Skip to content

CFP – Michigan Journal of Law & Society – Law & Social Movements

04/22/2022 N/A
Call for Papers: Law & Social Movements Accepting Submissions | April 22 – July 22, 2022 ABOUT The Michigan Journal of Law & Society (MJLS) is the nation’s first law-school journal to focus on the intersections of law, history, and the social sciences. MJLS is also the nation’s first law-school journal to incorporate law students,…

Labor of Love: Celebrating Karl Klare’s Vision and Advocacy

04/08/2022 Northeastern Law School & Zoom
Northeastern Law is holding a day-long celebration of Karl Klare, with panels addressing the issues at the heart of Klare’s work: “Transforming Constitutionalism” (on constitutionalism & South Africa, with The Honorable Dennis Davis, Frank Michelman, Jayshree Satpute, & Lucy Williams, with a video presentation by Amaya Paulina Alvez Marín) “Unions & Workers (Solidarity Forever)” (with…

NYU LPE 101 SPEAKER SERIES: Torts with Talha Syed

04/06/2022 Zoom
The NYU Law and Political Economy speaker series will be having its LAST event of the semester on an LPE approach to Torts with a live lecture and Q&A with Professor Talha Syed from UC Berkeley next Wednesday, April 6th at 6 PM. Professor Syed’s research focuses on law and political economy, with applications to…

Healthcare as Freedom, Healthcare as Control

04/05/2022 Zoom and YLS
The final event in our “Political Economy of Care” series, hosted jointly with the Global Justice Health Partnership (GHJP). In the US, access to some kinds of healthcare expanded during a period in the 1960s – 2000s when other social welfare programs were being sharply cut.  But while spending on healthcare and access to health…

Abolition Across Criminal Justice, Immigration, and National Security

04/01/2022 Zoom
Abolition Across Criminal Justice, Immigration, and National Security explores the interconnections between abolitionist movements in the criminal justice, immigration, and national security spaces. The conference’s goal is to contribute to the growing public conversation on abolition by exploring the importance of taking an intersectional approach to the abolitionist project and underscoring the close relationship that…

NYU LPE 101 Speaker Series: Civil Procedure with Luke Norris

03/24/2022 Zoom
The NYU Law and Political Economy 101 Speaker Series will be having its second event of the semester on an LPE approach to Civil Procedure with a live lecture and Q&A with Professor Luke Norris of Richmond University this Thursday, March 24th at 6pm! Professor Norris teaches on civil procedure, labor and employment law, and constitutional law focusing…

LPE Mentoring “Office Hours”

03/04/2022 Zoom
Please Join Us! Law and Political Economy  “Office Hours” Upcoming Mentoring Session Co-sponsored by LPE Project and APPEAL  When:  Friday March 4, 2022. 4:00 – 5:00pm ET, (UTC-5) via zoom (link will be provided to accepted registrants) Registration & Deadline:  Sign up HERE by March 1, 2022. Space is limited.   Who: We welcome new & aspiring scholars, graduate and professional…

Neoliberalism & Healthcare

03/03/2022 Zoom (& at YLS)
The fourth event in our “Political Economy of Care” series, hosted jointly with the Global Justice Health Partnership (GHJP). Decades of austerity and market-based solutions have delivered us a rapaciously profit-driven health care system and weak systems for community and public health, as well as social welfare and labor and community power. 27.5 million people…

ANU Law Conference: Law & Inequality

02/16/2022 In-person & on Zoom
A major public law conference will be held virtually & at the ANU College of Law in Canberra on 16-18 February 2022. Growing inequality is a defining challenge of our times, domestically and globally. Yet the role of inequality in social, political and economic life is often muted (sometimes, invisible) in much public law scholarship. Notably, public law’s foundational concepts were forged in a social world where the inevitability of inequality was often taken for granted. The stuttering processes of democratisation have rendered that assumption untenable.

The LPE Society at Berkeley Presents: Commodified Justice & American Penal Form

02/14/2022 Room 115
Monday, February 14th, 2022, 12:50-2:00 PM, Room 115 Join LPE and Daniel Epstein (UChicago Political Science) for a discussion of his paper recently published in The Journal of Law & Political Economy. The article analyzes American penal law, ideology, and culture through the lens of Marxist theories of commodification and commodity fetishism, and concludes by arguing that commodified justice can perhaps be…

Health, Movements, and Power-Building

02/01/2022 Zoom
Healthcare is an extraordinary complex bureaucracy, and in the US enormous authority is given to healthcare providers and professionals. What does that mean for community mobilization around health? Can health serve as a site of organizing and social justice work? Are there particular ways of organizing around health that do – and don’t – build…

Keywords: CLS & LPE on ‘Political Economy’ and ‘Indeterminacy’

01/21/2022 Zoom
This event brought together participants in the Critical Legal Studies (CLS) and Law and Political Economy (LPE) movements to discuss their approaches to the concepts of “political economy” and “indeterminacy.” The panelists included Libby Adler, Amy Kapczynski, Duncan Kennedy, Karl Klare, Akbar Rasulov, and Talha Syed, and the panel will be moderated by Aziza Ahmed.…

LPE Mentoring “Office Hours”

01/21/2022 Zoom
Please Join Us!  When: January 21, 2022, 4:00-5:00p.m. ET (UTC-4) via zoom (link will be provided to accepted registrants) Who: We welcome new & aspiring scholars, graduate and professional students, and others interested in careers in Law and Political Economy to join us for this opportunity to talk in small groups with faculty about academic interests and…

CFP – Harvard Law Digital Symposium On COVID-19, Work, and Health

01/21/2022 Harvard Law School
Call for Papers Background Last month, in light of the Omicron wave sweeping the U.S. at alarming rates, the CDC changed its guidance on isolation for individuals infected with SARS-CoV-2. Instead of recommending 10 days of isolation, the period was shortened to 5, with no requirement for a negative test to return to the workplace.…