwaltung für Justiz Berlin (BerlinSenateDepartment of Justice)

Friday, July 27

7:45 - 14:00

Reg is tra tion [GF- Seminar Build ing]

8:30 - 14:00

Book Ex hibit [S1.102 & S1.103]

8:30 - 18:15

Paper Posters on dis play, Law Facultylobby [see session 1100 for list]

Sessions

8:15 - 10:00

3101 Context and Cause Lawyering: Culture,Identity, and Their Consequences(Sponsored by CRN03 CauseLawyering)

[Room S1.307]

Laura J. Hatcher, Southern IllinoisUniversity

Chair/DiscussantHualing Fu, University of Hong Kong

Cause Lawyering in an Authoritarian State

Ulrike Mueller, Onati International Institute for the Sociology of Law

Politics of the Waiting Room and ProfessionalDirect Action: Private Practice Cause Lawyering in Berlin

Lawrence Repeta, Omiya Law SchoolJapanese Cause Lawyers and ConstitutionalRights

3102 Technologies of Risk Governance(Sponsored by CRN05 RegulatoryGovernance)

[Room S1.406]

Tom Baker, University of ConnecticutChair

Bradley Bryan, University of VictoriaEquipmentality: Frankenfoods, Hockey Masksand the Irresponsibility of Risk Management

Stephen Lyng, Carthage CollegeFrom Action to Edgework: Character andReflexivity in Late Modernity

Jens O. Zinn, School of Social Policy,Sociology, and Social Research

Promises and Pitfalls of Societal Regulation: ASociological Perspective on the Management ofRisk and Uncertainty

3103 Non-Enforcement of Labor Rights:www.Where?Why?What Is To Be Done?(Sponsored by CRN08 Labor Rights)

[Room L 139a]

Frances Raday, Colman College ofManagement /Hebrew University

Chair/DiscussantEran Golan, Workers Hotline

New Legal Strategies for Enforcing LaborRights

Risa L. Lieberwitz, Cornell UniversityIntegrating Individual and Collective Rights ofWorkers: Can We Reunite Labor andEmployment Law?

Nantiya Ruan, University of DenverThe Risen Dead Letter: Increasing Dissonancebetween Narrowness of Employees’ Right toReligious Expression and the Supreme Court’sTitle VII and Establishment ClauseJurisprudence

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

71 Friday, July 27 8:15 - 10:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Nardia Simpson, Institute of DevelopmentStudies, Brighton

One Twelfth of Eleven Camels: ChallengingLegal Fictions in the Context of Insolvency andOccupational Diseases

3105 Debt Adjustment Programs (Sponsoredby IRC IRC Comparative Socio/LegalApproaches to ConsumerOverindebtedness, Debt Adjustment,and Insolvency)

[Room S1.204]

William C. Whitford, University ofWisconsin

ChairJohannes Doll, Federal University of Rio

Grande do Sul and Marli A. Sampaio,Procon-SP

Elderly Consumer Weakness in “WithholdingCredit”

Nadja Jungmann, Erasmus Universiteit andNick Huls, Erasmus UniversiteitRotterdam

The Dutch Consumer Bankruptcy Act (“Wetschuldsanering natuurlijke personen” or Wsnp):The End of the Voluntary Debt SettlementProcedure or a New Beginning?

Catarina Frade, University of Coimbra,Portugal and Cláudia Abreu Lopes,University of Coimbra

The Context of Overindebtedness’ Regulation

Michelle Kelly-Louw, University of SouthAfrica

Prevention of Overindebtedness andMechanisms for Resolving Overindebtedness ofSouth African Consumers

Georg E. Kodek, Supreme Court of AustriaDiscussant

3106 Varieties of Disputing Behavior andtheir Determinants (Sponsored by IRCComparative Disputing Behavior)

[Room S1.608]

Helen E. Hartnell, Golden Gate U / Free U of Berlin

Chair/DiscussantKeiichi Ageishi, Niigata University

Land and House Problem and DisputingBehavior in Japan

Malgorzata Fuszara, University of WarsawSocial Role of Notorious Litigants

Ryo Hamano, Rikkyo UniversityAdvice Seeking Behavior of Civil Disputants inJapan

Rebecca L Sandefur, Stanford UniversityRank, Resources, and Resourcefulness:Socioeconomic Differences in Responses toJusticiable Problems

3107 Access to Justice: Law and Social Justicein Comparative Perspectives

[Room L 326]

Daniel Adler, The World BankChair/Discussant

Gary Kok Yew Chan, SingaporeManagement University

Access to Justice for the Poor: The SingaporePerspective

Mary Nell Trautner, University at Buffalo,SUNY

Tort Reform and Access to Justice in PersonalInjury Cases: Implications of Lawyers’Screening and Framing Decisions

Elizabeth Cooper, Fordham UniversityBeyond Litigation: Teaching for Social Justice in the Law School

Suzuka Yoshioka, Kobe UniversitySeeking Legal Advice in Rural Areas of Japan

3108 Acknowledgment of Group Identity: ForBetter or for Worse?

[Room S1.308]

Allison Elizabeth Fish, University ofCalifornia, Irvine

ChairLibardo José Ariza, Universidad de Deusto

We Are Indians Too: AnthropologicalKnowledge, Indigenous Subjectivity, andConstitutional Adjudication

Yifat Bitton, Shaarey-Mishpat College ofLaw

The Limits of Equality and the Virtues ofDiscrimination: The Formation of DiscriminatedGroups in the United States

Rohee Dasgupta, Keele UniversityHidden Ghettos: Questions on Jewish Identityand Rights in Poland Post-1945

Juan Carlos Durán Böhme, UniversidadComplutense de Madrid

Constitutional Recognition of the Difference inthe Andean Region

3109 Author Meets Reader—Judicial SystemTransformation in the Globalizing World:Korea and Japan, by Choi & Rokumoto(eds.)

[Room L 144]

Shiro Kashimura, Kobe UniversityChair

Dohyun Kim, Dongguk UniversityAuthor

Masahiro Fujita, National GraduateInstitute for Policy Studies, ChaiharkHahm, Yonsei University, John Ohnesorge,University of Wisconsin and Dimitri R.Vanoverbeke, Catholic University Leuven

Readers

72 Friday, July 27 8:15 - 10:00

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

3110 Children Encountering Justice:Interrogations, Confessions, andCriminalization

[Room S1.505]

Janet Ainsworth, Seattle UniversityChair/Discussant

Fiona Raitt, University of DundeeChildren, Participation, and the JudicialImagination

Christine S Scott-Hayward, New YorkUniversity

Explaining Juvenile False Confessions:Adolescent Development and PoliceInterrogation

Simon Singer, Northeastern UniversityThe Reframing of Criminalization in JuvenileJustice

3111 Citizens and Experts[Room S1.301]

Judith Fordham, Murdoch UniversityChair

Judith Fordham, Murdoch UniversitySecrets of the Jury Room: The CSI Effect

Antoine Pelicand, University of NantesPeace Judges, Proximity Judges: The Changes of Lay Status in French Legal System

Gerald J. Thain, University of WisconsinLaw Professor and Foreperson of a Jury: How ISpent (Some of) Last Summer

3112 Comparative Corporate Governance:Law and Finance

[Room L E42]

Andreas Engert, Ludwig MaximilianUniversity, Munich

ChairSimon Deakin, University of Cambridge

Industrialization, Legal Origin, and EconomicDevelopment in Historical Perspective

Martin Gelter, Vienna University ofEconomics and Business Administration

A Theory on the Impact of Shareholder Controland Ownership Concentration on CorporateStakeholders

Holger Spamann, Harvard UniversityLaw and Finance Revisited

Gordon Smith, University of Wisconsin,Chang Hee Lee, Seoul National Universityand Jens Dammann, University of TexasSchool of Law

Discussants

3113 Conjunctural Politics Gendered:Federalism, Neo-Liberalism, andRedistribution

[Room S1.201]

Judy Fudge, University of VictoriaChair

Gillian Calder, University of VictoriaChallenges to Maternity and Parental Leave inCanada: Federalism and Equality

Judy Fudge, University of VictoriaThe Legal Regulation of Working Time: Beyondthe Male-Bread Winner and Female CaregiverDivide

Hester Ayres Lessard, University of VictoriaFamily, Marriage, and Children: Neo-LiberalChoices and Conservative Values

Margot Young, University of BritishColumbia

Discussant

3114 Constructions of Identity in CommunityRelations

[Room M 1070]

Jonathan Goldberg-Hiller, University ofHawaii

ChairJon Binnie, Manchester Metropolitan

UniversityRe-Thinking the Place of Critical LegalGeographies

Davina Cooper, University of KentBuilding Community Out of Strangers:Alternative Trading and Exchange Schemes

Alison Diduck, University College LondonIf Only We Can Find Appropriate Terms to Use,the Issue Will Be Solved

Martha-Marie Kleinhans, University ofReading

Corporate Politics and Identity: Berlin’sHolocaust Memorial and Degussa AG

Carl F. Stychin, University of ReadingDiscussant

3115 Courts at Work[Room L E44/46]

Lynn Mather, State University of New Yorkat Buffalo

Chair/DiscussantMilton Heumann, Rutgers University, Brian

Pinaire, Lehigh University and JenniferLerman, Rutgers University

License to Operate: The Process, Politics, andPolicy Implications of Discipline for PhysicianFelony Offenders

Jeffrey Kahn, Southern MethodistUniversity

Russia’s Hybrid Criminal Procedure Code

Tomohiko Maeda, Sapporo UniversityCollaboration between Judges and Court Clerks:Expanding Domain of Court Clerks in JapaneseCivil Justice

Richard Schauffler, National Center forState Courts

Measuring Court Performance: JudicialIndependence and Judicial BranchAccountability

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

73 Friday, July 27 8:15 - 10:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

3116 Dealing with an Objectionable Past: AComparison across Countries

[Room M Senatssaal]

Carl Baar, York UniversityChair/Discussant

Christopher Kendrick Connolly, CliffordChance US LLP

Living on the Past: Prospects for a TruthCommission in Northern Ireland

Laurel Fletcher, University of California,Berkeley, Harvey M. Weinstein, Universityof California, Berkeley and Jamie Rowen,University of California, Berkeley

Context, Timing, and Dynamics of TransitionalJustice: A Historical Perspective

Maria Paula Saffon, U de los Andes/UNacional and Rodrigo Uprimny, UNacional/U of Wisconsin

Transitional Justice without Transition? TheColombian Case and its Challenges to theTransitional Justice Paradigm

David Sugarman, Lancaster UniversityImperfect Justice: The Challenges and Obstaclesto the Prosecution of Pinochet in Chile,2000-2006

Stephen G. Utz, University of ConnecticutJustifying Transitional Justice

3117 Dispute Resolution in China: AComparative Perspective on SelectiveAdaptation

[Room S1.601]

Pitman B. Potter, University of BritishColumbia

ChairSarah Biddulph, University of Melbourne

and Weidong He, Shanghai Academy ofSocial Sciences

Policies and Responses to Housing Evictions inShanghai

Say Hak Goo, University of Hong Kong andAnne Carver, Chinese University of HongKong

Low Structure, High Ambiguity: SelectiveAdaptation of International Norms of CorporateGovernance Mechanisms in China

Weidong He, Shanghai Academy of SocialSciences

Protection of the Right to Housing DuringHousing Relocation of Residents: ForcedRelocation in Shanghai

Lesley Jacobs, York UniversitySelective Adaptation and International HumanRights to Health

Shu Liang Wang, Shanghai Academy ofSocial Sciences

Introduction to the Dispute ResolutionMechanism for International Trade in China

Pengfei Yang, Shanghai Academy of SocialSciences

The Effectiveness of Collective Contracts inChina: A Perspective on Labour Rights

Sarah Biddulph, University of MelbourneDiscussant

3118 Empowering Democratic-StyledConstitutions

[Room S1.604]

Sandra Segaram Paramalingam, KeeleUniversity

ChairMehmet Fevzi Bilgin, Sakarya University

Necessity of Constitutions

Clara Marsan, European UniversityInstitute

Delimiting the Demos that UnderpinsContemporary Constitutional Polities

Sabrina L. Pinnell, University of California,Santa Barbara

Formation vs. Action: What EmpowersConstitutional Courts in New Democracies?

3119 Family and Power[Room S1.403]

Mary Coombs, University of MiamiChair/Discussant

Beata Laciak, University of WarsawChildren’s Rights in Polish families: Theory andPractice

Debra Schleef, University of MaryWashington

The Thirty-Hour Day: Law and Business Student Expectations about Balancing Work and Family

Martha Smithey, Texas Tech University andIgnacio Luis Ramirez, Texas TechUniversity

Expectations of Parenting and IntimatePartnership among College Students: AnAnalysis of Mexican American and AngloAmerican College Students

3120 Fractures in the American CapitalPunishment Machinery

[Room S1.205]

Patrick W Timmons, San Jose StateUniversity

Chair/DiscussantJohn Blume, Cornell University, Valerie

Hans, Cornell University, Sheri Johnson,Cornell University and TheodoreEisenberg, Cornell University

Death in Delaware: Judges, Juries, and Race

Samuel Gross, University of Michigan andBarbara O’Brien, Michigan StateUniversity

Executions and Exonerations in the UnitedStates

74 Friday, July 27 8:15 - 10:00

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Daniel William LaChance, University ofMinnesota, Twin Cities

State Killing and Cultural Anxiety Amidst aLiberal Consensus

Richard Weisman, York UniversityRemorse and Psychopathy at the Penalty Phaseof the Capital Trial: How Psychiatry’s View of“Moral Insanity” Helps Build the Case for Death

3121 Governance by Marking and Branding[Room M 3086]

Olufunmilayo Arewa, NorthwesternUniversity

ChairMargaret Chon, Seattle University

Fair Trade, Brand-Based Regulation, and NewGlobal Governance

Rosemary J. Coombe, York UniversityBearing Cultural Distinction: Marking Places ofDifference in Neoliberalism

Errol Meidinger, State University of NewYork at Buffalo

Commodifying and Branding Moral Legitimacythrough Environmental Stewardship Programs

Peter Yu, Michigan State UniversityThe Protection of the Intangible CulturalHeritage

Sarah Harding, Illinois Institute ofTechnology

Discussant

3122 Israeli Legal Geography: Internal andExternal Walls

[Room S1.501]

Yishai Blank, Tel Aviv UniversityChair

Yishai Blank, Tel Aviv UniversityThe Gated Community as a Private City:Fragmentation of Public Space in Israel

Claris Harbon, Tel Aviv UniversityAffirmative Squatting in Israel: Mizrahi WomenCorrecting Past Injustices

Alexandre (Sandy) Jonathan Kedar, HaifaUniversity

Israeli Courts and the Construction of a theSeparation Zone/Regime betweenIsrael/Palestine

Issi Rosen-Zvi, Tel Aviv UniversityPigs in Space: Geographic Separatism in aMulticultural Society

David Delaney, Amherst CollegeDiscussant

3123 Key Actors in Latin American Justiceand Justice Reform

[Room S1.502]

Luis Pasara, Universidad de SalamancaChair/Discussant

María Inés Bergoglio, Universidad Nacionalde Córdoba

Increasing Inequality in the Legal Profession inLatin America

Maria del Pilar Domingo, Universidad deSalamanca

Political Power and Judicial Politics in LatinAmerica

Luis Pasara, Universidad de Salamanca andJulio Faundez, University of Warwick

International Actors in Justice Reform in LatinAmerica

3124 Law and the Transformations of Place[Room S2.102]

Douglas Harris, University of BritishColumbia

ChairMichael Begg, University of British

ColumbiaEnvironmental Law or EnvironmentalDevelopment Law? Legal Context and the Birth(or Death?) of Environmentalism in BritishColumbia

Douglas Harris, University of BritishColumbia

Property and the Making of Place

Renisa Mawani, University of BritishColumbia

Unmaking Stanley Park: Tracing Coast SalishDemands for Justice

3125 Law, Society, and Compliance Behavior[Room S1.605]

Cristie L. Ford, University of BritishColumbia

ChairNeil Anthony Gunningham, Australian

National University, Robert A. Kagan,University of California, Berkeley andDorothy Thornton, University ofCalifornia Berkeley

The Persistence of Economic Factors in ShapingRegulation: Limits of Regulatory and SocialLicense Pressures

Fiona Haines, University of MelbourneVanquishing the Enemy or Civilizing theNeighbour? Controlling the Risks fromHazardous Industries

Vibeke Lehmann Nielsen, University ofAarhus and Christine Parker, Universityof Melbourne

Testing the Promise of the “New Governance”:Do Non-State Actors Wield Any Influence overBusiness Compliance with RegulatoryObjectives?

Jillian T. Weiss, Ramapo CollegeRelationships between TransgenderNon-Discrimination Law and Corporate Policies

Bridget Hutter, London School of EconomicsDiscussant

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

75 Friday, July 27 8:15 - 10:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

3126 Law, Society, and Taxation V:Avoidance, Enforcement, andLegitimacy of the Tax System

[Room L 140/142]

Brian D Galle, Florida State UniversityChair/Discussant

Joseph Dodge, Florida State UniversityThe Constitutional Validity of Federal Taxes inthe United States

David Grant Duff, University of TorontoTax Avoidance and the Rule of Law

Henry Ordower, Saint Louis UniversityThe Culture of Tax Avoidance in Europe and theUS

Alex Raskolnikov, Columbia UniversityTax Identity

3127 Legal Persons and Imagined Bodies:Three Perspectives

[Room S1.504]

Martha Merrill Umphrey, Amherst CollegeChair/Discussant

Susan A. Bandes, DePaul University(Visiting Professor, University of Chicago2007-2008)

Murderous States: Empathy and Distancing inthe Capital System

Carol Sanger, Columbia UniversityMandatory Ultrasound and Informed AbortionConsent: Looking Your Fetus in the Eye

Kendall Thomas, Columbia UniversityDoing What Comes (Un)Naturally: Procreation,Parenting, and the Heterosexualization of theDeath Drive in Hernandez v. Robles

3128 Legal Plurality in UnexpectedCircumstances

[Room T 008]

Jonathan Yovel, University of Haifa /Columbia Law School

Chair/DiscussantCeren Belge, University of Washington

Negotiating Cultural Autonomy: The Contestingof Honor Killings in Turkey and Israel

Erik Larson, Macalester CollegeWhen the Rule of Law is Insufficient: Necessity,International Reaction, and Coups in Fiji

Robert E. Rosen, University of MiamiLegal Pluralism and Corporate Behavior

Dayna N. Scott, York UniversityConstructing Causal Narratives: Organizing forEnvironmental Justice

Aimar Ventsel, Estonian LiteraryMuseum/Max Planck Institute for SocialAnthropology

Punx and Skins United: Ideology, Economy, and Counterculture

3129 Making Soft Law and “NewGovernance” Approaches Effective:Remedies, Opportunity Structures,Stability, and Contextual Criteria

[Room M 1072]

Imelda Maher, University College, DublinChair/Discussant

Aron Cs. Buzogany, Free University BerlinThe Enlargement of EU Environmental Policyand the Role of Legal Opportunity Structures

Nicolai Dose, Technical University MunichOld or New Governance?

Emilia Korkea-aho, University of HelsinkiAn Taisce-Case and the Question of a LegalRemedy Before the European Court of Justice(Or Rather Why the Question Was Not There)

Faina Milman-Sivan, Ramat Gan LawSchool

Incorporating Civil Society into GlobalGovernance: Lessons from the InternationalLabor Organization (ILO)

3130 Minorities, Asylum Seekers, andDiscrimination

[Room T 013]

Harry M. Rhea, La Salle U/National U ofIreland

ChairRosaan Kruger, Rhodes University

Confronting Racial Discrimination: The SouthAfrican Experience

Sanele Sibanda, University ofWitwatersrand

From Legal Formalism to Legal Pragmatism: ACase for the Formal Recognition of GroupHuman Rights

Filip Spagnoli, Belgian Central BankHow the Rule of Law Can Protect Human Rights Against the Dictatorship of the Majority

Liam P. Thornton, University College CorkThe Socio-Economic Rights of Asylum Seekersin Ireland and the U.K.

3131 Property Rights: Structures of Property[Room L 229]

Kai Bussmann, University Halle, WittenbergChair

Vardaan K. Ahluwalia, National Universityof Juridical Sciences

Intellectual Property Rights: Solution to theImpasse Between Individual and Society from an Indian Perspective

Mohammad Alramahi, The University ofManchester

To What Extent ICANN-Accredited RegistrarsAre Guilty?

Benjamin Barros, Widener UniversityGroup Size and Heterogeneity in the Design ofLegal Structures

76 Friday, July 27 8:15 - 10:00

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Shubha Ghosh, Southern MethodistUniversity

Identifying Competitive Norms in IntellectualProperty

Sabrina Safrin, Rutgers UniversityChain Reaction: How Property Begets Property

3133 Regulating Natural Resources:Authority versus Rights

[Room M 3059]

Jason S. Johnston, University ofPennsylvania

ChairEmma Algotsson, University of the

WitwatersrandCross-Border Conservation: Crime Control andCommunity Participation in the GreaterLimpopo Transfrontier Park

Yuval Feldman, Bar-Ilan University andDoron Teichman, Hebrew University

Were All “Legal Dollars” Created Equal?

Sanghamitra Padhy, University of SouthernCalifornia

Battling for Clean Water: A Socio LegalAnalysis of the Clean Ganga Campaign

Satish Shastri, University of RajasthanMigration and the Rights of Indigenous People:An Indian Perspective

3134 Roundtable–The Future of “Separatebut Equal” Across Race, Sex, and Sexual Orientation

[Room S1.404]

This roundtable will crit ically ex plore how the

long-maligned concept of “separate but equal” is

faring both doc trinally and aspirationally in the 21st

century. The le gal concept was re pudiated in the

con text of de jure seg re gated pub lic ed u ca tion and

other in stances of ex press gov ern ment-man dated

segregation in the middle of the last cen tury. How-

ever, in the con texts of both marriage and ed ucation,

“separate but equal” is gain ing currency as a po liti-

cally pal at able re sponse to com pet ing de mands for

resources and rights. Indeed, sep arate but “equal”

has come to be not only accepted but also embraced

by courts and po litical leaders looking to ap pease

the equality de mands of same-sex cou ples while ac -

ced ing to the tra di tion al ist de mands to re serve mar-

riage to heterosexuals. The concept is playing out

differently in ed ucation, but with no less effect on

the ground. Many who fo cus on closing the gaps in

achievement be tween ra cial groups are now em -

brac ing of ten ra cially iso lated spe cial ized char ter

schools rather than in te gra tion ef forts. Sim i larly,

single-sex ed ucation, and spe cial schools for gay,

lesbian, bi-sexual and transgender teens are again

as cen dant. Per haps most sig nif i cantly, the United

States Su preme Court is now considering whether

to pro hibit school dis tricts from tak ing race into ac -

count in order to en sure that students experience ed-

ucation in a multi-ra cial set ting. Bring ing to bear

tools from le gal and educational the ory and prac-

tice, this roundtable will ad dress this cen tral ten -

sion: the formal repudiation of “separate but equal”

as a legal concept, and its current embrace in several

contexts by otherwise progressive constituencies.

Rachel Godsil, Seton Hall UniversityChair

Michelle Adams, Seton Hall UniversityParticipant

Suzanne Goldberg, Columbia UniversityParticipant

Shavar Jeffries, Seton Hall UniversityParticipant

George Sanchez, City University of NewYork

Participant

3135 Service Panel–World Cycle on the Waysof Law

[Room M 3092]

The purpose of this ses sion is to pro vide in forma-

tion about a cycle of Socio-legal Con ferences

started at the In ternational Institutre for the So ciol-

ogy of Law at Oñati in 2005. The first Con ference

was en titled Eu ropean Ways of Law, and the re sults

of this Con ference and the main discussion about

the is sue will be presented by Pro fessors Da vid

Nelken and Volkmar Gessner. The sec ond Con fer-

ence was held this year, in July 2007, one week ago

and was entitled: Latin Amer ican Ways of Law: De -

moc racy, De vel op ment and Lib er a tion and the re-

sults of the Con ference will be pre sented by Profes-

sors Carlos Lista and Angelica Cuellar. Pro fessor

Bengoetxea, cur rent Di rector at Oñati will introduce

the main topics and the global ambition of the IISL

Joxerramon Bengoetxea, InternationalInstitute for the Sociology of Law

ChairAngelica Cuellar, Universidad Nacional

Autonoma de MexicoParticipant

Volkmar Gessner, University of BremenParticipant

Carlos Alberto Lista, Universidad Nacionalde Córdoba

ParticipantDavid Nelken, University of Macerata

Participant

3136 Technologies, Justice, and Law[Room S1.101]

Laurence Dumoulin-Boulanger, EcoleNormale Supérieure de Cachan

Chair/DiscussantThierry Delpeuch, Ecole Normale

Supérieure de CachanTechnological Cooperation as a Strategy ofInternational Influence in the Field

Marie-Sophie Devresse, Université desSciences et Technologies de Lille 1

Trust, Technology, and Penal Rationality

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

77 Friday, July 27 8:15 - 10:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Laurence Dumoulin-Boulanger, EcoleNormale Supérieure de Cachan andChristian Licoppe, ENST, Paris

Justice à Distance: The Case of VideoconferenceTrials between Paris andSaint-Pierre-et-Miquelon

Mara Lee Merlino, University of Nevada,Reno, James Richardson, University ofNevada, Reno and Jared Chamberlain,University of Nevada, Reno

Science in the Law School Curriculum: ANational Survey of Evidence Professors aboutTeaching Science to Law Students

Bertrand Renard, National Institute ofCriminalistic and Criminology, Belgium

Genetic Techniques and Penal Justice: AContribution to a New Model of Justice?

3137The International Circulation ofExpertise and the Restructuring ofNational Legal Fields: Asian Examples

[Room S1.503]

Yves Dezalay, CNRS ParisChair

Kay-Wah Chan, Macquarie UniversityJudicial Reform in Japan: Its Impact on theLegal Profession and the Role of Law

Bryant Garth, Southwestern Law Schooland Yves Dezalay, CNRS Paris

Revamping Legal Virtue in Asia

Randy Peerenboom, University ofCalifornia, Los Angeles

Middle-Income Blues: Implications for Rule ofLaw and Constitutional Development in China

Seong-Hyun Kim, Hayang UniversityDiscussant

3138 Theoretical Approaches to Globalization[Room T 330]

Robert Wai, York UniversityChair

Honor Brabazon, York UniversityThe Political Economy of Legal Imperialism inthe Global Era

Anthony J. Colangelo, Columbia UniversityThe Legal Limits of Universal Jurisdiction

Catherine Dauvergne, University of BritishColumbia

Sovereignty and Illegality: The Globalization ofMigration Law

Amanda Perry-Kessaris, University ofLondon

Enriching the World Bank’s Vision of NationalLegal Systems and Foreign Direct Investment

Jan Rothkamm, Ecole des Hautes Etudes enSciences Sociales

Global Law as Universal Law: GuntherTeubner’s Definition Revisited

3139 Torture and the War on Terror[Room S1.401]

Tamar Pitch, University of PerugiaChair

Jill Fraley, University of KentuckyTorture as Performance: The Changing Meaningof Torture and its Implications

Josh Kaplan, University of ChicagoTorture and “24": Rationalizing Human RightsViolations

Jinee Lokaneeta, Drew UniversityEmergence of the Military Commission Act:Significance of Domestic Legal Principles

Elizabeth Rapaport, University of NewMexico

Defining Torture Down: The U.S. and OtherDemocracies (Never) Embraced the LegalProhibition of Torture

Thomas Crocker, University of SouthCarolina

Discussant

3140 Transnationalism, Law, andGovernance: Conceptualizing Non-StateActors and the State

[Room S1.402]

Fleur E. Johns, University of SydneyChair/Discussant

Olufemi O. Amao, University College,Ireland

Multinational Corporations and CorporateGovernance Paradigm In Nigeria

Zeynep Kivilcim Forsman, IstanbulUniversity

The New Law-Making in Transnational Context

Caroline Marie Melly, University ofCalifornia, Irvine

Defining and Delimiting “The State” in Senegal

Yi Shin Tang, U di Torino/University ofGhent

Bilateral versus Multilateral Strategies in theDesign of International IPR Agreements: Effectson the Technology Transfer to DevelopingCountries

3141 Women/Gender in the Legal Profession(Sponsored by WG Legal Profession)

[Room S1.405]

Ulrike Schultz, FernUniversität HagenChair

Anne Boigeol, IHTP/CNRSWomen and the Transformation of the Elite ofthe Paris Bar: The Persistence of Inequalities

Cynthia Fuchs Epstein, City University ofNew York

Career Lines of Women Lawyers in PublicInterest Law

78 Friday, July 27 8:15 - 10:00

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Fiona Meta Kay, Queen’s UniversityProfessional Monopolies and Divisive Practicesin Law: Women Notaires and Avocates in CivilLaw Canada

Matthias Kilian, University Of CologneThe Gender Gap: An Empirical Approach to theGrowing Female Bar in Germany

Margaret Thornton, Australian NationalUniversity

Globalisation, Gender, and Legal Practice

Harriet Silius, Åbo Akademi UniversityDiscussant

3142 Unmasking the Far Right: Racism,Regulation, and Resistance

[Room T 306]

Julie Stubbs, University of SydneyChair/Discussant

Gail F. Mason, University of SydneyRegulating the Emotion of White Supremacy

Gail F. Mason, University of Sydney andMike Sutton, Nottingham Trent University

Unbuttoning the BNP

Barbara Perry, University of OntarioInstitute of Technology and Randy Blazak,Portland State University

White Supremacists’ Spatial Imagination: TheGeography of Racial Hatred

Gail F. Mason, University of Sydney and EdPollock, Sheffield Hallam University

Online Racism: Understanding Interactivity

3143 Who’s Watching, Who’s Listening?Parent-Child Relationships and the Law

[Room T 406]

Ellen S. Cohn, University of New HampshireChair/Discussant

Tamar O. Morag, College of ManagementAcademic Studies

Law and Change: Parental Corporal Punishment

from a Comparative Perspective

Jane Muller-Peterson, Pennsylvania StateUniversity

Civil Protection From Abuse Acts in the UnitedStates and Their Failure to Protect Children

Benjamin Shmueli, Duke UniversityCorporal Punishment of Children: ComparativeView of Current and Desirable Models

Benjamin Shmueli, Duke University ,andAyelet Blecher-Prigat, Sha’arei MishpatLaw College

In the Eye of the Camera and the Law: ParentalSurveillance of Children

10:15 - 12:00

Cof fee Break

10:15 - 12:00

3201

Featured Session Roundtable:Presidential Panel on EmpiricalResearch—Law in the Real World

[Room S1.101]

A team of scholars led by Ha zel Genn re leased a re -

port in No vember 2006, Law in the Real World, that

focuses on the state of empirical re search on law in

the United Kingdom and an alyzes how the goal of

an empirical un derstanding of law might best be ac-

com plished. This panel of in ter na tional com men ta -

tors will use the report as a jumping off point to dis-

cuss the de vel op ment of em pir i cal ap proaches to

law in di verse re gions of the world.

Malcolm Feeley, University of California,Berkeley

ChairTheodore Eisenberg, Cornell University

ParticipantHazel Genn, University College, London

ParticipantVolkmar Gessner, University of Bremen

ParticipantSetsuo Miyazawa, Aoyama Gakuin

UniversityParticipant

3202

Featured Session—ContrastingIslamic Adaptations: Norms andLaw across Europe and North

America (Sponsored by IRC IslamicInstitutions and Legal Frameworks in New Lands)

[Room T 008]

John R. Bowen, Washington UniversityChair

John R. Bowen, Washington University andMalika Zeghal, University of Chicago

Elaborations of Halal in the United States andFrance

Claire de Galembert, CNRSLocal Authorities and Demands for Rights ofRecognition by Muslims Communities in Europe

Anne Saris, Université du Québec àMontréal, and Alexandre Caeiro, ISIM,Leiden

Religious Expertise and the Law in Canada andFrance

Mushirul Hasan, Jamia Milia UniversityDiscussant

3203

Featured Session— Roundtable:Reaction of Constitutional Courtsto Social Change

[Room M 1070]

Social change pres ents a chal lenge to law makers

and law applicants. The faster so ciety changes the

sooner the law ages. In terpreted in the traditional

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

79 Friday, July 27 10:15 - 12:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

way it may pro duce undesirable re sults. Not all the

nec es sary ad ap ta tions of the law to chang ing sit u a-

tions can be achieved by the legislature. Ad aptation

is also the task of the courts. This is par ticularly true

for con stitutional law, which in most coun tries can-

not be amended as eas ily as or dinary law. Here

much of the burden of ad aptation is placed on con-

stitutional courts or courts with constitutional ju ris-

diction and has to be achieved by way of in terpreta-

tion. The panel will dis cuss how courts fulfil this

function and how they ought to ful fil it in a manner

faithful to the text and in ac cordance with demo-

cratic prin ci ples. The ques tion has a meth od olog i cal

and a functional as pect: How can judges as certain

whether social change af fects the meaning of con-

sti tu tional pro vi sions and what are the ap pro pri ate

her me neu tic means to re in ter pret the con sti tu tion?

Which ad aptations to changed circumstances can be

achieved by judges, which are reserved to con stitu-

tional amendments? Spe cial at tention will be paid to

new con sti tu tional democracies.

Dieter Grimm, Wissenschaftskolleg zuBerlin / Institute for Advanced StudyBerlin

ChairPedro Cruz Villalon, Constitutional Court of

SpainParticipant

Jutta Limbach, Goethe-InstitutParticipant

Kim Lane Scheppele, Princeton UniversityParticipant

Miroslaw Wyrzykowski, ConstitutionalCourt of Poland

Participant

3204

Featured Session—Roundtable:Revisiting the Sacred/SecularDivide: The Legal Story

[Room T 013]

Re-con sid er ation of the sec u lar iza tion the sis, in all

of its various guises, is proceeding apace. In the le-

gal arena, re cent work includes re-tellings of the

history of the na ture and ex tent of the modern secu-

lar iza tion of law, philo soph i cal de lin ea tion of the

im pos si bil ity and/or undesirability of separationist

le gal ide ol o gies, as well as em pir i cal in ves ti ga tion

and creative re-imaginings of ap proaches to the ac -

tual reg u la tion of re li gious per sons, places, and

ways of life. All of this work presents chal lenges to

ex ist ing le gal re gimes and le gal phi los o phies.This

in ter dis ci plin ary panel will fo cus on the le gal con-

texts of this re-consideration at the global, na tional,

and local lev els. Pan elists will consider the geneal-

ogy of legal secularism, the an thropology of the le -

gal sec u lar, le gal reg u la tion of emerg ing re li gious

populations, and the re-invention of national

“church/state” regimes

Winnifred Fallers Sullivan, SUNY, BuffaloChair

Mary Anne Case, University of Chicago/Princeton Universtiy

Participant

Tim Jensen, University of SouthernDenmark

ParticipantTomoko Masuzawa, University of Michigan

Participant

3205

Featured Session— Roundtable;Torture and the Security State

[Room M 1072]

Over the 19th and 20th cen turies, torture lost legiti-

macy as a pe nal or ju dicial practice, and was le gally

pro hib ited as an in ter na tional crime af ter World

War II. Nev ertheless, it continued to be prac ticed

with ap pall ing reg u lar ity and prev a lence, al beit

prac ti tio ners tended to deny al le ga tions be cause of

its crim i nal sta tus and il le git i macy. How ever, in the

21st century tor ture has been openly res urrected as a

“le git i mate” tac tic for “fight ing ter ror ism” and “en-

hancing se curity” by the US gov ernment, de spite

the de nial-through-eu phe misms such as “co ercive

in ter ro ga tions” and “al ter na tive tac tics.” What

makes 21st cen tury tor ture dis tinc tive and dif fer ent

from trends of the past is the fact that the world’s

lone su perpower, os tensibly a model for the rule of

law, has refuted and abandoned a uni versal consen-

sus on the il le gal ity of bru tal iz ing pris on ers in cus-

tody, not to mention the sub stantial body of ex pert

opin ion that it is in ef fi ca cious in pro duc ing “truth.”

The American embrace of torture af ter 9/11 has had

a num ber of im por tant and con tra dic tory ef fects on

a global scale, and these are the subjects of this

panel. Rev e la tions about Amer i can tor ture have gal-

vanized and united an in teresting array of critics

within the coun try who are in tent on reversing these

trends, in clud ing uni formed mil i tary law yers, hu-

man rights ac tiv ists, civil lib er tar i ans and le gal

scholars. Peo ple in other countries who are com mit-

ted to main tain ing and en forc ing the pro hi bi tion

against torture have been ap palled and pro pelled to

action by the “green lighting” of torture by the US,

which has been taken as a li cense for other states to

openly adopt the same bru tal tac tics against their

“en e mies” and “sub ver sives.” And scholars of tor-

ture have added to these global dis cussions by of fer-

ing re mind ers and in sights about the destructive ef-

fects on so cieties where tor ture was rampant in the

past.

Lisa Hajjar, University of California, SantaBarbara

ChairJamil Dakwar, American Civil Liberties

Union (ACLU)Participant

Louis Frankenthaler, Public CommitteeAgainst Torture In Israel

ParticipantManfred Gnjidic, Attorney

ParticipantLeigh Payne, University of Wisconsin,

MadisonParticipant

80 Friday, July 27 10:15 - 12:00

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

3206

Featured Session—Legal Cultureand Judicialization in LatinAmerica (Sponsored by IRC

Legal Culture and theJudicialization of Politics in LatinAmerica)

[Room S1.205]

Alexandra Huneeus, Stanford U /U ofWisconsin, Madison

ChairJavier A. Couso, Universidad Diego Portales

The Transformation of Constitutional Discoursein Latin America and Judicialization

Maria del Pilar Domingo, Universidad deSalamanca

Judicial Politics and Novel “Appropriations” ofthe Law in the Pursuit of Political and SocialChange

Rachel Sieder, University of LondonJuridification in the Archipelago of (In)Justice:Indigenous Rights and Legal Culture(s) inPost-Conflict Guatemala

Catalina Smulovitz, Universidad Torcuato diTella

Judicialization in Argentina: Legal Culture orTaking Advantage of Opportunities?

Bryant Garth, Southwestern Law SchoolDiscussant

3207

Featured Session— Roundtable:European Welfare andEmployment Policies: A Global

Social Model? (Sponsored by IRCSocial Europe and CRN08 LaborRights)

[Room M Senatssaal]

This mini-plenary will dis cuss the con tent of the Eu -

ro pean So cial Model, its gov er nance char ac ter is -

tics, and its im plications for wel fare, la bor and em -

ploy ment pol i cies, their de vel op ment and im ple -

mentation, in the world at large. Par ticipants will fo-

cus on a series of critical, cross-cutting questions,

including the role of the na tion-state and of su prana-

tional in sti tu tions in pro vid ing wel fare, in shap ing

and co or di nat ing the la bor mar ket, and sup port ing

or un der min ing in dus trial re la tions sys tems. Fur ther

topics include the role of non-state actors, par ticu-

larly the employer and trade un ion so cial partners in

the redesign and op eration of these systems; the re -

lationship between state wel fare pol icies and the op -

eration of the la bor market; the race and gen der seg -

mentation of the la bor market and its relationship to

welfare pol icies on the one hand, and industrial rela-

tions in sti tu tions and em ploy ment pol i cies on the

other; the im portance of wel fare and em ployment

policy in broader economic pol icy-making; and the

role of su pra na tional co or di na tion and learn ing

mech a nisms as cat a lysts, pre texts, or re-chan nel ing

devices for na tional re forms in these in tertwined

and overlapping por tions of So cial Eu rope. The ses-

sion will discuss fac tors that can ex plain the re sil-

ience of Eu ropean wel fare pol icies and explore the

im pli ca tions of ef forts to sus tain a Eu ro pean So cial

Model in re lation to re actions to globalization in the

world at large. However, it will also problematize

the com mon as ser tion that Eu ro pean so cial val ues

are dis tinctive as well as broadly shared within EU

Member States, as compared to other developed and

developing countries.

Ralf Rogowski, University of Warwick andMarley S. Weiss, University of Maryland

Co-ChairsDiamond Ashiagbor, University College

LondonParticipant

Joel Handler, University of California, LosAngeles

ParticipantCsilla Kollonay Lehoczky, Central European

UniversityParticipant

Claus Offe, Hertie School of GovernanceParticipant

David M. Trubek, University of WisconsinParticipant

Manfred Weiss, University of FrankfurtParticipant

3208

Featured Session— Roundtable:Transformation in Crime andPunishment: From Local to

Global[Room M 3059]

This fea tured ses sion will ex am ine the con ti nu i ties

and dis continuities across time and place in the

crime con trol/pe no logi cal land scape. It will ex plore

how and to what ex tent globalization processes (in

terms of transportation and “border crossings” of

ideas, prac tices, pol i cies, and econ o mies) in flu ence

how lo cal crim i nal jus tice/pe no logi cal change takes

shape in varied set tings, as well as the lim its to these

broader in fluences on lo cal systems. Each pan elist

will talk ho listically about his/her work in terms of

how it il lu mi nates these is sues.The dis cus sion will

consider and de bate the ro bustness of recent theo-

ret i cal con tri bu tions, as well as the var ied em pir i cal

approaches to test those theories, that seek to ex -

plain the pro cess of late modern penal transforma-

tion across and within different locales.

Mona Lynch, San Jose State UniversityChair

Katja Franko Aas, University of OsloParticipant

Farid Samir Benavides-Vanegas,Universidad Nacional de Colombia

ParticipantDavid Garland, New York University

ParticipantLaura Piacentini, University of Strathclyde

ParticipantJoachim J. Savelsberg, University of

MinnesotaParticipant

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

81 Friday, July 27 10:15 - 12:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

3209

Featured Session— Roundtable:Economic and Social Rights and Development

[Room S1.204]

This session will ex plore the relationship be tween

economic and social rights and de velopment strate-

gies in Africa, In dia and Latin America. As the idea

of “rights-based” de velopment has taken hold, peo -

ple are de ploying hu man rights dis course in an ef -

fort to in flu ence de vel op ment strat e gies. So cial

movements and NGOs have used dis courses on

such in ter na tion ally-rec og nized rights as the rights

to health, employment, hous ing and ed ucation to in-

fluence policy de cisions in many countries as well

as the ac tions of in ternational agen cies and or gani-

zations. In some cases, they have sought the sup port

of the ju diciary in those coun tries whose con stitu-

tions in clude social and eco nomic rights. Pan elists

will as sess ex periences in various parts of the world

and discuss the effectiveness of strategic

deployment of these discourses.

Ruth M. Buchanan, York UniversityChair

Mauricio Garcia-Villegas, UniversidadNacional/ University of Wisconsin

ParticipantKevin Malunga, Wits University

ParticipantBalakrishnan Rajagopal, Massachusetts

Institute of TechnologyParticipant

Pablo Rueda, University of California,Berkeley

ParticipantLucie White, Harvard University

Participant

12:00 - 12:30

Lunch Break

Friday Regular Sessions End

12:30 - 13:30

Prize Ceremony

[Room M Senatssaal]

As so ci a tion award pre sen ta tions from the Law and

So ci ety As so ci a tion; Re search Com mit tee on So ci -

ology of Law *(ISA), Sociolegal Stud ies Associa-

tion, and Sektion Rechtssoziologie in der

Deutschen Soziologischen Gesellschaft (DGS -

Section for the So ciology of Law in the German So -

cio log i cal As so ci a tion)

13:30 - 17:30

Grad u ate Stu dent Ac tiv ity

[Room S1.101]

Sociolegal Tours

[for those pre-registered]

13:30 - 14:30

IRC Gender and Judging—BusinessMeeting [Room L 229]

WG Gender and Law—BusinessMeeting [Room L 326]

WG (EASL) Anthropology of Law andRights—Business Meeting [Room L140/142]

New Governance and the Law —Business Meeting [Room S1.608]

CRN23 International HumanRights—Business Meeting [RoomS1.605]

Law & Policy Editorial Board Meeting[Room L 139a]

Israeli Law and Society [Room L E42]

Editorial Board Meeting for Regulation& Governance [Room L 144]

13:30 - 14: 30

RCSL Busi ness Meeting [Room MSenatssaal]

14:30 - 16:30

RCSL Board Meeting [Room MSenatssaal]

Saturday, July 28

7:45 - 16:00

Reg is tra tion [GF- Seminar Build ing]

8:30 - 14:00

Book Ex hibit [S1.102 & S1.103]

8:30 - 14:05

Paper Posters on dis play, Law Facultylobby

8:30 - 18:00

Sociolegal Cinema [M Kinosaal]

82 Saturday, July 28 8:30 - 18:00

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

See film sched ule in meet ing packet

Sessions

8:15 - 10:00

4101 Alternative Regulation in Health CareII: Current Issues (Sponsored by CRN05Regulatory Governance)

[Room S1.308]

Louise Trubek, University of WisconsinChair/Discussant

Cary Coglianese, University of PennsylvaniaInfection Control in the Hospital Setting: AnAnalysis of Regulatory Governance

Mary Coombs, University of MiamiHow Not to Do Medical Malpractice Reform: AFlorida Case Study

Marc A. Rodwin, Suffolk UniversityA Medical Malpractice Premium Crisis?Ignoring Data to Reframe Medical QualityProblems as Failures of Tort Law and Juries

4102 Labor Law and New Governance(Sponsored by CRN08 Labor Rights)

[Room S1.406]

Guy Mundlak, Tel-Aviv UniversityChair

Adelle Blackett, McGill UniversityThe Paradox of OHADA’s Transnational, HardLaw, Labour Harmonization Initiative

Cynthia Estlund, New York UniversityFrom Self-Regulation to Self-Governance in theU.S. Workplace

Chai Feldblum, Georgetown UniversityWorkplace Flexibility: Politics and Substance

Eva Ruth Kocher, University of HamburgTransnational Labor Law: New Roles for LaborMarket Actors

Frances Raday, Colman College ofManagement /Hebrew University

Discussant

4103 Punishment and Society: The Varietiesof Penal Forms in Late Modernity(Sponsored by CRN27 Prisons andPrisoners)

[Room S2.Reutersaal]

Shadd Maruna, Queens University BelfastChair/Discussant

Mary Francesca Bosworth, University ofOxford

Securing the Border: Immigration Detention andSocial Exclusion in Britain

Pat O’Malley, University of SydneyTheorising Fines

Dirk Van Zyl Smit, University Nottinghamand Sonja Snacken, Vrije UniversiteitBrussel

European Principles and the Place ofImprisonment in European Penal Systems

4104 The Impact of Internationalized Courtswithin Particular States andCommunities (Sponsored by CRN23International Human Rights)

[Room L 140/142]

Laura A. Dickinson, University ofConnecticut

Chair/DiscussantWilliam W. Burke-White, University of

PennsylvaniaReconciling Peace and Justice:The InternationalCriminal Court in Uganda

Kamari Maxine Clarke, Yale UniversityCrafting the Victim, Crafting the Perpetrator:The ICC and the Individualization of CriminalResponsibility

Susan F. Hirsch, George Mason UniversityVictims’ Justice: Perspectives fromAnthropology

Richard A. Wilson, University ofConnecticut

Defining Genocide at International CriminalTribunals: Towards a Political Understanding ofGenocide

Elena Baylis, University of PittsburghDiscussant

4105 “New Collectives”: Twenty-FirstCentury Applications of CollectiveHuman Rights (Sponsored by CRN25Collective Human Rights)

[Room S1.608]

Feargal E. MacIonnrachtaigh, QueensUniversity, Belfast

ChairJulinda Beqiraj, University of Trento

International Protection of Migrant Workers’Rights: The Case for a CombinedIndividual-Group Approach

Zoe Godolphin, University of BristolThe World Bank, Education, and CollectiveRights

Emma M. Henderson, La Trobe UniversityRe/Moving the State: Citizenship, Asylum, andthe Australian Designated Unauthorised Arrivals Bill 2006

Paddy Hillyard, Queen’s University Belfastand Amy Maguire, University of Newcastle

Re-Imagining Women’s Security through theLens of Collective Human Rights

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

83 Saturday, July 28 8:15 - 10:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

4106 The Public’s Confidence in Courts andLegal System: A Comparative Approach(Sponsored by IRC/CRN06 PublicOpinion and the Courts)

[Room S1.301]

Vasil Kenkishvili, Georgian Institute ofPublic Affairs

Chair/DiscussantKristina V. Galstyan, Yerevan State

UniversityPublic’s Opinion of Courts and Rule of LawReforms in the Republic of Armenia

Olya Melen, Environment-People-LawThe Role of Courts in Tackling EnvironmentalProblems: NGO Perspective

Dejan Pavlovic, Belgrade UniversityThe Public Perception of the Judicial System inSerbia

David B. Rottman, National Center for State Courts

The Uses of Public Opinion Research on theCourts: The International Experience

4107 Transnational Transformations of theState IV (Sponsored by IRCTransnational Transformations of theState)

[Room M 1070]

Tom Ginsburg, University of IllinoisChair

Damian Chalmers, London School ofEconomics

Food Law in Europe and the Creation andRenegotiation of the European State

Allison Christians, University of WisconsinSovereignty and Duty in International Taxation

Christine B Harrington, New YorkUniversity

How “Transnational” are NAFTA Networks?

Veerle Heyvaert, London School ofEconomics

Chemicals Regulation and the Future of theSingle Market

Maira R. Machado, Getulio Vargas LawSchool

Financial Regulation and International CriminalPolicy: The Anti-Money Laundering System inBrazil and Argentina

4108 Children In and After Divorce[Room S1.204]

Laura Cardia-Vonèche, University ofGeneva

Chair/DiscussantDaphna Hacker, Tel Aviv University

Continuity and Change in Parental RolesConstructions upon Divorce in Israel

Zoe Rathus, Griffith UniversityShifting the Gaze in Family Law: Dangers forWomen and Children from the Future Focus

Annika EM Rejmer, Lund University andSusanna Johansson, Lund University

Mediation and Collaboration as New AlternativeMethods in Swedish Child and Family Practice

Barbara Willenbacher, University ofHannover

Socio-Legal Prerequesites of Joint Custody

4109 Citizenship, Exclusion, and Technologiesof the State

[Room S2.102]

Doris Marie Provine, Arizona StateUniversity

ChairHuyen Pham, Texas Wesleyan University

Private Enforcement of U.S. Immigration Laws

Susan Sterett, University of DenverRule of Law and Governing with Paper:Claiming and Fixing Identities

Sarah Turnbull, University of TorontoCommissions of Inquiry and the Production ofState Thought

4110 Constitutional Rights: Legal Guaranteesvs. Educational Policies?

[Room L39a]

Ahti Laitinen, University of TurkuChair

Paul Edward Green, University ofCalifornia, Riverside

Race-Conscious Educational AssignmentPolicies: Law, Social Science, and Diversity inPublic Education

Ahti Laitinen, University of TurkuOfficial and Unofficial Norms and the Changesof Society

Kimberly A. Yuracko, NorthwesternUniversity

Illiberal Education: Constitutional Constraints onHomeschooling

Paulette M. Caldwell, New York UniversityVoluntariness in Single-Sex/Single-RaceSchools

Jon B Gould, George Mason UniversityDiscussant

4111 Constructing Citizens: Inclusion,Integration, and Blood

[Room S1.401]

Florian Hoffmann, Pontifícia UniversidadeCatólica do Rio de Janeiro

Chair/DiscussantIker Barbero, University of the Basque

CountryCitizenship and Immigration: Socio-legalExpressions as Alternatives

84 Saturday, July 28 8:15 - 10:00

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Eugene K. B. Tan, Stanford UniversityInternational Marriages and Citizenship:Patriarchal Dilemmas in CosmpolitanizingSingapore

Ricky Van Oers, Radboud UniversityNijmegen

Integration as a Requirement for Naturalisation

Diana H Yoon, New York UniversityMilitarized Intimacies and the Ties of Blood,Nation, and Citizenship

4112 Critiquing Law Reform Initiatives toAddress Women’s Inequalities

[Room L E44/46]

Janine Benedet, University of BritishColumbia

Chair/DiscussantCindy Baldassi, University of British

ColumbiaEmbryo Donation and the Concept of Adoption:Women’s Perspectives?

Maneesha Deckha, University of VictoriaThe Assisted Human Reproduction Act and theImpact of its Discourse for Women

Toni Williams, University of KentGender, Financial Exclusion, and the Regulationof Financial Consciousness: A CriticalComparison of Policy Discourse in Canada, theUK, and South Africa

Margot Young, University of BritishColumbia

A Basic Income: Directions for Welfare Reform

4113 Culture and Rights: Conflicts overLocalization

[Room T 113]

Daniela Hrzan, Humboldt University, BerlinChair/Discussant

Fang Deng, Bridgewater State CollegeWhy Has China’s Marriage Law Been AmendedTwice Since 1980?

Sulaiman Khalid, Usmanu DanfodiyoUniversity

Law and Values in Society: An Examination ofMuslim’s Response to “Child’s Right Act” inNigeria

Patricia Wiater, Uof Leipzig/U RobertSchuman (Strasbourg III)

Universality or Cultural Relativism of HumanRights: “Culture” in the Jurisprudence of theECtHR

4114 Current Developments in Law andSociety in East Asia: An InauguralSession

[Room S1.101]

Richard Barron Parker, Hiroshima ShudoUniversity

Chair

Roman David, Yale UniversityTransitions to Clean Government: Amnesty asan Anti-Corruption Measure in Hong Kong

Jeffrey Kingston, Temple University JapanTransitional Justice, Reconciliation, and HumanRights in East Timor

Setsuo Miyazawa, Aoyama GakuinUniversity

American Influence in Legal Education Reformin Japan, Korea, and China

Mayumi Saegusa, Waseda University andJulian Dierkes, University of BritishColumbia

Integrating Alternative Dispute Resolution intoJapanese Legal Education

Chien-huei Wu, European UniversityInstitute

Mission Impossible? Could the WTO SaveChinese Courts?

Eric A. Feldman, University of PennsylvaniaDiscussant

4115 Employment Contracts and TheirAbsence

[Room S1.405]

Daniel Adler, The World BankChair/Discussant

María Florencia García Paz, InternationalInstitute for Sociology of Law

The Part-Time Work and the Family Life inSpain from a Feminist Approach

Jessica Guth, University of LeedsThe Opening of Borders and Scientific Mobility:The Impact of the EU Enlargement on theMovement of Early Career Scientists

Robert Knegt, Universiteit van AmsterdamThe Employment Contract as an ExclusionaryDevice

Elizabeth Oliver, University of LeedsLiving Flexibly? How Europe’s ScienceResearchers Manage Mobility, Fixed TermEmployment, and Life Outside of Work

4116 Ethics and Regulation I[Room L229]

Daniel Markovits, Yale UniversityChair

Dafne Bordone, University of MilanLawyers’ Self-Regulation and DisciplinaryProceedings: A Survey of the Milan Bar

Zayènne van Heesen-Laclé, LeidenUniversity

Quality Control and Legal Ethics in DutchNotary Firms

Kyoko Ishida, Waseda UniversityEthics and Regulations of Japanese LegalService Providers in the 21st Century

Hua-hsin Yen, Harvard UniversityLawyers’ Confidentiality after Enron: Lessonsfor Taiwan Attorneys

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

85 Saturday, July 28 8:15 - 10:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Carroll Seron, University of California,Irvine

Discussant

4117 Health Governance in Public Health:Emerging Issues and Institutions

[Room M 3086]

Patricia Kuszler, University of WashingtonChair/Discussant

H.C. Niu, Tsing Hua University, TaiwanTwo-Side Effects of Precautionary Principle inPublic Health Risk Management andDecision-Making

Wenmay Rei, National Yang MingUniversity

Responsible Motherhood? A Feminist Analysisof Prenatal Genetic Screening

Ihua Tsai, Chung Yuan Christian UniversityLegal Controversies of the Opt-Out Project onthe Prevention of Prenatal Transmission of theHuman Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) inTaiwan

Meng-Chen Tsou, National Tsing-HuaUniveisity

The Use of Tandem Mass Spectrometry inNewborn Screening: Benefit, Risk, and Conflictamong State, Parents, and Children

Chieh Chun Wu, National Yang-MingUniversity

The Epidemiologic Transition in Taiwan, 1906 -2003

4118 History for an Era of “Transformations,Resistances, Futures”: Four Inflections

[Room S1.605]

Christopher L. Tomlins, American BarFoundation

ChairShani Bar-On, Tel Aviv University

The History of Labor in Ofakim, Israel, and theConstruction of a Right to Work

Anya Bernstein, University of ChicagoThe Relational Basis of Being Deserving inTaipei

Kunal M Parker, Cleveland State UniversityHistorical Contextualization and LegalKnowledge

Christopher L. Tomlins, American BarFoundation

A Constellation of Eras: Materialist History, theAtlantic World, and Law

Roy Kreitner, Tel Aviv UniversityDiscussant

4119 Human Rights inside Prisons[Room S1.201]

Bernard E. Harcourt, University of ChicagoChair

Helen Codd, University of CentralLancashire

Subversive Sperm? Prisoners, Procreation, andHuman Rights

Fabienne Emmerich, University ofNottingham

Hunger Strikes in Prison: Resistance, Survival,and Autonomy

Alan Eladio Gómez, Ithaca CollegeResisting “Frontier Justice”: Medical Torture,U.S. Global Terror Prisons, and the BlackPanther Party

Michael A. Smyth, University of California,Irvine and Valerie Jenness, University ofCalifornia, Irvine

Passage of the Prison Rape Elimination Act:Discursive Politics and the Reconstitution ofPrison Rape in a Culture of Control

4120 Law Challenging Sovereignty[Room S1.403]

Carol Gould, Temple UniversityChair/Discussant

Marco Fabri, Italian National ResearchCouncil (IRSIG-CNR)

Information and Communication Technology for Justice

Alessio Lo Giudice, U of Milan/ U of CataniaThe Question of Collective Identity: PossibleConceptual Models

Ernesto A. Hernández-López, ChapmanUniversity

Migration Transnationally Turns Sovereignty inMexican and US Law: Inspiration in ChangedNationalism and New Judiciary Roles

4121 Lawyers and the Construction ofEurope: Methodological and EmpiricalFindings

[Room M 1072]

Patrick Schmidt, Macalester CollegeChair/Discussant

Antonin Cohen, University of PicardieWho Are the Masters of the Treaties? The Social Recruitment of the European Court of Justice

Mikael Rask Madsen, University ofCopenhagen

European Human Rights Lawyers: TheAmbiguity of a Professional and IdeologicalEngagement

Christèle Marchand, Université de PicardieJules Verne and Antoine Vauchez, CentreNational de la Recherche Scientifique

Counting Lawyers that Count: A Sociology ofEU Lawyers Pleading to the European Court ofJustice

Laurent Scheeck, Université Libre deBruxelles

Conflict and Cooperation between EuropeanCourts: The Diplomacy of Transnational Judicial Networks in Europe

86 Saturday, July 28 8:15 - 10:00

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

4122 Lay Argumentation and JudicialProcedure

[Room M Senatssaal]

Kati Hannken-Illjes, Freie Universität BerlinChair

Sigurd D’hondt, Ghent UniversityLegally Irrelevant Talk and Metacommunication

Kati Hannken-Illjes, Freie Universität BerlinBringing the Client to Court

Nele Nivelle, University of LeuvenCausality in Belgian Tort Law

Anusheh Rafi, Kanzlei MitteCommunication with Lay People Before theDistrict Courts

Kent D. Lerch, Max-Planck-Institut fürEuropäische Rechtsgeschichte and RalphChristensen, RechtslinguistischerArbeitskreis Heidelberg

Inclusion and Exclusion of Lay Arguments inLegal Proceedings

4123 New Issues in the Law of ConsumerCredit

[Room S1.505]

Gregory D. Squires, George WashingtonUniversity

Chair/DiscussantPatricia A. McCoy, University of Connecticut,

Raphael Bostic, University of SouthernCalifornia, Kathleen C. Engel, Cleveland StateUniversity, Susan M. Wachter, University ofPennsylvania and Anthony Pennington-Cross,Marquette University

The Effect of State Anti-Predatory LendingLaws on the Flow of Credit

Christopher L. Peterson, University ofFlorida

Credit Reports and Payday Loans: Should WeRequire that Fringe Lenders Report BorrowerRepayment Behavior?

Alan M. White, Valparaiso UniversityBehavior and Contract

4124 New Trends of Policing and SecurityMeasures in Information Societies

[Room LE42]

Paul T. Dougan, University of SunderlandChair/Discussant

Magnus Hörnqvist, Stockholm UniversityDoes Governance Exclude Power?

Anne-Marie M Singh, Ryerson UniversityTrends in Private Policing: Implications for thePolitical Economy of Human Security

Anna Umberg, University of HamburgFrom Terrorism and Gnomes

Naoko Yoshida, Meiji UniversityKoban Revisited

4125 Owners, Judges, and the Decline ofPublic Interest: Expropriation in theXXI Century (Sponsored by WG Lawand Urban Space)

[Room S1.205]

Antonio Azuela, Universidad NacionalAutonoma de Mexico

ChairCarlos Herrera Martín, Instituto

Tecnológico Autónomo de MéxicoExpropriations in Mexican Legal Culture: ASurvey of Judicial Rulings 1917-2005

Romain Melot, National Institute forAgronomical Research

Land Expropriation in Courts: CitizensContesting Public Interest Procedures

Gustaaf Olivier Reerink, Leiden UniversityLand Titling and Tenure Security for Indonesia’s Lower Income City Dwellers: Experiences fromthe Kampungs of Bandung

Jean-Louis van Gelder, University ofAmsterdam

Legal Tenure Security, Perceived TenureSecurity, and Housing Improvement: AnAttempt towards Integration

4126 Reconfiguring the Language of Rights[Room L326]

Rose Villazor, Southern MethodistUniversity

ChairKevin N. Maillard, Syracuse University

The Kept Man: Marriage and Contract in Lawand Popular Culture

Patricia Seith, Columbia UniversityFrom Economic Dependent to Economic Actor:Tracing the Legal Construction of Women’sEconomic Ability

Rose Villazor, Southern MethodistUniversity

Deconstructing Local Anti-UndocumentedImmigrant Property Ordinances

4127 Reframing Globalization: Are EconomicIntegration and Legal Convergence Real or Imagined?

[Room S1.307]

David Kennedy, Harvard UniversityChair/Discussant

Helena Alviar, Universidad de Los AndesThe Limits Imposed by Free Trade onAdministrative Law Interpretation and Use inLatin America

Jacco Bomhoff, Leiden UniversityGlobalization and the Contingency of Balancingand Proportionality

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

87 Saturday, July 28 8:15 - 10:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Joel R. Paul, University of California, SanFrancisco

Economic Integration and Growth as HistoricalContingencies

Ugo Mattei, University of California, SanFrancisco

Discussant

4128 Responsibility and the Limits of Law[Room T 008]

Jamie Mayerfeld, University of WashingtonChair

Morris B. Kaplan, State University of NewYork, Purchase

Hate Crime Law and the Privatization ofPolitical Responsibility

Elena Loizidou, University of LondonAn Anarchist Theory of Political Responsibility:The Anti-Draft Campaign of Emma Goldmanand Alexander Berkman

Jamie Mayerfeld, University of WashingtonInstitutionalizing Responsibility: The Preventionof Torture in Europe

Garrath Williams, Lancaster UniversityLegal and Moral Approaches to Responsibility

Leslie J. Moran, University of LondonDiscussant

4129 Roundtable–Beyond theTeaching-Service Mission: Developingthe Research Potential of Law SchoolClinics in the United States

[Room L 144]

The mod ern clin i cal le gal ed u ca tion move ment in

the United States has been an imated by an explicit

teaching and service mission. The synergy (and ten-

sion) of this dual mission has been the subject of

con sid er able de bate and dis cus sion over the last

four de cades as law school clinics have become

sites of in creas ingly di verse and in no va tive ped a -

gogy and prac tice. At the same time, the U.S. le gal

services move ment is at a crossroads. The ac cess to

justice gap for the poor has been well chronicled.

Un for tu nately, al most 40 years of gov ern ment fund-

ing for le gal ser vices has yielded rel atively few an -

swers in terms of how best to serve cli ents, as sess

pro gram ef fec tive ness or un der stand cli ent and

community needs. We propose to explore the po ten-

tial of law school clin ics to serve as sites of in quiry

and knowl edge production. Clin ics are uniquely sit -

uated to un dertake a sus tained and meaningful re -

search agenda to answer crit ical ques tions confront-

ing the le gal ser vices and ac cess to justice commu-

nity. Like good teaching hos pitals, clinics should be

sites for at least three, in terrelated ac tivities: 1) lab o-

ra to ries for test ing ser vice de liv ery mod els; 2) en-

gines of teaching in novation, and 3) portals for sub -

stantive research. The roundtable session will de -

scribe and in vite strategies for de veloping and ad -

vancing a re search agenda rel evant to le gal ser vices

de liv ery pol i cies and a more rig or ous and em pir i cal

examination of the ways in which le gal as sistance

does (or does not) pro duce benefits (“deliverables”)

for low income clients and their communities in the

U.S.

Jeff Selbin, University of California,Berkeley

ChairJuliet M. Brodie, Stanford Law School

ParticipantJeanne Charn, Harvard University

ParticipantWilliam Simon, Columbia University

ParticipantRebecca L Sandefur, Stanford University

Participant

4130 Roundtable—Feminism, RestorativeJustice, and Violence Against Women

[Room S1.601]

There is an ur gent need to cre ate new ways for

abused women to find justice. Despite sig nificant

accomplishments over the past 35 years, community

activists know well that jus tice for most abused

women re mains elu sive. Search ing for ways to ex -

pand op tions for women and in crease accountability

for vi olent men, a number of feminist activists and

schol ars have been ex am in ing re stor ative jus tice.

There are both po tential ben efits and po tential

harms in us ing restorative jus tice in cases of vi o-

lence against women. At their best, the in formal

con flict-me di a tion prac tices re ferred to as “re stor -

ative jus tice” seek to decrease the role of the state in

responding to crime, and in crease the in volvement

of per sonal, fa mil ial, and com mu nity net works in

repairing the harm caused by crime. As prac ticed in

New Zea land, Australia, Can ada, and the United

States, re storative jus tice is most com monly ap plied

to youth crimes. Re storative prac tices are not rec -

ommended, and in many jurisdictions are disal-

lowed for cases of rape, do mestic vi olence, and

child sexual abuse. Nev ertheless, there is increasing

use of these prac tices to ad dress vi olence against

women. This roundtable will discuss the po tential

benefits and harms of us ing restorative jus tice in

these cases, and will ad dress what is at stake here for

fem i nist antiviolence ac tiv ism. The par tic i pants in-

clude le gal schol ars and so ci ol o gists from Australia,

Canada, and the United States.

James Ptacek, Suffolk UniversityChair

Donna Coker, University of MiamiParticipant

Kimberly Cook, University of NorthCarolina, Wilmington

ParticipantRashmi Goel, University of Denver

ParticipantJulie Stubbs, University of Sydney

Participant

88 Saturday, July 28 8:15 - 10:00

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

4131 The Many Faces of EuropeanHarmonization: “Hard” Law, “Soft”Law, Legal Culture, and PrivatizedEuropean Norms

[Room S1.402]

Karim Medjad, H.E.C ParisChair

Ezgi Basak Demirayak, Anadolu UniversityAcquisition of the Own Shares by a PublicLimited Company According to EuropeanizedTurkish Law

Catherine Celine Dupre, University ofWales, Aberystwyth

Human Dignity in the EU: Selective “CommonTraditions”

Poul Kjaer, European University InstituteConstructing a Common Basis: OMC Processesas a Pre-Condition for Hard Law Integration

Karim Medjad, H.E.C Paris, and EveChiapello, HEC Paris

Beyond Soft Law: An Extreme Example ofPrivatization of the European Norm

Lucinda Miller, University College LondonLegal Culture and European Private LawHarmonisation

4132 Service Panel–How to Do Field Work inAnother Country

[Room M 3092]

Hadar Aviram, Tel Aviv U/UC HastingsChair

Javier A. Couso, Universidad Diego PortalesParticipant

Erik Larson, Macalester CollegeParticipant

Leslie McAllister, University of NottinghamParticipant

4133 The Challenge of Multiculturalism andInterdisciplinarity to ConstitutionalRights

[Room S1.501]

Miguel Schor, Suffolk UniversityChair

Maria Rita Bartolomei, University ofMacerata, Italy

Human Rights Construction and Denunciation as an Ethical Position for Anthropology of Law:Some Proposals

Vito Breda, Cardiff UniversityConstitutional Identities in a Globalised Society;Idiosyncrasy of Synergy ?

Sarah Harding, Illinois Institute ofTechnology

The Private Side of Property

Youngjae Lee, Fordham UniversityWhat Does International Consensus Tell Usabout Cruelty?

Julie Nice, University of DenverThe Four Corners of Marriage

Laura Ford, Cornell UniversityDiscussant

4134 The Intersection of Bioethics and Law[Room T 013]

Elaine Draper, California State University,Los Angeles

ChairPatrick Hanafin, University of London

Cultures of Life: Constructing the Embryo inLegal Discourse

Graciela Nowenstein Piery, University ofExeter, and Stéphanie Hennette-Vauchez,Université Paris XII

The Return of the Living-Dead? Law, Medicine,and Definitions of Death in the 20th Century

Radhika Rao, University of CaliforniaCoercion, Commercialization, andCommodification: The Ethics of Compensationfor Egg Donors in Stem Cell Research

Ani B. Satz, Emory UniversityA Case for Universal Access to HighTechnology Health Care

4135 The Role of Culture in AlternativeGovernance: Society, Community, andCitizenship

[Room S1.504]

David Cowan, University of BristolChair

Christoph Eberhard, Facultés UniversitairesSaint Louis, Brussels

The Intercultural Challenges of Law andGovernance in a Globalizing World

Irene C. Anthis, University of Bristol, andRussell James Buchan, University ofBristol

Towards an International Community: A CaseStudy on Iraq

Fernanda Pirie, Oxford UniversityLaw on the Margins in China

Guan H. Tang, University of EdinburghThe Public Interest and AdministrativeProtection in Chinese Copyright

Balahur Doina, Alexandru Ioan CuzaUniversity

Discussant

4136 Theorizing Rights, Ethics, and Deviance[Room S1.404]

Jean De Munck, Catholic University ofLouvain

Chair/DiscussantAndrea Mubi Brighenti, University of

TrentoEmergent Normativities in a Crew of GraffitiWriters

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

89 Saturday, July 28 8:15 - 10:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Robert David Fine, University of WarwickRights of Man, Cosmopolitan Rights, HumanRights, Right to Have Rights: ConceptualDistinctions and Origins

Aneta Gawkowska, University of WarsawNew Feminists and Their Vision of Rights andLaw

Ben Golder, Birkbeck CollegeFoucault on Ethics and Law

Miyuki Hasegawa, Chiba UniversityReintegrative Shaming and ResponsibilityExpansion

4137 Timing It Right in Law andDevelopment: Creating InterimInstitutions, Evaluating Readiness,Acknowledging Ongoing Evolution

[Room S1.503]

Brisa Lopes de Mello Ferrao, University ofSao Paulo

ChairAnna Jonsson, Uppsala University

Rule of Law as a Development Goal in CentralAsia: Methods and Achievements

Oliver David Mendelsohn, La TrobeUniversity

Is the Past of Indian Law the Future Too?

Caroline Sage, World Bank, Daniel Adler,The World Bank, and Michael Woolcock,World Bank

Interim Institutions and the DevelopmentProcess: Law and the Creation of Spaces forReform in Cambodia and Indonesia

Lindsay J. Stirton, University of East Anglia,Martin Lodge, London School ofEconomics, and Yoonhee Tina Chang,Bath Business School

Rethinking Institutional Endowment in Jamaica:Misguided Theory, Prophecy of Doom, orExplanation for Regulatory Change

Mallika Shakya, London School ofEconomics

Mao’s Cultural Capital: Competing Legal andCultural Institutions among the ModernEntrepreneurs in Nepal

Iris A. Muth, Legal Consultant GTZ, OSCEDiscussant

4138 The Limits and Opportunities of Rights:New Directions and Applications

[Room T 306]

Elizabeth Heger Boyle, University ofMinnesota

Chair/DiscussantRichard A Brisbin, West Virginia University

,and Susan Hunter, West VirginiaUniversity

Rights Consciousness and the Meaning ofAnimal Rights: A Four Nation Study

Hsiaowei Kuan, University of PennsylvaniaWhen Nanking Massacre Becomes a Metaphorfor Abortion: The Rise of AntiabortionMovement and Why Feminists Need a NewAbortion Discourse in Taiwan

George I. Lovell, University of WashingtonCitizen Tactics for Establishing the Legitimacyof Novel Civil Rights Claims

4139 International Criminal Tribunals andthe European Court of Human Rights:Socio-Legal Approaches (Sponsored byWG Legal Profession)

[Room M 3059]

Anthony Bradney, Keele UniversityChair/Discussant

Nina-Louisa Arold, StanfordUniversity/Lund University

The Legal Culture of the European Court ofHuman Rights

Fred Bruinsma, Utrecht UniversitySeparate Opinions in the Grand Chambers of theECHR (1998-2007)

Goran Sluiter, University of AmsterdamBehind the Written Law: Why InternationalCriminal Tribunals Function the Way They Do

Erik Voeten, George Washington Universityand Allison Danner, Vanderbilt University

Who is Running the International CriminalJustice System?

10:00 - 10:15

Cof fee Break

10:15 - 12:00

4201 Roundtable–Towards a Socio-LegalStudy of Risk and Insurance (Sponsoredby CRN05 Regulatory Governance)

[Room S1.205]

Risk has emerged as one of the dominant organizing

themes in the late mod ern so cial sci ences with ma jor

funding streams, journals, con ferences, and scholar-

ship. What would it mean to take up risk and insur-

ance as the subject of socio-legal studies. The par -

ticipants will discuss the shape and tra jectory of this

new field and its re lationship to the prominent for -

ma tions around risk in so ci ol ogy, eco nom ics, and

po lit i cal sci ence.

Tom Baker, University of ConnecticutChair

Stephen Lyng, Carthage CollegeParticipant

Pat O’Malley, University of SydneyParticipant

Jens O. Zinn, School of Social Policy,Sociology, and Social Research

Participant

90 Saturday, July 28 10:15 - 12:00

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

4202 Voices from Within/Voices fromWithout: New Participants in the DeathPenalty Debate in the United States(Sponsored by CRN11 The CulturalLives of Capital Punishment)

[Room S1.405]

Timothy V. Kaufman-Osborn, WhitmanCollege

ChairPaul Kaplan, University of California, Irvine

Facts and Furies: The Antinomies of Law andRetribution in the Work of Capital Prosecutors

Robert C. Owen, University of Texas, AustinDeath Row Inmates in Cyberspace

Patrick W. Timmons, San Jose StateUniversity

The Meanings of Medellin and Quintero: TheMexican Government’s Challenge to CapitalPunishment in the United States

Timothy V. Kaufman-Osborn, WhitmanCollege

Discussant

4203 Roundtable–Mobilization Strategies ofthe Legal Complex (Sponsored by WGLegal Profession and CRN20 The LegalComplex and Struggles for PoliticalLiberalism)

[Room L 140/142]

This ses sion ex am ines a de vel op ing the ory of the

conditions un der which the le gal complex (legally

trained oc cu pa tions) mo bi lizes for or against po lit i-

cal lib eralism. Based on fourteen case studies in

Asia, Eu rope, Latin Amer ica and North America, a

synthetic es say by Halliday, Karpik and Feeley ar -

gues that the legal complex has very dif ferent pro-

files in its association with struggles for ob taining,

main tain ing or los ing po lit i cal free dom. The au thors

will pres ent an overview of the the ory, commenta-

tors will respond, and the au thors will reply before

throwing the session open for gen eral dis cussion.

Terence Halliday, American Bar FoundationChair

Daniel M. Brinks, University of Texas,Austin

ParticipantCarlo Guarnieri, University of Bologna

ParticipantLisa Hajjar, University of California, Santa

BarbaraParticipant

Lucien Karpik, Ecoles des Mines, ParisParticipant

Tamir Moustafa, University of WisconsinParticipant

Stuart A. Scheingold, University ofWashington

Participant

4204 Developing Criminal Justice (Sponsoredby CRN24 Rule of Law, State Building,and Transition)

[Room S1.301]

Per Bergling, Umea UniversityChair/Discussant

Cynthia Alkon, Appalachian School of Lawand Dmitry I. Nurumov, The Organizationfor Security and Co-operation in Europe

Plea Bargaining: Are We Importing a Bad Ideato Troubled Criminal Justice Systems?

Farid Samir Benavides-Vanegas,Universidad Nacional de Colombia

Forgive and Forget? The Transitional JusticeColombian Experiende 1948-2006

Chin-Shou Wang, National Cheng KungUniversity, Zih-jing Kuo, National ChengKung University and Sheng-Chi Teng,National Chiao Tung University

Regime Shift and Prosecutorial Reform inTaiwan

4205 Studying How Institutions Mediate Law: New Legal Realist Methods (Sponsoredby CRN28 Realist and Empirical LegalMethods)

[Room S1.101]

Gregory C Shaffer, Loyola University,Chicago

ChairLisa T. Alexander, University of Wisconsin

Problematizing Stakeholder Participation in NewGovernance Reform: Public Housing ResidentInvolvement in HOPE VI Redevelopment

Elizabeth Mertz, ABF/University ofWisconsin

Language Structure and Law School Reform

Victoria Frances Nourse, University ofWisconsin

After Wordplay: The Principle of the SelfishInstitution and the Idea of Law as Governance

Joyce Sterling, University of DenverDiscussant

4206 Judicialized Repayment Plans(Sponsored by IRC ComparativeSocio/Legal Approaches to ConsumerOverindebtedness, Debt Adjustment,and Insolvency)

[Room S1.204]

Johanna Niemi-Kiesilainen, UmeaUniversity

Chair/DiscussantJean Braucher, University of Arizona

A Comparative Study of Repayment Forms ofIndividual Bankruptcy

Clarissa Costa De Lima, UniversidadeFederal Do Rio Grande Do Sul and Karen

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

91 Saturday, July 28 10:15 - 12:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

R. D. Bertoncello, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

The Overindebtdness and the JudicialExperience in the South of Brazil: TheRenegotiation of The Debt´s Project

John Duns, Monash University and RosalindMason, University of Southern Queensland

The Australian Experience with Debt

Agreements

Soogeun Oh, Ewha Womans UniversityPortraits of Consumer Bankrupts in Korea

4207 International Business Disputes andADR (Sponsored by IRC ComparativeDisputing Behavior)

[Room S1.502]

Yves Dezalay, CNRS ParisChair/Discussant

Silvia Beccio, University Statale of MilanThe Role of Arbitration in InternationalCommercial Trade: A Socio-Legal Analysis

Luigi Cominelli, Università degli Studi diMilano

Disputing and Settling in the World TradeOrganization

José A. F. Costa, Catholic University ofSantos

Arbitrator Profiles and the Discourse of ICSIDAwards

4208 Transnational Legal Consciousness(Sponsored by IRC Legal Consciousnessin Comparative Perspective)

[Room S1.201]

Laurens Bakker, Radboud UniversityChair

Laurens Bakker, Radboud UniversityThreats or Rights? Dayak Indigeneity as aSource of Law

Annie Bunting, York UniversityLittle Mosque and Big Love: Mormons,Muslims, and the Comparative Regulation ofMarriage

Betty De Hart, University of NijmegenFamilies in Transnational Legal Space betweenDutch and Islamic Family Law

Ben Fleury-Steiner, University of Delawareand Aaron Fichtelberg, Unviersity ofDelaware

Legal Consciousness and Legitimacy inRwanda’s Gacaca

Barbara M. Oomen, Utrecht UniversityBetween the Hague and Juba: Local Perspectiveson the ICC

4209 After Jacques Derrida and NiklasLuhmann:The (Im-)Possibility of aSocial Theory of Justice

[Room M Senatssaal]

Gunther Teubner, Goethe UniversitätFrankfurt

ChairGunther Teubner, Goethe Universität

FrankfurtSelf-subversive Justice: Contingency orTranscendance Formula of Law

Christoph Menke, UniversitätPotsdam/Philosophie

The Abyss of the Individual: SocialPreconditions of the Aporia of Justice

Jean Clam, CNRS, BerlinAging Postmodernity: Law BeyondPolycontexturality and the Fragmented Self

4210 Author Meets Reader–Gerechtigkeit inLueritz, by Inga Markovits ((Justice inLueritz:A History of Law in EastGermany)

[Room M 1072]

Susanne Karstedt, Keele UniversityChair

Inga Markovits, University of Texas, AustinAuthor

Erhard R. Blankenburg, Vrije Universiteit,Bettina Lange, Keele University, StefanMachura, University of Wales, Bangor and Konstanze Plett, University of Bremen

Readers

4211 Author Meets Reader—The Theoreticsof Race in the Post-Civil Rights Era:Review Race, Sex, and Suspicion: TheMyth of the Black Male, by D. MarvinJones

[Room S1.401]

Steve Winter, Wayne State UniversityChair

Donald Marvin Jones, University of MiamiAuthor

Kevin D Brown, Professor of Law, MichaelHiggenbotham, University of Baltimore,Kenneth Williams, SouthwesternUniversity, and Adrien Wing, University of Iowa

Readers

4212 Cutting Edge Methodology in Law andSociety Research

[Room T 113]

Michael Heise, Cornell UniversityChair/Discussant

Katherine Barnes, Washington UniversityA Bayesian Approach to Selection Bias Appliedto Racial Profiling

92 Saturday, July 28 10:15 - 12:00

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Gabrielle A. Ferrales, NorthwesternUniversity, John Hagan, NorthwesternUniversity and Guillermina Jasso, NewYork University

An Iraqi Judicial Experiment: Toward a Theoryof Gender Control Theory

Yohei Katano, Sophia UniversityEnvironmental Policy and Social Capital inTokyo

Maja Kljucar, Humboldt Universität zuBerlin

In Search of the Reality of Company Law inCroatia

David Thacher, University of MichiganAvailability as Resource and Bias

4213 Cultural and Legal Cliteracy[Room S1.308]

Susan F. Appleton, Washington UniversityChair

Susan F. Appleton, Washington UniversityFamily Law, Sex Law, and Popular Culture

Elizabeth Emens, Columbia UniversityAdaptive Desires

Laura A. Rosenbury, Washington Universityand Jennifer Rothman, Loyola Law School

Beyond Intimacy

Susan E. Stiritz, Washington UniversityCultural Cliteracy: The Contexts of Women’sNot Coming

Laura Kessler, University of UtahDiscussant

4214 Concepts and Approaches in Law andSociety in East Asia: An InauguralSession

[Room S1.403]

Setsuo Miyazawa, Aoyama GakuinUniversity

ChairWen-Chen Chang, National Taiwan

UniversityEast Asian Foundations for Constitutionalism:Resistance or Reconstruction?

Chulwoo Lee, Yonsei UniversityThe Transformation of Citizenship in East Asia:Issues for Inquiry

Salil Kumar Mehra, Temple UniversityWhat is Asian Law?

Richard Barron Parker, Hiroshima ShudoUniversity

Why Has It Been So Difficult to Develop anInternal Legal Culture in Japan?

Dimitri R. Vanoverbeke, Catholic UniversityLeuven

Towards a New Framework for AnalysingJudicial Reform in Japan

Lawrence M. Friedman, Stanford UniversityDiscussant

4215 Diversity in the Legal Profession[Room L39a]

Haesook Kim, Long Island UniversityChair

Joanne Braithwaite, University of LondonExplaining Diversity Policies in Large LondonLaw Firms

Rachel Cryer, University of GlamorganValleys Girls, Learning to Be Lawyers

Angelique Davis, Seattle UniversityDiversity Matters: The Connection betweenRace in the Legal Profession and AmericanDemocracy

María Eugenia Gastiazoro, UniversidadNacional de Córdoba

Gender Differences in the Legal Professions

Cees Groenendijk, Radboud University,Nijmegen

Dutch Lawyers of Moroccan and Turkish Origin: How to Overcome Barriers to Success?

Manuel Gomez, Florida InternationalUniversity/Stanford University

Discussant

4216 Feminism, Secularism, and Religion[Room T 008]

Maria Drakopoulou, University of KentChair

Margaret Davies, Flinders UniversitySecular Feminism and Multi-Faith LegalPluralism

Maria Laetitia Loenen, University of UtrechtFrom Headscarf to Burqa: The Difference ItMakes

Anu Pylkkänen, University of HelsinkiFeminism and the Challenge of Religious Truths: The Case of Nordic Protestantism

Asifa Quraishi, University of WisconsinWestern Advocacy for Muslim Women: It’s NotJust the Thought that Counts

Hanne Petersen, University of CopenhagenDiscussant

4217 Historical and ContemporaryPerspectives on Lay Participation

[Room L229]

Ellen S. Cohn, University of New HampshireChair/Discussant

Adriana Sylwia Bartnik, University ofWarsaw

The Role of Lay Judges in the Justice System ofthe Republic of Poland: Sociological and LegalAnalysis

Nikolay P Kovalev, Queen’s UniversityBelfast and John D Jackson, Queen’sUniversity Belfast

Lay Adjudication and Human Rights in Europe

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

93 Saturday, July 28 10:15 - 12:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Marc Musick, University of Texas, Austinand Mary R. Rose, University of Texas,Austin

The Role of Religion in the Production ofAttitudes toward the Jury

Zhuoyu Wang, University of Birminghamand Sally Lloyd-Bostock, London School of Economics

Lay Assessors in China: 100 Years of Historyand the Present Institution

4218 How Courts Contribute to the Buildingof Democracy

[Room L326]

Bojan Bugaric, University of LjubljanaChair

Alfons Aragoneses, Universitat PompeuFabra

Spanish Law and Its Antichambers from the Past

Mihaela Mihai, University of TorontoFiltering Emotions: The Role of Courts inTransitional Justice Processes

Shannon I. Smithey, Westminster CollegeJudging Democracy: How Constitutional CourtsInfluence Democratic Development in EasternEurope

Sophia Wilson, University of WashingtonThe Effects of Publicity on the JudicialDecision-Making in the Countries of the FormerSoviet Union

4219 Identity, Rights, and Community: NewDirections in the Study of Law inEveryday Life

[Room M 3092]

David Engel, State University of New York,Buffalo

ChairSusan C. Bibler Coutin, University of

California, IrvineExiled by Law: Deportation and the Inviabilityof Life

Frank Munger, New York Law School andDavid Engel, State University of NewYork, Buffalo

How Rights Become Active: Toward aRecursive Theory of Rights and Identity

Barbara Yngvesson, Hampshire CollegeAs If Begotten: Adoptive Identities and theEthnographic Real

David Nelken, University of MacerataDiscussant

4220 Law, Community, and Conflict[Room S2.102]

Sandra Braman, University of Wisconsin,Milwaukee

Chair

Sandra Braman, University of Wisconsin,Milwaukee

Law and Community Memory

Sophia Mihic, Notheastern IllinoisUniversity

Torture, Generational Memory, and the Meaningof Encampment

Ivette Perez-Vega, University of Puerto RicoWillie Bester: An Artist Resisting the Injusticeof Post-Apartheid in South Africa

Michael W. Yarbrough, Yale UniversityRestoring the Legal to “Legal Consciousness”

4221 Law, Society, and Taxation VI: DoctrinalAspects of Current Tax Controversies

[Room S1.608]

Tracy Kaye, Seton Hall UniversityChair/Discussant

Christine L. Agnew, University of HoustonInterpreting Tax Statutes with a Never-EndingPeriod

Richard T. Ainsworth, Boston UniversityTransfer Pricing Theory: InconsistentApplications in Direct and Indirect Taxation

Brad Borden, Washburn UniversityIn Defense of Section 1031

Tamara Lynn Larre, University ofSaskatchewan

Tax Policy, Statutory Interpretation, and the “InLieu of” Theory

4222 Lay Decision-Making in the JusticeSystem

[Room M 3059]

Nicole L. Waters, National Center for StateCourts

Chair/DiscussantShari Seidman Diamond, Northwestern

University and Mary R. Rose, University of Texas, Austin

Balance in Deliberations: Over Time, By CaseType, and Across Jurors

Valerie Hans, Cornell University andTheodore Eisenberg, Cornell University

Taking a Stand on Taking the Stand

Neal Feigenson, Quinnipiac UniversityEffects of PowerPoint on Juror Decision Making

Masahiro Fujita, National GraduateInstitute for Policy Studies

Lay Participation in Japan: Lessons from MockMixed Jury Trials by Real Professional Judgesand Citizens

94 Saturday, July 28 10:15 - 12:00

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

4223 Between Tradition and Social Change(Sponsored by WG Comparing LegalCultures)

[Room S1.406]

Peter Solomon, University of TorontoChair/Discussant

Lasha Bregvadze, Institute of State and Lawof the Georgian Academy of Sciences

Legal Culture between Localism and Globalism:Collisions of Plural Legal Regimes and Culturesin Post-Soviet Georgia

Catherine Celine Dupre, University ofWales, Aberystwyth

Human Dignity in Post-Communist Hungary:Triggering a New Legal Culture

Weidong Ji, Kobe UniversityInterpretative Turn of Legal Tradition in Chinaand Its Impacts on Social Transformation

Marina Kurkchiyan, University of OxfordLegal Cultures in Russia and China in theContext of Development

Magdalena Sengayen, Oxford UniversityTransformations within Central European LegalCultures and Their Effect on Consumers

4224 Normative Constructions at Work[Room T 013]

Risa L. Lieberwitz, Cornell UniversityChair/Discussant

Consuelo Chacartegui, Pompeu FabraUniversity and Nuria Pumar, BarcelonaUniversity

Retirement Pension and Gender: The SpanishCase from the European Perspective

Anna Louise Chapman, University ofMelbourne

Uncovering Normative Work, Care, and Familyof Australian Leave Entitlements

Garry C. Gray, Institute for Work andHealth and Mark D. Easton, University ofToronto

Health and Safety Legal Consciousness: TheInfluence of Job Hierarchy on Workplace SafetyRights

Ann McGinley, University of Nevada, LasVegas

Using Masculinities Theory to InterpretBehavior Occurring “Because of Sex” UnderTitle VII

4225 Perceptions, Attitudes, andRepresentations: How People ViewCourts, Law, and Justice

[Room L 144]

Richard Bierschbach, Yeshiva UniversityChair

Roberto Cammarata, University of Studiesof Milan and Roberta Bosisio, Universityof Studies of Milan

Right/Not Right: Questions of Justice and MoralDilemmas in Adolescents’ Representations

Katarzyna Dzieniszewska-Naroska, WarsawUniversity of Technology

Attitudes of Polish Students towards Law andPolitics

Barbara Heitzmann, University of FrankfurtWhat Perceptions of Ascription of Legal(Criminal) Responsibility Do People Have?

Galma Jahic, Istanbul Bilgi University andSeda Kalem, Istanbul Bilgi University

Court Experiences and Attitudes towards Courts: Results of a National Survey in Turkey

Juan C. Oyanedel, King’s College LondonInequality, Fear of Crime, and Confidence inJustice in Chile 2003-2006

4226 Race, Law, and Performance Identity[Room S1.605]

Mario Barnes, University of MiamiChair

D. Aaron Lacy, Barry UniversityHair Today, Gone Tomorrow: Conforming forHire

Angela Onwuachi-Willig, University of Iowaand Mario Barnes, University of Miami

Lakisha and Jamal Go to Work: AnalyzingWorkplace Appearance and Grooming Standards as “Racial Stereotyping” under the MixedMotive Standard of Discrimination

Catherine E. Smith, University of DenverRacial Conspiracies and the Legal Anachronismof Intent

Christian M. Halliburton, Seattle UniversitySchool of Law

Claiming Identity: The Causes andConsequences of Self-Racialization andAuto-Othering

Aya Gruber, Florida InternationalUniversity

The Republican Cooptation of Minority Status

4227 Reflecting on Time and Space inSocio-Legal Theory

[Room S1.404]

Yofi Tirosh, College of ManagementChair/Discussant

Francesca Ursula Bitetto, Università degliStudi di Bari

Uncertain Future, Post-Modern Exception:Rights beyond Certainty

Chris Butler, Griffith UniversityCritical Legal Geography and the Social Theoryof Henri Lefebvre

Kenneth Ehrenberg, University at BuffaloLaw as a Pattern Language: An ArchitecturalTheory Illuminates the Law

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

95 Saturday, July 28 10:15 - 12:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Ronaldo Joaquim da Silveira Lobão,Fluminense Federal University

Vertiginous Time: All But Impossible to BeCaptured by Law

4228 Restructuring the Governance[Room S1.503]

Yifat Holzman-Gazit, College ofManagement, Law School

ChairMustafa Avci, Anadolu University and

Hafize Sevinc Aydar, Anadolu UniversityThe New Public Administration Concept and It’sReflections on Local Government in Turkey

Yifat Holzman-Gazit, College ofManagement, Law School and RaananSulitzeanu-Kenan, Haifa University

Commissions of Investigation and PublicOpinion: A Survey of Israeli Society

Herman Lelieveldt, RooseveltAcademy/Utrecht University

Assessing theTtrade-Off between theEffectiveness and Representativeness ofNon-Profit Organizations and VoluntaryAssociations

4229 Roman Law on the Colonial Periphery[Room S1.307]

David Ibbetson, University of CambridgeChair/Discussant

Paul Du Plessis, Edinburgh UniversityStructures, Substructures, and Modes ofClassification in the Roman and Scots Law ofContracts

Joshua Simon Getzler, University of OxfordGifts, Bargains, and Promises: The Dialectic ofImperial Core and Periphery

Jean Meiring, Cambridge UniversityEmpires Meet: Consideration and Causa inColonial Ceylon

Stelios Tofaris, University of CambridgeIn the Shadow of Common Law: The Influenceof Civilian Legal Thinking in Colonial India

4230 Roundtable—Gender, Culture, andLegal Education

[Room LE42]

Tra di tional mod els of le gal ed u ca tion do not ef fec -

tively ad dress women’s rights or ex plore how gen -

der and the law in teract with various so cial and po -

lit i cal in sti tu tions. This fail ure re in forces gen-

der-bias in all as pects of the le gal sys tem. The in cor-

po ra tion of gen der into le gal ed u ca tion, the ory and

doctrine can cre ate a more in clusive le gal cul ture

that is re sponsive to the needs and priorities of

women. Law schools can play an integral role in

promoting women’s legal rights by shap ing le gal

thinking, affecting the training of fu ture law yers

and policymakers, and cre at ing au thor i ta tive struc-

tures for le git i miz ing fem i nist thought re gard ing

sex and gender. This roundtable ses sion will pro-

vide a fo rum for feminist scholars and ad vocates to

discuss in corporating gen der and the role of culture

into core law school courses, such as torts, criminal

law, con tracts and property. Par ticipants will dis-

cuss teaching ma terials and meth ods that en able stu -

dents to better un derstand the gendered as sumptions

inherent in many central le gal principles and how

gender affects the pro duction of legal knowledge.

The ses sion will also ad dress the challenges facing

law teachers who use non-traditional readings and

methods in the core curriculum.

Daniela Kraiem, American UniversityChair

Darren Rosenblum, Pace UniversityParticipant

Elizabeth Schneider, Brooklyn Law SchoolParticipant

Lucinda Vandervort, University ofSaskatchewan

Participant

4232 Roundtable–Presidential Power inContext

[Room M 1070]

The “war on terror” has pro voked — or in some

cases, revived — a number of questions of con stitu-

tional doc trine, po lit i cal sci ence, and socio-le gal

scholarship. At a doctrinal level, we see re newed at -

tention to Supreme Court cases ad dressing the Con-

sti tu tion’s dis tri bu tion of au thor ity to re spond to ex-

traor di nary sit u a tions. To po lit i cal sci en tists, the

questions typically con cern the ways in which vari-

ous in stitutional ar rangements con strain — or fail to

con strain — the po lit i cal, ideo log i cal, and other

agendas of the various ac tors involved. From a

socio-le gal per spec tive, the prin ci pal ques tions may

be about the ways we talk about pres idential power

and the separation of pow ers more broadly — that

is, about the factors that in fluence the shape of de -

bates in this area, and about the ways in which at ten-

tion to those factors reveals the highly con tingent

nature of those de bates. This panel will draw on all

of these per spec tives to ad dress fun da men tal and

timely is sues of pres i den tial power. In par tic u lar,

the panel will fo cus on a few cen tral ju dicial pre ce-

dents (including but not limited to na tional se curity

cases) that have gained ca nonical sta tus and that

have come to organize the dis course, both within

the ex ecutive branch and in the pub lic more broadly,

about the scope of the President’s power. The panel

will con sider the par tic u lar so cial, po lit i cal, and his-

torical contexts out of which these de cisions

emerged, the process by which they came to be ac -

corded ca nonical status, and the ways in which they

have defined the contours of ongoing debates about

presidential power.

Bernadette Meyler, Cornell UniversityChair

David Franklin, DePaul UniversityParticipant

Trevor Morrison, Cornell UniversityParticipant

Kevin Stack, Yeshiva UniversityParticipant

96 Saturday, July 28 10:15 - 12:00

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

4233 The Costs of Culture[Room M 3086]

Amy J. Cohen, Ohio State UniversityChair

Caroline Brown, University of ChicagoVisible Claimants and Invisible Claims: Cultural Authority and Jurisdiction in the Indian ChildWelfare Act

Amy J. Cohen, Ohio State UniversityA Critical Assessment of the Culture Concept inLaw and Development

Melissa Demian, University of KentIntentions and Evidence: Culture’s AnalogicPersuasions

Ilana Gershon, Indiana UniversityMaori Culture, Maori Race: Legislating forIndigenes in the New Zealand Parliament

Amiria Salmond, University of CambridgeMuseum of Archaeology and Anthropology

Taonga Maori: Encompassing Rights andProperty in New Zealand

Peter Fitzpatrick, University of LondonDiscussant

4234 The Limits and Opportunities of Rights:No Road Forward or Progressive SocialChange?

[Room S1.402]

Kerry Rittich, University of TorontoChair/Discussant

Felicia A. Kornbluh, Duke UniversityA New Variable for Law and Society? HowDisability Can Change Understandings of U.S.Politics and Law

Bruno Sena Martins, University of CoimbraDisabled People’s Rights: Law in the EmergentPolitical Agendas

G. N. Rosenberg, University of ChicagoConfusing Rights with Reality: Litigation forSame-Sex Marriage and theCounter-Mobilization of Law

Stuart Wilson, University of theWitwatersrand

Litigating Housing Rights in a JohannesburgInformal Settlement

4235 The Significance of Labels atInternational Law

[Room L E44/46]

Katherine Fallah, University of SydneyChair

Laurie Berg, University of SydneyWhat’s In a Name? The Many Characterisationsof Irregular Migrants under International HumanRights Law

Katherine Fallah, University of SydneyNaming Violence: The Ratione PersonaeApplicability of International Humanitarian Lawto Corporate Actors in Armed Conflict

Mustafa Qadri, University College LondonRacism Colonialism and the GenocideConvention of 1948

Sheryl Van Horne, Pennsylvania StateUniversity

Violence in Search of Democracy: The MediaPortrayal of the War in Iraq

4236 Theorizing Justice[Room S1.504]

Jonathan Yovel, University of Haifa /Columbia Law School

ChairDaniel Augenstein, European University

Institute, FlorenceTolerance and Procedural Justice

Alan Norrie, King’s College LondonJustice and the Slaughter Bench: The Ethics ofWar Guilt in Arendt and Jaspers

Jonathan Papoulidis, University ofCambridge

The Laws of Peacebuilding: Theorizing aBroader Role for Transitional Justice

Magdalena Zolkos, University of AlbertaJustice “Beyond Guilt and Atonement”?Narratives of ICTY and the Promise ofRedemption

4237 Use of Law During and After War[Room S1.601]

Maria-Victoria Perez-Rios, City Universityof New York

Chair/DiscussantTawia Ansah, New England School of Law

Law After War: The “Messianic” Sovereign

Kerstin Carlson, University of California,Berkeley

Using International Courts to Grow InternationalHumanitarian Law: The Expansive Doctrine of“Joint Criminal Enterprise”

Ben M. Clarke, University of Notre Dame,Australia

Occupation, Resistance, and the Right ofSelf-Defence under Domestic Law

Ntombizozuko Veronica Dyani, University of the Witwatersrand

Sexual Violence, Armed Conflict, andInternational Law in Africa

Musa Movlievich Yusupov, The Center ofSocial - Strategic Researches

The Post-War Chechen Republic: Peculiarities of Functioning of Legal Institutes and Norms

4238 Images of Justice in Times of PoliticalInstability (Sponsored by WG Law andPopular Culture)

[Room S1.501]

Guy Osborn, University of WestminsterChair

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

97 Saturday, July 28 10:15 - 12:00

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Shulamit Almog, Haifa UniversityJustice in Israeli Film and Television

Sharon Cowan, University of EdinburghIs It “Different for Girls”? Trans-Identity Politics in the Movies

Peter W. Robson, University of StrathclydePolitics in Film: The Changing Nature ofCultural Products

4240 Labour Rights and New Governance inthe European Union (Sponsored by IRCSocial Europe and CRN08 Labor Rights)

[Room S1.505]

Cynthia Estlund, New York UniversityChair/Discussant

Diamond Ashiagbor, University CollegeLondon

Achieving “Flexicurity” in Europe: LabourMarket Discourses and New Governance

Norbert Reich, Tartu UniversityWidening vs Deepening the EU

Ralf Rogowski, University of WarwickReflexive Coordination of European Social andEmployment Policies

Els Sol, Universiteit van Amsterdam, GuyMundlak, Tel-Aviv University and EvaSchram, University of Amsterdam

Governing Temp Agency Work by New Modesof Regulation: Lessons for Europe?

12:00 - 12:30

Lunch Break

12:30 - 14:15

4301 The Conceptualization and Promotion of Plaintiffs’ Claiming (Sponsored byCRN03 Cause Lawyering)

[Room S1.201]

Margo Schlanger, Washington University,St. Louis

ChairSamuel Bagenstos, Washington University

Ethics and Access to Justice: A Disability LawPerspective

Myriam Gilles, Yeshiva UniversityThe Survivors Bar: Bringing Class Claims in theWake of the War on Class Actions

Margo Schlanger, Washington University,St. Louis

The Plaintiffs’ Bar and the Conceptualization ofLitigation

Anthony Sebok, Yeshiva UniversityThe Market in Lawsuits and the Problem of theInauthentic Claim

4302 Roundtable–Law and SocietyApproaches to Intellectual Property(Sponsored by CRN14 Culture, Society,and Intellectual Property)

[Room T 306]

The Law and So ci ety As so ci a tion “col lab o ra tive re-

search net work” (CRN) on Cul ture, So ciety, and In-

tellectual Property is de voted to the pro motion and

dis sem i na tion of multi-dis ci plin ary and col lab o ra -

tive re search re lat ing to in tel lec tual prop erty. The

CRN seeks to encourage in teractions among schol -

ars from di verse dis ciplines and perspectives who

focus on the le gal, so cial, and cultural di mensions of

in tel lec tual prop er ties—in clud ing pat ents, copy-

rights, trademarks, trade se crets, and rights of pub -

licity. The goal of this CRN is to en courage cre-

atively eclec tic ap proaches to the study of intellec-

tual prop erty. Part of the impetus for this CRN is the

re al iza tion that, de spite the ubiq uity and sig nif i -

cance of in tel lec tual prop erty is sues in con tem po -

rary so cial life world wide, the vast ma jority of

scholarship on this sub ject tends to be largely doc -

trinal and abstract. There are rel atively few scholars

who complement the study of IP law doc trine with

“law in ac tion” or “empirical” or other approaches

that have tra ditionally been at the core of the “law

and so ciety” en terprise. The pur pose of this

Roundtable is to ex plore: (1) whether there are

unique “law and so ciety” ap proaches to the study of

intellectual property law that should be explored

and, if so, (2) how this CRN might fa cilitate the pro-

duc tion and dis sem i na tion of such schol ar ship, and

(3) to brainstorm about projects in this field that

would ben e fit from sus tained and col lab o ra tive ef-

forts that a CRN such as this one might fa cilitate.

This Roundtable has sev eral des ignated “partici-

pants” to get the dis cussion go ing, but the for mat for

this ses sion is intended to gen erate participation

form all interested attendees.

William T. Gallagher, Golden GateUniversity

ChairOlufunmilayo Arewa, Northwestern

UniversityParticipant

Shubha Ghosh, Southern MethodistUniversity

ParticipantDebora Halbert, Otterbein College

ParticipantDavid S. Wall, University of Leeds

Participant

4303 Cases on Law, Governance, andDevelopment III (Sponsored by CRN24Rule of Law, State Building, andTransition)

[Room S1.502]

Luciana Gross Cunha, Fundação GetulioVargas

Chair/Discussant

98 Saturday, July 28 12:30 - 14:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Julio Faundez, University of WarwickThe Rule of Law and Political Processes:Lessons from Chile 1932-1973

Linn A. Hammergren, The World BankJudicialization of Administrative Claims: TheSocial and Political Impacts of Legal Actionsagainst the Government

Antônio José M. Porto, University of IllinoisThe Legal and Financial System Link: A CaseStudy from Brazil

4304 Rule of Law Defined, Received, andResisted (Sponsored by CRN24 Rule ofLaw, State Building, and Transition)

[Room T 113]

Veronica Taylor, University of WashingtonChair

Jon Eddy, University of WashingtonDonor Distortion and Cognitive Dissonance inRule of Law Project Implementation

Yuka Kaneko, Kobe UniversityRole of Law Models in Law and Judicial Reform in Asia: Controversial Development Strategies

Arinori Kawamura, Japan Coast GuardAcademy

Rule of Law and Aspects of Legal Cultures inAsia

Scott Newton, School of Oriental andAfrican Studies

Contemporary Legal Reception: Techne,Culture, Politics

4306 Roundtable–Punishment and Society:The New Punitiveness (Sponsored byCRN27 Prisons and Prisoners)

[Room M Senatssaal]

Hyper in carceration in the United States ap pears to

be the cutting edge of a new punitiveness also mak-

ing its mark in Eu rope, South America, and Asia.

What are the sources of this new punitiveness? Are

they best seen as re flecting specific im peratives in

each so ciety or as global pat tern per haps determined

by glob al iza tion it self. The par tic i pants will be gin a

discussion of the new punitiveness and its implica-

tions for de mocracy, glob alization, and the rule of

law.

Jonathan S. Simon, University of California,Berkeley

ChairVanessa Barker, Florida State University/

Princeton UniversityParticipant

Johannes B. Feest, Universitaet BremenParticipant

Barbara A. Hudson, University of CentralLancashire

ParticipantMona Lynch, San Jose State University

Participant

John Sutton, University of California, SantaBarbara

Participant

4307 Gender and Judging V: Gender,Feminism, and Family Law Judging(Sponsored by IRC Gender andJudging)

[Room S1.404]

Sabine Berghahn, Freie Universität BerlinChair

Marianne Breithaupt, University of AppliedSciences Landshut

Gender Bias in Poor Child MaintenanceArrangements

Monique Clarissa Cardinal, Université LavalWomen Judges and Family Courts in Syria

Winnie Kamau, York UniversityWomen, Families, and Dispute Resolution: TheImpact of Legal Pluralism

Beatriz Kohen, Equipo Latinoamericano deJusticia y Género

The Family Law Judges of the City of BuenosAires and Their Gender Representations

4308 Industrial Relations in the MemberStates Under the Impact ofEuropeanization and Globalization(Sponsored by IRC Social Europe andCRN08 Labor Rights)

[Room L39a]

Els Sol, Universiteit van AmsterdamChair

Wolfhard Kohte, Martin-Luther-UniversitätFirst Steps to an European Level of CollectiveBargainig in Health and Safety

Guy Mundlak, Tel-Aviv UniversityThe Paradox of Organizing Workers inCentralized Industrial Relations Systems

Andras Toth, Hungarian Academy ofSciences

Worker Representation and Industrial Relationsin the CEE Acceding States: What InfluenceEuropeanization?

Marley S. Weiss, University of MarylandProspects for Survival and Resurgence ofEuropean Industrial Relations under Regionaland Global Integration

Alvaro Santos, University of Texas, AustinDiscussant

4309 Latin American Judicialized Politics(Sponsored by IRC Legal Culture andthe Judicialization of Politics in LatinAmerica)

[Room S1.307]

Pablo Rueda, University of California,Berkeley

Chair

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

99 Saturday, July 28 12:30 - 14:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

María Inés Bergoglio, Universidad Nacionalde Córdoba

Understanding Judicialisation in Latin America:Tracking the Changes in Legal Culture

Leigh Payne, University of Wisconsin,Madison

When Perpetrators of State Violence Speak Out:The Politics and Judicialization of Speech inArgentina and Chile

Pablo Rueda, University of California,Berkeley

Legal Discourse and Social Change in Colombia

Leticia Barrera-Lopez, Cornell UniversityPerforming the Court: Narratives and Practicesof Image-Building in the Argentine SupremeCourt of Justice

Mark Goodale, George Mason UniversityDiscussant

4310 Author Meets Reader—AgainstPrediction: Profiling, Policing, andPunishing in an ActuarialAge, byBernard E. Harcourt

[Room S1.401]

Shai Lavi, Tel Aviv UniversityChair

Bernard E. Harcourt, University of ChicagoAuthor

Frederick Schauer, Harvard University,Susan S. Silbey, Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology and Lucia Zedner, Universityof Oxford

Readers

4311 Comparative Corporate Governance:Law in Context

[Room S1.504]

John Ohnesorge, University of WisconsinChair

Andrew Jen-Guang Lin, National TaiwanUniversity

The Front-End and Rear-End CorporateGovernance Reforms in Taiwan: UnsettledIssues on Regulatory Reforms

Joongi Kim, Yonsei UniversityA Forensic Study of Daewoo’s CorporateGovernance: Does Responsibility Solely Liewith the Chaebols and Korea?

Marco Ventoruzzo, Bocconi UniversityCost-Based and Rule-Based RegulatoryCompetition in Corporate Law: Comparing theU.S.A. and Europe

Donald C. Clarke, George WashingtonUniversity and Defeng Xu, PekingUniversity

Discussants

4312 Disputing “Religious Law” in the21stCentury: Rights and Identities

[Room T 008]

Martin Ramstedt, Max Planck Institute forSocial Anthropology

ChairCarola Lentz, Johannes Gutenberg

Universität MainzEarth Shrines: The Sacred/Secular Connection in West African Land Litigation

Jothie Rajah, University of MelbourneConstantly Colonised: Hindu Legal Identities inthe Modern Nation State of Singapore

Martin Ramstedt, Max Planck Institute forSocial Anthropology

Entangled Notions of Sacrality, Governance, and Law: The Call for Hindu Judicature inContemporary Bali

4313 Cultural Rights: A Challenge to Lawand Society (AISLF-CR03)

[Room S1.608]

Pierre Guibentif, Universidade Nova deLisboa

Chair/DiscussantLuc-Henry Choquet, Direction de la

protection judiciaire de la JeunesseTaking into Account of a Cultural Dimension inPrevention, Judicial Handling, and EducationalAction

Michel Coutu, Université de MontréalCultural Rights at the Workplace: TowardsPost-Industrial Citizenship?

Claire de Galembert, CNRSThe Juridical Controversies in the Field ofAdministrative Law About the IslamicHeadscarfs (1989-2004)

Edmundo Balsemão Pires, Universidade deCoimbra

Towards a Law of Cultural Ceremonial

4314 Debating Discipline and Method inSocio-Legal Studies

[Room M 3059]

J.D. Trout, Loyola University ChicagoChair/Discussant

Shulamit Almog, Haifa University andMichal Alberstein, Bar Ilan University

Legal Education and the Humanities: Poetics ofInterpretations

Richard Markovits, University of Texas,Austin

Economic and Philosophic Theory and Law &Society Research: The Disservice the CurrentLaw-School Paradigms Render and the Servicethe Correct Positions Would Perform

Alexander Kozin, Freie Universität BerlinThe Force of Law and its Empirical Positions

100 Saturday, July 28 12:30 - 14:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Richard Markovits, University of Texas,Austin

Law Related Theory as an Obstacle to EmpiricalLegal Studies

William Rose, Albion CollegeReform, Resistance, Transformation: On thePlace of Critique in Realist Socio-Legal Theory

Julian Webb, University of WarwickSocio-Legal Studies, Transdisciplinarity and theChallenge of Complexity

4315 Does Law Really Help against So-CalledDomestic Violence? A ComparativePerspective

[Room S1.405]

Elizabeth Schneider, Brooklyn Law SchoolChair/Discussant

Rosemary L. Barberet, City University ofNew York

An Analysis of Parliamentary and Media Debateon Spain’s Gender Violence Act

Madalena Duarte, University of CoimbraCan Law Empower Women? A Critical View ofLaw in Violence Against Women

David Ford, Indiana University/ PurdueUniversity, Indianapolis

Law and Custom in Controlling DomesticViolence Against Women in Kenya

Gail Garfield, City University of New YorkWomen’s Safety as a Matter of Social Justice:The U.S. Violence Against Women Act

4316 Ethics and Regulation II[Room L229]

Jeffrey W. Stempel, University of Nevada,Las Vegas

ChairDaniel Markovits, Yale University

Professional Ethics and Political Legitimacy

Paul Paton, Queen’s UniversityLawyers, Privilege, and the Challenge ofAccountability

Thomas Ross, University of PittsburghSheltering Illegality: U.S. Lawyers and AbusiveTax Shelters

Neta Ziv, Tel Aviv UniversityDiscussant

4317 Graduate Student ActivityRoundtable–Professional Issues forNorth American Academies

[Room M 1070]

This is a ques tion and answer ses sion de signed to

discuss pub lishing, job searching, tenure and other

professional con cerns for sociolegal schol ars in or

in ter ested in North Amer i can acad e mies. Par tic i pa -

tion is invited for grad uate students who are en -

rolled in the Grad uate Stu dent Ac tivities for this

meet ing.

Jonathan Goldberg-Hiller, University ofHawaii

ChairTom Baker, University of Connecticut

Participant

4318 How Do We Monitor Crime and withWhat Consequence?

[Room S2.102]

David Wood, University of MelbourneChair/Discussant

Grzegorz Bryda, Jagiellonian UniversityUsing Data Mining for Fraud Detection: NewMethods for Crime Control and Public Safety

Jianhong Liu, Rhode Island CollegeAssessing Black’s Theory of Law: A MultilevelAnalysis of Data from Tianjing, China

Anton Maslov, Carleton UniversityProperty Crime Reporting in Canada: Examining the Effects of Victims’ Perception of their SocialContext on their Reporting Behaviour

Marco Aurelio Ruediger, Fundação GetúlioVargas, Vicente Riccio, Fundação GetúlioVargas, and Angela Britto, FundaçãoGetúlio Vargas

Homicides in Rio de Janeiro State - Brazil: AGeographical Distribution and Its Impacts forPublic Policies Concerning Crime Reduction

4319 Immigration Law, Anti-ImmigrantDiscourse, and Immigrant Sanctuary inComparative Perspective

[Room L 144]

Leti Volpp, University of California,Berkeley

Chair/DiscussantJennifer Clarke, Australian National

UniversityStill Whitening Australia? Skilled Migration,Citizenship, and Ethnicity

Hamsa Murthy, University of California,Berkeley

Labor Law and Regulation of Immigrants inTwo Southwestern States

Mary Romero, Arizona State UniversityUnraveling the Appropriation of HomelandSecurity Discourse in Mothers Against IllegalAliens (MAIA) Campaign

Charles R. Venator Santiago, Ithaca CollegeDominican-Haitian Biopolitics and DominicanImmigration Law and Policy

4320 Infrastructure Commons and OpenAccess: Environment, Information, theInternet, and Beyond

[Room S1.403]

Marc R. Poirier, Seton Hall UniversityChair

David M. Driesen, Syracuse UniversityThe Environment as Infrastructure

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

101 Saturday, July 28 12:30 - 14:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Brett Frischmann, Loyola UniversityChicago

Environmental Infrastructure

Gregory N. Mandel, Albany Law SchoolDisentangling Infrastructure, Commons, andOpen Access

Marc R. Poirier, Seton Hall UniversityPublic Trust Resources and the Theory ofInfrastructure Commons

4321 Law, Society, and Taxation VII:Administrative and Political Aspects ofTaxes

[Room S1.601]

Karen Brown, George WashingtonUniversity

Chair/DiscussantRichard T. Ainsworth, Boston University

Carousel Fraud: Proposal for a CertifiedTechnology Solution

Kathryn A. James, Monash UniversityThe Politics of Tax Reform: The Introduction ofa Goods and Services Tax

Tor Krever, University of Cambridge andRichard Cullen, University of Hong Kong

Tax Reform and Political Reform in Hong Kong

4322 Law, Society and Luhmann:Deconstruction and Reconstruction

[Room M 3086]

Peer C. Zumbansen, York UniversityChair

Fatima Kastner, Hamburg Institue forSocial Research

Luhmann’s Paradox of Sovereignty: On theGenerative Mechanism of the Political System in the World Society

Alexandra Kemmerer, University ofWuerzburg

Spheres of Transformation, Limits ofIntegration: Citizenship as a Social System

Matthias Mahlmann, Free University, BerlinSystems Theory and the Modern Culture ofHuman Rights

Oren Perez, Bar Ilan UniversityPurity Lost: The Paradoxical Face of the NewTransnational Legal Body

Gunther Teubner, Goethe UniversitätFrankfurt

Discussant

4323 Networks and States: The IntersectionBetween Religion, Identity, andBoundaries

[Room T 013]

Janet Halley, Harvard UniversityChair

Pascale Fournier, University of OttawaThe Adjudication of Otherness in ConstitutionalLiberal States: A Critique of the (Multi)CulturalEncounter in the Enforcement of Mahr

Isabel Cristina Jaramillo, Universidad de losAndes

Family, Nation, and Religion in NineteenthCentury Latin America

Moria Paz, Harvard UniversityA Non-Territorial Ethnic Network and theMaking of Human Rights Regime: The Case ofthe Alliance Israélite Universelle

Gokce Yurdakul, Brock UniversityMuslim Women against Islam: A Comparison ofNecla Kelek in Germany, Ayaan Hirsi Ali in theNetherlands, and Irshad Manji in Canada

4324 Overcoming Poverty?[Room S1.503]

Thomas Meyer, Deutsche Gesellschaft fürtechnische Zusammenarbeit mbH

ChairTeresa Consoli, University of Catania

Law and Money: Social Regulation of Subsidiesfor Poor People

Ivan C. Ribeiro, University of Sao PauloRobin Hood vs. King John Redistribution: HowDo Local Judges Decide Cases in Brazil?

Claire Weber, International Institute for theSociology of Law (IISJ)

The Price of Land Reform Policy in Zimbabwe:The Zimbabwean Economic Crisis and theOverflow into South Africa

4325 Perspectives on Multiple Legal Orders:Socio-Legal Dimensions of PrivateInternational Law

[Room M 3092]

Joel R. Paul, University of California, SanFrancisco

Chair/DiscussantHelen E. Hartnell, Golden Gate University /

Free University of BerlinEU Judicial Cooperation in Civil Matters: WhatDoes It Matter?

Nikitas Hatzimihail, University of CyprusImages of International Governance and theDisciplinary Identity of Private InternationalLaw

Lazaros E. Panourgias, EuropeanInvestment Fund, EIB Group

International Banking: Balancing Regulation andTrade Values

Tonya L. Putnam, Columbia UniversityCourts Without Borders? ExtraterritorialRegulation as a Source of Structure in theInternational System

102 Saturday, July 28 12:30 - 14:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

4326 Refusals, Transitions, and PostapartheidLaw

[Room M 1072]

Karin Van Marle, University of PretoriaChair/Discussant

Henk Botha, University of StellenboschRefusal, Romance, and the Limits ofTransformative Constitutionalism

Wessel Badenhorst Le Roux, University ofSouth Africa

Memorial Constitutionalism as a Mode ofRefusal

Johan W. G. Van der Walt, University ofGlasgow

Refusing and Embracing Normativity

Andre J. Van der Walt, StellenboschUniversity

Refusal and Transition in Postapartheid LandLaw

4327 Reproducing Law: Technology,Transformation, and Tradition

[Room L326]

Cindy Baldassi, University of BritishColumbia

ChairErin Ackerman, Johns Hopkins University

Rights of Procreation: Access to AssistedReproduction in the United States

Sameena Mulla, Johns Hopkins UniversityEmergency Contraception for Sexual AssaultVictims: Medical or Legal Intervention?

Ilke Ozdemir, University of Nottingham,Robert Dingwall, University ofNottingham, and Therese Murphy,University of Nottingham

The Removal of Donor Anonymity for AssistedConception in the UK

Young-Gyung Paik, Johns HopkinsUniversity

Assisted Reproduction, Depopulation Crisis, andBioethics Law in South Korea

Nicola White, Law Reform Commission ofIreland

The Right of Procreational Autonomy in FrozenPre-Embryo Disputes: Time for a LegislativeThaw

Susan Sterett, University of DenverDiscussant

4328 Rethinking Canadian Sex WorkerPolicy: Reflections on Regulation,Rights, and Resistance

[Room S1.308]

Melissa Munn, University of Ottawa/MountRoyal College

Chair/Discussant

Chris Marion Bruckert, University ofOttawa

Erotic Dancers: Informal and Formal Strategiesof Resistance

Leslie Ann Jeffrey, University of NewBrunswick, Saint John and BarbaraSullivan, University of Queensland

Canadian Sex Work Policy for the 21st Century:Lessons from Australia and New Zealand

Colette Parent, University of OttawaSex Work, Laws, and Violence

Alvaro P. Pires, University of OttawaReconceptualising the Prostitution Laws: FromVictimless Crime to “Two-Sided Crime”

4329 Rights, Remedies, and Justice inNational and International Courts

[Room LE42]

Menachem Hofnung, Hebrew University ofJerusalem

ChairMargit Cohn, Hebrew University, Jerusalem

Constitutionalism and Judicial Activism: Britishand Israeli Debates

Assaf Meydani, Academic College ofTel-Aviv Yaffo and Gideon Doron, TelAviv University

Constitutional Court versus Non-Governability:The Israeli Case

Deidre S. Powell, University of LondonCaribbean Court of Justice: Breaking NewGrounds

Jeff Redding, Yale UniversityAdministration of Islamic Law in India:Problems and Potentials

Sonja Starr, Harvard UniversityRights and Remedies in International Courts

4330 Roundtable–Incredible Governance:Conspiracy Thinking and AnotherPolitics

[Room S1.101]

This session grows out of an awareness of the prev -

alence of con spiracy think ing in times of po litical

turmoil. The goal is to complicate (without en dors-

ing) conspiracy think ing by drawing out the en vi-

ronments in which such thinking flourishes.

Paul A. Passavant, Hobart and WilliamSmith Colleges

ChairJodi Dean, Hobart and William Smith

CollegesParticipant

Mark Fenster, University of FloridaParticipant

James Martel, San Francisco StateUniversity

Participant

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

103 Saturday, July 28 12:30 - 14:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Serguei Oushakine, Princeton UniversityParticipant

4331 Roundtable–Network on ConstitutionalJurisprudence and Socio-LegalKnowledge

[Room S1.205]

The roundtable will bring together a net work of

schol ars work ing on the in ter con nec tions be tween

con sti tu tional ju ris pru dence and socio-le gal knowl-

edge on the na tional and Eu ropean level. The rela-

tion ship be tween so cial sci ence and con sti tu tional

discourses is again on the agenda be cause of the

grow ing so cial, re li gious and cul tural plu ral ism and

the ef fects of Eu ro pean In te gra tion which chal lenge

tra di tional dis courses of con sti tu tional ju ris pru -

dence. The multi-dis ci plin ary net work con sists of

young and established schol ars from Law, Po litical

Sci ence, So ci ol ogy and An thro pol ogy. It aims at a

closer the o ret i cal and em pir i cal anal y sis of dis-

courses, ac tors, and in sti tu tions pro duc ing le-

gal-con sti tu tional knowl edge. Over a pe riod of

three years, these is sues will be ex plored in close

col lab o ra tion by three the matic work ing groups

which will regulary meet and hold ple nary ses sions

to which also external ex perts will be in vited. The

roundtable will be the kick-off meeting for the net -

work which has ap plied for fund ing at the German

Research Foun dation (DFG) and has been asked to

revise and resubmit the application.

Angelika Siehr, Humboldt UniversityChair

Christian Marc Boulanger,Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin

ParticipantMilena Büchs, University of Southampton

ParticipantJens Michael Phillipp Gerhard Kersten,

Universität DortmundParticipant

Beate Rudolf, Free University BerlinParticipant

Michael Wrase, Humboldt University, BerlinParticipant

4332 What Is Flesh: New Critiques andTheories on Body Ownership,Conception, Trade, Theft, and Display

[Room S1.501]

Michele Goodwin, University of MinnesotaLaw School (Visiting, University ofChicago Law School)

ChairSonu Bedi, Dartmouth College

The Slavery Contract: A Defense

Danielle Conway-Jones, University ofHawaii, Manoa

Indigenous Peoples’ Rights and Recognition andProtection of Traditional Knowledge, CulturalHeritage, and Genetic Resources

Deven Desai, Thomas Jefferson Law SchoolIntellectual Property’s Implications for theTechnological Singularity and/or Its Precursors

Lance Gable, Wayne State UniversityAutonomy and Equality in our TranshumanFuture: Legal and Bioethical Implications

Michele Goodwin, University of MinnesotaLaw School ( Visiting, University ofChicago Law School)

Tort Law and Body Ownership

L. Song Richardson, DePaul UniversityPreying on Passion: Should the Criminal JusticeSystem Police the Baby Market?

4333 Service Panel–How to Publish a PeerReviewed Journal Article

[Room S1.605]

Ed i tors/for mer ed i tors from a va ri ety of sociolegal

journals will provide in sights on how best to ap -

proach the pub lishing pro cess (from sub mission to

pub li ca tion, etc.).

Malcolm Feeley, University of California,Berkeley

ChairHoward Erlanger, University of Wisconsin

ParticipantKeith Hawkins, University of Oxford

ParticipantCarroll Seron, University of California,

IrvineParticipant

4334 The Other Other: Students and LegalAnthropologists in a Classroom

[Room S1.301]

Marius Holden, Humboldt UniversitaetChair

Christoph Eberhard, Facultés UniversitairesSaint Louis, Brussels

How to Teach Legal Anthropology in DifferentContexts and to Different Audiences

Damiano Gallinaro, University of Rome “LaSapienza” Italy

Teaching Anthropology in a Law Faculty: AnItalian Experience

Marius Holden, Humboldt UniversitaetFieldwork in the Classroom: Filming and BeingFilmed, a Re-Enacted Legal Event

Reetta Toivanen, University of HelsinkiWhat Do They Know? Prejudices againstAnthropologists Teaching Human Rights

4335 The Social Dimension of Contracts[Room L 140/142]

Celso Ramos De Oliveira, CentroUniversitario Senac de Sao Paulo

Chair/Discussant

104 Saturday, July 28 12:30 - 14:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Brisa Lopes de Mello Ferrao, University ofSao Paulo and Ivan C. Ribeiro, Universityof Sao Paulo

Do Brazilian Judges Favor the Weak Party?

Alex Jettinghoff, Radboud University,Nijmegen

Dynamics of Business Contracting and theBureaucratization of Trust

Bertram Keller, University of MunichContract as Communication

Ann Vogel, Singapore ManagementUniversity and Katharina Frey, TechnicalUniversity Dresden

The Practice of Volunteered Unpaid Labor: Onthe Formalization of Contract in NonprofitOrganizations

4336 Theory and Practice of Governance[Room S1.604]

Ubong Effeh, University of SunderlandChair/Discussant

Carol Gould, Temple UniversityStructuring Global Democracy: PoliticalCommunities, Universal Human Rights, andTransnational Representation

Ferdinando Spina, Università del Salento,Lecce

Central Government and the Resistance of LocalCommunities: Two Italian Conflicts

Hafize Sevinc Aydar, Anadolu University,and Turan Yildirim, Marmara University

Regulatory and Supervisory Authorities inTurkish Administration: IndependentAdministrative Organisations orNon-Departmental Organisations?

4337 Roundtable–Diversifying Gender?Comparative Feminist LegalScholarship (Sponsored by WG Genderand Law)

[Room S1.406]

This session is organised by the Working Group on

Gender and Law under the theme of ‘Feminism and

the Production of Knowledge’. It is a roundtable

dis cus sion con cern ing po ten tial dif fer ences be-

tween fem i nist le gal dis courses on dif fer ent con ti -

nents. Ques tions of gen der and law are discussed

throughout the world, how ever the issues on the

agenda, the way they are framed, and the the oretical

contexts used vary greatly from coun try to coun try.

We ask how is sues of law, gender and di versity are

re flected in dif fer ent le gal, cul tural, in sti tu tional

and po litical contexts. Which issues are on the cut-

ting edge of feminist legal scholarship, and why?

Which the o ret i cal frame works are dis cussed, used,

or con sid ered in ap pro pri ate? Where are the

faultlines be tween mainstream and dissent? Which

goals do we pur sue in research? How do we influ-

ence le gal the ories and practices? What does femi-

nist scholarship have to say in relation to paradig-

matic cases such as re ligious plu ralism, do mestic vi -

olence and con structions of marriage? The in terna-

tional meeting of LSA and RCSL of fers a rare op -

portunity to dis cuss such top ics in a truly interna-

tional set ting, and the ses sion will be a collaboration

between the Working Group, the Cen tre for

Transdisciplinary Gender Studies at Humbolt Uni-

versity, and Womedlaw, an organisation of women

from the Euro-Med i ter ra nean coun tries con cerned

with issues of equality and diversity in the academic

world.

Susanne Baer, Humboldt UniversityChair

Maria Drakopoulou, University of KentParticipant

Anissa Lardjane, MSH/IUEParticipant

Kevat Nousiainen, University of HelsinkiParticipant

Asifa Quraishi, University of WisconsinParticipant

Anicee M. Van Engeland, Institut d’EtudesPolitiques

Participant

4338 Culture, Identities, and theContemporary Law School:Transformation, Resistance, and LegalEducation (Sponsored by WG LegalProfession)

[Room L E44/46]

Richard Collier, University of Newcastleupon Tyne

Chair/DiscussantAnthony Bradney, Keele University

Speaking Truth to Power

Fiona Cownie, Keele UniversityTransforming the Culture: Academic Identitiesin a Changing World

Jason Keith Fernandes, Centre for the Studyof Culture and Society

The New Legal Education Model and LegalConsciousness in India

Rob Midgley, Rhodes UniversityTransforming Legal Education: RecentDevelopments in South Africa

4339 When Constitutions Entrench Class:Justice Denied or Justice Aspired To?

[Room S1.505]

Oliver David Mendelsohn, La TrobeUniversity

ChairVirginia Mantouvalou, University of

LeicesterLabour Rights under the European Conventionon Human Rights

Julie Nice, University of DenverRevisiting tenBroek

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

105 Saturday, July 28 12:30 - 14:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Sameer Pandit, India UniversityAffirmative Action in India: An Analysisthrough Rawlsian Theories and Thoughts for theFuture

Adarsh Ramanujan, National LawUniversity, Jodhpur, Ankit Virmani,National Law University, Jodhpur, andKritika Venugopal, National LawUniversity, Jodhpur

Reservations: Rhetoric of Justice or RestorativeJustice?

Laura Ford, Cornell UniversityDiscussant

4340 Comparative Legal Consciousness:Post-Apartheid South Africa (Sponsoredby IRC Legal Consciousness inComparative Perspective)

[Room S1.204]

Annie Bunting, York UniversityChair

Mark Heywood, AIDS Law ProjectHealth Rights, Health Law, and Policy inPost-Apartheid South Africa

John C. Mubangizi, University of Kwazulu,Natal

Developing a Human Rights Culture amidstPoverty and Inequality: The South AfricanPost-Apartheid Experience

Murray R. Wesson, University of LeedsRights Consciousness in Post-Apartheid SouthAfrica: A Cautiously Optimistic Assessment

Jeff Handmaker, Institute of Social StudiesDiscussant

14:15 – 14:30

Break

14:30 - 16:15

4401 Atypical Workers in a Different Key:Young, Old, Female, and the Law ofWork (Sponsored by CRN08 LaborRights)

[Room S1.201]

Laura Kessler, University of UtahChair

Pnina Alon-Shenker, University of TorontoRevisiting the Legal Doctrine of AgeDiscrimination in the Employment Setting

Jennifer Ann Drobac, Indiana University,Indianapolis

I Can’t to I Kant: The Sexual Harassment ofWorking Adolescents, Competing Theories, andEthical Dilemmas

Peggie R. Smith, University of IowaAging and Caring: The Legal Marginalization ofHome Care Workers

Chai Feldblum, Georgetown UniversityDiscussant

4402 Author Meets Reader–On theCourthouse Lawn: Confronting theLegacy of Lynching in the Twenty-firstCentury, by Sherrilyn Ifill (Sponsoredby CRN13 African Law and Society)

[Room S1.601]

Taunya Banks, University of MarylandChair

Sherrilyn Ifill, University of MarylandAuthor

Maxine Burkett, University of Colorado,Chris Cunneen, University of New SouthWales and Robert S. Westley, TulaneUniversity

Readers

4403 CRN23 Framing Regulatory Problemsas Human Rights Issues (Sponsored byCRN23 International Human Rights)

[Room S1.502]

Laura A. Dickinson, University ofConnecticut

Chair/DiscussantTai-Heng Cheng, New York Law School

Power, Norms, and International IntellectualProperty Law

Niklas Hultin, Swarthmore CollegeStop Writing or Go to Hell: Human Rights,Information, and the Regulation of Subjects

Margaret E. McGuinness, University ofMissouri, Columbia

Ending Armed Conflict in the Shadow ofInternational Human Rights Law

Hari Osofsky, University of OregonClimate Change, Environmental Justice, andHuman Rights: A Response to Professor Posner

4405 Responsible Lending (Sponsored by IRC Comparative Socio/Legal Approaches toConsumer Overindebtedness, DebtAdjustment, and Insolvency)

[Room T 113]

Karen Gross, Southern Vermont CollegeChair/Discussant

Christopher L. Peterson, University ofFlorida

Over-Indebtedness, Predatory Lending, and theInternational Political Economy of ConsumerCredit Securitization

Udo J. Reifner, Institute for FinancialServices, Hamburg

A Call to Arms: Regulation of ConsumerLending

Gregory D. Squires, George WashingtonUniversity

Inequality and Access to Financial Services

106 Saturday, July 28 14:30 - 16:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Jacob S. Ziegel, University of TorontoOverindebted Consumers and ConsumerInsolvencies: Creditors and Governments inDenial - The Canadian Experience

4406 Disputing Behavior and Socio-PoliticalChanges (Sponsored by IRCComparative Disputing Behavior)

[Room S1.604]

Masayuki Murayama, Meiji UniversityChair

Xin He, City University of Hong KongDebt Collection in Chinese Courts

Jolan Hsieh, National Dong Hwa UniversityIndigenous Wisdom and Alternative DisputeResolution: Case Studies in Taiwan

Jacek M. Kurczewski, Warsaw UniversityThe Use of Courts in Communist Poland andAfter

Ichiro Ozaki, Hokkaido UniversitySettling Disputes among Neighbors inContemporary Japan’s Society

Rogelio Perez Perdomo, NationalMetropolitan University

Discussant

4407 Circuits of Law across the BritishEmpire (Sponsored by IRC ColonialSouth Asian Legal History and CRN22South Asia)

[Room S1.405]

John Strawson, University of East LondonChair/Discussant

Jagan Natham Begari, University ofHyderabad

The Human Rights and Dalit Assertions in Inda:The Human Rights Perspective

Rohit De, Yale U/Sidney Sussex CollegeGender, Nationalism, and the Remaking ofIslamic Law in South Asia

Kusha Haraksingh, University of the WestIndies, Trinidad

Law, Identity, and Nation-Building in the IndianDiaspora: The Trinidad Case

Renisa Mawani, University of BritishColumbia

From India to Canada: Migrations of Legalitywithin Britain’s Colonies

4408 Judiciary in Transition (Sponsored byIRC Legal Professionalism in East AsianContext)

[Room L326]

Mami Hiraike Okawara, Takasaki CityUniversity of Economics

Chair

Hiroshi Fukurai, University of California,Santa Cruz and Zhuoyu Wang, Universityof Birmingham

Civic Participatory Systems in Law in Japan andChina

Haesook Kim, Long Island UniversityThe Breaking Down of Gender Barriers and ItsEffect on the Legal Profession in Korea

Emiko Nakaami, Waseda UniversityPublic Access to Judicial Records in Japan:Issues of Its Publication, Preservation, andTranslation

Mami Hiraike Okawara, Takasaki CityUniversity of Economics

Toward Plain Courtroom Communication forFruitful Deliberation in the Japanese MixedCourt System

4409 Transnational Transformations of theState III (Sponsored by IRCTransnational Transformations of theState)

[Room L326]

Gregory C Shaffer, Loyola University,Chicago

ChairOren Perez, Bar Ilan University

From Intel to Tel Aviv “White City”: Lawbetween Globalization and Localization at 21stCentury Israel

Sol Picciotto, Lancaster UniversityExpertise, National Interest, and UniversalValues in the Transnational Transformation ofthe State

Annelise Riles, Cornell UniversityCollateral Knowledge: Global PrivateGovernance as Limit

4410 Author Meets Reader–Stranger ThanFiction: Lori Andrews and HarrietWashington Meet Readers

[Room S1.301]

What is a body worth? Au thors Lori Andrews and

Harriet A. Washington pro vide book ends on the

socio-le gal con flict con cern ing body com merce,

sci ence, and more spe cif i cally, the ex ploi ta tion of

vul ner a ble pop u la tions, in sat is fy ing the de mand for

advancements in sci ence and medicine through the

use of hu man bod ies. Their books of fer refreshing

perspectives on the use of bod ies as tropes and tools

for med ical ad vancement. Lori's novel is set in Viet -

nam, while Harriet's book un packs a con troversial

leg acy of med i cal dis crim i na tion in the United

States. This roundtable probes new fron tiers, which

are more com plicated by an international demand

for hu man bi o log i cal re sources even from vul ner a -

ble groups. Lori Andrews, au thor of The Si lent As -

sas sin (St. Mar tin's Press 2007), and Har riet Wash-

ing ton, au thor of Medical Apartheid: The Dark His-

tory of Med i cal Ex per i men ta tion on Black Amer i -

cans From Co lonial Times To The Present (Dou ble

Day 2007), of fer un flinch ing ex am i na tions of con-

tro ver sial nar ra tives and prac tices in volved with

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

107 Saturday, July 28 14:30 - 16:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

casting and liberating the body. Sub-themes in clude

the initmate con nec tion be tween med i cal re search

and pol i tics, fo ren sic med i cine, sex u al iza tion,

gendered ex ploitation, commoditization and class.

Lori’s research for The Si lent As sas sin took her

from the White House to a for mer journalists’ club

in Ho Chi Minh City, Viet nam. Har riet re searched

in the dusty halls of state his torical so cieties and as

well served as a re search fel low at the University of

Tuskegee.

Michele Goodwin, University of Minnesota/University of Chicago

ChairLori Andrews, Chicago Kent Law School,

and Harriet Washington, DePaulUniversity

AuthorsSonu Bedi, Dartmouth College, and L. Song

Richardson, DePaul UniversityReaders

4411 Comparative Critical Visions of Law inthe Twentieth Century: Europe andLatin America

[Room T 008]

Paulo Macedo Garcia Neto, University ofSão Paulo

The Symmetries between Brazilian andAmerican Legal Realism: Critical Visions ofLaw in the 1930s

Roberto Gargarella, Universidad TorcuatoDi Tella

Latin American Political Radicalism in theXIXth Century

Martine Kaluszynski, Université deGrenoble

Critique du Droit Movement: France, 1970s

José Reinaldo de Lima Lopes, FundaçãoGetúlio Vargas/Universidade de São Paulo

The Social Function of Property and theEconomic Critique of Law

Maria Paula Saffon, U de los Andes/UNacional

Comparative Study of Latin American CriticalLegal Movements of the 60s, 70s, and 80s

Antoine Vauchez, Centre National de laRecherche Scientifique

Alternative Jurisprudence? Lawyers, Judges, and Legal Scholars and the Emergence of a “LegalLeft” in Post-68 Italy

4412 Courts and the State[Room L229]

Trevor Morrison, Cornell UniversityChair/Discussant

Judith N. Beyer, Max Planck Institute forSocial Anthropology

Imagining the State: How Perceptions of theState Influence Customary Law in the Kyrgyzaksakal courts

Erhard R. Blankenburg, Vrije UniversiteitIndicators of Justice

Fernando De Castro Fontainha, Universitéde Montpellier 1

All Them Judges: A Monopoly Based on aSymbolic Efficacy

Jens Meierhenrich, Harvard UniversityThe Political Economy of “Lawfare”

4413 The Reasonable Person in Criminal Law[Room L 144]

Kenneth Simons, Boston UniversityChair

Tatjana Hörnle, University of BochumThe Reasonable Person in Criminal Law: TheGerman Perspective

Victoria Frances Nourse, University ofWisconsin

After the Reasonable Man

Kenneth Simons, Boston UniversityThe Reasonable Person and Self-Control

Victor Tadros, University of WarwickCompassion, Toleration, and the ReasonablePerson

Markus Dubber, State University of NewYork, Buffalo

Discussant

4414 Dispute Resolution in Comparative andCross-Cultural Perspectives

[Room S1.403]

Eric A. Feldman, University of PennsylvaniaChair

Aseel Al-Ramahi, London School ofEconomics

Wasta: Corruption or Legitmate Networking inthe Jordanian Arbitration Process

Juan Pablo Cortés Diéguez, UniversityCollege Cork

An European Approach to the Construction ofOnline Dispute Resolution Methods forConsumers

William A. Donohue, Michigan StateUniversity and Myrto Leiss, University ofMunich

Negotiator Communication Style: ACross-Cultural Approach

Anna M. Krajewska, University of WarsawMediation in Poland: The Prospects

Edward F. Sherman, Tulane UniversityDispute Resolution Processes to Remedy Injuries to Consumers in the Global Economy

Badrinath K Rao, Kettering UniversityDiscussant

108 Saturday, July 28 14:30 - 16:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

4415 Economy and Society: TheoreticalPerspectives

[Room M 3059]

Francis A. Gabor, University of MemphisChair

Aditi Bagchi, University of PennsylvaniaImperfect Rights in Private Law

Audrey Benguira, Paris 1 University,Panthéon Sorbonne

The Legal Future of Ethics

Daisuke Mori, University of TokyoRelationship between Custom and Law inInternational Society

Vardaan K. Ahluwalia, National Universityof Juridical Sciences and Ankur Sood,National University of Juridical Sciences

Search for Pareto Optimality in Protection ofIntellectual Property

Francis A. Gabor, University of MemphisLegal Status of Labor Migration from theInternational and Comparative Law Perspective

4416 Fighting Racial Discrimination withEuropean Union Law: Limits andPossibilities

[Room M 1072]

Jacqueline Gehring, University ofCalifornia, Berkeley

ChairRhonda Evans Case, East Carolina

UniversityEngineering Legal Opportunity Structures: TheEU’s Racial Equality Directive as a Blueprint forStrategic Litigation

Jacqueline Gehring, University ofCalifornia, Berkeley

Resistance or Responsiveness? Explaining StateResponses to the European Union’s RacialEquality Directive

Theresa J Squatrito, University ofWashington

Combating Religious Discrimination in France:Mobilizing European Law

Rainer Nickel, University of FrankfurtDiscussant

4417 Gender, Labor, and Law[Room S1.505]

Risa L. Lieberwitz, Cornell UniversityChair/Discussant

Joanna Grossman, Hofstra University andDeborah L. Brake, University ofPittsburgh

Knowledge, Perception, and Reasonableness:Roadblocks to Fighting Discrimination

Ruth O’Brien, City University of New YorkLegal Narration as Women’s Work

Gretchen Ritter, University of Texas, AustinFamily Obligations and Gender Equity in theUnited States

4418 How Appealing: Examining the AppealsProcess

[Room S1.504]

Valerie Hans, Cornell UniversityChair/Discussant

Jon B. Gould, George Mason UniversityU.S. Habeas Corpus: What Does the EvidenceTell Us about Its Effectiveness?

Frederick Hessick, Boston UniversityWhy Nine?

Rafael Pardo, Seattle University andJonathan R. Nash, Tulane University

An Empirical Analysis of the Perceived Qualityof Appellate Review

Stephanie A. Roberts, University ofWestminster

Remedying State Illegality in the English Courtof Appeal: Quashing Convictions of theFactually Guilty

Nicole L. Waters, National Center for StateCourts and Tracy W. Peters, NationalCenter for State Courts

Why Trial Winners Appeal: The Mystery of theQuirky Appeal

4419 Human Rights under State ofEmergency

[Room L39a]

Gad Barzilai, University of WashingtonChair

Gad Barzilai, University of WashingtonNational Security and Human Rights: TowardsSociopolitical Deconstruction of PowerRelations

Deirdre Howard-Wagner, University ofSydney and Melinda Rosenberg, Universityof Northern Florida

Society Must be Defended from the NewEnemies of the State: The Restructuring ofHuman Rights through Political and LegislativeReform in Western Nation States

Yofi Tirosh, College of ManagementLaw in Hard Times: How Judicial Conceptionsof Time Shape the Law

Manuel Iturralde, London School ofEconomics

Punishment and Authoritarian Liberalism: ThePolitics of Emergency Criminal Justice inColombia

4420 Law, Land, and Property in Colonialand Postcolonial Contexts

[Room S1.205]

Keebet von Benda-Beckmann, Max PlanckInstitute for Social Anthropology

Chair/Discussant

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

109 Saturday, July 28 14:30 - 16:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Anke Allspach, York UniversitySecuring Cultural Hegemony: TransnationalNeo-Liberalisation through MicrocreditPrograms

Carrol Clarkson, University of Cape Town,and Peter Fitzpatrick, University ofLondon

Precolonialism: Nelson Mandela and the Law ofthe Law

Kriti Kapila, University of CambridgeMaking Relations Proper: Laws of theHousehold in Colonial Punjab

Ibironke T. Odumosu, University of BritishColumbia

The Third World and the Emerging ForeignInvestment Order: Resistances and (Maybe)Transformations

Karen A. Porter, Hanover CollegeContesting Power: Land Law, IndigenousCulture, and the Construction of Identity inNortheastern Tanzania

4421 Law, Society, and Taxation VIII:Culture, Family, and Taxes

[Room S2.102]

Anthony C. Infanti, University of PittsburghChair/Discussant

Bridget J. Crawford, Pace UniversityTax Regulation of Intimacy by Contract:Transfer Tax Aspects of Powers of Attorney

Henry Ordower, Saint Louis UniversityMethodology for Analysis of Cultural Origins ofTaxation Rules

Lisa Philipps, York UniversityJust Helping Out: How Should Tax Law Dealwith Informal Family Workers?

4422 Legal Change and Climate Change[Room L E44/46]

Cary Coglianese, University of PennsylvaniaChair/Discussant

Sumudu Anopama Atapattu, University ofWisconsin

Global Climate Change: Can Human Rights (and Human Beings) Survive this Onslaught?

Cinnamon Pinon Carlarne, University ofOxford

Notes from a Climate Change Pressure-Cooker:Local, State, and Civil Society Attempts atTransformation Meet National Resistance in theUSA

Jason S. Johnston, University ofPennsylvania

An Economic Analysis of DecentralizedResponses to Global Warming: OptimalStrategies with Developmental Divergence

Ilhami Alkan Olsson, Kent University andJohanna Alkan Olsson, Lund University

The Normative Development of InternationalClimate Change Regime: The Interplay betweenHard and Soft Law

Sarah Pralle, Syracuse UniversityStates, Courts, and Nature: The Impact of StateLitigation on National Environmental Policy

4423 National Security and theAdministrative State

[Room S1.101]

Mariano-Florentino Cuellar, StanfordUniversity

ChairMariano-Florentino Cuellar, Stanford

UniversityThe Untold Story of Al-Qaeda’s AdministrativeLaw Dilemmas

Jide O. Nzelibe, Northwestern UniversityAre Congressionally Authorized Wars Perverse?

David Zaring, Washington & Lee UniversityAdministrative Law After 9/11

Jerome Skolnick, New York UniversityPolicing and Protest in an Age of Terror

Francesca Bignami, Duke UniversityDiscussant

4424 Obstacles to Successful Transition inEastern Europe and Elsewhere

[Room M 3086]

Cynthia Alkon, Appalachian School of LawChair

Andrea Diaz, Pontificia UniversidadCatolica del Peru

Re-Conciliation in Divided Societies and theImportance of Inclusion/Exclusion.

Anna H. Dost, Humboldt-University BerlinMethodical Approach to Legal Research ofTransition Countries

Ivo Angelov Hristov, University of Plovdiv/National Assembly of The Republic ofBulgaria

The Deficit of Trust in Law Institution: BetweenProblem and Dessision (The Post CommunistTransition to Democracy)

4425 Property, Citizenship, and SocialEntreprenuerism in a GlobalMarketplace II

[Room M 3092]

Robin Paul Malloy, Syracuse UniversityChair

Lisa A. Dolak, Syracuse UniversityMedia Portrayals of Intellectual Property Rights

Thomas W. Mitchell, University ofWisconsin

State-Action and Private Property Regimes: ACase Study of Racial Wealth Disparities

Karen Morrow, Swansea UniversityThe Meaning of LIFE: Nature Conservation andthe EU’s Financial Instrument for theEnvironment

110 Saturday, July 28 14:30 - 16:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

James Charles Smith, University of GeorgiaRestrictions on Freedom of Expression imposedby Servitudes

4426 Race and the Perception and Practice ofFairness in Law and Legal Institutions

[Room S1.406]

David Wilkins, Harvard UniversityChair

Beatriz Irene Alvarado, University ofArizona, Bruce Sales, University ofArizona, and Aurelio Jose Figueredo,University of Arizona

Comparing Hispanic and Caucasion Perceptionsof Fairness in a University Setting

Virginia A. Mellema, U.S. EqualEmployment Opportunity Commission

Race Matters: The Paradox of Race in PolicePersonnel Decisions

Rakhi Ruparelia, University of OttawaSentencing Racialized Women as Drug Couriers: Systemic Discrimination and the CanadianCourts

Nancy Scherer, Wellesley CollegeWhat Impact Does Racial Diversity on theBench Have on Citizens’ Support for theJudiciary?

4427 Regulatory Challenges in ComparativePerspective

[Room L E42]

Bojan Bugaric, University of LjubljanaChair/Discussant

Avishai Benish, Hebrew University ofJerusalem

Outsourcing Discretion: Privatized WelfareEligibility Determination and the Limits ofRegulation

Hitoshi Ushijima, Chuo UniversityJapan’s Environmental Law Development inGlobalization: A New Soil ContaminationCountermeasure Law and Its Influence onSociety

Frans van Waarden, Utrecht University andYouri Hildebrand, Utrecht University

Market Liberalization and Adversarial Legalism

4428 Resource Rights and Self-Determinationfor Indigenous People

[Room M 1070]

Sandra Brunnegger, London School ofEconomics

Chair/DiscussantJudith Dick, Berliner Arbeitskreis

RechtswirklichkeitJudicial Practice in Legal Pluralism: Judgmentson Khasi Customary Law As an Example

Sondra Leftoff, City University of New YorkNavajo Justice in the Early Reservation Years:Autonomy, Resistance, and Mutuality

David Szablowski, York UniversityThe “I” in FPIC: Assessing Information inNegotiated Justice

Rose Villazor, Southern MethodistUniversity

Blood Quantum Laws: Racial Discrimination orAct of Self-Determination?

4429 Roundtable–Bringing the Nation-StateBack In: Sovereignty and Identity, Lawand Legitimacy

[Room M Senatssaal]

1989 and its aftermath saw the emer gence and swift

con sol i da tion of na tion-states across Cen tral and

East ern Eu rope. More over, se ces sion ist na-

tion-states – such as the Bal tic states, Slovakia and

Slovenia - were able to main tain ter ritorial in tegrity,

im pose a mo nop oly on vi o lence and es tab lish the

rule of law. Fur ther still, de spite war in the Bal kans

and the Cau ca sus, na tion-state con sol i da tion and

border security remains the global and lo cal agenda.

This continuing primacy of the na tion-state stands

in con trast to the dis course on Eu rope as a post-na-

tional con figuration. We hold that despite a lasting

trend to wards glob al iza tion, the law and le git i macy

of the nation-state re tains its overwhelming sig nifi-

cance for de mocratization as well as marketization.

Moreover, the sov ereignty and iden tity of the na -

tion-state re mains piv otal in CEE as it did ear lier in

Greece, Spain and Por tugal and does elsewhere in

China and the newly industrialised countries of East

Asia. The over all ambition of our round ta ble is to

bring the na tion-state back in as a major ob ject of

study as well as the cru cial fac tor for the re structur-

ing of the European and global po litical, eco nomic

and social space. We seek to ad dress a wide range of

the o ret i cal and em pir i cal ques tions.

1. We un der take a his tor i cal re-ex am i na tion of

state-building and na tion-building in Central and

Eastern Europe during the 20th cen tury to critically

appraise arguments about the ‘hollowing out’ and

‘withering away’ of the na tion-state as well as the

relativization and complexification of sov ereignty

and iden tity. We ques tion the in creasingly as sumed

link be tween the na tion-state and ‘backwardness’

by in sist ing that even glob al iza tion is em bed ded

within na tion-states. For our ar gu ment com par a tive

cases are important and we iden tify as cru cial to its

sa lience West ern Eu ro pean tran si tions from dic ta-

torship to democracy and East Asian economic

trans for ma tion.

2. We seek to re-appraise ex planatory un derstand-

ings of the transition in 1989 and the sub sequent

transformation, for we hold that indices of

marketization and de moc ra ti za tion make only sense

on the presumption that a centralised state rules over

a pac i fied ter ri tory. Hence it is meth od olog i cally

mistaken to ‘uni versally’ plot and measure progress

where and when his torical and le gal embeddedness

mat ters most.

3. We hold that law and le gitimacy and spe cifically

the legal provisions for private property and pub lic

service are cru cial. Spe cifically, we take a fresh

look at the restitution of property and the

privatisation of state assets. We are equally

interested in a re-evaluation of public services as a

complementary contract between the nation-state

and the citizens.

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

111 Saturday, July 28 14:30 - 16:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Ivo Vassilev, University of TeessideChair

Chris Armbruster, Research Network 1989Participant

Nagore Calvo, Lancaster UniversityParticipant

Ewa Gromnicka, Warsaw UniversityParticipant

Kasia Lach, Melbourne UniversityParticipant

Damiana Gabriela Otoiu, Université Libre,Brussels

Participant

4431 Roundtable–The New Formalism[Room S1.204]

Formalist mo dal i ties of le gal rea son ing have re-

cently come to the fore in a va riety of contexts. In

the the ory of con sti tu tional in ter pre ta tion, the

so-called “new originalism” or “original meaning

originalism” has gained new prominence and tran-

scended as so ci a tion with con ser va tive ju di cial pol i -

tics. In the the ory of stat u tory in ter pre ta tion, plain

mean ing or tex tual ist ap proaches, once con sid ered

ou tre, are in creas ing dom i nant in both ju di cial prac-

tice and scholarly de bates. Even in the realm of

com mon-law ju di cial de ci sion mak ing, in stru men-

talist ap proaches are chal lenged by ad vocates of

“strong stare decisis”. This roundtable will dis cuss

the “new for malism,” from the a va riety of per spec-

tives, in clud ing ju ris pru dence, po lit i cal the ory, and

the phi los o phy of language.

Dennis Michael Patterson, RutgersUniversity

ChairRandy E. Barnett, Georgetown University

ParticipantJeffrey M. Lipshaw, Suffolk University

ParticipantLawrence B. Solum, University of Illinois

ParticipantEkow Yankah, University of Illinois College

of LawParticipant

4432 Property and Technological Change inthe Twentieth Century

[Room S1.308]

Catherine Fisk, Duke UniversityChair

Stuart Banner, University of California,Berkeley

Trespassers in the Sky: The Invention of Flightand the Ownership of Airspace

Anne Barron, London School of Economicsand Political Science

Property, Copyright, and Technological Change

Catherine Fisk, Duke UniversityAttribution and the Developing Property Rightof Reputation

Lawrence M. Friedman, Stanford UniversityDiscussant

4433 The CSI Effect: Empirical, Theoretical,and Cultural Perspectives

[Room S1.401]

Neal Feigenson, Quinnipiac UniversityChair

Neal Feigenson, Quinnipiac UniversityThe Psychology of CSI and Visual ScientificEvidence in Court

Kimberlianne Podlas, University of NorthCarolina, Greensboro

The “CSI Effect” and Other Forensic Fictions

Christina Spiesel, Yale UniversityThe World According to “CSI”: Law and Justice

Nancy S. Marder, Illinois Institute ofTechnology

Discussant

4434 The Legal and Ethical Issues of BiobankResearch in Different Contexts

[Room T 306]

H.C. Niu, Tsing Hua University, TaiwanChair/Discussant

Hung-En Liu, National Taipei UniversityThe Ethical and Legal Controversies andGovernance of Biobank Projects in Taiwan andJapan

Hsiu-I Yang, National Yang-MingUniversity

The Use and Misuse of Informed Consent inTaiwan Biobank Debate

Shang-Yung Yen, Feng Chia UniversityBiobank, Data Protection, and Genetic Privacyin Taiwan and UK

4435 Theoretical and Empirical Study onLegal Assistance for TransformationCountries

[Room S1.404]

Seigo Hirowatari, University of TokyoChair

Katsuya Ichihashi, Nagoya UniversityThe Experience of Legal Assistance in theSphere of Administrative Procedure Law inUzbekistan: A Comparison with the Practice ofGermany

Rolf Knieper, Bremen UniversityPulls and Pushes of Legal Reform along the SilkRoad

Masaki Nakamura, Nagoya UniversityLegal Assistance and Social Change in Mongolia

Tserenbaltav Sarantuya, National Universityof Mongolia

Discussant

112 Saturday, July 28 14:30 - 16:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

4436 Threats to Justice in Crime ControlPolicy: Causes and RemedialPossibilities

[Room S1.503]

Sam Kamin, University of DenverChair

Bennett Capers, Hofstra UniversityCrime, Legitimacy, and Testilying

Samuel Gross, University of MichiganThe Rhetoric of Racial Profiling

Carissa Byrne Hessick, Harvard UniversityViolence Between Lovers, Strangers, andFriends

Richard Schauffler, National Center forState Courts

Three Strikes Law in California: UnintendedConsequences of Its Early Years

4437 Un/Thinking Belonging: Imprints ofLaw on Adoption, Queer Flesh, andStrangers

[Room S1.501]

Margaret Davies, Flinders UniversityChair/Discussant

Emily Grabham, University of KentTouching the Governed Body: Social Incisionsand Citizenship

Toni Johnson, Kent UniversityReading the Stranger: Identity and Imaginationin a Refugee Hearing

Sarah Lamble, University of Kent,Canterbury

Unknowable Bodies, Unthinkable Sexualities:Lesbian and Transgender Invisibility in theToronto “Pussy Palace” Bathhouse Raid

4438 Transgender and Feminist Perspectiveson Degendering Law (Sponsored by WGGender and Law)

[Room S1.605]

Konstanze Plett, University of BremenChair/Discussant

Laura Alexandra Adamietz, HumboldtUniversity, Berlin

Latest Twists in German TransgenderJurisprudence: Degendering the Concept of Sexin the Constitutional Protection against SexDiscrimination?

Michelle Cottier, University of ZurichFeminist, Transgender, and Intersex Visions of aGender-Free Society and the Legal Category ofSex

Andrew N. Sharpe, Keele UniversityEndless Sex: The Gender Recognition Act andthe Persistence of a Legal Category

Dean Spade, University of California, LosAngeles

Consolidating the Gendered Citizen: TransSurvival, Bureaucratic Power, and the War onTerror

16:15 - 16:30

Cof fee Break

16:30 - 18:15

4501 Comparative and InternationalPerspectives on Labor Rights(Sponsored by CRN08 Labor Rights)

[Room T 013]

Joe Slater, University of ToledoChair

Julinda Beqiraj, University of TrentoDevelopments in the International ProtectionRegime of Migrant Workers’ Rights

Brian Langille, University of TorontoThe ILO Is Not a State: Its Members Are NotFirms

Helene Michel, University Lille and LaurentWillemez, University Poitiers

French Labor Judges: A Sociography ofNon-Professionnal Judges

Adrian A. Smith, McGill UniversityTransnational Labour Law, Global Governance,and the Caribbean

Joan E. Vogel, Vermont Law SchoolDiscussant

4502 CRN16 Language and Law IV:Language and the Rule of Law(Sponsored by CRN16 Language andLaw)

[Room S1.405]

Bethany K. Dumas, University of TennesseeChair/Discussant

Ronald Richard Butters, Duke University,Phillip M. Carter, Duke University andTyler Kendall, Duke University

Perverted Justice: The Instant Messages of SomeConvicted “Sexual Predators”

Marcin Matczak, University of OxfordIs Judicial Formalism Compatible with Rule ofLaw Ideals?

Guillermina Seri, Department of PoliticalScience, Union College

Policing, the Rhetoric of Governance, and theQuality of Democracy in Argentina and Uruguay

Anita Soboleva, JURIXLegal Definitions in War on Extremism

4503 Human Rights and Grass Roots SocialMovements (Sponsored by CRN23International Human Rights)

[Room M 3086]

Sally Merry, New York UniversityChair

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

113 Saturday, July 28 16:30 - 18:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

John G. Dale, George Mason UniversityTransnationalizing Torture: GrassrootsMovements Using Legal Mechanisms to End the Practice of Extraordinary Rendition

Michelle A. McKinley, University of OregonHow Did the Subaltern Speak? Divorce andConcubinage Claims from Colonial Lima

Cristina Onorbe, Universidad del Pais VascoIntimate Violence and Legal Pluralism inMozambique

Tamara Relis, Columbia University /LondonSchool of Economics

Human Rights and Violence Against Women inIndia: Paradoxes in Formal Versus InformalJustice

Julia Trautsch, Georg-August University ofGöttingen

Recent Changes in the Relationship between theNational and the Indigenous Juridical Systems in Guatemala: Exemplified by the ParadigmaticCases of the K´iche´-speaking Region of theWestern Highlands

4504 Institutional Design, Enforcement, andDevelopment (Sponsored by CRN24Rule of Law, State Building, andTransition)

[Room S1.201]

Scott Newton, School of Oriental andAfrican Studies

Chair/DiscussantThomas C. Heller, Stanford University

Climate Change: Designing an EffectiveResponse

Alvaro Santos, University of Texas, AustinMaking the WTO More Flexible: Carving OutPolicy Autonomy for Developing Countries

Jane K. Winn, University of WashingtonRegulatory Competition to Set Global ICTStandards: US, EU, and PRC Strategies

Ubong Effeh, University of SunderlandSub-Saharan Africa and the Multilateral TradingRegime: Re-Examining the “Market Access”Mantra

4505 Collective Human RightsVI–Roundtable-Discussion Session onCollective Human Rights (Sponsored byCRN25 Collective Human Rights)

[Room S2.102]

This session pro vides an op portunity for the 20-plus

members of the new CRN on collective human

rights, and any other attendees who might be inter-

ested, to discuss the ideas that have emerged from

panels during the course of the meeting. Network

members will also have the op portunity to dis cuss

fu ture op por tu ni ties for col lab o ra tion on the theme

of col lec tive hu man rights, in clud ing meet ings and

pub li ca tion op por tu ni ties.

Amy Maguire, University of NewcastleChair

Paddy Hillyard, Queen’s University BelfastParticipant

Miodrag Jovanovic, University of BelgradeParticipant

Sandra Segaram Paramalingam, KeeleUniversity

Participant

4506 New and Emerging Bankruptcy Systems(Sponsored by IRC ComparativeSocio/Legal Approaches to ConsumerOverindebtedness, Debt Adjustment,and Insolvency)

[Room T 113]

William C. Whitford, University ofWisconsin

Chair/DiscussantBertel De Groote, Ghent University College

Tax Debts and the Concept of Discharge inConsumer Insolvency Legislation from a Belgian Viewpoint

Claudia Lima Marques, Federal Universityof Rio Grande do Sul and Antônio Herman Benjamin, Judge at the Superior Tribunalde Justiça

Consumer Overindebtedness in Brazil and theNeed of a New Consumer BankruptcyLegislation

Ming Qi, Jilin UniversityLegal Thinking of Establishing ConsumerBankruptcy System in China

4507 Mapping the Experiences of the U.S. Barby Practice Setting

[Room S1.502]

Robert E. Rosen, University of MiamiChair/Discussant

William T. Gallagher, Golden GateUniversity

Strategic Intellectual Property Litigation: WhatIP Lawyers and Clients Say (and Do) AboutAsserting Intellectual Property Rights

Leslie C. Levin, University of ConnecticutThe Career Paths and Professional Developmentof New York Immigration Lawyers

Susan Poser, University of NebraskaMultidisciplinary Practice and Law & Society: A Natural Alliance

William D. Henderson, Indiana University,Bloomington

Income and Satisfaction of Indiana Solo & Small Firm Lawyers

4508 East Asian Legal Professionalism:Lawyersin Transition I (Sponsored byIRC Legal Professionalism in East AsianContext)

[Room L39a]

Kay-Wah Chan, Macquarie UniversityChair

114 Saturday, July 28 16:30 - 18:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

Kay-Wah Chan, Macquarie UniversityLegal Professionalism in Japan in the Current ofChanges and Reform

Weidong Ji, Kobe UniversityThe Chinese Lawyers: An Empirical Analysis ofthe Law Firms in Transition

Manako Kinoshita, Doshisha UniversityThe Attitudes of Lawyers toward Pro BonoActivities in Kyoto

Shu-chin Grace Kuo, National Chung-ChengUniversity

Examining the Gender Politics in the Process ofBecoming Legal Professionals for Women inTaiwan

Kwang-Jun Tsche, Kyunghee UniversityNew Legal Profession through New Education

4510 Author Meets Reader—The First WomenLawyers: A Comparative Study of Gender,Law, and the Legal Professions, by MaryJane Mossman

[Room S1.404]

Sally Jane Kenney, University of MinnesotaChair

Mary Jane Mossman, York UniversityAuthor

Anne Boigeol, IHTP/CNRS, Ulrike Schultz,FernUniversität Hagen, Harriet Silius, Åbo Akademi University, Hilary Sommerlad,Leeds Metropolitan University, andMargaret Thornton, Australian NationalUniversity

Readers

4511 Constructing “Criminalization” inIntimate Relationships

[Room S1.403]

Toni Williams, University of KentChair/Discussant

Janine Benedet, University of BritishColumbia and Isabel Grant, University ofBritish Columbia

The Unexpected Complainant

Margaret Denike, Carleton UniversityGender and the Just War Ethic: PoliticalJustifications for Militarized “HumanitarianIntervention”

Ruthy Lazar, York UniversitySay “I Do”: Consent in the Legal Discourse ofSexual Assault in Marriage

Debra Parkes, University of ManitobaRace, Gender, and Identifying WrongfulConvictions: Are We Missing Women?

4512 Criminal Law as a Tool of TransitionalJustice

[Room M 3059]

Farid Samir Benavides-Vanegas,Universidad Nacional de Colombia

Chair

Kerstin Carlson, University of California,Berkeley

Taking Root: The Impact of the InternationalCriminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia onPolitics and Law in Croatia

Padraig Gearoid McAuliffe, UniversityCollege Cork

Capacity-Building for Defence Council in EastTimor’s Hybrid Tribunal

Kirsten McConnachie, Queens UniversityBelfast, Harry Mika, Central MichiganUniversity. and Kieran McEvoy, QueensUniversity Belfast

Who Is It For? Engendering Legal Humility inInternational Criminal Justice

Guillaume Mouralis, CNRS, ParisThe Shade of the Eichmann Trial: The Shiftbetween Legal Time and Political Time byProsecuting GDR-Officials in Germany

Julie Trappe, Universitaet HeidelbergTransitional Justice in Romania

4513 Law and Society in the Law SchoolCurriculum: New Legal Realism Panel(Sponsored by CRN28 Realist andEmpirical Legal Methods)

[Room S1.605]

Elizabeth Mertz, American Bar Foundation/University of Wisconsin

ChairHoward Erlanger, University of Wisconsin

The Sociology of Innovation in Legal Education

Michael Heise, Cornell UniversityIncorporating Empirical Research andMethodologies into Law Teaching

Edward L. Rubin, Vanderbilt UniversityIf We Are Teaching Contracts, Why Aren’t theStudents Reading Contracts?

Susan Sturm, Columbia UniversityInnovations in Law School Pedagogy

Lucie White, Harvard UniversityDiscussant

4514 Selective Adaptation Theory:Comparative Perspectives on DisputeResolution

[Room S1.501]

Pitman B. Potter, University of BritishColumbia

ChairLjiljana Biukovic, University of British

ColumbiaCompliance with International Treaties:Selective Adaptation Analysis

Akira Fujimoto, Shizuoka UniversityLegal Consciousness and Selective Adaptation:A Quantitative Perspective

Pitman B. Potter, University of BritishColumbia

Selective Adaptation and Institutional Capacity

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

115 Saturday, July 28 16:30 - 18:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Ilan Vertinsky, University of BritishColumbia and Liza Sharon Vertinsky,Lawfirm of Wolf, Greenfield and Sacks,P.C.

Some Methodological Consideration in StudyingNational Compliance with InternationalEconomic Rules: Selective Adaptation in Chinaand Japan to WTO Rules and Competition Laws

Xianchu Zhang, University of Hong KongChinese Characteristics in Selective Adaptation

Sarah Biddulph, University of MelbourneDiscussant

4515 Empire’s Law: AmericanExceptionalism, the Bush Regime, andLegality

[Room S1.101]

Margit Mayer, Free UniversityChair/Discussant

David Abraham, University of MiamiThe Bush Regime from Elections to Detentions:A Bootstrapped Moral Economy of Carl Schmittand Human Rights

Amy Bartholomew, Carleton UniversityRightlessness and Legality in the Age ofEmpire’s Law

Josef Estermann, Free University Berlin(Ger)/ Uof Lucerne (Suisse)

Rule of Law and European (Continental) LegalThinking

John Torpey, City University of New YorkReligion, Law, and American Empire

4516 Former Long Term Prisoners:Resettlement, Rebuilding, andResistance

[Room S1.401]

Colette Parent, University of OttawaChair/Discussant

Chris Marion Bruckert, University ofOttawa

Long Term Ex-Prisoners’ Contestation andCompliance: Negotiating Age, Gender, andClass

Ruth M. Jamieson, Queen’s UniversityTime and the Experience of Resettlement

Melissa Munn, University of Ottawa/MountRoyal College

Finding Place: Geography and the ResettlementExperiences of Former Prisoners

4517 Globalization’s Effect on Human Rights[Room S1.601]

Alejandro Lorite, American University inCairo

Chair/DiscussantDaniel M. Brinks, University of Texas,

Austin and Varun Gauri, World BankEnforcing Social and Economic Rights in theDeveloping World

Monica Errico, Milano-Bicocca UniversityCapabilities and Human Rights: New Challengesfor Law and Development Studies

Leslie Pickering Francis, University of Utahand John Gregory Francis, University ofUtah

Exit and the Recognition of Rights

Rosario Ponce de Leon, University ofLancaster

Implementability and Social Globalization

Juliana Ströbele-Gregor, Freien UniversitätBerlin

Globalisation, the State, and Local IndigenousCultures: The Dynamics of the Discourses ofHuman Rights and Indigenous Women’s Rightsin Latin America

4518 Graduate Student ActivityRoundtable–Professional Issues forEuropean/UK/East Asian Academies

[Room M 1072]

This is a ques tion and answer ses sion de signed to

discuss pub lishing, job searching, tenure and other

professional con cerns for sociolegal schol ars in or

interested in European, UK, and East Asian acad e-

mies. Par tic i pants in the Grad u ate Stu dent

Acitivities are in vited to at tend.

Davina Cooper, University of KentChair

Morag A. McDermont, University of BristolParticipant

Masayuki Murayama, Meiji UniversityParticipant

Bronwen Morgan, University of BristolParticipant

4519 How Judges Judge or Should Judge[Room L229]

Mark Carlton Miller, Clark UniversityChair/Discussant

Ronald Clifford Den Otter, CaliforniaPolytechnic, San Luis Obipso

Judging in an Age of Moral Pluralism

Roberto Freitas Filho, Centro Universitáriode Brasília - UniCEUB

Critical Legal Studies and the Functions ofCoherence: Internal and External LegalPerspectives

Moa Forsberg, Univerity of LundThe Justification of Judgments in Criminal Trialsduring a Possible Paradigm Shift

Eileen A. Scallen, William Mitchell Collegeof Law

The Judicial Persona in the American Same-SexMarriage Cases

116 Saturday, July 28 16:30 - 18:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

4520 Innovations and Challenges in PenalPolicy

[Room S1.307]

Judith Randle, University of California,Berkeley

Chair/DiscussantWilliam Wells Berry III, Oxford University

Federal Sentencing after Booker: An Assessmentof the Rationales behind Downward Departuresafter the Removal of Mandatory SentencingRequirements

Silvia Gomez-Mestres, Université deMontpellier

New Governances and the Penal Mediation inFrance: Alternatives to Penal Judicial Systemand the New Juridical and Political Culture

Matthew Kleiman, National Center for State Courts and Brian J. Ostrom, NationalCenter for State Courts

The Benefits and Costs of Nonviolent OffenderRisk Assessment: The Virginia Experience

Maria Letizia Zanier, University ofMacerata

Compulsory Prosecution as a Myth? Notes about the Italian Case

4521 Legal Approaches to Fighting Racism:Problems and Possibilities

[Room M 1070]

Jocelyn Benson, Wayne State UniversityChair/Discussant

Ely Aharonson, London School ofEconomics and Political Science

Lost in Translation? Reimagining Racismthrough the Hate Crime Canon

Rurion Soares Melo, University of SaoPaulo, Felipe Gonçalves Silva, UNICAMPand Marta Rodriguez de Assis Machado,University of Sao Paulo

Public Sphere and the Effectiveness ofAnti-Racism Legal Protections in Brazil

Timothy Webster, Morrison FoersterNo Foreigner Allowed: Racial Discrimination inJapan

4522 Legal Culture[Room S1.504]

Michael Likosky, New York UniversityChair/Discussant

Evgenia Ivanova, European HumanitiesUniversity

Do The Slavs Practice Legal Nihilism? TowardSocial and/or Discursive Character of LegalNihilism in Belarus.

Brian J. Ostrom, National Center for StateCourts, Roger A. Hanson, Hanson andHunter Consulting and Charles W.Ostrom, Michigan State University

Cultural Change in Trial Courts

Noa Vaisman, Cornell UniversityLaw, Kinship, and the Self-Knowing Subject

4523 The 50th Anniversary of “12 AngryMen”

[Room S1.301]

The year 2007 will mark the 50th an niversary of the

movie "12 An gry Men." This movie of fers the only

portrayal of an ac tive jury in the history of Ameri-

can film-making. The movie has with stood the test

of time, not only be cause of the great en semble cast,

but also be cause it portrays the jury as a group of

twelve or dinary men who learn in the course of their

deliberations what it means to be a jury. The learn -

ing pro cess is not an easy one. The de liberations are

marked by clashing personalities and marred by

prejudice. Yet, the ju rors, led by the per severing and

patient Henry Fonda, eventually learn to put aside

prejudice and per sonal enmity, to piece together the

evidence with a crit ical eye, and to de liver a ver dict

of not-guilty based on their reasonable doubt. When

this movie was re leased fifty years ago, au diences

greeted it with lit tle en thusiasm. Yet, the movie has

endured and is now rec ognized as a classic. Even

though the movie of fers a fic tional ac count, it pro-

vides a rare glimpse into jury de liberations. It con-

tinues to raise such ques tions as: Is this how a jury

should de lib er ate? Is this fic tional jury de lib er a tion

con sis tent with ac tual jury de lib er a tions now that

we have fifty years of em pirical stud ies? How do

audiences in other countries view this clas sic Amer-

ican film on the jury? The film is in cluded in the

Sociolegal Cinema se ries show ing to day [M

Kinosaal]

Nancy S. Marder, Illinois Institute ofTechnology

Chair/DiscussantRobert Burns, Northwestern University

A Jury between Fact and Norm

Mar Jimeno-Bulnes, University of BurgosA Different Argument for “12 Angry Men” from the Spanish Perspective: The Rule of theMajority for the Verdict

Austin Sarat, Amherst CollegeFathers in Law: Violence and Reason in TwelveAngry Men

Stephen C. Thaman, Saint Louis UniversityThe Good, the Bad, and the Indifferent: “TwelveAngry Men” in Russia

4524 Organizational Law andEntrepreneurship

[Room L 144]

Mark C. Suchman, University of Wisconsin,Madison

ChairBrian Broughman, University of California

BerkeleyIndependent Directors as Private Arbitrators

Darian M. Ibrahim, University of ArizonaThe (Not So) Puzzling Behavior of AngelInvestors

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

117 Saturday, July 28 16:30 - 18:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Gordon Smith, University of WisconsinCooperatives and Innovation

4525 Comparative Legal Cultures–Politics,Justice, and Crime (Sponsored by WGComparing Legal Cultures)

[Room S1.204]

Marina Kurkchiyan, University of OxfordChair/Discussant

Alex Jettinghoff, Radboud University,Nijmegen

The Wannsee-Lawyers: Flexibility of LegalCulture?

Stefan Machura, University of Wales,Bangor

The Influence of Political Parties on Courts

Daniela Mainenti, Research Unit OneComparative Criminal Procedures Aspects inItalian Legal Transplants

Leslie Sebba, Hebrew University ofJerusalem

Why May Canadians, but Not Israelis, SmackTheir Children?

4526 Regulation and Developing Economies[Room S1.503]

Bridget Hutter, London School of EconomicsChair

Thomas K Cheng, University of Hong KongRegulating Economic Local Protectionism inChina

Chienwen Hung, Edinburgh UniversityExamining the Patentability of PharmaceuticalProducts for Developing Countries from aPrecautionary Approach

Paulo TL Lessa Mattos, Brazilian Center ofAnalysis and Planning - CEBRAP

Industrial Policy and Competition in DevelopingCountries: From the Regulatory State Model toNew Governance in Economic Development

Alexandrina S. Moura, Federal U ofPernambuco/ Joaquim Nabuco Foundation

The National Environment Council in Brazil and the Environmental Federalism

Benjamin Van Rooij, Leiden UniversityDevelopment Regulation: Greening Industrywithout Enforcement?

4527 Regulation, Risk, and Resistance: The“Effectiveness” and “Influence” ofPre-Sentence Reports in the SentencingDecision Process

[Room S1.308]

Barbara A. Hudson, University of CentralLancashire

Chair/DiscussantSimon Halliday, University of Strathclyde

Status, Regulatory Space, and Criminal JusticeSocial Work

Fergus McNeill, Glasgow UniversityHysteresis, Risk and Redemption: Reconfiguring Social Enquiry

Cyrus Tata, Strathclyde UniversityThe Pursuit of Quality in Pre-Sentence Reports:the Elusion and Illusion of ‘Quality’

4528 Rethinking the Sacred/Secular Divide[Room T 008]

Dorota Glowacka, University of King’sCollege

Chair/DiscussantAnn Kibbey, University of Colorado,

BoulderFrom Protestant Calling to White CollarSweatshop: The Middle Class Theory of SocialClass

Richard Kenneth Sherwin, New York LawSchool

Law, Metaphysics, and the Digital Neo-Baroque

Robert Yelle, University of MemphisThe Hindu Moses: Christian Representations ofJudaism and the Secularization of Hindu Lawunder Colonialism

4529 Roundtable–Contemporary Perceptionsof Democratization and Human Rightsin Iraq and Afghanistan

[Room M Senatssaal]

Our roundtable will host scholars from Frankfurt

and Berlin uni versities spe cializing in the study of

de moc ra ti za tion in Mus lim so ci et ies. We will at -

tempt to ex plore and de bate some of the contempo-

rary in tellectual trends in Iraq and Af ghanistan to-

wards de moc ra ti za tion and hu man rights. We will

relate to three main top ics: Re ligious edicts in Iraq

and Af ghan i stan as to lib eral dem o cratic con sti tu -

tional amendments and their compatibility with Is -

lam; The de bate in Iraq and some Arab in tellectual

circles as to the motivations behind Western democ-

ra ti za tion plans; and anal y sis of Afghan re flec tions

on six years ex pe ri ence in de moc ra ti za tion based on

a field re search con ducted in that country. To at tain

larger audience involvement we will pres ent during

the roundtable a short video-work from Af ghani-

stan, pre sent ing in ter view ma te rial from the field

research conducted there.

Julia M. Eckert, Max Planck Institute forSocial Anthropology

ChairFelicia Herrschaft, Goethe University

FrankfurtParticipant

Marc Philipp Nogueira, FrankfurtUniversity

ParticipantUriya Shavit, Frankfurt University

Participant

118 Saturday, July 28 16:30 - 18:15

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

4530 Roundtable–Human Rights Law asChallenge for the “Cultures” ofDifferent Disciplines

[Room L E44/46]

In many dif fer ent dis ci plines, re search ers are study-

ing hu man rights without much knowl edge of each

other’s research results. In ad dition to the valu able

work conducted in subject ar eas such as law, an -

thropology or his tory, the re search field of hu man

rights re quires close co-op er a tion among dif fer ent

dis ci plin ary back grounds. Work ing in an in ter dis ci-

plinary team can bring added value by de tecting

gaps and loop-holes in hu man rights. Such ap -

proaches are also important in fig uring out the dif fi-

cul ties in im ple ment ing cer tain hu man rights laws

or iden ti fy ing un in tended con se quences of leg is la -

tion. The discrepancy be tween ‘law on paper’ and

‘in reality’ be comes ob vious through new perspec-

tives put for ward dur ing an in ten sive dis ci plin ary

exchange. Un derstanding the context of the so cial

reality of law is a precondition for the fruitful de vel-

opment of hu man rights law in theory and praxis.

Still, in ter dis ci plin ary re search is of ten seen as an

ex cur sion from the ac a demic path and in sti tu tional

and fi nancial sup port for fur ther re search is rare.

The aim of the roundtable is to elaborate on what is

meant by the con cept of interdisciplinarity in the

field of legal and social sci ences and to discuss the

meth od olog i cal and the o ret i cal chal lenges posed by

in ter dis ci plin ary team-work for the separate subject

areas interested in human rights.

Reetta Toivanen, University of HelsinkiChair

Mark Goodale, George Mason UniversityParticipant

Claudia M. Mahler, University of PotsdamParticipant

Kevat Nousiainen, University of HelsinkiParticipant

Thomas Scheffer, Freie Universität BerlinParticipant

4531 Tensions between the Economic andSocial Dimensions of AlternativeGovernance: From CSR to ISO to OMC

[Room M 3092]

Claire H. O’Brien, European UniversityInstitute

ChairAndrea Ballestero, University of California,

IrvineAre Human Rights and Commodities Different?Water and Expert Knowledge in Latin America

Mark Dawson, European UniversityInstitute

What is Lisbon? The Ambiguity of SocialEurope in the Open Method of Coordination

Claire H. O’Brien, European UniversityInstitute

Human Rights Regulation in theTransnationalprivate Sector: Time for aProcedural Turn?

Stepan Wood, York UniversityISO Corporate Social Responsibility Standardsand the Legitimation of Global RegulationBeyond the State

Caroline Sage, World BankDiscussant

4532 The “Transformatory Potential” of Lustration and Restitution

[Room L E42]

Miguel Schor, Suffolk UniversityChair

Roman David, Yale UniversityLustration Systems, Collective Memory andTransformative Perspective of TransitionalJustice

Tshepo Madlingozi, University of Pretoria,South Africa

Good Victim, Bad Victim: Post-ApartheidBeneficiaries, Victims, and the Struggle forSocial Justice

Adriana Diana Mica, Polish Academy ofSciences

The Lustration with Two Heads and theMyriapod Transitional Justice in Romania

Wouter Jan Veraart, Vrije UniversiteitAmsterdam

Time, Restitution, and the Law

4533 The International Circulation ofExpertise and the Restructuring ofNational Legal Fields: Latin America

[Room S1.406]

Diana Rodriguez, University of Los AndesChair

Fabiano Engelmann, UFSCAR-São CarlosThe Judiciary Reform in Brazil

Daniel Palacios, Ecole des Hautes Etudes enSciences Sociales

The Penal Procedural in Chile and the LatinAmerican Legal Field

Diana Rodriguez, University of Los Andesand Cesar Rodriguez-Garavito, U of theAndes/ U of Wisconsin, Madison

Globalizing Intellectual Property Rights: ThePolitics of Law in US-South America Free Trade Agreements

Angela Santamaria, Javeriana BogotaIndigenous Peoples and Legal Practices:Indigenous Jurisdictions in Colombia and theProduction of International Law in the UnitedNations

Virginia Vecchioli, Universidad de BuenosAires

Transnational Networks and theProfessionalization of Lawyers Committed to the Human Rights Cause in Argentina.

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

119 Saturday, July 28 16:30 - 18:15

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

4536 Trends and Discussions in Family Law[Room S1.505]

Mavis Maclean, Oxford UniversityChair/Discussant

Janet Ainsworth, Seattle UniversityBeyond Status and Contract: Relational Estoppelas a Source of Rights and Obligations in IntimateRelationships

Kimberly J. Leighton, Tufts UniversityLaw’s Unnatural Progeny

Hiram Meléndez-Juarbe, University ofPuerto Rico

Privacy in Puerto Rico and the Madman’s Plight: Decisions

Joshua C. Tate, Southern MethodistUniversity

Disinheritance of Children and the Limits ofTestamentary Freedom

4538 Women’s Labour Market Participation:Achievements and Shortcomings acrossEurope—How Legal Rules Can Work asIncentives or Disincentive forEmployment Integration

[Room S1.608]

Kirsten Scheiwe, Universität HildesheimChair/Discussant

Sabine Berghahn, Freie Universität Berlinand Maria Wersig, Freie Universität Berlin

Legal and Social Foundations of the MaleBreadwinner Model in Germany

Susanne Burri, University of UtrechtTrends in Female Labour Market Participationand Work-Family Policies in the Netherlands

Åsa Gunnarsson, Umeå UniversityGender Equality and the Diversity of Rights andObligations in Swedish Social Citizenship

Lena Wennberg, Umea UniversitySocial Inclusion of Solo Mothers: Constructionsof Normality in Past, Present, and SwedishSocial Security

4539 Comparing Legal Cultures–Case Studies(Sponsored by WG Comparing LegalCultures)

[Room L326]

Fred Bruinsma, Utrecht UniversityChair/Discussant

Rob Midgley, Rhodes University and HelenKeep, Rhodes University

The Emerging Role of Ubuntu-botho inDeveloping a Consensual South African LegalCulture

Monique Nuijten, Wageningen Universityand David Lorenzo, Roskilde University

Territorial Struggle, Indigenous Peoples, andLegal Culture in the Andean Highlands of Peru

Gisela Shaw, University of the West ofEngland

Civil-Law Notaries and the Challenge ofLiberalisation: The Case of France

18:30 - 20:00

Clos ing Re cep tion [Hertie School ofGov er nance, Schlossplatz 1]Spon sored by Vereinigung für Rechtssoziologie

(As so ci a tion for So ci ol ogy of Law), Sektion

Rechtssoziologie in der Deutschen Soziologischen

Gesellschaft (Section for the Sociology of Law in

the German Sociological As so ci a tion), Fac ulty of

Law, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, and the

Hertie School of Gov ernance

Sunday, July 29

10:00 - 17:30

Meeting of LSA/CLSA 2008 Pro gramCom mit tee [Amer i can Acad emy inBerlin]

120 10:00 - 17:30

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Building Codes: L=Law, M=Main, S=Seminar, T=Theology

AAas, Katja Franko 3208Abbott, Kenneth 2220Abdullah, Abu Haniffa 1109Abe, Masaki 1106Abel, Richard 1404, 2309Abeles, Marc 2406Abraham, David 1301, 2335, 4515Abramo, Claudio 2132Achilefu, Ignatius C 2421Ackerman, Erin 4327Adamietz, Laura Alexandra 4438Adams, Michelle 3134Adekoya, Charles Olufemi 1232Adelson, Joel W. 2320Adler, Daniel 2427, 3107,

4115, 4137Adler, Michael E. 1110, 1307Ageishi, Keiichi 3106Agnew, Christine L. 4221Agrama, Hussein A. 2326Agrawal, Arnim 1538Agrawal, Arvind K. 1538Aharonson, Ely 4521Ahluwalia, Vardaan K. 3131, 4415Ahmad, Muneer 1503, 2140Ahmed, Tawhida 1125Ainsworth, Janet 3110, 4536Ainsworth, Richard T. 4221, 4321Akbas, Kasim 2138al Attar, Mohsen 2120Al Botmeh, Reem 1419Al-Ramahi, Aseel 4414Alberstein, Michal 4314Albuquerque, Letícia 1140Alexander, Gregory S. 2241Alexander, Lisa T. 4205Alexandre, Michele 2340, 2412Alfonso Sierra, Tatiana A. 1507Algotsson, Emma 3133Aliotta, Jilda 2408Alkon, Cynthia 1520, 2115,

4204, 4424Allen, Tom 2331Allspach, Anke 1414, 4420Almeida, Jorge 1421Almog, Shulamit 4238, 4314Almond, Paul 1212Alon-Shenker, Pnina 4401Alramahi, Mohammad 3131Altemöller, Frank 2115Alvarado, Beatriz Irene 1140, 4426Alviar, Helena 2503, 4127Aman, Alfred C 2406Amao, Olufemi O. 3140

Amatrudo, Anthony 1212, 1414, 2112

Amstutz, Marc 2141Andersen, Chris 2216Andersen, Ellen Ann 1425Andersen, Stine 1114Anderson, Alison 2220Anderson, Gavin W 2229Anderson, Jack 1439Andrei, Andrea 1228Andrews, Lori 4410Andrews, Neil J. 1233, 2137Andrews, Penelope 1403, 2505Ann, Vireak 2427Ansah, Tawia 2234, 4237Ansley, Frances 1503, 2310Ansolabehere, Karina M. 1322Anter, Andreas 2210Anthis, Irene C. 4135Aponte Miranda, Lillian 1220Applebaum, David R. 2314Appleton, Susan F. 4213Apreotesei, Alina Ioana 2433Aragoneses, Alfons 4218Araujo, Sara A. 1437Arcimowicz, Jolanta 1310, 2119Arewa, Olufunmilayo 1231, 3121, 4302Ariza, Libardo José 3108Arjomand, Said A 1137, 2416Armbruster, Chris 4429Armour, John 2214Armstrong, Kenneth 2301Arold, Nina-Louisa 4139Arrese, Susana 1531Arthurs, Harry 1202, 1402Arup, Christopher Jon 1411, 2121Arvidsson, Matilda 2217Asano, Camila L. 2121Aschke, Manfred 2428Ashford, Chris 1123Ashiagbor, Diamond 3207, 4240Asimow, Michael 1309Assy, Bethania 1124Astor, Hilary 2423Astrom, Karsten 2320Atapattu, Sumudu Anopama 4422Atuahene, Bernadette 2231Atuguba, Raymond A. 2503Auchmuty, Rosemary 1339, 2240Augenstein, Daniel 4236Avci, Mustafa 4228Aviram, Amitai 2137Aviram, Hadar 1107, 2311, 4132Aydar, Hafize Sevinc 4228, 4336Aylwin, Nicole 2120Azuela, Antonio 1322, 4125

BBaar, Carl 1307, 3116Baba, Ken'ichi 1106Babbit, Victoria Maclean 1518Backer, Larry Cata 1237Backert, Wolfram 1306Backhouse, Constance 2413Baer, Susanne 1512, 4337Bagchi, Aditi 2339, 2417, 4415Bagenstos, Samuel 1433, 4301Baglay, Sasha 2431Baier, Matthias 1513, 2112Baines, Beverley 1517Baker, Tom 2401, 3102, 4201, 4317Bakker, Laurens 4208Baldassi, Cindy 4112, 4327Baldwin, Bridgette 1513Baldwin, Davarian 1513Baldwin, James E. 2413Ballestero, Andrea 4531Balmer, Nigel J. 2407Banakas, Stathis 1533Bancaud, Alain 1421Bancu, Elena Delia 2218Bandes, Susan A 1303, 3127Baines, Beverly 1207, 2107Banks, Cate 2423Banks, Taunya 2334, 2505, 4402Banner, Stuart 4432Bar-On, Shani 4118Barak-Erez, Daphne 2311Barberet, Rosemary L. 1227, 4315Barbero, Iker 2327, 4111Barbour, Charles Andrew 2213Barclay, Scott 1425, 2201Barker, Vanessa 1332, 4306Barnes, Jeb 1422Barnes, Katherine 4212Barnes, Mario 1332, 4226Barnes, Robin 2439Barnett, Larry D. 2410Barnett, Randy E 1211, 4431Barrera-Lopez, Leticia 4309Barrett, Kathleen Regina 2116, 2422Barron, Anne 4432Barros, Benjamin 3131Barrow-Giles, T. Cynthia 2132Barskanmaz, Cengiz 1434, 2216Bartholomew, Amy 2310, 4515Bartnik, Adriana Sylwia 4217Bartolomei, Maria Rita 4133Bartow, Ann 1236, 1412Barzilai, Gad 2311, 4419Bastalic, Hanife Biserka 1135Bastard, Benoit 1521, 2129Bastos, Eliane Ramos 1517

Index of Participants 121

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Index Of Participants

Basu, Srimati 2403Bates, Karine 2403Baumle, Amanda Kathleen 2129Baxi, Pratiksha 2204, 2507Baxi, Upendra 2229Baxter, Hugh W. 1533Baylis, Elena 1333, 4104Bazbazat, Rawan 1225Beale, Linda M. 2137Beard, Jennifer 2217Beaune, Nadege 1140Beccio, Silvia 4207Beck, Susanne 1417Becker Lorca, Arnulf 1534Bedi, Sonu 4332, 4410Beecher-Monas, Erica 1231, 2137Begari, Jagan Natham 4407Begg, Michael 3124Belge, Ceren 1515, 3128Bell, Jeannine 1406, 2334Bell, Vikki 1335Belleau, Marie-Claire 1407Bello, Barbara G. 1117Ben-Ishai, Stephanie 1306Benavides-Vanegas, Farid 2420, 3208,

4204, 4512Benda-Beckmann, Franz von 1217Benda-Beckmann, Keebet von

1217, 1314, 1437, 4420Benedet, Janine 4112, 4511Bengoetxea, Joxerramon 2102, 2422,

3135Benguira, Audrey 4415Benish, Avishai 4427Benjamin, Antônio Herman 4506Benson, Jocelyn 1416, 4521 Beqiraj, Julinda 4105, 4501Bereswill, Mechthild 2122Berg, Laurie 4235Berger, Bethany 2432Berger, Margaret A. 1133Berghahn, Sabine 1434, 4307, 4538Bergkamp, Lucas 1309Bergling, Per 1405, 4204Bergman, Anna-Karin 2236Bergoglio, María Inés 3123, 4309Berman, Paul Schiff 1333Berndt, Thorsten 1129Bernstein, Anya 4118Bernstein, Lisa 2501Berry III, William Wells 4520Bertolino, Elisabetta 1338Bertoncello, Karen 4206Beyer, Judith N. 4412Bhabha, Jacqueline 2310Bhansali, Uttara 1538Biddulph, Sarah 3117, 4514Bierschbach, Richard 4225Bignami, Francesca 1302, 4423Bikundo, Edwin Makori 2341, 4235Bilgin, Mehmet Fevzi 2332, 3118Bilsky, Leora 1529

Binnie, Jon 3114Bird, Annie 2238Birdsall, Andrea 2420Bitetto, Francesca Ursula 4227Bitton, Yifat 3108Biukovic, Ljiljana 4514Blackett, Adelle 1102, 4102Blair, Keith 2324Blake, Andrew 1439Blake, Leslie 2112Blandy, Sarah 1120Blank, Yishai 3122Blankenburg, Erhard 2506, 4210, 4412Blazak, Randy 3142Blecher-Prigat, Ayelet 3143Block-Lieb, Susan 1105, 1418Blokker, Paul 2318Bloom, Anne 2138, 2321Blume, John 3120, 4418Bobukeeva, Meergul 2212Bocker, Anita 1424, 2107Bodie, Matthew 2337Boigeol, Anne 2319, 3141, 4510Bomhoff, Jacco 4127Bonelli, Maria Gloria 2103Bonzano, Luce Alessandra Giulia 1538Borden, Brad 4221Bordone, Dafne 4116Bosisio, Roberta 1316, 4225Bosniak, Linda 2310Bostic, Raphael 4123Bosworth, Mary Francesca 4103Botha, Henk 4326Bottomley, Anne 1228Boulanger, Christian Marc 1405, 4331Bounds, Michael M. 1120Bouriaud, Laura 2218Boutcher, Steven 2223Bowen, John R. 1314, 3202Bowman, Diana M. 2220Bowman, Kristi 1316Boyd, Chistina 2408Boyd, Susan B 1239, 2423Boyea, Brent 1132, 2114Boyle, Elizabeth Heger 2508, 4138Bozzo-Rey, Malik 2329Braatz, Erin 2415Brabazon, Honor 3138Brace, Paul 2114Bradley, Caroline 1231Bradney, Anthony 4139, 4338Braidotti, C. Christina 2312Braig, Katharina 1338Braithwaite, Joanne 4215Braithwaite, John 1509, 2102Brake, Deborah L. 4417Braman, Sandra 2119, 4220Braucher, Jean 1306, 4206Breda, Vito 4133Bregvadze, Lasha 4223Breithaupt, Marianne 4307

Brentano, Cornelia 1140Brich, Cecile 1204Brighenti, Andrea Mubi 1523, 4136Brinks, Daniel M. 2103, 4203, 4517Brisbin, Richard A 4138Britt, Elizabeth 2123Britto, Angela 4318Brock, Ditmar 1306Brodie, Juliet M. 4129Brodocz, André 1136Brooks, Kim 1517, 2124Brooks, Robert A. 2138Broughman, Brian 4524Brown, Caroline 4233Brown, Elizabeth 1518Brown, Elizabeth 1215, 2138Brown, Karen 2124, 4321Brown, Kevin D 4211Brown Keyder, Virginia M. 2218Bruckert, Chris Marion 4328, 4516Brudney, Daniel 2127Bruinsma, Fred 4139, 4539Brummer, Chris 2215Brunnegger, Sandra 2205, 4428Brunon-Ernst, Anne 2329Bryan, Bradley 2110, 3102Bryda, Grzegorz 4318Bryde, Brun-Otto 2601Buchan, Russell James 4135Buchanan, Kim Shayo 2434Buchanan, Neil H. 1102, 2324Buchanan, Nicholas 1535Buchanan, Ruth M. 1108, 3209Buck, Alexy 2407Buck, Trevor G. 1140Budniok, Jan 1521Bugaric, Bojan 1302, 4218, 4427Bukowski, Andrzej Wojciech 1432Bunt, Laura Anne 1528, 2429Bunting, Annie 1201, 4208, 4340Burke, Tom 1422, 2109Burke-White, William W. 4104Burkett, Maxine 4402Burns, Robert 4523Burri, Susanne 1122, 4538Bushimata, Atsushi 1307Bussmann, Kai 1116, 2315, 3131Butler, Chris 4227Butters, Ronald Richard2402, 4502Butuhy, Julio Cesar 2133Buzogany, Aron Cs. 3129Büchs, Milena 2409, 4331

CCabot, Heath 2440Caeiro, Alexandre 3202Cahana-Amitay, Dalia 2129Cahill, Maria Catherine 2127Calder, Gillian 1239, 1517, 3113Caldwell, Paulette M. 4110Calleman, Catharina 1122

122 Index of Participants

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Calliess, Gralf-Peter 2508Calvo, Kerman 1422Calvo, Nagore 4429Cameron, Jamie 2408Cammarata, Roberto 4225Campbell, David 2501Campbell, Liz 2316Campesi, Giuseppe 2106Campos, Paul 2418Candeub, Adam 1516Candioti, Magdalena 2410Canuel, Mark 1320Capers, Bennett 4436Carbado, Devon W 2216, 2432Cardia-Vonèche, Laura 4108Cardinal, Monique Clarissa 4307Cardoso, Evorah Lusci Costa 2121Carhoglu, Bihter 2426Carlarne, Cinnamon Pinon 4422Carlisle, Jessica 2326Carlson, Kerstin 4237, 4512Carlsson, Lina 2236Carlé, Benny 1210Carr, Helen 1319Carstensen, Peter 1233, 1525Carter, Phillip M. 4502Caruso, Bruno 1202Carver, Anne 3117Case, Mary Anne 3204Casebeer, Kenneth M. 1402Castañeda Sabido, Fernando 1322Castillo, Juan C. 2322Cavalazzi, Rosângela 2407Cebada, Alicia 2121Chacartegui, Consuelo 4224Chacon, Jennifer Marie 2317Chalmers, Damian 4107Chamberlain, Jared 1224, 1521,

3136Chambliss, Elizabeth 1411Chan, Felix W.H. 2425Chan, Gary Kok Yew 3107Chan, Kay-Wah 3137, 4508Chandler, Jennifer 1119, 2235Chang, Wen-Chen 4214Chang, Yoonhee Tina 4137Chanock, Martin 2439Chaparro, David 1436Chapman, Anna Louise 4224Charlesworth, Lorie 1529Charn, Jeanne 4129Chase, Oscar G. 2314Chaski, Carole E. 2203Chatterjee, Nandini 1208Chaturvedi, Ruchi 2228Chavez, Arturo 1322Cheng, Tai-Heng 4403Cheng, Thomas K 4526Cheung, Anne 1516

Chiapello, Eve 4131Childerhose, Janet 1523Chiu, Man Chung Andy 1111Choi, Dai-Kwon 1508Choi, Susanne Y. P. 1232Chon, Margaret 3121Choquet, Luc-Henry 4313Chorev, Nitsan 1209Choudhry, Sujit 2419Choy, Timothy K. 2241Christensen, Ralph 4122Christians, Allison 2124, 4107Christudason, Alice 1120Chryssostalis, Julia H. 2237Chrzanowski, April Petra 1426Churgin, Michael J. 1201Cichomski, Mariusz K. 1214Cifuentes, Juan 2302Cioffi, John W. 1318Cirkovic, Elena 1326, 2420Clam, Jean 4209Clark, Kathleen 1118Clarke, Antoinette 2439Clarke, Ben M. 4237Clarke, Donald C. 2304, 4311Clarke, Jennifer 4319Clarke, Kamari Maxine 4104Clarkson, Carrol 4420Cléro, Jean-Pierre 2329Codd, Helen 2219, 4119Coeurdray, Murielle 1521Coffey, Gerard 1130Coglianese, Cary 2502, 4101, 4422Cohen, Amy J .4233Cohen, Antonin 4121Cohen, Mathilde 1513Cohn, Ellen S. 1227, 3143, 4217Cohn, Margit 1228, 2330, 4329Coker, Donna 1334, 4130Colangelo, Anthony J. 3138Collier, Richard 1113, 4338Collins, Hugh 2202Coman, Ramona 1121Cominelli, Luigi 4207Compton, D'Lane 2129Conac, Pierre-Henri 2214Conde, Pierre Yves 2139Condon, Mary 1210Connolly, Christopher Kendrick 3116Consoli, Teresa 4324Constable, Marianne 2211Convery, Una 2420Conway-Jones, Danielle 4332Cook, Kimberly 4130Coombe, Rosemary J. 3121Coombs, Mary 3119, 4101Cooney, Mark 2136Cooper, Davina 2429, 3114, 4518Cooper, Elizabeth 3107

Copelon, Rhonda 2507Corkin, Joseph 2430Corley, Pamela C. 1132Cormier, Kelley 2212Correas, Oscar 1322Cortés Diéguez, Juan Pablo 4414Coslovsky, Salo Vinocur 2201Costa, José A. F. 4207Cottier, Michelle 2222, 4438Cottrol, Robert James 2227, 2410Couso, Javier A. 2601, 3206, 4132Coutin, Susan C. Bibler 2440, 4219Coutu, Michel 4313Cowan, David 1107, 1319, 4135Cowan, Jane K. 1311Cowan, Sharon 2240, 2340, 4238Cownie, Fiona 4338Craig, Sarah 1201Crawford, Bridget J. 1412, 4421Creutzburg, Claudia 1136Crewe, Ben 2305Crocker, Thomas 2339, 3139Cromer, Julie D. 1312, 2118Crook, Richard C. 1304Cross, John 1203, 2118Cruz Villalon, Pedro 3203Cryer, Rachel 4215Cserne, Péter 1235Cuellar, Angelica 1322, 3135Cuellar, Mariano-Florentino 2215,

4423Culbert, Jennifer L. 1337, 2436Cullen, Richard 4321Cummings, Scott 1401, 2503Cunha, Luciana Gross 1304, 4303Cunliffe, Emma 1239, 2340Cunneen, Chris 4402Currie, Albert Wayne 1106, 1317, 2306Curry, Brett W. 1132Curry, Rebecca 2414Custos, Dominique M. 1302Cutler, Athena Claire 2229

DD'Agostino, Giuseppina 2235D'hondt, Sigurd 4122D'Souza, Radha 1532Dabrowska, Patrycja K 2301Dailey, Anne 2226Dakwar, Jamil 3205Dale, John G. 4503Dallara, Cristina 1121Dambach, Mia 1328Dammann, Jens 3112Dammann, Klaus 2341Danner, Allison 4139Darian-Smith, Eve 1535, 2440Darley, John 2125Dasgupta, Rohee 3108Darley, John 2205, 2405

Index of Participants 123

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Dauvergne, Catherine 2426, 3138Dauvergne, Peter 2236David, Roman 4114, 4532Davidoff, Steven M. 1231Davidov, Guy 1402Davidson, Diane R. 2330Davies, Margaret 4216, 4437Davis, Adrienne 1412, 2232Davis, Angelique 4215Dawson, Mark 4531De, Rohit 1103, 4407De Beer, Jeremy 2235de Galembert, Claire 3202, 4313De Groot-Van Leeuwen, Leny

1424, 2107De Groote, Bertel 4506De Hart, Betty 4208De Lima, Clarissa Costa 4206De Munck, Jean 1416, 2328, 4136De Oliveira, Celso Ramos 2133, 4335de Silva, Adrian 2321de Ville, Jacques 2213de Zwart, Frank 1504Deakin, Simon 1402, 2214, 2427, 3112Dean, Jodi 4330Deckha, Maneesha 4112Dedek, Helge 1427Deess, Eugene (Perry) 1330Degenhardt, Teresa 1435Delaney, David 1518, 3122Delli Carpini, Michael 2109Delpeuch, Thierry 1121, 3136Demian, Melissa 4233Demirayak, Ezgi Basak 4131Demleitner, Nora V. 2317Den Otter, Ronald Clifford 4519Denape, Jean-Pierre 2322Deng, Fang 4113Denike, Margaret 1338, 4511Dennaoui, Youssef 1537Dennis, Donna I. 1112Depoorter, Ben 1526Derani, Cristiane 2221Dersso, Solomon Ayele 1205Desai, Deven 4332Desroches, Frederick John 2433Dessecker, Axel 1428Devresse, Marie-Sophie 1428, 3136Dewar, John 1426Dezalay, Sara 2139Dezalay, Yves 3137, 4207Dhami, Mandeep K 2325Diamond, Shari Seidman 1206, 4222Dias, João Paulo 1109, 1421Diaz, Andrea 4424Dick, Judith 4428Dickinson, Laura A. 1420, 4104, 4403Didevych, Yuriy 2115Diduck, Alison 3114Dierkes, Julian 1308, 4114Dilling, Olaf 2438

Dimitrova, Neli Georgieva 2221Dingwall, Robert 4327Dino, Alessandra 1214Dinovitzer, Ronit 1411DiPaolantonio, Mario 1335DiRusso, Alyssa 1140Dixon, Jennifer Elizabeth 1120Dixon, Jo 2415Dodd, Lynda 1112Dodge, Joseph 1423, 3126Doina, Balahur 4135Dolak, Lisa A. 2331, 4425Doll, Johannes 3105Domingo, Maria del Pilar 3123, 3206Domitrovich, Stephanie 1521Donahue, Karen Ann 2221Donnelly, Mary 1222Donohue, William A. 2328, 4414Dorbeck-Jung, Bärbel 1138, 1502,

2220Doron, Gideon 4329Dos Santos, Élida de Oliveira Lauris

1421Dose, Nicolai 3129Dost, Anna H. 4424Dotan, Yoav 2201Dougan, Paul T. 1414, 2431, 4124Douglas, Heather 1232, 2240, 2340Doyle, Aaron 1536Drakopoulou, Maria 1339, 4216, 4337Drammeh, Omar 2238Draper, Elaine 4134Driesen, David M 4320Drobac, Jennifer Ann 4401Du Plessis, Paul 4229Duarte, Madalena 1323, 4315Dubber, Markus 4413Dubé, Richard 1328Duff, David Grant 2224, 3126Dugan, Laura 1315Dugard, Jackie 1123Dukes, Ruth 1102Dumas, Bethany K. 2203, 4502Dumoulin-Boulanger, Laurence 3136Duncan, Nick 2132Duns, John 4206Dupre, Catherine Celine 4131, 4223Dupuis, Ann 1120Durán Böhme, Juan Carlos 3108Dutton, Michael 2230Dyani, Ntombizozuko Veronica 4237Dzieniszewska-Naroska, Katarzyna

4225

EEades, Diana 1204, 2203Earl, Hilary C. 1529Easton, Mark D. 4224Eberhard, Christoph 4135, 4334Eckert, Julia M. 2204, 2403, 4529Eckert, Lynn 1334, 2429Economides, Kim 1524

Eddy, Jon 4304Edler, Juliane 1528Edwards, Lilian 1119Effeh, Ubong 4336, 4504Ehrenberg, Kenneth 4227Eichenhofer, Eberhard 2318Eifler, Stefanie 1536Eisenberg, Theodore 1317, 3120,

3201, 4222Ekardt, Felix 1434Ellison, Graham 1530Ellman, Ira M. 1426Elmen-Gruys, Kjerstin 2418Elveris, Idil 1323, 2227Emens, Elizabeth 4213Emmerich, Fabienne 4119Emmert, Frank 1309Engel, David 4219Engel, Kathleen C. 4123Engelmann, Dirk 1409Engelmann, Fabiano 4533Engelmann, Stephen 1320Engert, Andreas 2214, 3112English, Penny 2237Epp, Charles 1422, 2401Epstein, Cynthia Fuchs 1524, 3141Epstein, Lee 2408Erlanger, Howard 4333, 4513Erp, Judith van 1210Errico, Monica 4517Eskinat, Rana 1234Estermann, Josef 4515Estlund, Cynthia 4102, 4240Evans Case, Rhonda 1514, 4416Ewick, Patricia 1406

FFabri, Marco 2116, 4120Fairfax, Lisa Monique 1233Fairfax, Roger A 2116Falk, Armin 1409Falk, Phil 2405Fallah, Katherine 4235Family, Jill E. 1510Farasat, Warisha 2238Farrar, Salim A. 1314Farrington, David P. 1536Faulconbridge, James R 2111Faundez, Julio 1304, 3123, 4303Fayyad, Mahmoud 1419Febbrajo, Alberto 2218Feddersen, Christoph 1309Feeley, Malcolm 2336, 3201, 4333Feenan, Dermot 2107Feest, Johannes B. 1531, 4306Fehlberg, Belinda Louise 1426Fehr, Stephanie Aisha 1434Feibelman, Adam 2206Feigenson, Neal 4222, 4433Feilzer, Martina Yvonne2108, 2433Feldblum, Chai 2411, 4102, 4401Feldman, Eric A. 4114, 4414

124 Index of Participants

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Feldman, Yuval 2102, 3133Feldthusen, Bruce 2405Felstiner, Bill 1217, 1531, 2227Fenster, Mark 2337, 4330Fernandes, Jason Keith 4338Fernando, Paula 2138Ferrales, Gabrielle A. 4212Ferrao, Brisa Lopes de Mello

4137, 4335Ferreira, António C. 1109Fichtelberg, Aaron 4208Figueredo, Aurelio Jose 4426Filho, Roberto Freitas 4519Fine, Robert David 4136Finkelman, Paul 1429Fischer, Alexander 1103, 1504Fish, Allison Elizabeth 1312, 3108Fisher, Shauna 2223Fisk, Catherine 4432Fittipaldi, Edoardo 2225Fitzpatrick, Daniel 2331Fitzpatrick, Peter 2113, 2213,

4233, 4420Fleming, Jr., J. Clifton 1423, 2224Flessas, Tatiana 1238Fletcher, Laurel 3116Fletcher, Maria 1201Fleury-Steiner, Ben 4208Flores, David 1521Fogelklou, Anders 1137Fonseca, Marcelo Traldi 2133Fontainha, Fernando De Castro

4412Fontana, David 2419Foote, Daniel H. 1307Forbath, William E. 1301Ford, Cristie L. 1410, 2414, 3125Ford, David 4315Ford, Laura 1435, 2119, 4133, 4339Fordham, Judith 2312, 3111Forell, Caroline A 1413Foreman, Victoria P. 2127Forsberg, Moa 4519Fortin, Elizabeth 2231Foster, Laura A. 1312Fournier, Pascale 4323Fox, Marie 2237Frade, Catarina 3105Fraley, Jill 3139Fralick, Heather 1132Francis, John Gregory 4517Francis, Leslie Pickering 4517Franken, Sefa 1105, 2407Frankenthaler, Louis 3205Franklin, David 4232Fredette, Jennifer 1213Freeman, Lisa M 1428Frerichs, Sabine 1114Frey, Katharina 4335

Friedman, Lawrence M. 2501, 4214, 4432

Frischmann, Brett 1525, 4320Frisonroche, François 1121Frohmann, Lisa 2429Frost, Amanda 1118Fu, Hualing 3101Fudge, Judy 1102, 3113Fujimoto, Akira 2307, 4514Fujita, Masahiro 1307, 3109, 4222Fukaya, Yasuko 2123Fukui, Kota 1418Fukurai, Hiroshi 1134, 4408Fuszara, Malgorzata 1310, 2225, 3106Fuzer, Katalin 1432

GGabbert, Wolfgang 1437Gable, Lance 2414, 4332Gabor, Francis A. 4415Gadowska, Kaja 1432Gajda, Amy 2112Galanter, Marc 1504, 2111, 2425Gallagher, William T. 1312, 4302, 4507Galle, Brian D 1423, 3126Gallinaro, Damiano 4334Galstyan, Kristina V. 4106Gandhi, Pathik 1313Garcia, Margarida 2420Garcia Neto, Paulo Macedo 4411Garcia-Villegas, Mauricio 3209García Paz, María Florencia 4115Garfield, Gail 4315Gargarella, Roberto 4411Garland, David 1303, 3208Garrido Gomez, Maria-Isabel 1437Garrison, Marsha 1426Garsten, Christina 2202Garth, Bryant 1411, 2209,

2404, 3137, 3206Gastiazoro, María Eugenia 4215Gauri, Varun 4517Gawkowska, Aneta 2321, 4136Gehrig, Tina 2440Gehring, Jacqueline 4416Gelpern, Anna 2501Gelter, Martin 3112Genn, Hazel 2506, 3201George, Erika Renee 1316, 2417Georgia, Ulmschneider Wralstad 1529Gephart, Werner 1537Gerlitz, Jean-Yves 2322Gershon, Ilana 4233Gessner, Volkmar 3135, 3201Getzler, Joshua Simon 4229Ghassemi, Ghassem 1328Ghazzal, Zouhair 2326Ghias, Shoaib 2421Ghosh, Shubha 1203, 1335,

1525, 2302, 3131, 4302

Gianola, Elizabeth 2231Gibson, Johanna 2235Gies, Lieve 1321, 2308Gilbert, Andrew 1212Gilles, Myriam 4301Gillmer, Jason A. 2232Ginsburg, Tom 1104, 1332, 2404, 4107Girling, Evi Joanni 2101Giron, Alicia 1538Githens, Marianne 2107Glanert, Simone 1126Glowacka, Dorota 4528Glöckner, Andreas 1409Godolphin, Zoe 4105Godsil, Rachel 3134Goedde, Patricia 1415Goel, Rashmi 4130Gokbel, Dogan 1234Golan, Eran 3103Goldberg, David 1118Goldberg, Suzanne 3134Goldberg-Hiller, Jonathan 1321,

3114, 4317Golder, Ben 4136Goldsmith, Andrew J. 2119Goluboff, Risa 1112Gomez, Laura 2140, 2334Gomez, Manuel 1307, 4215Gomez-Mestres, Silvia 4520Gong, Shanna 2418Goo, Say Hak 3117Goodale, Mark 4309, 4530Goodall, Kay 1130Gooding, Susan 1535Goodman, Philip Russell 2219Goodwin, Michele 4332, 4410Goold, Benjamin Jervis 2435Gordoa, Malen 1531Gotell, Lise Anne 2340Gottschalk, Marie 1511Gould, Carol 4120, 4336Gould, Jeremy 1404Gould, Jon B 1526, 4110, 4418Gould, Mark 2421Gnjidic, Manfred 3205Graber, Christoph-Beat 2341Grabham, Emily 4437Graham, Nicole 1224Granfield, Robert 1224Grant, Isabel 4511Gray, Garry C. 4224Graycar, Reg 1207, 2107Grebler, Gillian 2203Green, A. Michael 1306Green, Paul Edward 4110Greenberg, David F. 2101Greenfield, Steve 1439, 2237Greenhouse, Carol J 1311, 2406Greer, Scott L 1502

Index of Participants 125

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Grimm, Dieter 3203Groenendijk, Cees 4215Gromnicka, Ewa 4429Gross, Aeyal 1115, 1430, 2321Gross, Ariela 1221, 2232Gross, Karen 4405Gross, Samuel 3120, 4436Grossman, Joanna 4417Gruber, Aya 4226Guardiola-Rivera, Oscar E. 2313Guarnieri, Carlo 1421, 4203Guibentif, Pierre 2135, 2332, 4313Gulati, G. Mitu 2501Gundogdu, Ercument 2414Gunnarsson, Åsa 4538Gunningham, Neil Anthony 2102, 3125Gustafson, Kaaryn 1433, 2334Guth, Jessica 4115Guttentag, Michael D. 1539, 2337Guzik, Keith 1417Gómez, Alan Eladio 4119

HHacker, Daphna 1113, 2319, 4108Hadad, Dina 1140Hagan, John 2105, 2415, 4212Hagen, Gregory 2235Hahm, Chaihark 2114, 3109Haines, Fiona 3125Hajjar, Lisa 3205, 4203Halbert, Debora 1516, 2115, 4302Halewood, Peter 1435Hall, Margaret Isabel 1427Hall, Mark 2105Halley, Janet 1412, 2411, 4323Halliburton, Christian M. 4226Halliday, Simon 1422, 4527Halliday, Terence 1404, 1418,

2508, 4203Halme, Miia 2204Halsey, Mark 2122Haltom, William Thomas 1325, 2418Hamano, Ryo 3106Hamlin, Rebecca 1201Hammad, Lubna A. 2238Hammergren, Linn A. 2104, 4303Hammerslev, Ole 1121, 2209Hanafin, Patrick 4134Handler, Joel 1301, 3207Handmaker, Jeff 1201, 4340Haney, Lynne A 2415Hannken-Illjes, Kati 2131, 4122Hans, Valerie 1330, 3120, 4222Hanson, Roger A. 4522Haraksingh, Kusha 4407Harbon, Claris 3122Harcourt, Bernard E. 2339, 2435,

4119, 4310Harding, Rosie 1107, 1425Harding, Sarah 3121, 4133Harpalani, Vinay 2432Harrington, Christine B 4107

Harris, Charles S. 1527Harris, Douglas 3124Harris, Mark A 2505Harrison, Lindsay 1334Hartnell, Helen E. 1532, 3106, 4325Hartog, Hendrik 1534, 2428Hasan, Mushirul 3202Hasegawa, Kiyoshi 1307Hasegawa, Miyuki 4136Haskell, John D. 1415Hassenstab, Christine M. 1112Hasson, Ezra 1222Hatcher, Laura J 1415, 3101Hatzimihail, Nikitas 1534, 4325Haupt, Claudia E. 2112Havinga, Tetty 1210Hawkins, Keith 4333Haworth, Kate 2402He, Weidong 3117He, Xin 4406Hebenton, Bill 2227Hegel, Christine 2326Heinzelman, Susan Sage 1337Heise, Michael 4212, 4513Heitzmann, Barbara 1325, 4225Heller, Thomas C. 4504Heminway, Joan M. 1231Henderson, Emma M 4105Henderson, Lynne 2309Henderson, William D. 2111, 4507Hendler, Edmundo D. 1330Hendley, Kathryn 2212Hendry, Jennifer 2141Hennette-Vauchez, Stéphanie 4134Henrikson, Ann-Sofie 2206Hepple, Bob 1202, 2301Herberg, Martin 2438Herman, Aleksandra 2233Herman, Didi 1321Hermer, Joe 1238Hernandez, Ester E 2440Hernández-López, Ernesto A. 4120Herrera Martín, Carlos 4125Herrmann, Dietrich 1136Herrschaft, Felicia 1128, 4529Hertogh, Marc 1107, 2308Hervey, Tamara 1125,

1218, 1502, 2301Herwig, Alexia 2438Hessick, Carissa Byrne 4436Hessick, Frederick 4418Hetcher, Steven A. 1236Heumann, Milton 2116, 2316, 3115Heyvaert, Veerle 4107Heywood, Mark 4340Higgenbotham, Michael 4211Hilbink, Lisa 1310Hilbink, Thomas M. 1108, 1501Hildebrand, Youri 4427Hillyard, Paddy 4505Hillyard, Paddy 4105

Hirowatari, Seigo 4435Hirsch, Susan F 1311, 4104Hockett, Jeffrey David 1132Hocking, Barbara 2338Hodapp, Paul 1117, 1513Hodge, Graeme 2220Hoeland, Armin 2208Hoennige, Christoph 1416Hoffer, Stephanie R .2324Hoffmann, Florian 4111Hofmann, Herwig C.H. 1309Hofnung, Menachem 1329,

2132, 4329Hogeveen, Bryan 2313Hohmann, Jessie Miranda 1436Holden, Marius 4334Hollander-Blumoff, Rebecca 2328Holtje, Michael 2325Holzer, Elizabeth 2426Holzleithner, Elisabeth 1239, 1434Holzman-Gazit, Yifat 4228Homewood, Stephen 2430Hook, Jay Gravett 1526Hosser, Daniela 1506Hotta, Syugo 1204, 2402Hough, Mike 2108Howard, Tim 1323Howard-Wagner, Deirdre 2205,

2405, 4419Howe, John Bellett 1410Hristov, Ivo Angelov 4424Hrzan, Daniela 2216, 4113Hsieh, Jolan 4406Huang, Cheng-Yi 1405Huang, Kuo-Chang 1317Hudson, Barbara 2305, 4306, 4527Hughes, Jula 1506, 2434Hull, Kathleen 1425, 1512Huls, Nick 3105Hultin, Niklas 4403Humphreys, Stephen 2313Huneeus, Alexandra 2404, 3206Hung, Chienwen 4526Hunt, Cecil 1429Hunt, James 2133Hunter, Caroline 1319Hunter, Nan D. 1502, 2411Hunter, Rosemary 1407, 2423Hunter, Susan 4138Huppes, Gjalt 2236Huppes-Cluysenaer, Liesbeth

1138, 1438Hussain, Tamkin 2327Hutter, Bridget 3125, 4526Hakan Hyden 2304Hörnle, Tatjana 4413Hörnqvist, Magnus 4124

IIafolla, Vanessa 1410Ibbetson, David 4229Ibikoglu, Arda 2219

126 Index of Participants

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Ibrahim, Darian M. 4524Ichihashi, Katsuya 4435Ifill, Sherrilyn 4402II, Takayuki 1508, 2307Iida, Takashi 1307Inclan, Silvia 1104Infanti, Anthony C. 1423, 4421Iontcheva Turner, Jenia 1420Iqbal, Khurram 2115Irie, Hideaki 1307Ishida, Kyoko 4116Iso, Isabel Miko 2222Israël, Liora 1501Ito, Chuck 2214Iturralde, Manuel 4419Ivanova, Evgenia 4522

JJackson, John D. 4217Jacobs, Lesley 1331, 3117Jacobsson, Kerstin 2202, 2409Jacoby, Melissa B. 1231, 2407Jaffe, Jim 1529Jahic, Galma 4225Jain, Sarah 2110James, Kathryn A 2324, 4321James, Mark 1335, 1439Jamieson, Ruth M. 4516Janger, Edward J. 2325Jaramillo, Isabel Cristina 4323Jasso, Guillermina 4212Jeffrey, Leslie Ann 4328Jeffries, Shavar 3134Jenness, Valerie 4119Jensen, Tim 3204Jerabek, Hynek 2322Jettinghoff, Alex 4335, 4525Ji, Weidong 2304, 4223, 4508Jimeno-Bulnes, Mar 4523Johansson, Hakan 2409Johansson, Susanna 4108Johns, Fleur E. 1115, 3140Johnson, Kimberley 1223Johnson, Rebecca 1407Johnson, Sheri 3120Johnson, Toni 4437Johnston, Jason S. 3133, 4422Jones, Carol AG 2103, 2307Jones, Donald Marvin 4211Jones, Jackie 2129Jones, Lynn 1123, 2223Jonsson, Anna 1137, 2231, 4137Jost, John 2125Jou, Susyan 2227Jovanovic, Miodrag 1205, 1505,

4505Joyce, Paul 2407Joyce, Richard 2113Jungmann, Nadja 3105

KKaczmarek, Karolina 1204Kagan, Robert A. 1318, 2102, 3125Kahn, Jeffrey 3115Kajtar, Edit 2409Kakiuchi, Shusuke 1307Kalem, Seda 2227, 4225Kaluszynski, Martine 4411Kamara, Ibrahim Badamasi 1313Kamau, Evanson Chege 1140Kamau, Winnie 4307Kambale, Pascal 2238Kamin, Sam 4436Kaminaga, Yuriko 1307Kaneko, Yuka 4304Kanomata, Nobuo 1106, 2306Kapila, Kriti 4420Kaplan, Josh 3139Kaplan, Morris B. 4128Kaplan, Paul 4202Karakocali, Ahmet 1534Karpik, Lucien 1404, 4203Karstedt, Susanne 1116, 1315,

2509, 4210Kashimura, Shiro 1106, 2306, 3109Kassis, Mudar 1225, 1419Kassymbekova, Botakoz S. 2101Kastner, Fatima 4322Kasturi, Malavika 1208Katano, Yohei 4212Kaufman-Osborn, Timothy V.1303, 4202Kawai, Mikio 1307Kawamura, Arinori 4304Kawar, Leila 2223Kay, Fiona Meta 3141Kaye, Tracy 2224, 4221Kazemian, Lila 1536Kedar, Alexandre (Sandy) Jonathan

1221, 3122Keep, Helen 4539Keller, Bertram 4335Kellogg, Catherine 2113, 2213Kelly, Elsa Mary Anne 1109Kelly-Louw, Michelle 3105Kemmerer, Alexandra 4322Kendall, Sara 1420Kendall, Tyler 4502Kende, Mark 1101, 1403Kenkishvili, Vasil 2108, 4106Kennedy, David 1405, 3138, 4127Kennedy, Ellen 2335Kenney, Sally Jane 1207, 2408, 4510Kersten, Jens Michael PhillippGerhard

4331

Kesan, Jay P. 1119Kessler, Laura 1140, 4213, 4401Khalid, Sulaiman 4113Khalil, Asem 1225, 1419Kheria, Smita 1417

Kibbey, Ann 4528Kilborn, Jason 2206Kilian, Matthias 3141Kilpatrick, Claire 2202Kilroy OAM, Debbie 2434Kim, Dohyun 3109Kim, Haesook 2408, 4215, 4408Kim, Joongi 4311Kim, Sangjoon 1330Kim, Seong-Hyun 3137King, Michael 2141, 2441Kingston, Jeffrey 4114Kinoshita, Manako 1106, 4508Kirewskie, Cassandra A. 1418Kirkland, Anna 1433, 2418Kitamura, Takanori 2123Kivilcim Forsman, Zeynep 3140Kjaer, Poul 4131Klages, Philipp 1318Kleba, John Bernhard 1140Kleiman, Matthew 4520Klein, Richard 2134Kleinhans, Martha-Marie 3114Klettner, Alice Louise 1410, 2215Klijn, Albert 1106Kljucar, Maja 4212Klug, Heinz 1209, 2229, 2505Klöppel, Ulrike 2222Knegt, Robert 1138, 4115Knieper, Rolf 4435Kniffka, Hannes 2203Knoll, Michael 2124Knorr, Lars 1135Kobayashi, Tomohiko 1418Kocher, Eva Ruth 4102Kociszewski, Pawel A. 2413Kodek, Georg E. 3105Koelling, Peter M. 1421Koenig, Thomas H. 2420Kogacioglu, Dicle 2308Kohen, Beatriz 4307Kohne, Michiel 2120Kohte, Wolfhard 4308Kollman, Kelly 1425Kollonay Lehoczky, Csilla 2208,

2409, 3207Kolsky, Elizabeth 1413, 2207Koppelman, Andrew 2411Korkea-aho, Emilia 3129Kornbluh, Felicia A. 2413, 4234Kortabarria, Manttoni 1531Kosfeld, Michael 1409Koshan, Jennifer 1207, 1517Kosin, Alex 2437Kotiswaran, Prabha 1507Kotkin, Minna 1133Koukiadaki, Aristea 2427Kovalev, Nikolay P 1134, 4217Kozin, Alexander 4314

Index of Participants 127

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Kozuka, Souichirou 1105Kraiem, Daniela 4230Krajewska, Anna M. 4414Krasmann, Susanne 2339Kreitner, Roy 4118Krever, Tor 4321Krishnan, Jayanth 1103, 1504, 2201,

2503Kritzer, Herbert M. 2506Kruger, Rosaan 3130Krygier, Martin 1522, 2323Ku, Julian 1420Kuan, Hsiaowei 4138Kubo, Kazuyo 2319Kuboyama, Rikiya 1308Kuebler, Dorothea 1409Kuehne, Adelheid 2328Kuhelj, Alenka 1128Kuo, Shu-chin Grace 2319, 4508Kuo, Zih-jing 4204Kurban, Dilek 1515Kurczewski, Jacek M. 1307, 2225,

2509, 4406Kurkchiyan, Marina

2314, 4223, 4525Kurosawa, Kaoru 1134Kuszler, Patricia 4117Kutylowski, A. Jan 2132Kuyucu, Tuna 2231Kwiet, Konrad 1529Kyriakakis, Joanna 2417Köhne-Hoegen, Ernestine Henriëtte

1424Kölbel, Ralf 1129

LLach, Kasia 4429LaChance, Daniel William 3120Laciak, Beata 3119Lacy, D. Aaron 2412, 4226Laemers, Miek 1106LaFree, Gary 1315Laitinen, Ahti 4110Lamble, Sarah 4437Lancaster, Ryan 2105Landsman, Stephen 1134Langbroek, Philip M. 2116Lange, Bettina 2424, 4210Langille, Brian 4501Lao, Marina 1525Lapp, Miriam 2330Lardjane, Anissa 2240, 4337Larre, Tamara Lynn 4221Larson, Erik 3128, 4132Larson, Jane 2134Larsson, Stefan K 2320Lau, Martin W 1304Lauth, Hans-Joachim 1310Lave, Tamara R. 2228Lavi, Shai 2311, 2436, 4310Law, David 2419Lawrence, Sonia 1517

Lazar, Ruthy 4511Lazarus, Liora 2435Le Blanc, Marc 1536Le Roux, Wessel Badenhorst 4326Lea, John 2239Lechner, Götz 1306Lee, Chang Hee 3112Lee, Chulwoo 4214Lee, Cynthia G. 2227Lee, Gia B. 1118Lee, Jae-Hyup 2307Lee, Kye Il 1129Lee, Li-Ju 1117, 2114Lee, Nick M. 2131Lee, Simon-Hoey 1137Lee, Youngjae 4133Lefranc, Sandrine 2139Leftoff, Sondra 4428Leiboff, Marett 1325, 2437Leighton, Kimberly J 4536Leiss, Myrto 2328, 4414Lele, Priya P 2214Lelieveldt, Herman 4228Lembcke, Oliver W. 1138, 1438Leng, Jing 1233Lentz, Carola 4312Lerch, Kent D. 4122Lerman, Amy E. 1506Lerman, Jennifer 3115Lerman, Lisa G. 1224Lerner, Hanna 2112Leroy, Marie-Laure 2329Lessa Mattos, Paulo TL 4526Lessard, Hester Ayres 3113Levi, Ron 2139, 2415Levi-Faur, David 1302, 1509, 2221Levin, Leslie C 4507Levin, Ronald 1309Levine, Jonathan 1235Levine, Murray NMI 1134Levit, Janet Koven 1333Licoppe, Christian 3136Lieberman, David 1320Lieberwitz, Risa L. 3103, 4224, 4417Liebling, Alison 2305Likosky, Michael 1509, 4522Lima Marques, Claudia 4506Limbach, Jutta 2601, 3203Lin, Andrew Jen-Guang 4311Lindenthal, Alexandra 2438Lindgren, Lena 2323Lippert, Randy 2239Lipshaw, Jeffrey M. 4431Lista, Carlos Alberto 1224,

1531, 2312, 3135Littwin, Angela K. 1215Liu, Han-Hsi 1218Liu, Hung-En 4434Liu, Jianhong 4318Liu, Sida 2103, 2307Liu, Titi M. 1108

Lloyd-Bostock, Sally 4217Lo Giudice, Alessio 4120Lobel, Orly 2102Lobão, Ronaldo Joaquim daSilveira

4227Lodge, Martin 4137Loenen, Maria Laetitia 4216Loizidou, Elena 2213, 4128Lokaneeta, Jinee 1413, 3139Long, Doris E. 2118, 2302Lopes, Cláudia Abreu 3105Lopes, José Reinaldo de Lima

2206, 4411Lopez, Julia 1202, 1402Lorenzo, David 4539Lorite, Alejandro 1115, 4517Loutfi, Anna Ziad 2410Lovell, George I. 4138Lucas, Ann 1332, 2228Ludewig, Revital 1407Ludlow, Karinne 2220Luker, Trish 1533Lum, Cynthia 1315Lupica, Lois Ruth 1105Lynch, Mona 1511, 3208, 4306Lyng, Stephen 3102, 4201Lyon, Mary Beth 1108López-Santana, Mariely 2409

MMacaluso, Marilena 1527MacAmhlaigh, Cormac S. 1139Macaulay, Stewart 2212, 2501MacCoun, Robert 1206, 2125Macedo Jr., Ronaldo P 1533, 2137MacGiolla Bhéin, Ciarán 1205Machado, Maira R. 4107Machado, Marta Rodriguez deAssis

4521Machnicka, Agnieszka A. 1335Machura, Stefan 4210, 4525Macias, Patrisia 1414MacIonnrachtaigh, Feargal E.

1505, 4105Mack, Kathy 2126Maclean, Mavis 1426,2225,

2423, 4536MacNeil, WIlliam 2217Madlingozi, Tshepo 4532Madsen, Mikael Rask 2209, 4121Maeda, Tomohiko 1307, 3115Magalhães, Vladimir Garcia 1140Maguire, Amy 1205, 1505,

4105, 4505Mahajan, Manjari 1218Maher, Imelda 1128, 2301, 3129Mahler, Claudia M. 4530Mahlmann, Matthias 4322Maier, Leo 2438Maillard, Kevin N. 2319, 4126Mainenti, Daniela 4525

128 Index of Participants

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Maischatz, Katja 1306Makowski, Grzegorz 1115Malagodi, Mara 2428Malatesta, Maria 1501, 2209Malhotra, Namita 1312Malinska, Malgorzata 2233Mallampalli, Chandra 1208Malleson, Kate 1207Malloy, Robin Paul 2331, 4425Malone, Mary Fran T 1104Malunga, Kevin 3209Mandel, David R 2325Mandel, Gregory N. 4320Maneca-Lima, Teresa 1109, 2417Mangalagiu, Diana 1527Mann, Ronald J. 1306Mantouvalou, Virginia 4339Marchand, Christèle 4121Marchant, Gary 2220Marchetti, Elena 2230Marder, Nancy S. 4433, 4523Margalit, Avital 2241Margulies, Peter 2309Markard, Nora 2240Markel, Dan 1431, 2305Markovits, Daniel 4116, 4316Markovits, Inga 4210Markovits, Richard 4314Marks, Monique 2119Marrus, Michael R. 1529Marsan, Clara 3118Marshall, Anna-Maria 1512, 2223Marshall, Bryan W. 1132Martel, James 4330Martin, Andrew D. 2408Martin, Elaine 2408Martin, Karin D. 1506Martins, Bruno Sena 4234Maruna, Shadd 2122, 4103Maslov, Anton 4318Mason, Gail F. 3142Mason, Paul 1305, 1506Mason, Rosalind 4206Massa, Ester 1214Masselot, Annick 2318Massoud, Mark F. 1405Masuzawa, Tomoko 3204Matczak, Marcin 1121, 4502Mather, Lynn 1411, 2126, 3115Matschke, Sebastian 1116Matsumura, Yoshiyuki 2506Mattei, Ugo 4127Matulewska, Aleksandra E 1204Matwyshyn, Andrea M 1119Mawani, Renisa 3124, 4407Mayer, Margit 4515Mayerfeld, Jamie 4128Mazor, Lester J 1532McAdams, Richard H 1409

McAllister, Leslie 4132McAuliffe, Padraig Gearoid 4512McBarnet, Doreen 1228McCallum, David 2230McCann, Michael 1325, 2336McConnachie, Kirsten 4512McCorkel, Jill 1506McCoy, Patricia A. 4123McDaniels, Devin 1331McDermont, Morag 1110, 1410, 4518McDonagh, Eileen 1111, 1213McEvoy, Kieran 4512McFarlane, Audrey G 2412McGinley, Ann 1133, 4224McGuinness, Margaret E. 4403McIvor, Claire 1427McKinley, Michelle A. 4503McMillan, L Jane 1326, 2338McNamee, Eugene 1413McNeill, Fergus 4527McQueen, Rob 1224, 2230Meade, Everard Kidder 2101Mederiros, Fernanda L. F. de 1140Medjad, Karim 4131Mehra, Salil Kumar 4214Meidinger, Errol 2502, 3121Meierhenrich, Jens 1529, 4412Meili, Steve 1401Meiring, Jean 4229Meixner, Marie 2427Melen, Olya 4106Mellema, Virginia A. 4426Melly, Caroline Marie 3140Melo, Rurion Soares 4521Melossi, Dario 1214, 1305, 2106Melot, Romain 4125Melville, Angela 1310Meléndez-Juarbe, Hiram 1119, 4536Mendelski, Martin 2218Mendelsohn, Oliver David 1103,

1504, 4137, 4339Mendilow, Jonathan 1329Meneses, Maria Paula G. 2504Menke, Christoph 1337, 4209Mercadante, Araminta de Azevedo

1124Merlino, Mara Lee 1224, 1521, 3136Merry, Michael 2216Merry, Sally 1311, 2204, 2336, 4503Mertz, Elizabeth 2211, 4205, 4513Meuwese, Anne 2414Meydani, Assaf 1329, 4329Meyer, Thomas 2133, 4324Meyler, Bernadette 4232Mezei, Peter 2118Mezey, Naomi J. 2226Mica, Adriana Diana 4532Michalski, Joseph H 2136Michel, Helene 4501Midgley, Rob 4338, 4539

Mihai, Mihaela 4218Mihic, Sophia 2133, 4220Mika, Harry 4512Milhem, Feras Abdel-Raheem 1225Miller, Bruce Granville 2338Miller, Lucinda 4131Miller, Mark Carlton 1421, 4519Miller, Monica K. 1521Miller, Teresa 2317Milman-Sivan, Faina 1527, 2328, 3129Minderhoud, Paul 2426Miragem, Bruno 2407Mirza, Qudsia 2211, 2505Mischkowski, Gabriela 2507Mishra, Sangay K 2327Mitchell, Thomas W. 1406, 4425Miyazawa, Setsuo 3201, 4114, 4214Mnisi, Sindiso 2424Moeller, Hans-Gerg 2141, 2441Mohamed, Reem W. M. 1232Mohammadi, Majid 1104Mohanty, Tapan Ranjan 1214Mohapatra, Prabhu Prasad 2207Montana, Riccardo 2314Moore, Dawn 1428Moore, Kathleen M. 2127Moore, Nathan 2213Mootz III, Francis J. 1237Mor, Sagit 1221Morag, Tamar O. 3143Morag-Levine, Noga 1235Morales-Cruz, Myrta 1323, 1503Moran, Leslie J. 4128Morgan, Bronwen 1509, 2502, 4518Morgan, Kimberly J 1223Mori, Daisuke 1307, 4415Moriarty, Jane 2134Moriya, Akira 1307Morlok, Martin 1129Morrison, Trevor 4232, 4412Morrow, Karen 4425Moss, Scott 1133Mossman, Mary Jane 1239, 1517, 4510Motha, Stewart 1321Motyka, Krzysztof Edward 2225Moura, Alexandrina S. 4526Mouralis, Guillaume 4512Moustafa, Tamir 4203Mubangizi, John C. 4340Mueller, Ulrike 3101Mugerwa, Jackson Herbert 2431Muir, Ed 1529Mulcahy, Linda 1319Mulla, Sameena 4327Mullally, Siobhan 2233Muller-Peterson, Jane 3143Munarriz, Gerardo Juan 1326Mundlak, Guy 2310, 4102, 4240, 4308Munger, Frank 1503, 4219

Index of Participants 129

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Munn, Melissa 4328, 4516Munro, Vanessa 2340Murayama, Masayuki 2506,

4406, 4518Murdocca, Carmela 2140Murphy, Therese 4327Murray, Claire 1222Murray, Karen Bridget 1319Murray, Stuart John 2110Murthy, Hamsa 4319Mushkat, Roda 2422Musick, Marc 4217Muth, Iris A. 4137Muzio, Daniel 2111Muñoz, Elvira 1531Myers, JoAnne 1213Müller, Wolfgang 1237

NNacsa, Beata 2208Nadler, Janice 1206Nagenborg, Michael 1417Naik, Swagata 1418Nakaami, Emiko 4408Nakamura, Masaki 4435Nakamura, Masao 1331Nalepa, Monika 2509Nambu, Saori 1140Nash, Jonathan R. 1235, 4418Nasser, Salem Hikmat 1520Nassmacher, Karl H. 1329Nelken, David 2314, 3135, 4219Nelson, Robert L. 2105Nemytina, Marina Victorovna 1137Nesper, Larry E. 2338Neuber, Anke 2122New, William 2216Newton, Scott 4304, 4504Ni Aolain, Fionnuala 1430Nice, Julie 4133, 4339Nicholson, Nancy Schweda 1204Nickel, Rainer 1403, 4416Nielsen, Laura Beth 1107, 1406, 2105Nielsen, Vibeke Lehmann 3125Niemeijer, Bert 2306, 2506Niemi-Kiesilainen, Johanna 2206, 4206Nierobisz, Annette 1425Niki, Tsuneo 1307Nimaga, Salif 1212Niu, HC 2320, 4117, 4434Nivelle, Nele 4122Nobrega, Flavianne Fernanda B. 2420Nogueira, Marc Philipp 4529Nolan, Aoife 1515, 2417Noll, Gregor 2217Noonan, Kathleen 2502Norrie, Alan 4236Norton-Hawk, Maureen 1334Nottage, Luke 1105Nour, Soraya 1124Nourse, Victoria F. 1334, 4205, 4413Nousiainen, Kevat 1339, 4337, 4530

Nowak, Tobias 2308Nowenstein Piery, Graciela 4134Nsanja, Farida Nakayiza 2312Nuijten, Monique 4539Nunes, Tiago De Garcia 1323Nurumov, Dmitry I. 1134, 4204Nusdeo, Ana Maria 2236Nzelibe, Jide O. 1420, 4423

OO'Brien, Barbara 3120O'Brien, Claire H. 4531O'Brien, Mark 1123O'Brien, Ruth 4417O'Leary, Majella 1524O'Malley, Pat 4103, 4201Odumosu, Ibironke T. 4420Oduware Bridget I. 1122Offe, Claus 3207Oguamanam, Chidi 2120, 2338Oguz, Ozgur 2427Oh, Soogeun 233, 4206Ohnesorge, John 2404, 3109, 4311Okan, Neval 1234Okawara, Mami Hiraike 2402, 4408Olgiati, Vittorio 1137, 2114Oliveira, Priscila Candido Ubriaco

1517Oliver, Elizabeth 4115Olsen, Frances E. 2203Olsson, Ilhami Alkan 4422Olsson, Johanna Alkan 4422Onorbe, Cristina 4503Onwuachi-Willig, Angela 4226Oomen, Barbara M. 2231, 4208Ordower, Henry 3126, 4421Oros, Elena 1539Orsini, Michael 2110Osaka, Eri 1308, 1510Osanloo, Arzoo 1518, 2230Osawa, Machiko 1122Osborn, Guy 1439, 4238Osiel, Mark J. 1435Osofsky, Hari 1220, 4403Ostrom, Brian J. 4520, 4522Ostrom, Charles W. 4522Ostrom, Hans 2432Ostroukh, Asya 1325Oswell, David 2131Ota, Shozo 1307, 1532Otoiu, Damiana Gabriela 4429Otsuka, Hiroshi 1106Otto, Jan Michiel 2104, 2404Oude Vrielink-Van Heffen, M. 1502Oushakine, Serguei 4330Owen, Robert C. 4202Owens, Rosemary J. 1102Oyanedel, Juan C. 4225Ozaki, Ichiro 4406Ozdemir, Ilke 4327Ozer Saritas, Duygu 1534

PPacelle, Richard L. 1132Padhy, Sanghamitra 1436, 3133Paerli, Kurt 1510Pahl, Katrin 1337Pahuja, Sundhya 2313Paik, Young-Gyung 4327Palacios, Daniel 4533Panayotov, Alexandre 2415Pandit, Sameer 4339Pandolfi, Mariella 2406Panke, Diana 1114Panourgias, Lazaros E 4325Papoulidis, Jonathan 4236Pappalardo, Fabrizio 1316Paramalingam, Sandra Segaram

1205, 3118, 4505Pardo, Rafael 4418Parent, Colette 4328, 4516Parhisi, Parinas 2233Parikh, Sunita 1103Parker, Christine 2502, 3125Parker, Kunal M 4118Parker, Richard 2121, 4114, 4214Parkes, Debra 1517, 4511Pasara, Luis 3123Paschal, Richard A. 2332Passavant, Paul A 2239, 4330Pate, Kim 2434Patel, Ash 2407Paterson, John 2141, 2341Paton, Paul 4316Patterson, Dennis M. 1211, 4431Paul, Joel R. 4127, 4325Pavlich, George 1319, 2113, 2313Pavlovic, Dejan 4106Payne, Leigh 3205, 4309Paz, Moria 1528, 4323Paz, Reut Y. 2138Pedroso, João 1109Peerenboom, Randy 2304, 3137Peleg, Anat 1521Pelicand, Antoine 3111Pelisse, Jerome 1107, 2308Penalver, Eduardo 2241Pendas, Devin 1529Peng, Shin-yi 1335Pennington-Cross, Anthony 4123Perdomo, Rogelio Perez 1415, 4406Perelman, Jeremy 1108Perera, Chandima D. 1122Perez, Oren 4322, 4409Perez Hurtado, Luis F. 1224Perez-Rios, Maria-Victoria 2316,

4237Perez-Vega, Ivette 4220Peroni, Robert J. 1423, 2224Perry, Barbara 3142Perry, Richard Warren 2140Perry-Kessaris, Amanda 3138Pessoa, Leonel Cesarino 1124

130 Index of Participants

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Peters, Tracy W. 4418Petersen, Alan 2220Petersen, Hanne 4216Peterson, Christopher L.4123, 4405Pham, Huyen 4109Phelippeau, Eric 2330Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos,Andreas

2141, 2237, 2441Philipps, Lisa 2124, 4421Phillipson, Gavin 1130Piacentini, Laura 3208Piana, Daniela 2103Picciotto, Sol 4409Picker, Colin B. 1333Piemontese, Patrizia 1523Pierce, Steven 2439Pieret, Julien 1436Pieterman, Roel 1435Pigou, Piers 2509Pillard, Nina 2226Pils, Eva 2241Pinaire, Brian 3115Pinnell, Sabrina L. 3118Pippart, Nina 1436Pires, Alvaro P. 4328Pires, Edmundo Balsemão 4313Pirie, Fernanda 4135Pitch, Tamar 1313, 1530, 2431,

3139Platsas, Antonios 2332Pleasence, Pascoe 2407, 2506Plett, Konstanze 2222, 2507, 4210,

4438Plickert, Gabriele 1528Podlas, Kimberlianne 2437, 4433Poier, Salvatore 2302Poirier, Marc R. 4320Polak, Paulina Anna 1432Pollack, Shoshana 1334Pollock, Ed 3142Ponce de Leon, Rosario 4517Porter, Karen A. 4420Porto, Antônio José M. 4303Poscher, Ralf 1211Poser, Susan 4507Potter, Pitman B. 3117, 4514Powell, Deidre S. 4329Prabhat, Devyani 1438Pralle, Sarah 4422Prateek, Satya 1514Preuss, Ulrich 2335Priban, Jiri 1432, 2135Pritchett, Wendell 2412Provine, Doris Marie 1414, 2106,

4109Pruitt, Lisa R. 2433Ptacek, James 4130Pucci, Rafael D. 1530Pumar, Nuria 4224

Pupolizio, Ivan 2328Purusharth, Tejasvi 1418Puschel, Flavia P. 1212Putnam, Tonya L 4325Pylkkänen, Anu 2233, 4216

QQadri, Mustafa 4235Qi, Ming 4506Quack, Sigrid 1318, 2209Quadrelli, Isabella 1113Quraishi, Asifa 4216, 4337

RRabinovich, Orna 2328Raday, Frances 3103, 4102Radkau, Joachim 2210Rafi, Anusheh 4122Rahmatian, Andreas 1522Raiser, Thomas 2210Raitt, Fiona 1239, 3110Rajagopal, Balakrishnan 2204, 3209Rajah, Jothie 1415, 4312Ramanujan, Adarsh 1111, 4339Ramirez, Ignacio Luis 3119Ramji-Nogales, Jaya 1201Ramsay, Iain 1105, 2206Ramshaw, Sara 1533Ramstedt, Martin 1314, 4312Randle, Judith 2433, 4520Rao, Anupama 2207Rao, Badrinath K 2312, 4414Rao, Radhika 4134Rapaport, Elizabeth 2339, 3139Rasch, Katharina 2315Raskolnikov, Alex 3126Rastegar, Mitra 1524Rathus, Zoe 4108Rattner, Arye 2322Ratton-Sanchez, Michelle 1209Rauschenbach, Mina 2108Ravitch, Frank S. 1523, 2127, 2428Ray, Brian 1403Razack, Sherene H. 2140Rebellon, Cesar J. 1227Redding, Jeff 4329Reece, Helen 1113Reerink, Gustaaf Olivier 4125Rees, Joe 1210Rehder, Britta 1318, 2427Rei, Wenmay 4117Reich, Norbert 4240Reichman, Nancy 1209Reifner, Udo J. 4405Reinold, Theresa S. 1522Rejmer, Annika EM 4108Rekosh, Edwin 2503Relis, Tamara 2403, 4503Renard, Bertrand 3136Repeta, Lawrence 3101

Restrepo Amariles, David 1313Rethimiotaki, Helen 1128Revillard, Anne 1123Rhea, Harry M 1520, 2316, 3130Rhoades, Helen 2423Ribeiro, Daniel Torres de Melo 1517Ribeiro, Ivan C. 4324, 4335Riccio, Vicente 1530, 4318Richardson, James 1224, 1521, 3136Richardson, L. Song 4332, 4410Richland, Justin B. 1535Riles, Annelise 2241, 4409Rimalt, Noya 1221Ritter, Gretchen 1223, 4417Rittich, Kerry 4234Roach Anleu, Sharyn 2126Roberts, Christopher E. 1132Roberts, Simon 2111Roberts, Stephanie A. 4418Robertson, Douglas 1120Robson, Peter W. 1439, 4238Rodriguez, Diana 4533Rodriguez, Jose R. 2323Rodriguez-Garavito, Cesar 1507,

2504, 4533Rodwin, Marc A. 4101Roehl, Klaus F. 1215Roepstorff, Kristina 1505Rogerson, Carol 1426Rogowski, Ralf 2135, 3207, 4240Roithmayr, Daria 1412Rollins, Joe Neil 1123Romero, Mary 4319Ronfani, Paola 1316Rose, Mary R. 2105, 4217, 4222Rose, William 2234, 4314Rosen, Robert E. 3128, 4507Rosen-Zvi, Issi 3122Rosenberg, Arnold S. 1314Rosenberg, Barbara 1209Rosenberg, G N 2411, 4234Rosenberg, Melinda 4419Rosenblum, Darren 1412, 4230Rosenbury, Laura A 4213Rosentreter, Michael A. 1218, 1534Rosga, AnnJanette 1338Ross, Jacqueline E. 2234Ross, Thomas 4316Rossetti, Carlo G. 2330Rostain, Tanina 2111, 2401Rostock, Petra 1434Rothkamm, Jan 3138Rothman, Jennifer 4213Rothmayr Allison, Christine 2320Rottenburg, Richard W. 1217Rottman, David B. 4106Roussel, Violaine 1501Rowen, Jamie 3116Ruan, Nantiya 3103

Index of Participants 131

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

Rubin, Edward L. 1515, 4513Rubio, David Sánchez 1323Rudolf, Beate 4331Rueda, Pablo 3209, 4309Ruediger, Marco Aurelio 1530, 4318Ruether, Werner 1214Ruffer, Galya B. 1101, 1301, 2335Ruibal, Alba 1104Rundle, Kristen 1529Ruparelia, Rakhi 2434, 4426Russell, Lynette W 2338Rustad, Michael 2420Ryan, Desmond 1427

SSaban, Ilan 1221Sack, Fritz 2305Sadek, Maria T. 2306Sadka, Joyce 1317Saegusa, Mayumi 1331, 4114Saffon, Maria Paula 3116, 4411Safjan, Marek 2509Safrin, Sabrina 3131Sage, Caroline 4137, 4531Saguy, Abigail 2418Sajo, Andras 2502Sakai, Masahiro 1307Sakrani, Raja 1537Salem, Jamil Elias 1225Sales, Bruce 1140, 4426Salim, Arskal 1314, 2416Salmond, Amiria 4233Salomone, Rosemary C. 1316Sampaio, Marli A. 3105Sanchez, George 3134Sand, Inger-Johanne 1115Sandefur, Rebecca L 3106, 4129Sanders, Joseph 2123Sandford, Karrie 2116Sandvik, Kristin B. 1140, 2426Sanger, Carol 3127Sannerholm, Richard LO.. 1405Santamaria, Angela 4533Santore, Daniel 1425Santos, Alvaro 4308, 4504Santos, Boaventura de Sousa 1507,

2504Santos, Cecilia MacDowell 2504Sarantuya, Tserenbaltav 4435Sarat, Austin 2436, 4523Saris, Anne 3202Sass, Peter 2315Sato, Iwao 2306Sato, Yasunobu 1104Satz, Ani B. 1433, 4134Savelsberg, Joachim J. 2415, 3208Saxby, Ryan 2223Sayed, Hani 2508Scaff, Lawrence A. 2210Scallen, Eileen A. 2218, 4519Scamardella, Francesca 1102Schauer, Frederick 4310

Schauffler, Richard 3115, 4436Scheeck, Laurent 2114, 4121Scheffer, Thomas 2123, 2424, 4530Scheingold, Stuart A. 4203Scheiwe, Kirsten 1407, 4538Scheller, Percy 2322Scheppele, Kim Lane 3203Scherer, Nancy 4426Schielke, Sabine 1513Schlanger, Margo 2401, 4301Schleef, Debra 3119Schlueter, Georg H. 1405Schmalbeck, Richard 1423, 2224Schmeiser, Susan 2436Schmidt, Patrick 4121Schneider, Elizabeth 1133, 1311,

2507, 4230, 4315Schneider, Jacqueline L. 1536Schneiderman, David 2229Schoenfeld, Heather 1328Schoenholtz, Andrew 1201Schofield, Philip 1320Scholten, Sophie 2426Schor, Miguel 1101, 4133, 4532Schrag, Philip G 1201Schragger, Richard C. 1118Schram, Eva 4240Schreiner, Agnes T.M. 1114, 1539Schrenker, Markus 2322Schucher, Karen 1517Schultz, Ulrike 1407, 3141, 4510Schultz, Vicki 2129Schwartz, David S. 2422Schwartz, Richard 1520Schwartz, Saul 1306Schweppe, Jennifer 1130Schwidetzky, Walter 2224Schwindt, Richard William 1331Schwitters, Robert Jan Sjoert 1438Schwöbel, Christine EJ 1515Schäller, Steven 1136Scott, Colin 1422, 2202Scott, Dayna N. 2236, 3128Scott, Joanne 1509, 2502Scott, Wendy E. 1140Scott Bray, Rebecca 2425Scott-Hayward, Christine 1130, 3110Searl, Mark 1425Sebba, Leslie4 525Sebok, Anthony 2109, 4301Sefiha, Ophir 2205Sehring, Jenniver 1310Seifert, Achim 1402Seith, Patricia 1117, 4126Selbin, Jeff 4129Semmelmann, Constanze 2133Sen, Rajarshi 1111Sen, Sudipta 2207Sengayen, Magdalena 4223Seri, Guillermina 4502Seron, Carroll 4116, 4333

Seroussi, Julien 2139Serra van-Dúnem, José O. 1507Sethi, Anuranjan 1312Sezgin, Yuksel 1437Shaffer, Gregory C 1209, 2508,

4205, 4409Shah, Rajiv 1119Shah, Syed AH 2137Shahar, Ido 2421Shahizaheh Anzabi, M. 2319Shakya, Mallika 4137Shalhoub-Kevorkian, Nadera 1311Shannon, Margaret 1139, 2218Shapland, Joanna M. 1125Sharafi, Mitra 1208, 2311Shariff, Fauzia 1437Sharpe, Andrew N. 1522, 4438Shastri, Satish 3133Shavers, Anna W. 1417, 2426Shavit, Uriya 1128, 2421, 4529Shaw, Gisela 1407, 4539Shdaimah, Corey S. 1125, 1401Sheehan, Grania R. 1426Sherman, Edward F. 4414Sherwin, Richard Kenneth 4528Shmueli, Benjamin 3143Sibanda, Sanele 3130Siebecker, Michael 2337Sieder, Rachel 1539, 3206Siehr, Angelika 4331Siems, Mathias 2214Silbey, Susan S. 2401, 4310Silius, Harriet 3141, 4510Silva, Felipe Gonçalves 4521Silverio, Valter 2216Silverstein, Gordon 1101Simon, Jonathan S. 1511, 2110,

2305, 4306Simon, William 2502, 4129Simons, Kenneth 4413Simpson, Nardia 3103Singer, Simon 3110Singh, Anne-Marie M 4124Sinha, Aseema 1209Skapska, Gracyna B. 1432, 2509Skeaff, Christopher 1126Skogan, Wesley G. 1527Skolnick, Jerome 4423Slater, Joe 4501Slepcevic, Reinhard 1114Sloan, James G. 1520Slotte, Pamela 2217Sluiter, Goran 4139Smigielska, Joanna 2129Smismans, Stijn 2301Smith, Adrian A. 4501Smith, Catherine E. 4226Smith, Gordon 2214, 3112, 4524Smith, Gregory J. 2218Smith, James Charles 4425Smith, Lars 2118

132 Index of Participants

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Smith, Peggie R. 4401Smith, Terry 2412Smithey, Martha 3119Smithey, Shannon I. 4218Smulovitz, Catalina 3206Smyth, Michael A. 4119Snacken, Sonja 4103Snodgrass-Godoy, Angelina 2504Soboleva, Anita 4502Soennecken, Dagmar 1201, 1514Soghomonyan, Luiza 1140Sol, Els 4240, 4308Solanki, Gopika 2403Solomon, Peter 4223Solum, Lawrence. 1211, 1431, 4431Sommerlad, Hilary 1424, 4510Song, Yuping 2304Sonneveld, Nadia 2104Sood, Ankur 4415Sorensen, Estrid 2131Soroko, Leah 2332Soukup, Petr 2322Sozzo, Máximo E. 2106Spade, Dean 4438Spagnoli, Filip 130Spamann, Holger 3112Sparks, Richard 1305, 1511Sparks, Tony C 1518Spencer, Maureen 2430Spiesel, Christina 4433Spina, Ferdinando 4336Squatrito, Theresa J 4416Squires, Dan 1427Squires, Gregory D. 4123, 4405Stack, Kevin 4232Stadler, Lena 2433Starr, Sonja 1420, 4329Steen, Sara 2219Stegmaier, Peter 1129Steigerwalt, Amy 1132, 1431Steiner, Kerstin 2416Stempel, Jeffrey 1109, 2425, 4316Stendahl, Sara Elisabeth 1110Stender-Vorwachs, Jutta 1135Stenson, Kevin M. 2239Stepniak, Daniel 1526Sterett, Susan 4109, 4327Sterling, Joyce 1411, 4205Stern, Rachel 2204Steur, Luisa J. 2120Stewart, Fenner L. 1233Stiritz, Susan E. 4213Stirton, Lindsay J. 4137Stolzenberg, Nomi 2226Stone, Katherine 1202, 2208Strach, Patricia 1223Strawson, John 1419, 4407Strazzeri, Irene 1515Ströbele-Gregor, Juliana 4517

Stubbs, Julie 3142, 4130Sturm, Susan 1117, 2102, 4513Stychin, Carl F. 2318, 3114Subotnik, Dan 2134Suchman, Mark 1206, 2105, 4524Sufian, Azlinor 2115Suga, Fumie 1222Sugarman, David 3116Suk, Julie Chi-hye 2425Suk, Mina 1126, 1523Sulitzeanu-Kenan, Raanan 4228Sullivan, Barbara 4328Sullivan, Kathleen S 1223Sullivan, Winnifred Fallers 3204Sunkin, Maurice 1422Susanti, Bivitri 2104Sutton, John 4306Sutton, Mike 3142Svenson, Arthur G. 1140Svensson, Marina 1304Swarup, Aditya 1313Swiffen, Amy 2113Sylvester, Douglas 2220Szablowski, David 4428

TTadros, Victor 4413Taekema, Sanne 1139Tai, Stephanie 1527, 2202Takahashi, Hiroshi 2306Tamanaha, Brian Z. 1211, 2323Tamir, Michal 1436, 2129Tan, Eugene KB 2428, 4111Tanaka, Maki 1115Tang, Guan H. 4135Tang, Yi Shin 3140Tans, Olaf 1138Tarumoto, Hideki 1538Tata, Cyrus 2126, 4527Tate, Joshua C. 4536Taylor, Veronica 2404, 4304Tehranian, John 2432Teichman, Doron 3133Teitel, Ruti G. 1430, 2509Teles, Steven 1422Teng, Sheng-Chi 4204Tepecik, Filiz 1234Ter Voert, Marijke 2506Teubner, Gunther 4209, 4322Thacher, David 4212Thain, Gerald J 3111Thaman, Stephen C. 1330, 4523Theissen, Natalia 1135Theroux, Charles 1425Thiel, Thorsten 1416Thiruvengadam, Arun 1103Thomas, Chantal 2204Thomas, Kendall 1430, 2505, 3127Thomas, Mark NB 1326, 2428Thompson, Brian 1110

Thomson, Michael 2237Thornhill, Chris 2341, 2441Thornton, Dorothy 3125Thornton, Liam P. 3130Thornton, Margaret 3141, 4510Timmer, Jaap 1304Timmons, Patrick W 2101, 3120, 4202Tirosh, Yofi 4227, 4419Tofaris, Stelios 4229Toivanen, Reetta 4334, 4530Tolley, Michael C. 1514Tomlins, Christopher L. 1238, 4118Tontrup, Stephan W 1409Torpey, John 4515Tosini, Domenico 2341Toth, Andras 2409, 4308Tragardh, Lars 2109Trappe, Julie 4512Trautner, Mary Nell 3107Trautsch, Julia 4503Tribe, Keith 2210Trochev, Alexei 1101Trout, J.D. 4314Trubek, David M. 2301, 3207Trubek, Louise 1502, 2202, 2503, 4101Tsai, Chih-Wei 1326Tsai, Ihua 4117Tsche, Kwang-Jun 4508Tsou, Meng-Chen 4117Tsuchiya, Akihiro 1528Tucker, James 2136Turcanu, Catrinel 1210Turnbull, Sarah 4109Turner, Bertram 1314Tvrdy, Linda A. 1223Twining, William 1104Tyler, Tom 1206, 2125Tzankova, Vesselina 1121

UUbink, Janine 2104Ulary, Georganna 2429Ulen, Thomas S. 1409, 2325Umberg, Anna 1214, 1435, 2234, 4124Umphrey, Martha Merrill 2226, 3127Underkuffler, Laura S 2331Uprimny, Rodrigo 3116Uruena, Rene 2234Ushijima, Hitoshi 1228, 4427Utz, Stephen G. 3116

VVaisman, Noa 4522Vaivade, Anita 1523Vakulenko, Anastasia 1321Valer Bellota, Pavel 2327Valverde, Mariana 1238, 1511Van Aeken, Koen 1210Van Aerschot, Paul 1213van Calster, Geert 2220

Index of Participants 133

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

van de Poll, Frederike Antonia 1520Van der Borght, Kim 1419van der Toorn, Jojanneke 2125Van der Walt, Andre J 4326Van der Walt, Johan WG 4326Van Engeland, Anicee M. 1339, 4337van Gelder, Jean-Louis 4125Van Gundy, Karen 1227van Heesen-Laclé, Zayènne 4116Van Horne, Sheryl 1315, 4235van Krieken, Robert 1113, 1539, 2323van Manen, Niels F. 1438Van Marle, Karin 1339, 4326Van Oers, Ricky 4111Van Rite, Eric 1218Van Rooij, Benjamin 2104, 4526van Roon, Marjorie Ruth 1120van Rossum, Wibo M. 2316, 2416van Waarden, Frans 4427Van Zyl Smit, Dirk 4103VanderVelde, Lea 1301Vandervort, Lucinda 2107, 4230Vanoverbeke, Dimitri R. 3109, 4214Vassilev, Ivo 4429Vatuk, Sylvia 1208, 2403Vauchez, Antoine 4121, 4411Vecchioli, Virginia 4533Velasco Maillo, Honorio 2406Velicogna, Marco 1417Venator Santiago, Charles 1429, 4319Venter, Francois 2601Ventoruzzo, Marco 4311Ventsel, Aimar 3128Venugopal, Kritika 4339Veraart, Wouter Jan 4532Verdolini, Valeria 1513Veronese, Alexandre 1106Vertinsky, Ilan 1331, 4514Vertinsky, Liza Sharon 4514Vieira, Oscar V. 2503Villazor, Rose 4126, 4428Vines, Prue 1126Virmani, Ankit 4339Vitalis, Ngambouk P. 1111Vladeck, David. C. 1118Vlies, Inge Vander 1213Voeten, Erik 4139Vogel, Ann 4335Vogel, Joan E. 4501Vogt, Hans-Ueli 2214Volpp, Leti 2310, 4319von Daniels, Detlef 1139, 1510von Wahl, Angelika 1512Vorländer, Hans 1136Voruz, Veronique 1328

WWachter, Susan M. 4123Wacquant, Loic 1305Wada, Yasuhiro 1307

Wada, Yoshitakda 1331, 1508Wai, Robert 2204, 3138Walby, Kevin T. 1328, 1536, 2239Walecki, Marcin 2132Wall, David S. 4302Waller, Spencer W. 1525Wang, Chin-Shou 4204Wang, Feng 1120Wang, Ming-Li 2114Wang, Shu Liang 3117Wang, Wei-Hong 2419Wang, Zhenmin 1508Wang, Zhuoyu 4217, 4408Ward, Artemus 1132Warning, Michael J. 2438Washington, Harriet 4410Washington, Scott Leon 2432Waters, Nicole L. 2227, 4222, 4418Watson, Sidney 1222, 1502Watson, Virginia L. 2119Webb, Julian 4314Weber, Claire 4324Weber, Karsten 1417Webley, Lisa 1524Webster, Timothy 4521Wegener, Bernd 2322Wei, Yuwa 1215Weidemaier, W. Mark C. 1510Weilenmann, Markus 1217Weinberg, Joanna K. 2320Weinrib, Laura 1112Weinstein, Harvey M. 3116Weisbrod, Carol 2225Weisman, Richard 1529, 3120Weiss, Jillian T. 3125Weiss, Manfred 2208, 3207Weiss, Marley S. 2208, 3207, 4308Weiss, Paulette S. 2417Wejnert, Barbara 1416Welch, Michael 2106Wells, Helen Marie 2424Wennberg, Lena 4538Werle, Markus M. 1116, 2315Wersig, Maria 4538Werth, Robert 2219Wesson, Murray R. 4340Westley, Robert S. 4402Wheeler, Sally 1532White, Alan M. 4123White, John Valery 2412White, Lucie 3209, 4513White, Nicola 4327Whitecross, Richard W 1110, 1307Whitford, William C. 3105, 4506Wiater, Patricia 4113Wiatrowski, Przemyslaw 1204Wiber, Melanie Gay 1217Wiegman, Ida 1210Wiener, Antje 2332Wiener, Richard 1105, 2325Wiese, Kirsten 1434

Wilf, Steven 2302Wilkins, David 1406, 4426Willemez, Laurent 4501Willenbacher, Barbara 4108Williams, Garrath 4128Williams, James 2215Williams, Kenneth 4211Williams, Kevin 2205Williams, Margaret S. 1207Williams, Toni 2434, 4112, 4511Wilson, Margaret 1315Wilson, Richard A 1529, 4104Wilson, Sophia 4218Wilson, Stuart 1323, 4234Winczorek, Jan 1539Wing, Adrien 4211Winn, Jane K. 2304, 4504Winter, Gerd 2202, 2438Winter, Steve 2211, 4211Winzer, Matthias 2315Witte, Daniel 1537Wood, David 4318Wood, Stepan 1139, 1418,

2120, 4531Woolcock, Michael 4137Wrase, Michael 1532, 4331Wu, Chieh Chun 4117Wu, Chien-huei 4114Wu, Richard 1308, 1508Wyrzykowski, Miroslaw 3203

XXu, Defeng 4311

YYablon, Charles 2437Yablon, Marcia A. 2410Yaish, Meir 2322Yang, Anand 2207Yang, Hsiu-I 4434Yang, Hyunah 2201Yang, Pengfei 3117Yankah, Ekow 4431Yankova, Diana 1204Yarbrough, Michael W. 2129, 4220Yelle, Robert 4528Yen, Hua-hsin 4116Yen, Shang-Yung 4434Yildirim, Turan 4336Yngvesson, Barbara 4219Yoon, Diana H 4111Yoshida, Naoko 4124Yoshioka, Suzuka 3107Young, Claire 1339, 2240Young, Donna 1429, 2439Young, Katharine 1108Young, Lisa 1426Young, Margot 3113, 4112Young, Rosalie R. 2219, 2306Yovel, Jonathan 2211, 2501,

3128, 4236Yu, Peter 1203, 1516, 3121

134 Index of Participants

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Yu, Xiaohong 1137Yuille, Lua K. 1220Yuracko, Kimberly A. 4110Yurdakul, Gokce 4323Yuruk, Ayse Tulin 1234Yusupov, Musa Movlievich 4237

ZZakariyah, Luqman 2421Zang, Dongsheng 2304Zanier, Maria Letizia 4520Zaring, David 2419, 4423Zedner, Lucia 2435, 4310Zeghal, Malika 3202Zhang, Xianchu 4514Zheng, Ge 2425Zhenmin, Wang 1308Ziegel, Jacob S 4405Ziegert, Klaus A. 2135Ziegleder, Diana 1116Ziller, Jacques 1302Zinn, Jens O. 3102, 4201Zippel, Kathrin 1512Ziv, Neta 1215, 4316Zolkos, Magdalena 4236Zorob, Maysa 1225Zumbansen, Peer C. 2214, 2508,

4322Zurek, Karolina 2221Zylan, Yvonne 1123, 2223

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136 Addresses of Participants

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Katja Franko Aas NORWAY [email protected] Abbott USA [email protected] Haniffa Abdullah MALAYSIA [email protected] Abdullah MALAYSIA [email protected] Abe JAPAN [email protected] Abel USA [email protected] Abeles FRANCE [email protected] Abraham USA [email protected] Abramo BRASILEdwin Odhiambo Abuya KENYA [email protected] C Achilefu NIGERIA [email protected] Ackerman USA [email protected] Acosta COLOMBIA [email protected] A. Adamietz GERMANY [email protected] Adams USA [email protected] Olufemi Adekoya BELGIUM [email protected] W. Adelson USA [email protected] Aden GERMANY [email protected] Adler KINGDOM OF CAMBODIA [email protected] E. Adler SCOTLAND [email protected] Afrin USA [email protected] Ageishi JAPAN [email protected] L. Agnew USA

[email protected] Hannaford Agor USA [email protected] A. Agrama USA [email protected] Agrawal INDIA [email protected] K. Agrawal INDIA [email protected] Aharonson UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] K. Ahluwalia INDIA [email protected] Ahmad USA [email protected] Ahmed UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Ainsworth USA [email protected] T. Ainsworth USA [email protected] Akademie Verlag GERMANY www.akademie-verlag.deKasim Akbas TURKEY [email protected] al Attar CANADA [email protected] Al-Botmeh PALESTINE [email protected] Al-Ramahi UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Alberstein ISRAEL [email protected] Albiston USA [email protected]

Letícia Albuquerque BRAZIL [email protected] Alessandrini UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] S. Alexander USA [email protected] T. Alexander USA [email protected] Alexandre USA

[email protected] Alfieri USA [email protected] A. Alfonso Sierra COLOMBIA [email protected] Algotsson SOUTH AFRICA [email protected] M. Aliotta USA [email protected] Alkan Olsson SWEDEN [email protected] Alkoby CANADA [email protected] J. Alkon USA [email protected] Allen AUSTRALIA [email protected] Allen UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Allspach CANADA [email protected] Almeida PORTUGAL [email protected] Almog ISRAEL [email protected] Almond UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Alon-Shenker CANADA [email protected] Alramahi ENGLAND [email protected] Altemoller GERMANY [email protected] I Alvarado USA [email protected] Alviar COLOMBIA [email protected] C. Aman USA [email protected] O. Amao IRELAND [email protected] T. Amatrudo UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Amien SOUTH AFRICA

Names and Email Addresses of Participants

[email protected] Amodu UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Amstutz SWITZERLAND [email protected] Anastasia ITALY [email protected] Andersen CANADA [email protected] A. Andersen USA [email protected] Andersen ITALY [email protected] Anderson UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] W Anderson UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Anderson UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] J. Anderson USA [email protected] Anderson USA [email protected] Andrei USA [email protected] B. Andrews USA [email protected] J. Andrews AUSTRALIA [email protected] E. Andrews USA [email protected] Ann [email protected] Ansah USA [email protected] Ansley USA [email protected] M. Ansolabehere MEXICO [email protected] Anter GERMANY [email protected] C. Anthis UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Aponte Miranda USA [email protected] Apor ITALY [email protected] R. Applebaum USA

[email protected] F. Appleton USA [email protected] Alina Apreotesei HUNGARY [email protected] Aragaki USA [email protected] A. Aragao PORTUGAL [email protected] Aragoneses SPAIN [email protected] Aranda UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] A. Araujo PORTUGAL [email protected] Arcimowicz POLAND [email protected] Arewa USA [email protected]

Libardo José Ariza SPAIN [email protected] Arjomand USA [email protected] Armbruster GERMANY [email protected] Armour UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Armstrong UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Armstrong UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Arold GERMANY [email protected] Arrese SPAIN [email protected] W. Arthurs CANADA [email protected] Arup AUSTRALIA [email protected] Arvidsson SWEDEN [email protected] L. Asano BRAZIL [email protected] Aschke GERMANY [email protected] M. Ashar USA [email protected]

Chris Ashford UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Ashiagbor UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Asimow USA [email protected] Askola UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Assy BRAZIL [email protected] Astor AUSTRALIA [email protected] Astrom SWEDEN [email protected] Anopama Atapattu USA [email protected] Atnachev ITALY [email protected] Atuahene USA [email protected] A. Atuguba GHANA [email protected] Auchmuty UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Augenstein ITALY [email protected] Avci TURKEY [email protected] Aviram USA [email protected] Aviram ISRAEL [email protected] S. Aydar TURKEY [email protected] Aylwin CANADA [email protected] Azuela MEXICO [email protected] Baar CANADA [email protected]’ichi Baba JAPAN [email protected] M. Babbit USA [email protected] Leonidovna Babich RUSSIA [email protected] Bacik IRELAND

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[email protected] Cata Backer USA [email protected] Backert GERMANY [email protected] Backhouse CANADA [email protected] Baer GERMANY [email protected] Bagchi USA [email protected] Bagenstos USA [email protected] Baglay CANADA [email protected] Bagnall UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Baier SWEDEN [email protected] Bailey AUSTRALIA [email protected] Baines CANADA [email protected] Baker USA [email protected] Bakker THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Baldassi CANADA [email protected] Baldwin USA [email protected] Baldwin USA [email protected] Baldwin UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Ballestero USA [email protected] Balmer UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Bancaud FRANCE [email protected] D. Bancu ROMANIA [email protected] Bandes USA [email protected] Banks AUSTRALIA [email protected]

Taunya L. Banks USA [email protected] Banner USA [email protected] Bar-On ISRAEL [email protected] Barak-Erez ISRAEL [email protected] Baraldi ITALY [email protected] Barberet USA [email protected] Barbero SPAIN [email protected] Andrew Barbour CANADA [email protected] W. Barclay USA [email protected] Barker USA [email protected] Barnes USA [email protected] Barnes USA [email protected] L. Barnes USA [email protected] Barnes USA [email protected] D. Barnett USA [email protected] E. Barnett USA [email protected] R. Barrett USA [email protected] Barron UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Barros USA [email protected] Barrow-Giles BARBADOS [email protected] Barshack ISRAEL [email protected] Barskanmaz GERMANY [email protected] Bartholomew CANADA [email protected] S. Bartnik POLAND

[email protected] Rita Bartolomei ITALY [email protected] M. Bartow USA [email protected] Barzilai USA [email protected] Basheer USA [email protected] B. Bastalic GERMANY [email protected] Bastard FRANCE [email protected] Ramos Bastos BRAZIL [email protected] Basu USA [email protected] Bates CANADA [email protected] K. Baumle USA [email protected] Baxi INDIA [email protected] Baxi UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] W Baxter USA [email protected] A. Baylis USA [email protected] Bazbazat PALESTINE rbazbazat @birzeit.eduLinda M. Beale USA [email protected] Beard AUSTRALIA [email protected] Beattie AUSTRALIA [email protected] Beaune FRANCE [email protected] Becak BRAZIL [email protected] Beccio ITALY [email protected] Becher USA [email protected] Beck UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Becker

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GERMANY [email protected] Becker Lorca USA [email protected] Bedi USA [email protected] Beecher-Monas USA [email protected] Natham Begari INDIA [email protected] Begg CANADA [email protected] Belge USA [email protected] Bell USA [email protected] H. Bell UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Belleau CANADA [email protected] G. Bello ITALY [email protected] Ben-Ishai CANADA [email protected] Samir Benavides-Vanegas COLOMBIA [email protected] von Benda-Beckmann GERMANY [email protected] von Benda-Beckmann GERMANY [email protected] Benedet CANADA [email protected] Bengoetxea SPAIN [email protected] Benguira FRANCE [email protected] Benish ISRAEL [email protected]

Antônio Herman Benjamin BRAZIL [email protected] Friedrichs Benson USA [email protected] Beqiraj ITALY [email protected] Bereswill GERMANY [email protected] Berg AUSTRALIA [email protected]

Bethany Berger USA [email protected] Berger USA [email protected] Berghahn GERMANY [email protected] Bergkamp BELGIUM [email protected] Bergling SWEDEN [email protected] Bergman SWEDEN [email protected] Bergman AUSTRALIA [email protected] Ines Bergoglio ARGENTINA [email protected] Berliner Wissenschafts-Verlag GERMANY www.bwv-verlag.dePaul Schiff Berman USA [email protected] Berndt GERMANY [email protected] Bernstein USA [email protected] Bernstein USA [email protected] Berrey USA [email protected] Berry III UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Bertolino UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] RD Bertoncello BRAZIL [email protected] R. Bessa BRAZIL [email protected] Besselink ITALY [email protected] Best GERMANY [email protected] N. Beyer GERMANY [email protected] Bhabha USA [email protected] Bhandar UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Bhansali INDIA

[email protected] Bhat INDIA [email protected] Biddulph AUSTRALIA [email protected] Bignami USA [email protected] Fevzi Bilgin TURKEY [email protected] Bilsky ISRAEL [email protected] Binnie UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Bird USA [email protected] Birdsall UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Ursula Bitetto ITALY [email protected] Bitton ISRAEL [email protected] Biukovic CANADA [email protected] Blackett CANADA [email protected] Blair USA [email protected] Blake UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Blake UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Blandy UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Blank ISRAEL [email protected] R. Blankenburg THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Blazak USA [email protected] Blecher-Prigat ISRAEL [email protected] Block-Lieb USA [email protected] Blokker ITALY [email protected] B. Blomgren-Bingham USA [email protected] Bloom

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USA [email protected] Blume USA [email protected] Bobukeeva KYRGYZSTAN [email protected] Bocker THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Boden USA [email protected] Bodie USA [email protected] Boigeol FRANCE [email protected] L. Boittin USA [email protected] Bomhoff THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Gloria Bonelli BRAZIL [email protected] Alessandra G. Bonzano ITALY [email protected] Bora GERMANY [email protected] Borden USA [email protected] Bordone ITALY [email protected] Bosisio ITALY [email protected] Bosniak USA [email protected] Bostic USA [email protected] Boswell USA [email protected] F. Bosworth UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Botha SOUTH AFRICA [email protected] Bottomley UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Boulanger GERMANY [email protected] Bouriaud ROMANIA [email protected] Boutcher

USA [email protected] R. Bowen USA [email protected] M. Bowman BELGIUM [email protected] Bowman USA [email protected] Boyd USA [email protected] B Boyd CANADA [email protected] Boyea USA [email protected] H. Boyle USA [email protected] Marie Boyne USA [email protected] Bozzo-Rey FRANCE [email protected] Braatz USA [email protected] Brabazon CANADA [email protected] Brace USA [email protected] Bradley USA [email protected] Bradley USA [email protected] Bradney UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Braidotti USA [email protected] Braig GERMANY [email protected] Braithwaite UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] B. Braithwaite AUSTRALIA [email protected] L. Brake USA [email protected] Braman USA [email protected] Brand SOUTH AFRICA [email protected] Braucher USA [email protected]

Irus Braverman USA [email protected] Breda UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Bregvadze GEORGIA [email protected] Breithaupt GERMANY [email protected] Brentano USA [email protected] Brich UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] M. Brighenti ITALY [email protected] M. Brinks USA [email protected] A. Brisbin USA [email protected] C. Britt USA [email protected] Britto BRAZIL [email protected] Brock GERMANY [email protected] M. Brodie USA [email protected]

André Brodocz GERMANY [email protected] Bronsteen USA [email protected] Brooks CANADA [email protected] A. Brooks USA [email protected] Broughman USA [email protected] Brown UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Brown USA [email protected] F. Brown USA [email protected] Brown USA [email protected] D Brown USA [email protected] A. Brown USA

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[email protected] M. Brown Keyder TURKEY [email protected] M. Bruckert CANADA [email protected] Brudney USA [email protected] J. Bruinsma THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Brummer USA [email protected] Brunnegger UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Brunon-Ernst FRANCE [email protected] Bryan CANADA [email protected] Bryda POLAND [email protected]. Brun-Otto Bryde GERMANY [email protected] J. Buchan UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Shayo Buchanan USA [email protected] H. Buchanan USA [email protected] Buchanan USA [email protected] Buchanan CANADA [email protected] Buchholz GERMANY [email protected] Buchs UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Buck UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] G. Buck UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] G. Buckle USA [email protected] Budniok GERMANY [email protected] Bugaric SLOVENIA [email protected] W. Bukowski POLAND [email protected] Bulkan

USA [email protected] A. Bunt CZECH REPUBLIC [email protected] Bunting CANADA [email protected] Burke USA [email protected] W. Burke-White USA [email protected] Burkett USA [email protected] Burns USA [email protected] Burri THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Burris USA [email protected] Bushimata JAPAN [email protected] Bussmann GERMANY [email protected] A. Butler AUSTRALIA [email protected] R. Butters USA [email protected] Cesar Butuhy BRASIL [email protected] Cs. Buzogany GERMANY [email protected] Bybee USA [email protected] Cabot GREECE [email protected] Caeiro FRANCE [email protected] Cahana-Amitay ISRAEL [email protected] C. Cahill ITALY [email protected] Calavita

[email protected] Calder CANADA [email protected] M. Caldwell USA [email protected] Calleman SWEDEN [email protected]

Gralf-Peter Calliess GERMANY [email protected] Calvo UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Calvo UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Cambridge University Press UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Cameron CANADA [email protected] Camilo de Oliveira DEUTSCHLAND [email protected] Cammarata ITALY [email protected] Campbell UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Campbell IRELAND [email protected] Campesi ITALY [email protected] Campos USA [email protected] Campus Verlag GERMANY www.campus.dePaulo Canario PORTUGAL [email protected] Candeub USA [email protected] Candioti ARGENTINA [email protected] Canuel USA [email protected]. Bennett Capers USA [email protected] Caracciolo di Torel UK [email protected] Carbado USA [email protected]

Laura Cardia-Von che SWITZERLAND [email protected] Cardiff University Law School UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] C. Cardinal CANADA [email protected] LC Cardoso BRAZIL [email protected] Carhoglu GERMANY

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[email protected] Carlarne UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Carlisle THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Carlson GERMANY [email protected] Carlsson SWEDEN [email protected] P. Carr UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Carr UK [email protected] Carr USA [email protected] Carstensen USA [email protected] M. Carter USA [email protected] Bruno Caruso ITALY [email protected] Carver PR OF CHINA [email protected] Casanas Adam ITALY [email protected] Anne Case USA [email protected] Casebeer USA [email protected]

Fernando Casta eda Sabido MEXICO [email protected] C. Castillo GERMANY [email protected]

Rosângela Lunardelli Cavalazzi BRAZIL [email protected] Cebada Romero GERMANY [email protected] Cerini ITALY [email protected] Chacartegui SPAIN [email protected] Marie Chacon USA [email protected] Chalmers UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Chamberlain USA [email protected] S. Chambliss

USA [email protected] W.H. Chan PR OF CHINA [email protected] Kok Yew Chan SINGAPORE [email protected] Chan AUSTRALIA [email protected] Chandler CANADA [email protected] Chang TAIWAN [email protected] Tina Chang UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] L. Chanock AUSTRALIA [email protected] Chantraine FRANCE [email protected] Chaparro SPAIN [email protected] L. Chapman AUSTRALIA [email protected] Charn Bellow USA [email protected] G. Chase USA [email protected] E. Chaski USA [email protected] Chatterjee UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Chaturvedi USA [email protected] Chausovsky USA [email protected] Chavez MEXICO [email protected] Hsu Chen USA [email protected] Cheng USA [email protected] Cheng PR OF CHINA [email protected] Cheung PR OF CHINA [email protected] Hua Chew MALAYSIA [email protected] Chiapello FRANCE [email protected]

Janet Childerhose CANADA [email protected] Man Chung Chiu AUSTRALIA [email protected] Choi KOREA [email protected] Choi GERMANY [email protected] Choi GERMANY [email protected] Y. P. Choi PR OF CHINA [email protected] Chon USA [email protected] Choquet FRANCE [email protected] Chorev USA [email protected] Choudhry CANADA [email protected] K. Choy USA [email protected] Christensen GERMANY [email protected] Christians USA [email protected] Christians BELGIUM [email protected] Christudason SINGAPORE [email protected] H. Chryssostalis UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Petra Chrzanowski AUSTRALIA [email protected] J. Churgin USA [email protected] K. Cichomski POLAND [email protected] Jose Cifuentes Gonzalez GUATEMALA [email protected] Ciobanu USA [email protected] W. Cioffi USA [email protected] Cirkovic CANADA [email protected] Clam GERMANY

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[email protected] S. Clark USA [email protected] Clark USA [email protected] Clarke USA [email protected] M. Clarke AUSTRALIA [email protected] Clarke PR OF CHINA [email protected] Clarke AUSTRALIA [email protected] Maxine Clarke USA [email protected] Clarkson SOUTH AFRICA [email protected]

Jean-Pierre Cléro FRANCE [email protected] Coben USA [email protected] Cochran USA [email protected] Codd UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Coeurdray FRANCE [email protected] Coffey IRELAND [email protected] Coglianese USA [email protected] J. Cohen USA [email protected] Cohen FRANCE [email protected] Cohen FRANCE [email protected] S. Cohn USA [email protected] Cohn ISRAEL [email protected] Coker USA [email protected] J. Colangelo USA [email protected] Collier UNITED KINGDOM [email protected]

Hugh Collins UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Coman BELGIUM [email protected] Cominelli ITALY [email protected]’Lane Compton USA [email protected] Yves Conde FRANCE [email protected] G. Condon CANADA [email protected] K. Connolly USA [email protected] Teresa Consoli ITALY [email protected] Constable USA [email protected] Convery IRELAND [email protected] Conway-Jones USA [email protected] J. Cook USA [email protected] J. Coombe CANADA [email protected] I. Coombs USA [email protected] Cooney USA [email protected] Cooper UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Cooper USA [email protected] Copelon USA [email protected] Elias Sultanum Cordeiro CANADA [email protected] Corkin UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] C. Corley USA [email protected] Cormier USA [email protected] Correas MEXICO [email protected]

Juan Pablo Cortes Diéguez IRELAND

[email protected] Coslovsky BRAZIL [email protected] Augusto F. Costa BRAZIL [email protected] Cottier SWITZERLAND [email protected] J. Cottrol USA [email protected] A. Couso CHILE [email protected] Bibler Coutin USA [email protected] Coutu CANADA [email protected] Cowan UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] K. Cowan ENGLAND [email protected] Cowan UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Cownie UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Jane Craig CANADA [email protected] Craig SCOTLAND [email protected] Cram UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] J. Crawford USA [email protected] Creutzburg GERMANY [email protected] Crewe UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Crocker USA [email protected] Crofts AUSTRALIA [email protected] D. Cromer USA [email protected] C. Crook UNITED KINGDOM [email protected]. Remy Cross USA [email protected] T. Cross USA [email protected] Cruz Villalon

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SPAIN [email protected] Cryer UNITED KINGDOM [email protected]

Péter Cserne GERMANY [email protected] Angelica Cuellar MEXICO [email protected] Cuellar USA [email protected] Cuffie BARBADOS [email protected] L. Culbert USA [email protected] Cullen HONG KONG [email protected] Cummings USA [email protected] Gross Cunha BRAZIL [email protected] Cunliffe CANADA [email protected] Cunneen AUSTRALIA [email protected] W. Currie CANADA [email protected] W. Curry USA [email protected] S. Curry USA [email protected] M. Custos USA [email protected] Claire Cutler CANADA [email protected] D’Agostino CANADA [email protected] D’hondt BELGIUM [email protected] D’Souza UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] K Dabrowska POLAND [email protected] Shezair Dafa ALBANIA [email protected] Dahlstrand SWEDEN [email protected] Dailey USA [email protected]

Jamil Dakwar USA [email protected] Dalberg-Larsen DENMARK [email protected] Dale USA [email protected] Dallara ITALY [email protected] Dambach FRANCE [email protected] Dammann THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Daniels US [email protected] Danner USA [email protected] Darian-Smith USA [email protected] Darley USA [email protected] Darmon FRANCE [email protected] Dasgupta UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Daum Shanks CANADA [email protected] Dauvergne CANADA [email protected] Dauvergne CANADA [email protected] David PR OF CHINA [email protected] Davidoff USA [email protected] Davidov ISRAEL [email protected] R. Davidson CANADA [email protected] Davies USA [email protected] Davies AUSTRALIA [email protected] Davis USA [email protected] M. Davis USA [email protected] Dawson ITALY

[email protected] De UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] De Beer CANADA [email protected] de Galembert FRANCE [email protected] de Groot-van Leeuwen THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] De Groote BELGIUM [email protected] De Hart NETHERLANDS [email protected] de la Durantaye USA [email protected] Costa De Lima BRAZIL [email protected] De Munck BELGIUM [email protected] Ramos De Oliveira BRAZIL [email protected] de Silva GERMANY [email protected] de Ville GERMANY [email protected] de Zwart NETHERLANDS [email protected] Deakin UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Dean USA [email protected] Deckha CANADA [email protected] Dedek CANADA [email protected] Deess USA [email protected] Deflem USA [email protected] E. Degenhardt NORTHERN IRELAND [email protected] Deguchi GERMANY [email protected] Delaney USA [email protected] Delli Carpini USA [email protected] Delpeuch

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FRANCE [email protected] Demian UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Basak Demirayak TURKEY [email protected] V. Demleitner USA [email protected] C. Den Otter USA [email protected] Denape SWEDEN [email protected] Deng USA [email protected] Denike CANADA [email protected] Dennaoui GERMANY [email protected] I. Dennis USA [email protected] Depoorter BELGIUM [email protected] Deppe GERMANY [email protected] Derani BRASIL [email protected] Ayele Dersso SOUTH AFRICA [email protected] Desai USA [email protected] J. Desroches CANADA [email protected] Dessecker GERMANY [email protected] Devandas Aguilar COSTA RICA [email protected] Devresse FRANCE [email protected] Dewar AUSTRALIA [email protected] Dezalay FRANCE [email protected] Dezalay FRANCE [email protected] K Dhami UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] S. Diamond USA [email protected]

Joao Paulo S. Dias PORTUGAL [email protected] Diaz SPAIN [email protected] Dick GERMANY [email protected] Dickinson USA [email protected] Didevych GERMANY [email protected] Diduck UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Dierkes CANADA [email protected] Dilling GERMANY [email protected] Georgieva Dimitrova DEUTSCHLAND [email protected] Dingwall UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Dinnen AUSTRALIA [email protected] Dino ITALY [email protected] Dinovitzer CANADA [email protected] DiPaolantonio CANADA [email protected] DiRusso USA [email protected] E. Dixon NEW ZEALAND [email protected] Dixon USA [email protected] Dodd USA [email protected] Dodge USA [email protected] Doina ROMANIA [email protected] A. Dolak USA [email protected] Doll BRAZIL [email protected] del Pilar Domingo UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Domitrovich USA

[email protected] A. Donahue USA [email protected] Charles Donahue U.S. [email protected] Donert ITALIA [email protected] Donnelly IRELAND [email protected] A. Donohue USA [email protected] R Dorbeck-Jung THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Doron ISRAEL [email protected]

Élida de Oliveira L Dos Santos PORTUGAL [email protected] Dose GERMANY [email protected] H. Dost GERMANY [email protected] Dotan ISRAEL [email protected] T. Dougan UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Douglas AUSTRALIA [email protected] Doyle CANADA [email protected] Drahos AUSTRALIA [email protected] Drake UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Drakopoulou UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Drammeh NORWAY [email protected] Draper USA [email protected] Drechsel USA [email protected] K. Dreier USA [email protected] Drenkhahn GERMANY [email protected] Dressel GERMANY [email protected]

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David M Driesen USA [email protected] A. Drobac USA [email protected] du Plessis SOUTH AFRICA [email protected] Du Plessis UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Maria Duarte PORTUGAL [email protected] Dubber USA [email protected]

Richard Dubé CANADA [email protected] Dudas USA [email protected] Abi Dudushi ALBANIA [email protected] G. Duff CANADA [email protected] Dugan USA [email protected] Dugard SOUTH AFRICA [email protected] Duke University Press USA [email protected] Dukes SCOTLAND [email protected] K. Dumas USA [email protected] Dumoulin-Boulanger FRANCE [email protected] Duncan UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Duncker & Humblot GERMANY www.duncker-humblot.deJohn Duns AUSTRALIA [email protected] C. Dupre WALES [email protected] Dupret SYRIA [email protected] Dupuis NEW ZEALAND [email protected]

Juan Carlos Duran Böhme BOLIVIA [email protected] Dutton

UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] V. Dyani SOUTH AFRICA [email protected] R. Dyer AUSTRALIA [email protected] Dzieniszewska-Naros POLAND [email protected] Eades AUSTRALIA [email protected] Earl CANADA [email protected] D. Easton CANADA [email protected] Eberhard BELGIUM [email protected] Ebersberger FRANCE [email protected] M. Eckert GERMANY [email protected] Eckert USA [email protected] Economides UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Eddy USA [email protected] Edler GERMANY [email protected] Edwards UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Effeh UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Effron USA [email protected] Ehrenberg USA [email protected] Eichenhofer GERMANY [email protected] Eifler GERMANY [email protected] Eisenberg USA [email protected] Ekardt GERMANY [email protected] Ellison UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] M. Ellman USA [email protected]

Phoebe C. Ellsworth USA [email protected] Elmen-Gruys USA [email protected] Elveris TURKEY [email protected] Emens USA [email protected] Emmerich GERMANY [email protected] Emmert USA [email protected] Engel USA [email protected] C. Engel USA [email protected] Engelmann UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Engelmann BRAZIL [email protected] Engelmann USA [email protected] Engert GERMANY [email protected] English UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] R. Epp USA [email protected] Fuchs Epstein USA [email protected] Epstein USA [email protected] Eriksson SWEDEN [email protected] S. Erlanger USA [email protected] Ernst US [email protected] Errico ITALY [email protected] Erstling SWITZERLAND [email protected] Esadze GEORGIA [email protected] Eskinat TURKEY [email protected] Esmeir USA

146 Addresses of Participants

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[email protected] Estermann SWITZERLAND [email protected] Estlund USA [email protected] Evans USA [email protected] Evans Case USA [email protected] Ewick USA [email protected] Eze SOUTH AFRICAMarco Fabri ITALY [email protected] Fakhri CANADA [email protected] Falk [email protected] Falk AUSTRALIA [email protected] Fallah AUSTRALIA [email protected] E. Family USA [email protected] Farasat INDIA [email protected] Farias BRAZIL [email protected] A. Farrar MALAYSIA [email protected] P. Farrington UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Fatnowna AUSTRALIA [email protected] R Faulconbridge UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Faundez UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Fayyad PALESTINE [email protected] Febbrajo ITALY [email protected] Feddersen [email protected] M. Feeley USA [email protected] Feenan NORTHERN IRELAND [email protected] Feest

GERMANY [email protected] L. Fehlberg AUSTRALIA [email protected] A. Fehr UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Feibelman USA [email protected] Feigenson USA [email protected] Y. Feilzer UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Feldblum USA [email protected] A. Feldman USA [email protected] Feldman ISRAEL [email protected] P. Feldthusen CANADA [email protected] Feller ISRAEL [email protected] L. Felsman AUSTRALIA [email protected] L. F. Felstiner USA [email protected] Fenster USA [email protected] Fernancez-Scalzo UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Keith Fernandes INDIA [email protected] Fernando PORTUGAL [email protected] A. Ferrales USA [email protected] Lopes de Mell Ferrao BRAZIL [email protected]

António C. Ferreira PORTUGAL [email protected] Fichtelberg USA [email protected] Jose Figueredo USA [email protected] F. Filho BRAZIL [email protected] D. Fine UNITED KINGDOM [email protected]

Jonathan Fineman USA [email protected] Finkelman USA [email protected] Fischer UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Fish USA [email protected] Fisher USA [email protected] L. Fisk USA [email protected] Fittipaldi ITALY [email protected] Fitzpatrick SINGAPORE [email protected] Fitzpatrick UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] G. Flekkoy NORWAY [email protected]. Clifton Fleming, Jr. USA [email protected] Flemsaeter NORWAY [email protected] Flessas

UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Fletcher USA [email protected] Fletcher SCOTLAND [email protected] Fletcher UK [email protected] Fletcher UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Fleury-Steiner U.S.A. [email protected] Anthony Flood UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Flores USA [email protected] Fogelklou SWEDEN [email protected] Traldi Fonseca BRAZIL [email protected] De Castro Fontainha FRANCE [email protected] Fontana USA

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[email protected] Fontanez-Torres USA [email protected] H. Foote JAPAN [email protected] E. Forbath USA [email protected] L. Ford CANADA [email protected] A. Ford USA [email protected] R. Ford USA [email protected] Fordham AUSTRALIA [email protected] A. Forell USA [email protected] P. Foreman USA [email protected] Forsberg

SWEDEN [email protected] Fortin UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] A. Foster USA [email protected] Foundation Press UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Fournier CANADA [email protected] Fox UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Frade PORTUGAL [email protected] Fraley USA [email protected] Fralick USA [email protected] G. Francis USA [email protected] P. Francis USA [email protected] Franck USA [email protected] Franczuk POLAND [email protected] Franken THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Frankenthaler

ISRAEL [email protected] M. Frankford USA [email protected] L. Franklin USA [email protected] Steiner Verlag GERMANY www.steiner-verlag.deJennifer Fredette USA [email protected] M Freeman CANADA [email protected] Frerichs GERMANY [email protected] Frey GERMANY [email protected] M. Friedman USA [email protected] Friis SWEDEN [email protected] Frischmann USA [email protected]

François Frisonroche FRANCE [email protected] Frohmann USA [email protected] Frost USA [email protected] Frymer USA [email protected] Fu CHINA [email protected] Fuchs SWITZERLAND [email protected] A. Fudge CANADA [email protected] Fujimoto JAPAN [email protected] Fujita JAPAN [email protected] Fukaya JAPAN [email protected] Fukui JAPAN [email protected] Fukurai USA [email protected] Fuszara POLAND

mfuszara@op. plKatalin Fuzer HUNGARY [email protected] Gabbert GERMANY [email protected] Gable USA [email protected] A. Gabor USA [email protected] Gadowska POLAND [email protected] Gajda USA [email protected] Galanter USA [email protected] T. Gallagher USA [email protected] D Galle USA [email protected] Gallinaro ITALY [email protected] V. Galstyan ARMENIA [email protected] Gandhi INDIA [email protected] Garcia CANADA [email protected] F. Garcia Lozano SPAIN [email protected] Garcia Magalhaes BRAZIL [email protected] M. Garcia Neto BRAZIL [email protected]

María Florencia Garcia Paz SPAIN [email protected] Garcia-Villegas COLOMBIA [email protected] Garfield USA [email protected] Gargarella ARGENTINA [email protected] Garland USA [email protected] Isabel Garrido Gomez SPAIN [email protected] Garrison USA [email protected] Garsten

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SWEDEN [email protected] Garth USA [email protected] Eugenia Gastiazoro ARGENTINA [email protected] Buenbrazo Gatmaytan USA [email protected] Gauri USA [email protected] Gavioli ITALY [email protected] Gawkowska POLAND [email protected] Gehrig SWITZERLAND [email protected] S. Gehring USA [email protected] Geiger GERMANY [email protected] Gelpern USA [email protected] Gelter AUSTRIA [email protected] Genn UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] George UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] R. George USA [email protected] Gephart GERMANY [email protected] Gerlitz GERMANY [email protected] M. Gershon USA [email protected] M. Gershowitz U.S.A. [email protected] Gessner GERMANY [email protected] S. Getzler UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Zeev Geva UK [email protected] Ghassemi GERMANY [email protected] Ghazzal USA [email protected]

Shoaib Ghias USA [email protected] Ghosh USA [email protected] Gianola USA [email protected] L Gibson USA [email protected] Gibson UNITED [email protected] Markus Giebel GERMANY [email protected] Gies UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Giesen AUSTRALIA [email protected] Gilad UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Gilbert UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Gilbert NORTHERN IRELAND [email protected] Gill USA [email protected] Gilles USA [email protected] Gillmer USA [email protected] Ginsburg USA [email protected] J. Girling UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Giron MEXICO [email protected] Giryaeva GERMANY [email protected] Githens USA [email protected] Glanert USA [email protected] Glowacka CANADA [email protected] Godolphin UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Godsil USA [email protected] Goedde USA

[email protected] Goel USA [email protected] Goess GERMANY [email protected] Gokbel TURKEY [email protected] Golan ISRAEL [email protected] A. Goldberg UNITED STATES [email protected] Goldberg USA [email protected] Goldberg-Hiller USA [email protected] Golder UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Goldsmith AUSTRALIA [email protected] Goldstein USA [email protected] Goleria INDIA [email protected] Goluboff USA [email protected] E. Gomez USA [email protected] Gomez USA [email protected] Gomez USA [email protected] Gomez-Mestres FRANCE [email protected] Gong USA [email protected] E. Gongora Mera GERMANY [email protected] Hak Goo PR OF CHINA [email protected] Goodale USA [email protected] Goodall UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] S. Gooding USA [email protected] P. Goodman USA [email protected]

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Philip R. Goodman USA [email protected] Goodwin USA [email protected] Jervis Goold UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Goonesekere SRI LANKA [email protected] Gordoa SPAIN [email protected] GordonUSA [email protected] A. Gotell CANADA [email protected] Gottschalk USA [email protected] Gottwald GERMANY [email protected] C. Gould USA [email protected] Gould FINLAND [email protected] B. Gould USA [email protected] Gould USA [email protected] Graber SWITZERLAND [email protected] K. Grabham UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Graf UNITED STATES [email protected] Graf USA [email protected] Graham AUSTRALIA [email protected] Gran USA [email protected] Granfield USA [email protected] Grant CANADA [email protected] C. Gray CANADA [email protected] Graycar AUSTRALIA [email protected] Grebler

USA [email protected]. Michael Green UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Edward Green USA [email protected] F. Greenberg USA [email protected] Greenfield UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] J. Greenhouse USA [email protected] L. Greer USA [email protected] Grimm GERMANY [email protected] Groenendijk THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Gromnicka POLAND [email protected] Gross ISRAEL [email protected] J. Gross USA [email protected] Gross USA [email protected] R. Gross USA [email protected] Grossman USA [email protected] E. Guardiola-Rivera COLOMBIA [email protected] Guarnieri ITALY [email protected] Gudehus GERMANY [email protected] Guedez UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Guibentif PORTUGAL [email protected]. Mitu Gulati USA [email protected] Gundogdu CANADA [email protected] Guney-Ruebenacker USA [email protected]

sa Gunnarsson SWEDEN [email protected]

Neil A. Gunningham AUSTRALIA [email protected] S. Gustafson USA [email protected] Guth UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Guthrie USA [email protected] D. Guttentag USA [email protected] Guyard-Nedelec FRANCE [email protected] Guzik USA [email protected] Hacker ISRAEL [email protected] Hadad UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Haddad BRAZIL [email protected] Hagan USA [email protected] Hagen CANADA [email protected] Hahm KOREA [email protected] Haines AUSTRALIA [email protected] Hajjar USA [email protected] Halbert USA [email protected] Halewood USA [email protected] I. Hall CANADA [email protected] A. Hall USA [email protected] Halley USA [email protected] Halliday SCOTLAND [email protected] C. Halliday USA [email protected] Halme FINLAND [email protected] Halsey AUSTRALIA

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[email protected] T. Haltom USA [email protected] Hamano JAPAN [email protected] Hamilton SCOTLAND [email protected] Hamlin USA [email protected] A. Hammad USA [email protected] Hammergren USA [email protected] Hammerslev DENMARK [email protected] Hanafin UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] F. Handler USA [email protected] Handmaker THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] A Haney USA [email protected] Hannken-Illjes GERMANY [email protected] P. Hans USA [email protected] Hansen SWEDEN [email protected] A. Hanson USA [email protected] Haraksingh TRINIDAD [email protected] Harbon ISRAEL [email protected] E. Harcourt USA [email protected] Harding UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Harding USA [email protected] Harpalani USA [email protected] B. Harrington USA [email protected] S. Harris USA [email protected] C. Harris

CANADA [email protected] A Harris AUSTRALIA [email protected] J. Harris UNITED STATES [email protected] Harrison USA [email protected] Hart UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] E. Hartnell GERMANY [email protected] Hartog USA [email protected] Hasan INDIA [email protected] Hasegawa JAPAN [email protected] Hasegawa JAPAN [email protected] D. Haskell USA [email protected] M. Hassenstab NORWAY [email protected] Hasson UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Hatcher USA [email protected] Hatti INDIA [email protected] Hatzimihail CYPRUS [email protected] E. Haupt GERMANY [email protected] Havinga THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Hawkins UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Haworth UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Hayden USA [email protected] He PR OF CHINA [email protected] He PR OF CHINA [email protected] Hebenton UNITED KINGDOM [email protected]

Christine Hegel-Cantarella USA [email protected] Sage Heinzelman USA [email protected] Heise USA [email protected] Heising GERMANY [email protected] Heitzmann GERMANY [email protected] Helfer USA [email protected] C. Heller USA [email protected] Hemingway UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] M. Heminway USA [email protected] M Henderson AUSTRALIA [email protected] Henderson USA [email protected] D. Henderson USA [email protected] D. Hendler ARGENTINA [email protected] Hendley USA [email protected] Hendry ITALY [email protected]

Stéphanie Hennette-Vauchez FRANCE [email protected] Henrikson SWEDEN [email protected] Hepple UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Herald UNITED STATES [email protected] Herberg GERMANY [email protected] Herman POLAND [email protected] Herman UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Hermer CANADA [email protected] E Hernandez

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USA [email protected] Hernandez Crespo USA [email protected] A. Hernandez-Lopez USA [email protected] R. Herrera Martin MEXICO [email protected] Herrmann GERMANY [email protected] Herrschaft GERMANY [email protected] Hertogh THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Hervey UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Herwig GERMANY [email protected] Herzberg GERMANY [email protected] Hess GERMANY [email protected] B. Hessick USA [email protected]. Andrew Hessick USA [email protected] A. Hetcher USA [email protected] Heumann USA [email protected] Heyer USA [email protected] Heyvaert UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Heywood SOUTH AFRICA [email protected] Higgenbotham USA [email protected] Hilal WEST BANK [email protected] Hilbink SPAIN [email protected] M. Hilbink USA [email protected] Hildebrand THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Hilliard USA

[email protected] Hillyard UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Hirowatari JAPAN [email protected] F. Hirsch USA [email protected] D. Hockett USA [email protected] Hocking AUSTRALIA [email protected] Hodapp USA [email protected] Hodge AUSTRALIA [email protected] Hoeland GERMANY [email protected] R. Hoffer USA [email protected] A Hoffman USA [email protected] Hoffmann GERMANY [email protected] Hoffmeyer GERMANY [email protected] Hofnung ISRAEL [email protected] Hogeveen CANADA [email protected] Miranda Hohmann UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Holden GERMANY [email protected] Holden GERMANY [email protected] Hollander-Blumoff USA [email protected] Ruth Holmberg USA [email protected] Holtje USA [email protected] Holzer USA [email protected] Holzleithner AUSTRIA [email protected] Holzman-Gazit ISRAEL [email protected] Homewood

UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Soo Hong UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] G. Hook USA [email protected] Hornle GERMANY [email protected] Hornqvist SWEDEN [email protected] Hosser GERMANY [email protected] Hotta JAPAN [email protected] Hough UNITED KINGDOM [email protected]. Tim Howard USA [email protected] Howard-Wagner AUSTRALIA

[email protected] Howe AUSTRALIA [email protected] B. Howe AUSTRALIA [email protected] Angelov Hristov BULGARIA [email protected] Hrzan GERMANY [email protected] Hsieh TAIWAN [email protected] Huang USA [email protected] Huang TAIWAN [email protected] Huang TAIWAN [email protected] Hudson UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Hughes CANADA [email protected] E. Hull USA [email protected] Huls THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Hultin USA [email protected] Humphreys

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UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Huneeus USA [email protected] Hung SCOTLAND [email protected] Hunt USA [email protected] Hunt USA [email protected] Hunt UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Hunter UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] D. Hunter USA [email protected] Hunter UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Hunter USA [email protected] Huppes THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Huppes-Cluysenaer THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Hussain USA [email protected] Hussin USA [email protected] David Hutchinson CANADA [email protected] M. Hutter UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Hyden SWEDEN [email protected] Iafolla CANADA [email protected] Ibbetson UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Ibikoglu TURKEY [email protected] M. Ibrahim USA [email protected] Ichihashi JAPAN [email protected] A. Ifill USA [email protected] Ihua-Maduenyi UNITED KINGDOM [email protected]

Takayuki Ii JAPAN [email protected] Iida JAPAN [email protected] Inclan MEXICO [email protected] C. Infanti USA [email protected] Ingelaere [email protected] Iontcheva Turner USA [email protected] Iqbal PAKISTAN [email protected] Irie JAPAN [email protected] Ishida JAPAN [email protected] Mizan Ismail MALAYSIA [email protected] Miko Iso SWITZERLAND [email protected] Israel FRANCE [email protected] Iturralde UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Ivanova BELARUS [email protected] Iwase JAPAN [email protected] Jackowska POLAND [email protected] D Jackson UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Jacobs CANADA [email protected] Jacobsson SWEDEN [email protected] B. Jacoby USA [email protected] Jaffe USA [email protected] Jahic TURKEY [email protected] B. Jain INDIA [email protected] Jain USA [email protected]

Kathryn A James AUSTRALIA [email protected] James UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Rachelle James UNITED STATES [email protected] M. Jamieson NORTHERN IRELAND [email protected] J. Janger USA [email protected] Cristina Jaramillo COLOMBIA [email protected] Jaramillo CHILE [email protected] Jasso USA [email protected] S. Jatoba BRAZIL [email protected] A. Jeffrey CANADA [email protected] Jeffries USA [email protected] Jenness USA [email protected] S. Jensen USA [email protected] Jensen DENMARK [email protected] Jerabek CZECH REPUBLIC [email protected] Jettinghoff THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Ji JAPAN [email protected] Jimenez COLOMBIA [email protected] Jimeno-Bulnes SPAIN [email protected] Jin AUSTRALIA [email protected] Joerges [email protected] Johansson SWEDEN [email protected] Johansson SWEDEN [email protected] E. Johns AUSTRALIA [email protected]

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Johns Hopkins University Press USA [email protected] Johnson UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Johnson USA [email protected] Johnson CANADA [email protected] Johnson USA [email protected] Johnson UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] S. Johnston USA [email protected] Jones USA [email protected] A. Jones UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] M. Jones USA [email protected] E. Jones USA [email protected] Jones UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Jones USA [email protected] Jonsson SWEDEN [email protected] Jerup Jorgensen DENMARK [email protected] Jost USA [email protected] Jou TAIWAN [email protected] Jovanic SERBIA [email protected] Jovanovic SERBIA [email protected] Joyce REPUBLIC OF IRELAND [email protected] Joyce UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Jungmann THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Kaczmarek POLAND [email protected]

Robert A. Kagan USA [email protected] Kahn USA [email protected] Kajtar HUNGARY [email protected] Kakiuchi JAPAN [email protected] Kalem TURKEY [email protected] Kalula SOUTH AFRICA [email protected] Kaluszynski FRANCE [email protected] Badamasi Kamara SIERRA LEONE [email protected] Kamau KENYA [email protected] KambaleUSA

[email protected] Kamin USA [email protected] Kaminaga JAPAN [email protected] Kaneko JAPAN [email protected] Kanomata JAPAN [email protected] Kapila UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Kaplan SWITZERLAND [email protected] B. Kaplan USA [email protected] Kaplan USA [email protected] Kara TURKEY [email protected] Karakocali TURKEY [email protected] Karpik FRANCE [email protected] Karstedt UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Kashimura JAPAN [email protected] Kassis

PALESTINE [email protected] S. Kassymbekova TAJIKISTAN [email protected] Kastner GERMANY [email protected] Kasturi CANADA [email protected] Katagiri JAPAN [email protected] Katano JAPAN [email protected] E. Katcherian USA [email protected] V. Kaufman-Osborn USA [email protected] Kawai JAPAN [email protected] Kawamura JAPAN [email protected] Kawar USA [email protected] Meta Kay CANADA [email protected] Kaye USA [email protected] Kazemian USA [email protected] (Sandy) JonathanKedar ISRAEL [email protected] Keep SOUTH AFRICA [email protected] Arthur Kell USA [email protected] Keller GERMANY [email protected] Kellogg CANADA [email protected] Mary Anne Kelly PR OF CHINA [email protected] Kelly-Louw SOUTH AFRICA [email protected] Kemmerer GERMANY [email protected] Kendall USA [email protected] Kendall USA

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[email protected] Kende USA [email protected] Kenkishvili GEORGIA [email protected] Kennedy USA [email protected] Kennedy USA [email protected] Kennerknecht GERMANY [email protected] J. Kenney USA [email protected] Kenyon AUSTRALIA [email protected] Michael Philli Kersten GERMANY [email protected] P. Kesan USA [email protected] T. Kessler USA [email protected] Kette GERMANY [email protected] Keyder TURKEY [email protected] Khalfaoui GERMANY [email protected] Khalid NIGERIA [email protected] Khalil PALESTINE [email protected] Kheria UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] M. Kibbey USA [email protected] Kicker AUSTRIA [email protected] J. Kilborn USA [email protected] Kilian GERMANY [email protected] Kilpatrick UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Kilroy AUSTRALIA [email protected] C. Kilwein USA [email protected] Kim

REPUBLIC OF KOREA [email protected] Kim KOREA [email protected] Kim USA [email protected] Kim KOREA [email protected] Kim SOUTH KOREA [email protected] Kim KOREA [email protected] King UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] B. Kingston JAPAN [email protected] Kinnear UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Kinoshita JAPAN [email protected] Kippenberg GERMANY [email protected] Kirchhoff GERMANY [email protected] A. Kirewskie CANADA [email protected] Kirk USA [email protected] R. Kirkland USA [email protected] Kirkpatrick US [email protected] Kitamura JAPAN [email protected] Kivilcim Forsman TURKEY [email protected] F. Kjaer ITALY [email protected] Klaaren SOUTH AFRICA [email protected] Klages GERMANY [email protected] Bernhard Kleba BRAZIL [email protected] Kleiman USA [email protected] Kleinhans UNITED KINGDOM [email protected]

Alice L. Klettner AUSTRALIA [email protected] Klijn THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Kljucar GERMANY [email protected] Kloppel GERMANY [email protected] J. Klug USA [email protected] Knegt THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Knieper FRANCE [email protected] Kniffka GERMANY [email protected] Knoll USA [email protected] Knorr GERMANY [email protected] Kobayashi JAPAN [email protected] H. Koch USA [email protected] Koch GERMANY [email protected] R. Kocher GERMANY [email protected] A. Kociszewski POLAND [email protected] E. Kodek AUSTRIA [email protected] M. Koelling USA [email protected] H. Koenig USA [email protected] Kogacioglu TURKEY [email protected] Kohen ARGENTINA [email protected] Kohne THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] H. Kohne-Hoegen THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Kohte GERMANY [email protected] Kollman SCOTLAND

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[email protected] Kollonay Lehoczky HUNGARY [email protected] D. Kolsky USA [email protected] P. Kommers U.S. [email protected] Kong PR OF CHINA [email protected] Konradi GERMANY [email protected] Koppelman USA [email protected] Korkea-aho FINLAND [email protected] Kornbluh USA [email protected] Kortabarria SPAIN [email protected] Kosfeld SWITZERLAND [email protected] Koshan CANADA [email protected] Kosin GERMANY [email protected] Kotiswaran UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Kotkin USA [email protected] Koukiadaki UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] P Kovalev UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Kozin GERMANY [email protected] Kozuka JAPAN [email protected] Kraiem USA [email protected] M. Krajewska POLAND [email protected] Krasmann GERMANY [email protected] Kreitner ISRAEL [email protected] Kremer GERMANY [email protected]

Tor Krever UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] E. Kringel USA [email protected] K. Krishnan USA [email protected] L. Kristiansen DENMARK [email protected] M. Kritzer USA [email protected] Kruger SOUTH AFRICA [email protected] Krygier AUSTRALIA [email protected] Ku USA [email protected] Kuan USA [email protected] Kubal UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Kubo USA [email protected] Kuboyama JAPAN [email protected] Kuebler GERMANY [email protected] Kuehne GERMANY [email protected] Kuhelj SLOVENIA [email protected] Grace Kuo PR OF CHINA [email protected] Kuo TAIWAN [email protected] Kurban TURKEY [email protected] M. Kurczewski POLAND [email protected] Kurkchiyan UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Kurosawa JAPAN [email protected] Kurumisawa JAPAN [email protected] Kussin GERMANY [email protected] Kuszler USA

[email protected]. Jan Kutylowski GERMANY [email protected] A. Kuyucu USA [email protected] Kwiet AUSTRALIA [email protected] Kyriakakis AUSTRALIA [email protected] Kysar USA [email protected]

Ralf Kölbel GERMANY [email protected] Lach AUSTRALIA [email protected] W. LaChance USA [email protected] Laciak POLAND [email protected]. Aaron Lacy USA [email protected] Laemers THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] LaFree USA [email protected] Laitinen FINLAND [email protected] Laliashvili GERMANY [email protected] Lamble UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Lancaster USA [email protected] M. Landeo USA [email protected] Landsman USA [email protected] M. Langbroek THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Lange UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Langille CANADA [email protected] Marie Lanouette USA [email protected] Lao USA

156 Addresses of Participants

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[email protected] Lardjane FRANCE [email protected] L. Larre CANADA [email protected] Larson USA [email protected] E. Larson USA [email protected] K Larsson SWEDEN [email protected] W Lau UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Lauth GERMANY [email protected] R. Lave USA [email protected] Lavi ISRAEL [email protected] Law USA [email protected] Law & Social Inquiry USA [email protected] Law and Society Association USA [email protected] Lawrence CANADA [email protected] Lazar CANADA [email protected] Lazarus UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Le Blanc CANADA [email protected] B. Le Roux SOUTH AFRICA [email protected] Lea UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Leakey UNITED KINGDOM [email protected]

Götz Lechner GERMANY [email protected] Ledger UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Hee Lee KOREA [email protected] Lee TAIWAN [email protected]

Ching Kwan Lee

[email protected] Lee KOREA [email protected] G. Lee USA [email protected] Lee USA [email protected] Lee KOREA [email protected] Il Lee GERMANY [email protected] Lee TAIWAN [email protected] M. Lee UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Lee PR OF CHINA [email protected] Lee USA [email protected] Leebaw USA [email protected] Leff USA [email protected] Lefranc FRANCE [email protected] Leftoff USA [email protected] Lehmann GERMANY [email protected] Leiboff AUSTRALIA [email protected] J Leighton USA [email protected] E. Leiss GERMANY [email protected] P Lele UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Lelieveldt THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] W. Lembcke GERMANY [email protected] Lenard HUNGARY [email protected] Leng PR OF CHINA [email protected] Leng UNITED STATES

[email protected] Lentz GERMANY [email protected] Leon USA [email protected] Lepinard FRANCE [email protected] D. Lerch GERMANY [email protected] E. Lerman USA [email protected] Lerman USA [email protected] G. Lerman USA [email protected] Lerner ISRAEL [email protected] Leroy FRANCE [email protected] TL Lessa Mattos BRAZIL [email protected] A. Lessard CANADA [email protected] Letamendia [email protected] Levi CANADA [email protected] Levi-Faur ISRAEL [email protected] C Levin USA [email protected] Levin USA [email protected] I. Levine USA [email protected] Levine USA [email protected] Levine USA [email protected] K. Levit USA [email protected] R. Levitsky USA [email protected] Lewis UNITED STATES [email protected] S.C. Lewis USA [email protected] Li PR OF CHINA

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[email protected] Li FINLAND [email protected] Li US [email protected] Licoppe FRANCE [email protected] Lieberman USA [email protected] Lieberwitz USA [email protected] Liebling UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Likhovski ISRAEL [email protected] Likosky USA [email protected] Lima BRAZIL [email protected] Lima Marques BRAZIL [email protected] Limbach GERMANY [email protected] Jen-Guang Lin TAIWAN [email protected] Lin USA [email protected] Lindenthal GERMANY [email protected] Lindgren SWEDEN [email protected] Lippert CANADA [email protected] M. Lipshaw USA [email protected] A. Lista ARGENTINA [email protected] K. Littwin USA [email protected] Liu USA [email protected] Liu TAIWAN [email protected] Liu USA [email protected] Liu USA [email protected] M. Liu

USA [email protected] Lloyd-Bostock UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Lo Giudice ITALY [email protected] J. Lobao BRAZIL [email protected] Lobel USA [email protected] Lodge UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Lodhia USA [email protected] M Loeb USA [email protected] Laetitia Loenen THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Loizidou UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Lokaneeta USA [email protected] E. Long USA [email protected]

Cláudia A. Lopes UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] R. Lopes BRAZIL [email protected] Lopes dos Santos BRAZIL [email protected] Lopez SPAIN [email protected] Lorenzo SPAIN [email protected] Lorite EGYPT [email protected] Ziad Loutfi HUNGARY [email protected] I. Lovell USA [email protected] M. Lucas USA [email protected] Mathilde Lucke GERMANY [email protected] Ludewig SWITZERLAND [email protected] Ludlow AUSTRALIA Karinne.Ludlow@

law.monash.edu.auWolfgang Ludwig-Mayerhofer GERMANY [email protected] Luker AUSTRALIA [email protected] Lum USA [email protected] R. Lupica USA [email protected] Lynch USA [email protected] Lyng USA [email protected] Beth Lyon USA [email protected] Lyons CANADA [email protected]

Mariely López-Santana ITALY [email protected] Macaluso ITALY [email protected] S. MacAmhlaigh ITALY [email protected] Macaulay USA [email protected] J. MacCoun USA [email protected] MacDowell Santos USA [email protected] P Macedo Jr. BRAZIL [email protected]

Ciarán MacGiolla Bhéin IRELAND [email protected] R. Machado BRAZIL [email protected] R. Machado BRAZIL [email protected] A. Machnicka ITALY [email protected] Machura UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Macias USA [email protected] Maciejczyk ITALY [email protected] E. MacIonnrachtaigh IRELAND [email protected]

158 Addresses of Participants

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Kathy Mack AUSTRALIA [email protected] Maclean UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] MacNeil AUSTRALIA [email protected]

Daithí MacSíthigh IRELAND [email protected] Lynee Madeira USA [email protected] Madison USA [email protected] Madlingozi SOUTH AFRICA [email protected] R. Madsen DENMARK [email protected] Maeda JAPAN [email protected] Maggioni ITALY [email protected] N. Magnusson CANADA [email protected] Maguire AUSTRALIA [email protected] Mahajan USA [email protected] Maher IRELAND [email protected] M. Mahler GERMANY [email protected] Mahlmann GERMANY [email protected] Mahoney USA [email protected] Maier GERMANY [email protected] N. Maillard USA [email protected] J. Maiman USA [email protected] Mainenti ITALY [email protected] Maischatz GERMANY

[email protected] Makowski POLAND [email protected] Malagodi

ITALY [email protected] Malatesta ITALY [email protected] A. Malavet USA [email protected] Malhotra INDIA [email protected] Malinska POLAND [email protected] Mallampalli USA [email protected] Malleson UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Paul Malloy USA [email protected] Francis T. Malone USA [email protected] Sifiso Malunga USA [email protected],[email protected] R. Mandel CANADA [email protected] N. Mandel USA [email protected] Maneca-Lima PORTUGAL [email protected] Mangalagiu FRANCE [email protected] Mann

[email protected] J. Mann USA [email protected] Mantouvalou UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] le Marchand FRANCE [email protected] Marchant USA [email protected] Marchetti AUSTRALIA [email protected] Marcus USA [email protected] Marder USA [email protected] Margalit ISRAEL [email protected] Margulies

USA [email protected] Markard GERMANY [email protected] Markel USA [email protected] Markovits USA [email protected] Markovits USA [email protected] Markovits USA [email protected] M. Marks SOUTH AFRICA [email protected] R. Marrus CANADA [email protected] Marsan Raventos ITALY [email protected] Marshall USA [email protected] W. Marshall USA [email protected] Martel USA [email protected] D. Martin USA [email protected] Martin USA [email protected] Martin US [email protected] D. Martin USA [email protected] S. Martins PORTUGAL [email protected] Maruna UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Maslov CANADA [email protected] F. Mason AUSTRALIA [email protected] Mason WALES [email protected] Mason AUSTRALIA [email protected] Massa ITALY [email protected] Masselot NEW ZEALAND [email protected]

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Mark F. Massoud USA [email protected] Masuzawa USA [email protected] Matczak POLAND [email protected] Mather USA [email protected] Matschke GERMANY [email protected] Matsumura JAPAN [email protected] Mattei USA [email protected] A. Matthews USA [email protected] E. Matulewska POLAND [email protected] M Matwyshyn [email protected] Mawani CANADA [email protected] Mayer GERMANY [email protected] Mayerfeld USA [email protected] Mazor GERMANY [email protected] H. McAdams USA [email protected] McAllister UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] G. McAuliffe IRELAND [email protected] J. McBarnet UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] McCallum AUSTRALIA [email protected] W. McCann USA [email protected] McConnachie NORTHERN IRELAND [email protected] McCorkel USA [email protected] McCoy USA [email protected] A. McCoy USA

[email protected] McCulloch AUSTRALIA

[email protected] McDaniels CANADA [email protected] A. McDermont UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] McDougal USA

Kieran McEvoy NORTHERN IRELAND [email protected] G. McFarlane USA [email protected] C. McGinley USA [email protected] E. McGuinness USA [email protected] McIvor UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] M McKenzie USA [email protected] A. McKinley USA [email protected] Jane McMillan CANADA [email protected] McNamee UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] McNeill SCOTLAND [email protected] McQueen AUSTRALIA [email protected] K. Meade USA [email protected] Meddings UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Luiza Fontoura deMederiros BRAZIL [email protected] Medjad FRANCE [email protected] K. Mehra USA [email protected] E. Meidinger USA [email protected] Meierhenrich USA [email protected] Meili USA

[email protected] Meiring UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Meixner FRANCE [email protected] Rezene Mekonnen SOUTH AFRICA [email protected] Melen UKRAINE [email protected] Melendez-Juarbe USA [email protected] Mellema USA [email protected] M. Melly USA [email protected] Soares Melo BRAZIL [email protected] Melossi ITALY [email protected] Melot FRANCE [email protected] Melville UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Mendelski GERMANY [email protected] D. Mendelsohn AUSTRALIA [email protected] Mendilow USA [email protected] Paula G. Meneses PORTUGAL [email protected] Menke GERMANY [email protected] F. Menski UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Meranze U.S.A. [email protected] de AzevedoMercadante BRAZIL [email protected] L. Merlino USA [email protected] Merry USA [email protected] E. Merry USA [email protected] Mertz USA [email protected]

160 Addresses of Participants

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Núbia C. Mesquita BRAZIL [email protected] Meuwese UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Meydani ISRAEL [email protected] Meyer SERBIA [email protected] Meyler USA [email protected] Mezei HUNGARY [email protected] J. Mezey USA [email protected] O. Mhango SOUTH AFRICA [email protected] D. Mica ROMANIA [email protected] H. Michalski CANADA [email protected] Michaud CANADA [email protected] Michel FRANCE [email protected] Midgley SOUTH AFRICA [email protected] Mihai CANADA [email protected] Mihic USA [email protected] Mika USA [email protected] Abdel-Raheem Milhem PALESTINE [email protected] Militzke Verlag e.K. GERMANY www.militzke.deBruce Granville Miller CANADA [email protected] L. Miller USA [email protected] Miller ENGLAND [email protected] C. Miller USA [email protected] K. Miller USA [email protected] Miller

USA [email protected] Milman-Sivan ISRAEL [email protected] Minderhoud THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Minkkinen UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Miragem BRAZIL [email protected] Mirza UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Mischkowski GERMANY [email protected] K Mishra USA [email protected] W. Mitchell USA [email protected] Miyazawa JAPAN [email protected] Mlynarski GERMANY [email protected] Mnisi SOUTH AFRICA [email protected] Moeller CANADA [email protected] Moesch Payot SWITZERLAND [email protected] W. M. Mohamed EGYPT [email protected] Mohammadi USA [email protected] Ranjan Mohanty DENMARK [email protected] Prasad Mohapatra INDIA [email protected] Montana UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] J. Moon CANADA [email protected] Moore CANADA [email protected] M. Moore USA [email protected] Moore UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] J. Mootz USA [email protected]

Sagit Mor ISRAEL [email protected] O. Morag ISRAEL [email protected] Morag-Levine USA [email protected] Morales-Cruz USA [email protected] J. Moran UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Morgan UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] J Morgan USA [email protected] Mori JAPAN [email protected] C. Moriarty USA [email protected] Moriya JAPAN [email protected] Morlok GERMANY [email protected] Morrison USA [email protected] Morrow UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Mosher CANADA [email protected] Moss USA [email protected] Jane Mossman CANADA [email protected] Motha UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Edward Motyka POLAND [email protected] S. Moura BRAZIL [email protected] F. Moura BRAZIL [email protected] Mouralis FRANCE [email protected] Moustafa USA [email protected] C. Mubangizi SOUTH AFRICA [email protected] Mueller GERMANY

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[email protected] H. Mugerwa CANADA [email protected] Mulcahy UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] A. Mulla USA [email protected] Mullally IRELAND [email protected] L. Muller USA [email protected] Muller-Peterson USA [email protected] Juan Munarriz UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Mundlak ISRAEL [email protected] W. Munger USA [email protected] Munn CANADA [email protected] Munoz SPAIN [email protected] Munro UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Murayama JAPAN [email protected] Murdocca CANADA [email protected] A Murn USA [email protected] Murphy UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Murray IRELAND [email protected] B. Murray CANADA [email protected] Murray USA [email protected] J. Murray CANADA [email protected] Murthy USA [email protected] Musalo USA [email protected] Mushkat UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] A. Musick

USA [email protected] Mussawir AUSTRALIA [email protected] A. Muth GERMANY [email protected] Muzio UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Myers USA [email protected] Nacsa HUNGARY [email protected] Nadler USA [email protected] Nagenborg GERMANY [email protected] Naik INDIA [email protected] Nakaami JAPAN [email protected] Nakamura JAPAN [email protected] Nakamura CANADA [email protected] Nalepa USA [email protected] Nambu JAPAN [email protected] Nammour FRANCE [email protected] R. Nash USA [email protected] H. Nasser BRAZIL [email protected] H. Nassmacher GERMANY [email protected] Natsheh PALESTINE [email protected] Nelken ITALY [email protected] Nelken USA [email protected] A. Nelson USA [email protected] L. Nelson USA [email protected] V. Nemytina RUSSIA

[email protected] E. Nesper USA [email protected] Neuber GERMANY [email protected] New USA [email protected] New York University Press USA

[email protected] G Newton [email protected] Newton UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] H. Nguyen USA [email protected] Ni Aolain NORTHERN IRELAND [email protected] Nice USA [email protected] Schweda Nicholson USA [email protected] Nickel GERMANY [email protected] G. Nicola USA [email protected] Beth Nielsen USA [email protected] Lehmann Nielsen DENMARK [email protected] Niemeyer THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Niemi-Kiesilainen FINLAND [email protected] M. Nierobisz CANADA [email protected] Niki JAPAN [email protected] Nimaga GERMANY [email protected] Nishimura JAPAN [email protected] Niu TAIWAN [email protected] Nivelle BELGIUM [email protected] Fernanda B. Nobrega BRAZIL [email protected] P. Nogueira

162 Addresses of Participants

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

GERMANY [email protected] Nolan NORTHERN IRELAND [email protected] Noll SWEDEN [email protected] Verlagsgesellschaft GERMANY www.nomos.deKathleen Noonan USA [email protected] Norrie UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Norton-Hawk USA [email protected] Nottage AUSTRALIA [email protected] Nour BRAZIL [email protected] F. Nourse USA [email protected] Nousiainen FINLAND [email protected] Noveck USA [email protected] Nowak THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Nowenstein Piery THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Nakayiza Nsanja UGANDA [email protected] Nuijten THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] De Garcia Nunes SPAIN [email protected] I. Nurumov REPUBLIC OF KAZAKHS [email protected] Maria Nusdeo BRAZIL [email protected] I. Nwaka NIGERIA [email protected] O. Nzelibe USA [email protected] O’Brien USA [email protected] H. O’Brien ITALY [email protected] O’Brien UNITED KINGDOM mark.o’[email protected]

Ruth O’Brien USA [email protected] O’Leary UNITED KINGDOM M.O’[email protected] O’Malley AUSTRALIA [email protected] O’Sullivan AUSTRALIA [email protected] Obata USA [email protected] T. Odumosu CANADA [email protected] I. Oduware NIGERIA [email protected] Offe GERMANY [email protected] Ogletree USA [email protected] Oguamanam CANADA [email protected] Oguz TURKEY [email protected] Jin Oh KOREA [email protected] Oh USA [email protected] Oh KOREA [email protected] Ohashi JAPAN [email protected] Ohnesorge USA [email protected] Okan TURKEY [email protected] Hiraike Okawara JAPAN [email protected] O. Olatubosun NIGERIA [email protected] Olgiati ITALY [email protected] Candido Ub Oliveira BRAZIL [email protected] Oliver UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] E. Olsen USA [email protected] Alkan Olsson TURKEY

[email protected] Ono JAPAN [email protected] Onorbe SPAIN [email protected] Onwuachi-Willig USA [email protected] M. Oomen THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Ordower USA [email protected] Oros MEXICO [email protected] Orsini CANADA [email protected] Osaka JAPAN [email protected] Osanloo USA [email protected] Osawa JAPAN [email protected] Osborn UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] J. Osiel USA [email protected] Osofsky USA [email protected] J. Ostrom USA [email protected] W. Ostrom USA [email protected] Ostrom USA [email protected] Ostroukh RUSSIA [email protected] Oswell UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Ota US [email protected] Ota JAPAN [email protected] G. Otoiu BELGIUM [email protected] Otsuka JAPAN [email protected] Michiel Otto THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Oude Vrielink-Van H

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THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Oushakine USA [email protected] C. Owen USA [email protected] J. Owens AUSTRALIA [email protected] Owor UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Carlos Oyanedel UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Ozaki JAPAN [email protected] Ozdemir UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Ozer Saritas TURKEY [email protected] L. Pacelle USA [email protected] Padhy USA [email protected] Paerli SWITZERLAND [email protected] Pahl USA [email protected] Pahuja AUSTRALIA [email protected] Paik USA [email protected] Palacios Munoz FRANCE [email protected] Panayotov USA [email protected] Pandit INDIA [email protected] Pandolfi CANADA [email protected] Panke GERMANY [email protected] E Panourgias LUXEMBOURG [email protected] Papoulidis CANADA [email protected] Pappalardo ITALY [email protected] Segaram Paramalingam UNITED KINGDOM [email protected]

Rafael Pardo USA [email protected] Parent CANADA [email protected] Parhisi GERMANY [email protected] Parikh UNITED STATES [email protected] SW Park USA [email protected] Parker AUSTRALIA [email protected] M Parker USA [email protected] B. Parker JAPAN [email protected] Parkes CANADA [email protected] Pasara SPAIN [email protected] A. Paschal USA [email protected] A. Passavant USA [email protected] Pastore CZECH REPUBLIC [email protected] Pate CANADA [email protected] Patel UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Paterson UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Pathak USA [email protected] Paton CANADA [email protected] M. Patterson USA [email protected] Paul USA [email protected] R. Paul USA [email protected] Pavlich CANADA [email protected] Pavlich CANADA [email protected] Pavlovic SERBIA

[email protected] Payne USA [email protected] Paz USA [email protected] Y. Paz GERMANY [email protected] Paz-Fuchs ISRAEL [email protected] AF Pedroso PORTUGAL [email protected] Peek USA [email protected] Peerenboom CHINA [email protected] Peleg ISRAEL [email protected] Pelicand FRANCE [email protected] Pelisse FRANCE [email protected] Pelizzon AUSTRALIA [email protected] Penalver USA [email protected] Pendas USA [email protected] Peng TAIWAN [email protected] Pennington-Cross USA [email protected] Perelman USA [email protected] D. Perera GERMANY [email protected] Perez ISRAEL [email protected] F. Perez Hurtado USA [email protected] Perez-Perdomo VENEZUELA [email protected] Perez-Rios USA [email protected] Perez-Vega USA [email protected] Periales SWITZERLAND

164 Addresses of Participants

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[email protected] J. Peroni USA [email protected] Perrin UNITED KINGDOMBarbara Perry CANADA [email protected] W. Perry USA [email protected] Perry-Kessaris UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] C. Pessoa BRAZIL [email protected] W. Peters UNITED STATES [email protected] R. Petersen UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Petersen DENMARK [email protected] L. Peterson USA [email protected] Peuker GERMANY [email protected] Pham USA [email protected] Phelippeau FRANCE [email protected] UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Philipps CANADA [email protected] Phillipson UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Piacentini SCOTLAND [email protected] Piana ITALY [email protected] Piasecka SWEDEN [email protected] Picciotto UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] B. Picker USA [email protected] Pickering AUSTRALIA [email protected] Piemontese ITALY [email protected]

Steven Pierce [email protected] Pieret BELGIUM [email protected] Pieterman THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Pigou

SOUTH AFRICA [email protected] Pillard USA [email protected] Pils PR OF CHINA [email protected] Pinaire USA [email protected] Pingree USA [email protected] F. Pinilla COLOMBIA [email protected] L. Pinnell USA [email protected] M. Pipkin USA [email protected] Pippart GERMANY [email protected] P. Pires CANADA [email protected] B. Pires PORTUGAL [email protected] Pirie UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Benjamin Pissler GERMANY [email protected] Pitch ITALY [email protected] Platsas IRELAND [email protected] Pleasence UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Plett GERMANY [email protected] Plickert USA [email protected] Podlas USA [email protected] Poier ITALY [email protected] R. Poirier USA

[email protected] A. Polak POLAND [email protected] Pollack CANADA [email protected] Pollock UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Ponce de Leon UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Porter UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] A. Porter USA [email protected] Portillo USA [email protected] J. Porto USA [email protected] Saade Portolan BRAZIL [email protected] Poscher GERMANY [email protected] Poser USA [email protected] B. Potter CANADA [email protected] S. Powell UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Prabhat USA [email protected] Pralle USA [email protected] Prateek INDIA [email protected] Pratt CANADA [email protected] K. Preuss GERMANY [email protected] Priban UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] M. Price USA [email protected] Princeton University Press USA [email protected] Pritchett USA [email protected]. Marie Provine USA [email protected]

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Lisa R. Pruitt USA [email protected] Ptacek USA [email protected] D. Pucci GERMANY [email protected] Pumar SPAIN [email protected] Pupolizio ITALY [email protected] Purusharth INDIA [email protected] P. Puschel BRAZIL [email protected] L. Putnam USA [email protected] Pylkkanen FINLAND [email protected] Qadri UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Qi PR OF CHINA [email protected] Quack GERMANY [email protected] Quadrelli ITALY [email protected] Quadri ARGENTINA [email protected] Quraishi USA [email protected] Raban USA [email protected] Rabinovich ISRAEL [email protected] Rachlinski USA [email protected] Raday ISRAEL [email protected] Radhakrishna INDIA [email protected] Radkau GERMANY [email protected] Rafi GERMANY [email protected] Rahmani-Afoosi AUSTRALIA [email protected] Rahmatian

UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Raiser GERMANY [email protected] Raitt UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Rajagopal USA [email protected] Rajah AUSTRALIA [email protected] Ramanujan INDIA [email protected] Luis Ramirez USA [email protected] Ramji-Nogales USA [email protected] Ramsay UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Ramshaw UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Ramstedt GERMANY [email protected] Randle USA [email protected] Rao USA [email protected] K Rao USA [email protected] Rao USA [email protected] Rapaport USA [email protected] Rappaport USA [email protected] Rasch GERMANY [email protected] Raskolnikov USA [email protected] Rastegar USA [email protected] S. Rathus AUSTRALIA [email protected] Rattner ISRAEL [email protected] Ratton-Sanchez BRAZIL [email protected] Rauschenbach SWITZERLAND

[email protected] S. Ravitch USA [email protected] Ray USA [email protected] Razack CANADA [email protected] Razavi GERMANY [email protected] J. Rebellon USA [email protected] Redding USA [email protected] Reece UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] O. Reerink THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Rees USA [email protected] Rees UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Rehder GERMANY [email protected] Rehn USA [email protected] Rei TAIWAN [email protected] Reich GERMANY [email protected] Reichman USA [email protected] Reid SCOTLAND [email protected] J. Reifner GERMANY [email protected] S. Reinold GERMANY [email protected] EM Rejmer SWEDEN [email protected] Rekosh HUNGARY [email protected] Relis USA [email protected] Renard BELGIUM [email protected] Renner GERMANY [email protected] Repeta

166 Addresses of Participants

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

JAPAN [email protected] Restrepo Amariles SPAIN [email protected] Rethimiotaki GREECE [email protected] Revillard FRANCE [email protected] M. Rhea USA [email protected] Rhoades AUSTRALIA [email protected] Torres de Me Ribeiro BRAZIL [email protected] C. Ribeiro BRAZIL [email protected] Riccio BRAZIL [email protected] T. Richardson USA [email protected] Song Richardson USA [email protected] B. Richland USA [email protected] Riles USA [email protected] Rimalt ISRAEL [email protected] Ristroph USA [email protected] Ritter USA [email protected] Roach Anleu AUSTRALIA [email protected] Roberts USA [email protected] Nigel Roberts USA [email protected] Roberts UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] A. Roberts UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Robertson SCOTLAND [email protected] Robson SCOTLAND [email protected] Rochette CANADA [email protected]

Usha Rodrigues USA [email protected] Rodriguez COLOMBIA [email protected] Rodrigo Rodriguez BRAZIL [email protected] Rodriguez-Garavito COLOMBIA [email protected] A. Rodwin USA [email protected] F. Roehl GERMANY [email protected] Roepstorff GERMANY [email protected] Rogerson CANADA [email protected] Rogowski UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Roithmayr USA [email protected] Rollins USA [email protected] Romero USA [email protected] Ronfani ITALY [email protected] M. Rose USA [email protected] R. Rose USA [email protected] Rose USA [email protected] E. Rosen USA [email protected] Rosen-Zvi ISRAEL [email protected] S. Rosenberg USA [email protected] Rosenberg BRAZIL [email protected] N. Rosenberg USA [email protected] Rosenberg USA [email protected] Rosenblum USA [email protected] A. Rosenbury USA

[email protected] A. Rosentreter GERMANY [email protected] Rosga USA [email protected] Ross USA [email protected] Ross USA [email protected] G. Rossetti ITALY [email protected] Rostain USA [email protected] Rostock GERMANY [email protected] I. Roth FINLAND [email protected] Rothkamm FRANCE [email protected] Rothman USA [email protected] Rothmayr Allison CANADA [email protected] W. Rottenburg GERMANY [email protected] B. Rottman USA [email protected] M. Rountree USA [email protected] Roussel FRANCE [email protected] Rowen USA [email protected] Ruan USA [email protected] L. Rubin USA [email protected]

David Sánchez Rubio SPAIN [email protected] Sheldon Rudes USA [email protected] Rudolf GERMANY [email protected] Rueda USA [email protected] Aurelio Ruediger BRAZIL

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[email protected] Ruether GERMANY [email protected] Benarieh Ruffer USA [email protected] Ruibal MEXICO [email protected] A. Rundle CANADA [email protected] Ruparelia CANADA [email protected] D Rush AUSTRALIA [email protected] W. Russell AUSTRALIA [email protected] Rustad USA [email protected] Ryan IRELAND [email protected] Agostini Saavedra DEUTSCHLAND [email protected] Saban ISRAEL [email protected] Sabbagh FRANCE [email protected] Sack GERMANY [email protected] Sacksofsky GERMANY [email protected] T. Sadek BRAZIL [email protected] Sadka MEXICO [email protected] Saegusa JAPAN [email protected] Paula Saffon COLUMBIA [email protected] Safjan POLAND [email protected] Safrin USA [email protected] Sagasti SPAIN [email protected] Sage USA [email protected] Saguy USA [email protected] Sajo

HUNGARY [email protected] Sakai JAPAN [email protected] Sakrani FRANCE [email protected] E. Salem PALESTINE [email protected] Sales USA [email protected] Salim GERMANY [email protected] C. Salomone USA [email protected] Samaha USA [email protected] A. Sampaio BRAZIL [email protected] Sanchez USA [email protected] Sand DENMARK [email protected] L. Sandefur USA [email protected] Sanders USA [email protected] Sandford CANADA [email protected] B. Sandvik NORWAY [email protected] Sanger USA [email protected] L.O. Sannerholm SWEDEN [email protected] Santamaria COLOMBIA [email protected] Santore USA [email protected] Santos USA [email protected] de Sousa Santos PORTUGAL [email protected] Sarantuya MONGOLIA [email protected] Sarat USA [email protected] Saris CANADA [email protected]

Jeremy J. Sarkin SOUTH AFRICA [email protected] Sass GERMANY [email protected] Sato JAPAN [email protected] Sato JAPAN [email protected] B. Satz USA [email protected] J. Savelsberg USA [email protected] Saxby [email protected] Sayed EGYPT [email protected] A. Scaff USA [email protected] A. Scallen USA [email protected] Scamardella ITALY [email protected] Schadtle GERMANY [email protected] Schaefer ISRAEL [email protected] Schaeller GERMANY [email protected] Schauer USA [email protected] Schauffler USA [email protected] Scheeck BELGIUM [email protected] Scheerer GERMANY [email protected] Scheffer GERMANY [email protected] A. Scheingold USA [email protected] Scheiwe GERMANY [email protected] Scheller GERMANY [email protected] Lane Scheppele USA [email protected] Scherer USA [email protected]

168 Addresses of Participants

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Sabine Schielke GERMANY [email protected] Schlanger USA [email protected] Jo Schleef USA [email protected] H. Schlueter THAILAND [email protected] Schmalbeck USA [email protected] Schmeiser USA [email protected] D. Schmidt USA [email protected] M. Schneider USA [email protected] M. Schneider USA [email protected] L. Schneider USA [email protected] Schneider GERMANY [email protected] Schneiderman USA [email protected] Schoene GERMANY [email protected] Schoenfeld USA [email protected] Schoenholtz USA [email protected] Schofield UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Scholten THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Schor USA [email protected] G Schrag USA [email protected] C. Schragger USA [email protected] Schram THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] T.M. Schreiner THE NEHTERLANDS [email protected] Schrenker GERMANY [email protected] Schucher CANADA

[email protected] Schultz GERMANY [email protected] Schultz USA [email protected] S. Schwartz USA [email protected] D. Schwartz USA [email protected] Schwartz CANADA [email protected] Schweik USA [email protected] Schweppe IRELAND [email protected] Schwidetzky USA [email protected] W. Schwindt CANADA [email protected] JS Schwitters THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] EJ Schwobel UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Scott IRELAND [email protected] N. Scott CANADA [email protected] Scott UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] E. Scott USA [email protected] Scott Bray AUSTRALIA [email protected] Scott-Hayward USA [email protected] Searl CANADA [email protected] Sebba ISRAEL [email protected] Sebok USA [email protected] Seckelmann GERMANY [email protected] Sefiha USA [email protected] Segal USA [email protected] Sehring

GERMANY [email protected] Seifert GERMANY [email protected] Seith USA [email protected] Seitz USA [email protected] Selbin USA [email protected] Semmelmann ITALY [email protected] Sen INDIA [email protected] Sen USA [email protected] Sengayen UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Sengur TURKEY [email protected] Seri USA [email protected] Seron USA [email protected] Seroussi FRANCE [email protected] Sethi INDIA [email protected] Sezgin USA [email protected] Shaffer USA [email protected] Shah [email protected] AH Shah PAKISTAN [email protected] Shahar ISRAEL [email protected] Shakya USA [email protected] Shalhoub-Kevorkian ISRAEL [email protected] Shankar INDIA [email protected] Shannon USA [email protected] Shapiro U.S.A. [email protected]

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Joanna Shapland UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Sharafi USA [email protected] R. Shariff UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] N. Sharpe UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Shastri INDIA [email protected] W. Shavers USA [email protected] Shavit GERMANY [email protected] Shaw UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Silberstein Shdaimah USA [email protected] R. Sheehan AUSTRALIA [email protected] Sheldon UK [email protected] F. Sherman USA [email protected] K. Sherwin USA [email protected] Shmueli USA [email protected] Sibanda SOUTH AFRICA [email protected] Sideri UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Siebeck GERMANY www.mohr-siebeck.deMichael Siebecker USA [email protected] Sieber GERMANY [email protected] Sieder UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Siehr GERMANY [email protected] Siems SCOTLAND [email protected] S. Silbey USA [email protected] Silius FINLAND

[email protected]

Felipe Gonçalves Silva BRAZIL [email protected] Silva Fontoura deBarcellos BRAZIL [email protected] Silverio BRAZIL [email protected] Silverstein USA [email protected] S. Simon USA [email protected] Simon USA [email protected] Simons USA [email protected] Simpson UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] I. Singer USA [email protected] M Singh CANADA [email protected] Sinha USA [email protected] B. Skapska POLAND [email protected] G. Skogan USA [email protected] H. Skolnick USA [email protected] Skordas UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Slater USA [email protected] Slepcevic AUSTRIA [email protected] G. Sloan UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Slotte GERMANY [email protected] Sluiter THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Smigielska POLAND [email protected] Smismans ITALY [email protected] A. Smith CANADA [email protected]

Catherine E. Smith USA [email protected] Smith USA [email protected] Smith USA [email protected] J. Smith CANADA [email protected] C. Smith USA [email protected] S. Smith USA [email protected] Smith CANADA [email protected] R. Smith USA [email protected] Smith USA [email protected] Smithey USA [email protected] I. Smithey USA [email protected] Smulovitz ARGENTINA [email protected] Smyth USA [email protected] Snacken BELGIUM [email protected] Snodgrass Godoy USA [email protected] Soboleva RUSSIA [email protected] Socio-Legal Studies Assoc. UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Soennecken UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Soghomonyan ARMENIA [email protected] Sohoni USA [email protected] Sol THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Solanki CANADA [email protected] Solomon CANADA [email protected] B. Solum USA

170 Addresses of Participants

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

[email protected] Sommer GERMANY [email protected] Sommerlad UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Song CHINA [email protected] Sonneveld THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Sood INDIA [email protected] Sorensen GERMANY [email protected] Soroko CANADA [email protected] Soukup CZECH REPUBLIC [email protected] Southworth USA [email protected]

Máximo E. Sozzo ARGENTINA [email protected] Spade USA [email protected] Spagnoli BELGIUM [email protected] Spamann USA [email protected] Sparks SCOTLAND [email protected] C Sparks USA [email protected] W. Spaulding USA [email protected] Spencer UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Spiesel USA [email protected] Spina ITALY [email protected] Spivak ISRAEL [email protected] J. Squatrito USA [email protected] Squires UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] D. Squires USA [email protected] Stack

USA [email protected] Stadler GERMANY [email protected] Stanford University Press USA [email protected] Starl AUSTRIA [email protected] Starr USA [email protected] Staszak USA [email protected] Steen USA [email protected] Stegmaier THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Steigerwalt USA [email protected] Steiner AUSTRALIA [email protected] W. Stempel USA [email protected] Stendahl SWEDEN [email protected] Stender-Vorwachs GERMANY [email protected] M. Stenson UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Stepniak AUSTRALIA [email protected] Sterett USA [email protected] S. Sterling USA [email protected] Stern USA [email protected] J. Steur HUNGARY [email protected] L. Stewart CANADA [email protected] E. Stiritz USA [email protected] J. Stirton UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Stolzenberg USA [email protected] Stone USA

[email protected] Strach USA [email protected] J. Strandburg USA [email protected] L. Strawson UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Strazzeri ITALY [email protected] Stribopoulos CANADA [email protected] Strobele-Gregor GERMANY [email protected] Stryker USA [email protected] Stubbs AUSTRALIA [email protected] J. Stumpo USA [email protected] Sturm USA [email protected] Stychin UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Subotnik USA [email protected] C. Suchman USA [email protected] Sufian MALAYSIA [email protected],[email protected] Suga JAPAN [email protected] Sugarman UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Chi-hye Suk FRANCE [email protected] Suk USA [email protected] Sulitzeanu-Kenan ISRAEL [email protected] Sullivan AUSTRALIA [email protected] Sullivan USA [email protected] F. Sullivan USA [email protected] Lee Summerfield AUSTRALIA [email protected]

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Devanayaka Sundaram INDIA [email protected] Sunkin ENGLAND [email protected] Susanti INDONESIA [email protected] M. Susman USA [email protected] Sutken TURKEY [email protected] R. Sutton USA [email protected] Sutton UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Sutton UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Svarc UK [email protected] G. Svenson USA [email protected] Svensson SWEDEN [email protected] Svensson SWEDEN [email protected] Swarup INDIA [email protected] Joppert Swensson Junior GERMANY [email protected] Swiffen CANADA [email protected] Sylvester USA [email protected] Szablowski CANADA [email protected] Tin Ngai Sze PR OF CHINA [email protected] H. Szilagyi HUNGARY [email protected] Tadros UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Taekema THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Tai USA [email protected] Takahashi JAPAN [email protected] Z. Tamanaha USA

[email protected] Tamir ISRAEL [email protected] KB Tan SINGAPORE [email protected] Tanaka UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] J. Tanenbaum USA [email protected] H. Tang UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Shin Tang BRAZIL [email protected] Tans THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Tarumoto JAPAN [email protected] Tata SCOTLAND [email protected] C. Tate USA [email protected] Taylor USA [email protected] K. Tehrani GERMANY [email protected] Tehranian USA [email protected] TeicmanRuti G. Teitel USA [email protected] Teles USA [email protected] Teng TAIWAN [email protected] Tepecik TURKEY [email protected] Ter Voert THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Teubner GERMANY [email protected] Thacher USA [email protected] J. Thain USA [email protected] Tham AUSTRALIA [email protected] C. Thaman USA [email protected]

Natalia Theissen GERMANY [email protected] Theroux CANADA [email protected] Thiel GERMANY [email protected] Thiruvengadam SINGAPORE [email protected] Thomas USA [email protected] Thomas USA [email protected] NB Thomas AUSTRALIA [email protected] R. Thomas-Buckle USA [email protected] Thompson UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Thomson UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Thornhill SCOTLAND [email protected] Thornton USA [email protected] P. Thornton IRELAND [email protected] Thornton AUSTRALIA [email protected] Timmer THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] W. Timmons USA [email protected] Tirosh ISRAEL [email protected] Titze GERMANY [email protected] Tofaris UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Toivanen FINLAND [email protected] C. Tolley USA [email protected] Tomasic AUSTRALIA [email protected] L. Tomlins USA [email protected] Tomlinson UNITED KINGDOM

172 Addresses of Participants

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

Stephan Tontrup GERMANY [email protected] Torpey USA [email protected] Torres UNITED STATES [email protected] Tosini ITALY [email protected] Toth HUNGARY [email protected] Tragardh USA [email protected] Trappe GERMANY [email protected] Nell Trautner USA [email protected] Trautsch GERMANY [email protected] Trebilcock CANADA [email protected] Tribe UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Trochev CANADA [email protected]. Trout USA [email protected] M. Trubek USA [email protected] G. Trubek USA [email protected] Tryneski USA [email protected] Tsai USA [email protected] Tsai PR OF CHINA [email protected] Tsche USA [email protected] Tsou TAIWAN [email protected] Tsuchiya JAPAN [email protected] Tucker CANADA [email protected] Tucker USA [email protected] Turanli Yucel TURKEY

[email protected] Turcanu BELGIUM [email protected] Turnbull CANADA [email protected] Turner GERMANY [email protected] Tusseau FRANCE [email protected] A. Tvrdy USA [email protected] Twining UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Tyler USA [email protected] Tzankova-Jaubert FRANCE [email protected] Ubink THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Ulary USA [email protected] Ulasiuk ITALY [email protected] S. Ulen USA [email protected] Umberg GERMANY [email protected] M. Umphrey USA [email protected] S. Underkuffler USA [email protected] University of WisconsinRodrigo Uprimny COLOMBIA [email protected] Uruena FINLAND [email protected] Ushijima JAPAN [email protected] G. Utz USA [email protected] Vaisman USA [email protected] Vaivade LATVIA [email protected] Vakulenko UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Valer Bellota PERU [email protected]

Mariana Valverde CANADA [email protected] Van Aeken BELGIUM [email protected] Van Aerschot FINLAND [email protected] van Calster BELGIUM [email protected] Van Creveld ISRAEL [email protected] A. van de Poll GERMANY [email protected] Van der Borght UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] van der Merwe SOUTH AFRICA [email protected] van der Toorn USA [email protected] J Van der Walt SOUTH AFRICA [email protected] WG Van der Walt SCOTLAND [email protected] A. Van Der Woude THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] O. Serra van Dunem ANGOLA [email protected] M. Van Engeland FRANCE [email protected] van Erp THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] van Gelder THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Van Gundy USA [email protected]

Zay nne van Heesen-Lacle THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Van Horne USA [email protected] Van Houtte BELGIUM [email protected] van Krieken AUSTRALIA [email protected] F. van Manen THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Van Marle SOUTH AFRICA [email protected]

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Ricky Van Oers THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Van Rite USA [email protected] Van Rooij THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Ruth van Roon NEW ZEALAND [email protected] M. van Rossum THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Van Waarden THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] van Woensel NETHERLANDS [email protected] Van Zyl Smit UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] VanderVelde USA [email protected] Vandervort CANADA [email protected] R. Vanoverbeke BELGIUM [email protected] Vassilev UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Vatuk USA [email protected] Vauchez FRANCE [email protected] Vautour USA [email protected] Vecchioli ARGENTINA [email protected] Veitch UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Velasco Maillo SPAIN [email protected] Velicogna ITALY [email protected] R. Venator Santiago USA [email protected] Venter SOUTH AFRICA [email protected] Ventoruzzo ITALY [email protected] Ventsel ESTONIA [email protected]

Kritika Venugopal INDIA [email protected] Jan Veraart THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Verberk THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Verdolini ITALY [email protected] Verein fur Rechts, DGS-Sektion

[email protected] Vergel Tovar FRANCE [email protected] Vermeer THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Veronese BRAZIL [email protected] Vertinsky CANADA [email protected] Sharon Vertinsky USA [email protected] C. Vidal COLOMBIA [email protected] V. Vieira BRAZIL [email protected] Vilaca PORTUGAL [email protected] C. Villazor USA [email protected] H. Villmoare USA [email protected] Vincenti ITALY [email protected] Vines AUSTRALIA [email protected] Vinjamuri UK [email protected] Virmani INDIA [email protected] P. Vitalis HUNGARY [email protected] Vittorio Klostermann GERMANY www.klostermann.deMaddalena Vivona AUSTRIA [email protected] Vander Vlies THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Voeten USA

[email protected] Vogel SINGAPORE [email protected] Vogel USA [email protected] Vogt SWITZERLAND [email protected] Voll SWITZERLAND [email protected] Volpp USA [email protected] von Daniels GERMANY [email protected] von Wahl USA [email protected] Vorlaender GERMANY [email protected] Voruz UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] M. Wachter USA [email protected] Wacquant USA [email protected] Wada JAPAN [email protected] Wada JAPAN [email protected] L. Waerstad NORWAY [email protected] Wai CANADA [email protected] T. Walby CANADA [email protected] Walecki POLAND [email protected] S. Wall UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] W. Waller USA [email protected] Walters UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Wang TAIWAN [email protected] Wang TAIWAN [email protected] Liang Wang PR OF CHINA [email protected] Wang

174 Addresses of Participants

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

TAIWAN [email protected] Wang PR OF CHINA [email protected] Wang UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Ward USA [email protected] J. Warning GERMANY [email protected] Washington USA [email protected] Washington USA [email protected] Washington USA [email protected] L. Waters USA [email protected] D. Watson USA [email protected] L. Watson AUSTRALIA [email protected] Webb UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Weber SOUTH AFRICA [email protected] Weber GERMANY [email protected] Webley UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Webster USA [email protected] Wegener GERMANY [email protected] Wei AUSTRALIA [email protected]. Mark C. Weidemaier USA [email protected] Weiden USA [email protected] Weilenmann SWITZERLAND [email protected] K. Weinberg USA [email protected] Weinrib USA [email protected] M. Weinstein

[email protected]

Carol Weisbrod USA [email protected] Weisman CANADA [email protected] T. Weiss USA [email protected] Weiss GERMANY [email protected] S. Weiss USA [email protected] S. Weiss USA [email protected] Wejnert USA [email protected] Welch UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] M. Wells UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Wennberg SWEDEN [email protected] Wensveen THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] M. Werle GERMANY [email protected]

Jan Werner-Müller

[email protected] Wersig GERMANY [email protected] Werth USA [email protected] Wesson UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] S. Westley USA [email protected] Wheeler UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] M. White USA [email protected] V. White USA [email protected] E. White USA [email protected] White IRELAND [email protected] W Whitecross UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] C. Whitford USA

[email protected] Wiater GERMANY [email protected] Wiatrowski POLAND [email protected] G. Wiber CANADA [email protected] Wiegman THE NETHERLANDS [email protected] Wiener UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Wiener USA [email protected] Wiese GERMANY [email protected] Wilf USA [email protected] B. Wilkins USA [email protected] Will USA [email protected] Willan UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Willekens GERMANY [email protected] Willemez FRANCE [email protected] Willenbacher GERMANY [email protected] Williams UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Williams CANADA [email protected] Williams USA [email protected] Williams AUSTRALIA [email protected] Williams USA [email protected] Williams UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Wilson UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] A. Wilson USA [email protected] Wilson USA [email protected] Wilson

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SOUTH AFRICA [email protected] Wilson UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Winczorek POLAND [email protected] Wing USA [email protected] Kaufman Winn USA [email protected] Winter GERMANY [email protected] L. Winter USA [email protected] Winzer GERMANY [email protected] Witherspoon UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Witte GERMANY [email protected] Wolf GERMANY [email protected] AR Wood AUSTRALIA [email protected] Wood CANADA [email protected] Woolcock

[email protected] Worner GERMANY [email protected] Worsham USA [email protected] Wrase GERMANY [email protected] Chun (Jesse) Wu TAIWAN [email protected] Wu ITALY [email protected] Wu PR OF CHINA [email protected] Wyrzykowski POLAND [email protected] Xu PR OF CHINA [email protected] Xu PR OF CHINA [email protected] Yablon

USA [email protected] A. Yablon USA [email protected] Yaish ISRAEL [email protected] Yajnik INDIA [email protected] Yang USA [email protected] Yang TAIWAN [email protected] Yang REPUBLIC OF KOREA [email protected] Yang PR OF CHINA [email protected] N. Yankah USA [email protected] Yankova BULGARIA [email protected] W. Yarbrough USA [email protected] Yasuda JAPAN [email protected] A. Yelle USA [email protected] Yen TAIWAN [email protected] Yen TAIWAN, R.O.C. [email protected] Yeung CANADA [email protected] Yildirim TURKEY [email protected] Yngvesson USA [email protected] Yoon USA [email protected] Yoshida JAPAN [email protected] Yoshioka JAPAN [email protected] Young AUSTRALIA [email protected] Young CANADA [email protected] Young USA

[email protected] Young UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Young USA [email protected] Young AUSTRALIA [email protected] Young CANADA [email protected] Young USA [email protected] Yovel USA [email protected] Yu USA [email protected] Yu USA [email protected] Yucel TURKEY [email protected] K. Yuille USA [email protected] A. Yuracko USA [email protected] Yurdakul CANADA [email protected] T. Yuruk TURKEY [email protected] Movlievich Yusupov RUSSIA [email protected] Zakariyah UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Zanderin SWEDEN [email protected] Zang USA [email protected] Letizia Zanier ITALY [email protected] Zaring USA [email protected] Zedner UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Zeghal USA [email protected] Zeisberg USA [email protected] Zhang PR OF CHINA [email protected] Zheng

176 Addresses of Participants

Berlin, 2007 Law and Society in the 21st Century

PR OF CHINA [email protected] Zhenmin PR OF CHINA [email protected] S Ziegel CANADA [email protected] A. Ziegert AUSTRALIA [email protected] Ziegleder GERMANY [email protected] Ziller ITALY [email protected] O. Zinn UNITED KINGDOM [email protected] Zippel USA [email protected] Ziv ISRAEL [email protected] Zolkos CANADA [email protected] Zollmann GERMANY [email protected] Zorob PALESTINE [email protected] C. Zumbansen CANADA [email protected] Zurek ITALY [email protected] Zylan USA [email protected]

Addresses of Participants 177

Law and Society in the 21st Century Berlin, 2007

International Sociological Association

RESEARCH COMMITTEE ON SOCIOLOGY OF LAW (RC12)

Established in 1962

Objectives

The Research Committee on Sociology of Law (RCSL) shall act as a free association of scholars

active in sociology of law or socio-legal studies all around the world, whatever their nationality,

opinion and scientific or methodological tendency.

Board 2006-2010

President: Anne Boigeol, France, [email protected]

Vice-Presidents: Benoît Bastard, France; Volkmar Gessner, Germany

Secretary: Luigi Cominelli, Italy, [email protected]

Elected Members: Malgorzata Fuszara, Poland; María Teresa Picontó, Spain; Valerio Pocar, Italy; Peter

Robson, United Kingdom; Ulrike Schultz,Germany

Observers: Masayuki Murayama, Japan; Carlos Lista, Argentina (Oñati Scientific Director); Devanayaka

Sundaram, India; Pierre Guibentif, Portugal

Founding Members: William Evan, Adam Podgòrecki

RCSL Working Groups:

WG Socio-Legal Methodology

Reza Banakar, University of Westminster, UK, [email protected]

WG Gender

Rosemary Hunter, University of Kent, UK, [email protected]

WG Comparative Legal Culture

Marina Kurkchiyan, University of Oxford, UK, [email protected] ; David Nelken:

[email protected]

WG Legal Profession

Emmanuel Lazega, CMH, CNRS, France, [email protected]

WG Human Rights

Stephan Parmentier, Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium, [email protected]

WG Law and Politics

Angélica Cuellar Vázquez, UNAM, México, [email protected]

WG Urban Problems

Antonio Azuela de la Cueva, UNAM, México, [email protected]

WG Social and Legal Systems

Vittorio Olgiati, Universitá di Urbino, Italy, [email protected]

WG Law and Popular Culture

Guy Osborn, University of Westminster, UK, [email protected]

WG European Integration

Harm J.C. Schepel, University of Kent, UK, [email protected]

Membership

See http://rcsl.iscte.pt/rcsl_join.htm for a membership application. Dues: A Countries (i100 Euros); B and C

Countries (i50 Euros) for a 4 year period. ISA membership registration form is available on

https://secured.com/~f3641/formisa.htm

The 2008 Annual Meeting of the

Law and Society Association

will be held jointly with the

Canadian Law and Society Association

May 29 - June 1

Hilton Montréal Bonaventure

Montréal, Québec

Canada

The 2008 Annual Meeting of the

Research Committee on

Sociology of Law

Law and Justice in the Risk Society

will be held

July 9 - 12

Milan and Como

Italy