Constitutional History on Trial – Status Quo, Combined Methods and New Sources

Constitutional History on Trial – Status Quo, Combined Methods and New Sources

Veranstalter
Historisches Kolleg (Prof. Dr. Yvonne Kleinmann)
Ausrichter
Prof. Dr. Yvonne Kleinmann
Veranstaltungsort
Historisches Kolleg, Kaulbachstraße 15
PLZ
80539
Ort
München
Land
Deutschland
Findet statt
In Präsenz
Vom - Bis
26.06.2024 - 28.06.2024
Deadline
31.01.2024
Von
Yvonne Kleinmann, Osteuropäische Geschichte, Martin-Luther-Universität Halle-Wittenberg

In many countries, the rule of law, fundamental rights and the purviews of constitutional institutions are increasingly subject to restrictions, causing heated public debates in some of them. The numerous studies on this topic from the perspectives of legal scholarship and political science usually underrate historical factors or neglect them completely. Contributions from legal and, more narrowly, constitutional history yet lack, though legal history in particular has the potential to examine a

Constitutional History on Trial – Status Quo, Combined Methods and New Sources

In many countries, the rule of law, fundamental rights and the purviews of constitutional institutions are increasingly subject to restrictions, causing heated public debates in some of them. The numerous studies on this topic from the perspectives of legal scholarship and political science usually underrate historical factors or neglect them completely. Contributions from legal and, more narrowly, constitutional history yet lack, though legal history in particular has the potential to examine and critically reflect on the practice as well as the fragility of the rule of law over the longue durée.

The ahistoricism of current debates about the rule of law and related topics has deep roots in the precarious state of legal and constitutional history. The status quo is sobering. Legal history is a core subject at law schools, where, due to their largely practical orientation, it occupies a specialised niche. At the same time, legal history is also a subdiscipline of history, though it is not firmly established in history departments, with only scattered individual representatives. Real discourse on terminology and methods between legal scholars and historians takes place only occasionally. Larger collaborative projects are limited to a few interdisciplinary centres and research institutes.

However, in recent decades, legal history has drawn inspiration from other fields, especially from legal sociology and legal anthropology, new cultural and political history, gender studies, the law and literature movement, global history and the study of transnational phenomena. Numerous questions for an interdisciplinary constitutional history arise, including:

- How can we grant non-state actors proper consideration?
- What methods help to analyse unwritten or uncodified constitutions?
- How do constitutional norms relate to interpretation and practice?
- What patterns of meaning and interpretations of the world do constitutions represent?
- How does normativity relate to narration in constitutional texts?
- What social and religious norms compete with constitutions?
- How do underprivileged groups become subjects of constitutions, and what role do social movements play?
- How can we detach constitutional history from its national framework and develop it into a history of entanglement?
- What neglected sources should we analyse, and what familiar sources require re-reading?

The aim of Constitutional History on Trial is to bring together scholars from various disciplines and discuss methods of constitutional history of modern and pre-modern times. The point of departure is a broad understanding of constitutions as the basic orders underlying communities. All contributions should include both theoretical and empirical aspects.

We invite abstracts in interdisciplinary legal and constitutional history from scholars at any stage of their careers. The conference language is English, though the revised contributions of the workshop will be published in German in the book series of the Historisches Kolleg . Please send your proposal of approximately 400 words to Yvonne Kleinmann and Franziska Nicolay-Fischbach by 31 January 2024. We will contact the selected participants with further details by mid-February 2024.

If necessary, limited funds are available for travel and accommodation.

Contact: Yvonne Kleinmann & Franziska Nicolay-Fischbach.

Kontakt

Yvonne Kleinmann (yvonne.kleinmann@historischeskolleg.de); Franziska Nicolay-Fischbach (franziska.nicolay-fischbach@historischeskolleg.de)

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Land Veranstaltung
Sprach(en) der Veranstaltung
Englisch
Sprache der Ankündigung