McGill University



ProgrammeThis conference has been accredited by the Barreau du Québec for a total of 10.25 hours (Block 1: 2h35; Block 2: 2h35; Block 3: 2h30; Block 4: 2h35) of Continuing Legal Education. Accreditation no. 10055461.Day 1: Friday, 28 September 2012Friday morning block08:30Registration and coffee09:00-09:10Mot de bienvenueL. Smith09:10-10:00Plenary: Back to the FutureE. WeinribS. Smith: président10:00-10:25Break10:25-12:10Panel: The Place of the Law Faculty in the University of the FutureS. Toope: Thinking, Doing, Being: What Do We Mean by ‘Practicing’ Law?S. Van Praagh: Teaching Law: “Historian and Prophet All in One”H. Dagan: Law as an Academic DisciplineM. Graziadei: commentatorM. Moran: présidente12:10-13:25LunchFriday afternoon block13:25-15:10Parallel panels 11A Transnational law of commercial contracts1B Juridification of CSR and the institutionalization of human rights responsibilities of the business sector1C Mixity and hybridity in the classroom and the courtroom15:10-15:35Break15:35-16:40Round table; rapporteurs; questions16:40-17:30Plenary: Market Totalitarianism: Thinking Through Legal TechniqueA. Riles: speakerR. Provost: présidentParallel panels 1, Friday afternoonCodePanel titleSpeakers1ATransnational law of commercial contractsG. Saumier: The Designation of Non-State Law as Lex Contractus in International Dispute ResolutionR. Wai: Already Transnational Private LawR. Michaels: Rethinking the UNIDROIT Principles of International Commercial ContractsG. Bermann: commentatorF. Gélinas: président1BJuridification of CSR and the institutionalization of human rights responsibilities of the business sectorK. Buhmann: Applying discourse analysis to the development of the ‘UN Framework’: Prospects for legal theory and teaching law-making processesC. Ryngaert: Exploring the potential of transnational private regulation in the field of business and human rightsM. Footer: Locating the nexus of human rights and CSR in informal international law and policy-making: the challenge of complex transnational regulating and governanceR. Janda: président1CMixity and hybridity in the classroom and the courtroomM. Bailey: One Family Law?S. Donlan: Back to the Future? Stateless Law, the State of the Law Schools and Comparative Legal HistoryR. Jukier: The Impact of Stateless Law on Legal PedagogyL. Langevin: Civil Liability : Getting out of Law and Getting out of Civil LawM. Devinat: présidentDay 2: Saturday 29 September 2012Saturday morning block08:45-9:55Parallel panels 22A Making Room for the State in Legal Pluralism: The Future of a Paradigm?2B The Production of Stateless Law?9:55-10:20Break10:20-12:00Parallel panels 33A En-Acting Stateless Law: Teaching, Learning, Performing beyond the State3B (Re)Charting the State: Borders, Rights and Governance3C Rethinking Law and Economics in the Wake of the Global Financial Crisis12:00-13:15LunchSaturday afternoon block13:15-15:00Panel: The future of law’s relationship with other disciplinesM. Bódig: Doctrinal Knowledge, Legal Doctrinal Scholarship and Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Law - Reassessing the Realist Legacy in the Age of GlobalizationM. Cumyn: La structure d’un ordre juridique sans ?tatL. Assier-Andrieu: Un inceste fécond?: la relation du droit et des sciences socialesN. Kasirer: commentatorP. Zumbansen: président15:00-15:20Break15:20-16:10Plenary: Against Legal PluralismJ. Gardner: speaker?N. Hazan: président?16:10-17:10Round table, rapporteurs, questionsH. Dedek: président17:10-17:30Mot de synthèseD. JutrasEVENINGCONFERENCE DINNER - SOUPER DE LA CONF?RENCEOptional / optionelParallel panels 2 & 3, Saturday morning2AMaking Room for the State in Legal Pluralism: The Future of a Paradigm?F. Makela: A Conceptual Vocabulary for Discussing Internormative ApperceptionM. St.-Hilaire: L’étude de la pluralité juridique hors le ?pluralisme juridique ? : L’avenir de la discipline ?D. McKee: Legal Pluralism and Globalization’s Background RulesH. Kong: président2BThe Production of Stateless LawJ. d’Aspremont/L. van den Herik: The pluralization of the modes of production and dissemination of knowledge about (international) lawJ. Ellis: Interdisciplinarity and law’s autonomyR. Buchanan: présidente3AEn-Acting Stateless Law: Teaching, Learning, Performing beyond the StateG. Painter: Struggles towards a Non-State JusticeM. Antaki: Teaching Stateless LawV. Forray: ?? Qu’est ce qu’une “faculté de droit”?? – De la philosophie au droit??F. Zenati-Castaing: ?Non ratione imperii, sed imperio rationis?M.-C. Ricgaud: présidente3B(Re)Charting the State: Borders, Rights and GovernanceA. Ahmed: The Emergence of Identity Politics in International Law and DevelopmentE. Arbel: Bordering the Nation: Examining Canada’s “Multiple Borders Strategy”O. Aronson: Border Disputes: Negotiating the Boundaries of State Power under Jurisdictional PluralismU. Khan: You’ve been a very bad boy: Legal & Quasi-Legal Social Control Strategies of Sex Trade ClientsH. Shamir: présidente3CRethinking Law and Economics in the Wake of the Global Financial CrisisD. Driesen: The Economic Dynamics of Law:? An IntroductionR. Hockett: Retrieving Keynes:? A Proposal for Systemic Risk ReductionJ. Hackney: A History of Corporate Finance Theory, Economic Dynamics, and the Financial CrisisA. Bjorklund, présidente ................
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