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All times NZDTStream 1Stream 2Stream 3Stream 48:00 – 10:00Chair David WilliamsPanel 1 – 8am Colonialism and the Legal Profession: Canada, Pakistan, and Hong KongPhilip Girard, Sida Liu and Summaiya ZaidiPanel 2 – 9am Models of Legal Transfers in the British EmpireDavid Schorr, Ron Harris and Assaf LikhovskiChair Warren SwainMaking Lists and Checking Them Twice: Policing, Law, and Governance in 19th century Colonial India and the British EmpireNellum SohailA Failed Transplant: Jurors and the Jury Trial in India, 1861 – 1975James JaffeResponding to Crises on the Edges of Empire: Comparisons, Connections, and the Workings of Imperial GovernanceAlex MartinboroughDoes a General Theory of Colonial Law Make Sense?Airton SeelanderChair Michael LittlewoodScots Law of Master-Servant: What Can We Learn From Domestic Servants?Alice KrzanichLegal Constructions of an Empire: The Emperor and the Territorial Lords of the Holy Roman Empire in 17th and 18th centuries Middle European JurisprudenceAndreas ThierNormative Orders, Local Law and Imperial Dynamics in Portugese America 17th and 18th centuriesGustavo CabralTwo Doctors of Civil Law and the American Colonial HistoryLukasz KorporowiczBritish Imperialism and Cultural Heritage at the end of XIX CenturyPierangelo Blandino Chair Ned FletcherThe Good Migrant: naturalisation, race and gender in South Africa and Australia in the early 20th centuryRachel BrightThe role of Legislation in Racial Identities within the English Atlantic 1640s – 1700sJustine CollinsHow the implementation of the British legal system provided by the 1763 Royal Proclamation varied between the four new governments?Antoni LahondesImperial FederationEric Wilkinson10:00 – 11:00Keynote: Joshua Getzler “ Six Nations of the Grand River, military feudalism, and the roots of ‘honour of the Crown’.” Chair Katherine Sanders11:00 – 11:30BREAK11:30 – 1:30Chair David WilliamsPanel 1 – 11:30amRoundtable discussion of Empire and the Making of Native Title: Sovereignty, Property and Indigenous PeopleBain Attwood, Miranda Johnson, Ned Fletcher and David WilliamsPanel 2 – 12:30pmRoundtable on Māori oral culture and Aotearoa New Zealand legal institutionsAnna Milne-Tavendale, Laura Kamau and Madi WilliamsChairThe Pepeha as Truth TellingSeonaid Abernethy and Hone SadlerLooking Forward Looking Back: Customary International Law, Human Rights and Indigenous Peoples Shea Esterling“Where is the Aboriginal Act?” Archibald Meston and the emergence of Aboriginal policy in QueenslandPaul Memmott and Jonathan RichardsThe Sun Never Set on Imperialist Ideology and the Representation of ‘Others’: Troubling Trade Marks throughout the British EmpireFady AounChair Henry Kha“What the Boers did Australia can do, and do ten times better”: The Impact of the Boers on Australian Defence PolicyAlexander Lee“No Quarter?: The problematic enforcement of international law in the frontline, 1915 - 1918Dale BlairBeyond the National Frame: Revisiting the Origins of Australian CitizenshipAnne MacduffAllegiance, Protection and the Long History of Belonging – An Historical Solution for Australian Citizens in Al-HawlFelicity Gerry, Sue Milne, Cate Read and Eamonn KellyChair Prue VinesAnalysing British Imposed Property Systems in the Indian Subcontinent: Understanding Transitions in Property RegimesUmar RashidThe Courts and Ellis Bent in New South Wales 1810 – 1815Paula ByrneColonisation through Proclamation: Revisiting a shared history of the British Empire through art and material culture Laura McLean and Pritam Dey1:30 – 2:00BREAK2:00 – 3:00Keynote: Miranda Johnson “Reckoning with a Pacific empire state: Race, nation, citizenship and the idea of New Zealand.” Chair Warren Swain3:00 – 3:30BREAK3:30 – 5:30Chair David WilliamsPanel 1 – 3:30pmScottish Criminal Law in New Zealand and Australia: Social and Cultural PerspectivesValerie Wallace, Tommy Boyd and Libby BowyerPanel 2 – 4:30pmLaw and History in Legal Education and PedagogySarah Wilson, other participants TBCChairMartial Law and War in the New EnglandCameron MooreThe Age of EmergencyChristopher RobertsLegality of 1857 Mutiny Laws of British IndiaAman KumarOne Imperial Gaol, Many Colonial Prisoners: convict transportation to Australia from the coloniesPatricia DownesChair Isabella AlexanderLegal Encounter between Colony and the Metropole: Women’s Question in Nineteenth Century IndiaSubhasri Ghosh“A dissolute woman”: Murder, gender and co-accused status in the case of Margaret CodyCaroline IngramDower’s uneven demise across the dowager’s empire: the second great dispossession in settler coloniesBettina BradburyThe Unification of Australian Divorce Law under the Matrimonial Causes Act 1959Henry KhaChair Bevan MartenRobert FitzRoy and the Collapse of the New Zealand Tax System, 1843 – 1845Michael Littlewood“To Your Marrowbones All”: Loan Transactions and the Law in Nineteenth Century AustraliaKaren Fairweather and Warren SwainThe relied-upon oral agreement: rationalizing an entrenched judicial exception to the Statute of FraudsSonali WalpolaOne Empire, three colonies, common histories but distinct journeys – A comparative study of the evolution of corporate rescue of the US, Australia and IndiaPreeti Nalavadi5:30 – 6:00BREAK6:00 – 7:00Keynote: Dame Sian Elias “Closing Address” Chair David Williams ................
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