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::  PROGRAM  ::
Princeton, New Jersey  ::  Woodrow Wilson School
October 19 - 21, 2000
 



Friday, Session 1A: 8:45am-10:15am

Criminal Law in Italy, Ancient and Medieval

Chair: Bruce Frier, Department of Classics
University of Michigan

Paper 1: "When Did the Romans Invent Homicide?"

Andrew Riggsby, Department of History
University of Texas

Paper 2: "Criminal Law in Medieval Bologna: A Lasting Pattern"

Sarah Blanshei
Agnes Scott College

Comment: Laura Stern, Department of History
University of North Texas

Friday, Session 3A: 2:00pm-3:30pm

Before and Beside the Common Law

Chair: Cynthia Neville, Department of History
Dalhousie University

Paper 1: "A Common Law Mentality in Anglo-Saxon England"

Bruce O'Brien, Department of History & American Studies
Mary Washington College

Paper 2: "Law as Theatre in Early Medieval Ireland"

Robin Stacey, Department of History
University of Washington

Paper 3:"Was Norman Law Common Law?"

Emily Z. Tabuteau, Department of History
Michigan State University

Comment: Chair

Saturday, Session 2A: 10:30am-noon

Confidentiality and the Canon Law

Chair: Charles Donahue
Harvard Law School

Paper 1: "Keeping the Client's Secrets: An Ethical Obligation of Medieval Advocates"

James A. Brundage, Department of History
University of Kansas

Paper 2: "The Privacy of Inward Spiritual Experience: The Case of Joan of Arc in the Nullification Trial, 1455-1456"

Blair D. Newcomb
(University of Richmond)

Comment: Robert C. Figueira, Department of History
Lander University

Saturday, Session 3A: 1:15pm-2:45pm

Truth, Justice, and the Carolingian Way:
Courts and
the Articulation of Power in Early Medieval Europe

Chair: Thomas Francis Head, Department of History
Hunter College

Paper 1: ""Why Go to a Court? Self-interest and the Courts in Early Carolingian Bavaria"

Warren Brown, Division of Humanities and Social Sciences
California Institute of Technology

Paper 2: "What Was Supposed to be True in a Carolingian Oath?"

Geoffrey Koziol, Department of History
University of California, Berkeley

Comment: Adam J. Kosto, Department of History
Columbia University
 

Friday, Session 1B: 8:45am-10:15am

Land Expropriation and Proof of Possession

Chair: Steven Wilf
University of Connecticut Law School

Paper 1: "Translating Property: Mexican Land Grants and the Contest over Land in the American West"

Maria Montoya, Department of History
University of Michigan

Paper 2:"Land Expropriation in Northern Mexico, 1856-1910"

Fredrich Katz, Department of History
University of Chicago

Paper 3: "The Transformation of Legal Geography in an Ethnocentric State: The Making of the Israeli Land Regime, 1948-1970"

Alexandre (Sandy) Kedar, Faculty of Law
Haifa University

Comment: Carol Rose
Yale Law School

Gregory S. Alexander
Cornell Law School
 

Friday, Session 4B: 3:45pm-5:15pm

The Common Law in the British Empire

Chair: Martin J. Wiener, Department of History
Rice University

Paper 1: "`A Moral Conquest More Striking': Law, Custom and Codification in Mid-Nineteeth Century British India"

Sandra M. den Otter, Department of History
Queen's University

Paper 2: "Ruling Strangers: Common Law and the Development of Colonial Criminal Justice in the British Mediterranean"

Thomas W. Gallant, Department of History
University of Florida

Paper 3: "Law and Sexuality in the British Empire"

Phillippa Levine, Department of History
University of Southern California

Comment: Peter Karsten, Department of History
University of Pittsburgh

Saturday, Session 3B: 1:15pm-2:45pm

Historical Perspectives on the Death Penalty--England and America

Chair: Thomas A. Green
University of Michigan Law School
 

Paper 1: "Making the `Bloody Code': Forgery Legislation in Eighteenth- Century England"

Randall McGowen, Department of History
University of Oregon

Paper 2: "Origins and Consequences of the Electric Chair and the Gas Chamber"

Stuart Banner
Washington University School of Law
 

Comment: James Oldham
Georgetown University Law Center
 

Michael Meranze, Deparment of History
University of California, San Diego

Saturday, Session 2B: 10:30am-noon  

Mind in the Dock: Responsibility in Nineteenth-Century English Law

Chair: Susanna Blumenthal
University of Michigan Law School

Paper 1: "Crime and Culpability: Victorian Approaches to Criminal Agency"

Joel Eigen, Department of Sociology
Franklin & Marshall College

Paper 2: "Making Medicine Legal: Credibility and Display in the Nineteenth-Century English Courtroom"

John Carson, Department of History
University of Michigan

Comment: Dana Rabin
(University of Illinois)

Allyson May
(Independent Scholar)

Saturday, Session 4B: 3:00pm-4:30pm

Crime, Violence and the Law in England

Chair: David Sugarman, Department of Law
Lancaster University

Paper 1: "One Strike and You're Out: The Impact of the Black Act on Armed Crime in England"

Joyce Malcolm, Department of History
Bentley College

Paper 2: "The Shadow of the Gallows: Murder, the Death Penalty, and the Long Road to Abolition in Post-War England, 1945-65"

Victor Bailey
(University of Kansas)

Comment: Greg Smith, Centre of Criminology
University of Toronto

David Lieberman
University of California, Berkeley, School of Law

Saturday, Session 3D: 1:15pm-2:45pm

The Bill of Rights and the Uses of History

Chair: Sandra F. VanBurkleo, Department of History
Wayne State University

Paper 1: "The Confounding of Natural Rights and the American Bill of Rights"

Donald Lutz, Department of Political Science
University of Houston

Paper 2: ""Law Professors Doing History and History Professors Doing Law"

Akil Amar
Yale Law School

Comment: Michael Les Benedict, Department of History
Ohio State University

Kermit Hall
North Carolina State University

Friday, Session 4D: 3:45pm-5:15pm

The Genealogy of Inequality

Chair: Stanley N. Katz, Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs
Princeton University

Paper 1: "The Long Lingering Shadow: Law, Liberalism, and Cultures of Racial Hierarchy and Identity in the Americas"

Robert Cottrol
George Washington Univ. Law School

Paper 2: "Civil Rights, Progress Narratives and the Production of `Good Blacks' in the Immediate Post-Bellum South"

Katherine Franke
Fordham University Law School

Paper 3: "The Asymmetrical Obligations of Citizenship"

Linda K. Kerber, Department of History
University of Iowa

Comment: Reva Siegel
Yale Law School

Friday, Session 1D: 8:45am-10:15am

The Constitutional Significance of American Expansion

Chair: Alex Aleinikoff
Georgetown University Law Center

Paper 1: "Getting from 11 to 50 (plus Puerto Rico): Integrating American Expansionism into the Canon of Constitutional History"

Sanford Levinson
University of Texas Law School

Paper 2: "Making the Same Mistake Twice: The Doctrine of Territorial Incorporation as a Constitutional Theory of Secession"

Christina Burnett
(University of Oklahoma College of Law)

Comment: Melvin Urofsky, Center for Public Policy
Virginia Commonwealth University

Friday, Session 2D: 10:30am-noon

Karl Llewellyn Reconsidered

Chair: N.E.H. Hull, Rutgers-Camden Law school

Paper 1: "Karl Llewellyn on Family Law"

Hendrik Hartog, Department of History
Princeton University

Paper 2:" "Karl Llewellyn on Constitutional Law"

John Harrison
University of Virginia Law School

Comment: Mary Anne Case
University of Chicago Law School

John Henry Schlegel
SUNY Buffalo Law School

Saturday, Session 1C: 8:45am-10:15am

After the New Deal:
Liberal Lawyers, Labor and the State

Chair: Victoria Saker Woeste
American Bar Foundation

Paper 1: "The Ideal and the Actual in the State: Willard Hurst at the Bureau of Economic Warfare"

Daniel R. Ernst
Georgetown University Law Center

Paper 2: "Joseph L. Rauh, Jr.: The Old New Dealer and the Union Democracy Movement"

Michael E. Parrish, Department of History
University of California, San Diego

Comment: Nelson Lichtenstein, Department of History

University of Virginia
Randall Hall

Katherine Stone
Cornell Law School
 

Friday, Session 2C: 10:30am-noon

Law, Religion, and Gendered Systems of Social Authority:
Case Studies from Colonial and Antebellum America

Chair: Cornelia Dayton, Department of History
University of Connecticut

Paper 1: "Dangerous Conversations: Blasphemy in Seventeenth-Century Massachusetts"

Kristin Olbertson, Department of History
University of Michigan

Paper 2: "An Informal Court of Public Opinion: Gendered Justice in Antebellum South Carolina"

Elizabeth Dale, Department of History
University of Florida

Comment: Bruce Mann
University of Pennsylvania Law School

Sharon Block, Department of History
University of California, Irvine
 

Saturday, Session 1D: 8:45am-10:15am

Natural Law Thought in British North America

Chair: Philip Hamburger
University of Chicago Law School
 

Paper 1: "Conscience and Law in the Middle Colonies"

Greg Roeber, Department of History
Pennsylvania State University

Paper 2: "Thomas Jefferson and the Natural Law Tradition"

David Konig, History Department
Washington University

Paper 3: "The Influence of Natural Law on Early America Political and Legal Culture"

Craig Yirush
(Johns Hopkins University)

Comment: Anthony Pagden, Department of History
Johns Hopkins University
 

Friday, Session 4A: 3:45pm-5:15pm

The Economic Analysis of Legal History

Chair: Geoffrey P. Miller
New York University Law School

Paper 1: "Drifting Apart? Legal History, Economic History, Law & Economic Analysis"

Ron Harris, Faculty of Law
Tel Aviv University

Paper 2: "The Selection of Thirteenth-Century Criminal Disputes for Litigation"

Daniel Klerman
University of Southern California Law School

Paper 3: ""The Bondsman's Burden"

Jenny Wahl, Department of Economics
Carleton College

Comment: William W. Fisher, III
Harvard Law School

Friday, Session 2B: 10:30am-noon

Canada and Australia:
Sister Colonies with (Somewhat)
Divergent Legal Histories

Chair: Ian Holloway, Faculty of Law
University of Western Ontario

Paper 1: "Storied Executions: The Last Men Executed in Australia and Canada"

Carolyn Strange, Centre of Criminology
University of Toronto

Paper 2: "Law for the Beaver, Law for the Kangaroo: Inscribing Britishness in Canada and Australia"

W. Wesley Pue
University of British Columbia School of Law

Paper 3: "Women's Legal History in Canada and Australia: A Case for Comparison"

Constance Backhouse
University of Ottawa School of Law

Comment: CHAIR

Friday, Session 3B: 2:00pm-3:30pm

Law and Society in Imperial Russia

Chair: William G. Wagner, Department of History
Williams College

Paper 1: "The Elaboration of Rules of Practice and the Professionalization Project: Lawyers in Late Imperial Russia"

Susan Zayer Rupp, Department of History
Wake Forest University

Paper 2: "How Much Crime is Enough? Criminology in Late Imperial Russia"

Z. Ronald Bialkowski
(University of California, Berkeley)

Paper 3: "The Response of Russian Society to the Basic Principles of 1862: The Zamechaniia of 1862 and Public Opinion"

Cheri C. Wilson, Department of History
Loyola College

Comment: CHAIR

Saturday, Session 1B: 8:45am-10:15am

Learning About Culture Through Law in the South Atlantic

Chair: Lawrence Rosen, Department of Anthropology
Princeton University

Paper 1: "Republicanism Through Law: Juan Bautista Alberdi and Argentina"

Jeremy Adelman, Department of History
Princeton University

Paper 2: "Barbarous Raiding and Civilized Ransom: Cultural Lessons from Captive Rescue in the South Atlantic"

Lauren Benton, Federated History Department
NJIT and Rutgers University--Newark

Paper 3: Which Law and Culture?: Christian Colonialism and Afromestizo Cultural in Colonial Mexico

Herman L. Bennett, Department of History
Rutgers University

Comment: CHAIR

Saturday, Session 4A: 3:00pm-4:30pm

Roundtable on Legal Formalism:
Comparative Historical Perspectives

Chair: Stanley L. Paulson
Washington University School of Law

Discussants: Christoph Schonberger
University of Frankfurt

Patrick J. Kelley
Southern Illinois University School of Law

Alexander Somek
University of Vienna

CHAIR

Saturday, Session 1A: 8:45am-10:15am

Law, Learning, and Judgment in Early Stuart England:
Reading Measure for Measure

Chair: Allen D. Boyer
New York Stock Exchange, Enforcements Division

Paper 1: "Law and Equity in Measure for Measure and in the Debates of James I, his Parliaments, and Edward Coke"

Louise Halper
Washington and Lee University School of Law

Paper 2: "Family Law as Prenuptial Negotiation"

Catherine McCauliff
Seton Hall University School of Law

Paper 3: "Measured Judgments? Histories, Pedagogies, and the Possibility of Equity"

Penny Pether
(Washington College of Law, American University)

Comment: David Millon
Washington Lee School of Law

Saturday, Session Early Morning A: 7:30am-8:30am

Ideas and Institutions in Israeli Law

Chair: Eben Moglen
Columbia University School of Law

Paper 1: "Awakening a Sleeping Beauty: 52 Years of Israeli Constitutional Revolution"

Shulamit Almog and Ariel L. Bendor, Faculty of Law
Haifa University

Paper 2: "Debt Forgiveness in the Jewish Tradition and Modern Day Israel"

Rafi Efrat, Department of Business Law
California State University, Northridge

Comment: CHAIR  

Friday, Session Early Morning B: 7:30am-8:30am

Legal Cultures of Colonialism and Nationalism

Chair: Brian Owensby, Department of History
University of Virginia

Paper 1: ""Colonial Rule in India and the Imperial Discourse of Justice: The Prosecutorial Speeches of Edmund Burke in the Impeachment Trial of Warren Hastings"

Mithi Mukherjee
(University of Chicago)

Paper 2: "Andres Bello's Footnotes: The Formation of the Nation-State and International Law in Nineteenth-Century Latin America"

Liliana Obregon
(Harvard Law School)

Comment: CHAIR

Friday, Session Early Morning A: 7:30am-8:30am

Family Law in the Ancient World

Chair: Edward Harris, Department of Classics
Brooklyn College

Paper 1: ""The Enslavement of Freeborn Children in the Roman Empire"

Judith Evans Grubbs, Department of Classical Studies
Sweet Briar College

Paper 2: "Paternal Control of the Family in the Roman Empire"

Eva Cantarella
New York University Law School

Comment: CHAIR

Friday, Session 4C: 3:45pm-5:15pm

Intellectual Biography and Intellectual History:
The Example of Gilded Age Legal Thought

Chair: William P. LaPiana
New York Law School

Paper 1: "The Three Tenors of Classical Legal Thought: Joel Bishop, Francis Wharton, and John Chipman Gray"

Stephen A. Siegel
DePaul University College of Law

Paper 2: "What the Separation of Church and State Misses: Justice Brewer and the Bible"

Linda Przybyszewski, Department of History
University of Cincinnati

Paper 3: "James Coolidge Carter and Mugwump Jurisprudence"

Lewis A. Grossman
Washington College of Law, American University

Comment: Thomas C. Grey
Stanford Law School

Saturday, Session 2D: 10:30am-noon

Money, Contract, and Capitalism in Early America

Chair: Harry N. Scheiber
University of California, Berkeley, School of Law

Paper 1: "Currency Policies and Legal Development in Colonial New England"

Claire Priest
(Yale University)

Paper 2: "Constituting Capitalism: From Political Economy to the Law of the Market"

Christine Desan
Harvard Law School

Comment: Christopher L. Tomlins
American Bar Foundation

Sean Wilentz, Department of History
Princeton University
 

Saturday, Session 4D: 3:00pm-4:30pm

Constructing Postwar Rights in World War II America

Chair: Mary L. Dudziak
University of Southern California Law School

Paper 1: "Equal Pay for Democracy: Race, Gender, and Rights in World War II"

Eileen Boris
University of Virginia

Paper 2: "The Four Freedoms, the Atlantic Charter, and the Reinvigoration of U.S. Rights Discourse, 1941-1946"

Elizabeth Kopelman Borgwardt
(Stanford University)

Paper 3: "The Making of Post-War Civil Rights: The Thirteenth Amendment, Racial Equality, and Labor Rights in World War II"

Risa Goluboff
(Princeton University)

Comment: William E. Forbath
University of Texas Law School

Friday, Session 3C: 2:00pm-3:30pm

Marriage, Courtship and the State in Nineteenth-Century America

Chair: J. Herbie DiFonzo
Hofstra University Law School

Paper 1: "Divorced or Dismissed: Legal Remedies to Marital Violence in Antebellum Boston"

Eliza Clark, Program in the History of American Civilization
Harvard University

Paper 2: "Justifiable Provocation: Violence Against Women in Essex County, New York, 1799-1860"

Sean T. Moore
(University of Connecticut)

Paper 3: "Husbands, Wives, and the Law in the Chinese-American Community in the Late-Nineteenth Century"

Todd M. Stevens
(Princeton University)

Paper 4: "Law, Love, and Courtship in Nineteenth-Century America: The Case of Pollard v. Breckinridge (1894)"

Melissa J. Ganz
(Yale University)

Comment: THE AUDIENCE  

Friday, Session 1C: 8:45am-10:15am

Beyond the Letter of the Law:
Physical Space and Material Environments in Legal History

Chair: Barbara Welke, Department of History
University of Minnesota

Paper 1: "The Public Space of Law: Massachusetts Courthouses and the Architecture of Professionalization, 1750-1830"

Martha J. McNamara, Department of History
University of Maine

Paper 2: "Bed, Board, and Hearth: The Common Law of Innkeepers and the Legal Construction of Public Space in 19th-century America"

Andrew K. Sandoval-Strausz
(University of Chicago)

Paper 3: "Lawyers, Books, and Paper"

Michael H. Hoeflich
University of Kansas School of Law

Comment: Thomas Edward Brennan, Department of History
U.S. Naval Academy

Saturday, Session Early Morning B: 7:30am-8:30am

Rethinking Foundational Cases in Federal Indian Law

Chair: Lindsay Robertson
University of Oklahoma College of Law

Paper 1: "`An Indian Cannot Get a Morsel of Pork': A Retrospective on Crow Dog, In re Blackbird, Tribal Sovereignty, Indian Poverty, and Federalism"

Sidney L. Harring
City of New York Law School, Queens College

Paper 2: "The Ghost of Lone Wolf v. Hitchcock Stalking the Land"

C. Blue Clark, Department of History
Oklahoma City University

Comment: Jill Norgren, Department of Government
John Jay College of Criminal Justice

University Graduate Center, CUNY

Saturday, Session 4C: 3:00pm-4:30pm

Lawyers in the American West, 1820-1920

Chair: Gordon Bakken, Department of History
California State University, Fullerton

Paper 1: "Legal Apprenticeship in the Office of Calvin Fletcher"

A. Christopher Bryant
(University of Nevada Las Vegas School of Law)

Paper 2: "Legal Argument in the Opinions of Montana Territorial Chief Justice Decius S. Wade"

Andrew P. Morriss
Case Western University Law School

Paper 3: "Western Women Lawyers, Defense of the Criminally Accused, and the Invention of the Public Defender"

Barbara Allen Babcock
Stanford Law School

Comment: CHAIR

Friday, Session 3D: 2:00pm-3:30pm

The People's Sovereignty in 19th-Century Constitutional Politics

Chair: Keith E. Whittington, Department of Politics
Princeton University

Paper 1: "The Struggle Over the People's Sovereignty Before the Civil War"

Chritian G. Fritz
University of New Mexico School of Law

Paper 2: "Reconceiving the Fourteenth Amendment's Founding"

Wayne D. Moore, Department of Political Science
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University

Paper 3: "A Revolution Too Soon: Woman Suffragists, the Right to Vote and the Living Constitution, 1869-1874"

Adam Winkler
(University of California, Los Angeles)

Comment: Mark E. Brandon, Department of Political Science
University of Michigan

Tony A. Freyer
University of Alabama School of Law

Saturday, Session Early Morning C: 7:30am-8:30am

South Carolina Redeemers in Court:
The Criminal
Justice System and the Establishment of White Supremacy

Chair: Christopher Waldrep, Department of History
San Francisco State University

Paper 1: "The 1878 Election Cases and the Collapse of Federal Enforcement Efforts in South Carolina"

Lou Falkner Williams, Department of History
Kansas State University

Paper 2: "Post-Reconstruction Justice in South Carolina: The Prosecution of Francis Lewis Cardoza"

W. Lewis Burke
University of South Carolina School of Law

Comment: Donald G. Nieman, Department of History
Bowling Green State University

Friday, Session Early Morning C: 7:30am-8:30am

American Criminal Justice in the Early 20th Century

Chair: Richard Hamm, Department of History
SUNY Albany

Paper 1: ""The Politics of Criminal Law in Progressive New York"