Veranstaltungen

Veranstaltungen

Gastgeber: Thomas Duve

Future-making and Custom in Indigenous Land Claims in Colonial Mexico

Max Planck Lecture in Legal History and Legal Theory

From protection to jurisdiction: extraterritoriality and legal change in the nineteenth-century mediterranean

Max Planck Lecture in Legal History and Legal Theory

Reading the Code: Institutions and the Legal Knowledge in Late Imperial China

Seminar Methoden der Rechtsgeschichte

Language and Knowledge as Intertwined Building Blocks when Doing Comparative Law

Seminar Methoden der Rechtsgeschichte

Conversing with our Elders: National Traditions of Legal History in Dialogue

Tagung

Slaves as Outsiders, Slaves as Property: Understanding Enslavement in a Global and Early Modern Context

Max Planck Lecture in Legal History and Legal Theory
This talk seeks to de-center existing narratives regarding enslavement, which traditionally focus on how it was practiced in North America and instead observe it both in the long durée and more globally. It asks about the various roles enslaved persons played in different times and geographical locations, as well as questions the assumption that slaves were property by setting enslavement on a larger canvas and by observing early modern debates regarding both the household and labor relations. [mehr]

Regimetheorie

Seminar Methoden der Rechtsgeschichte

Participatory Research in Legal History

Seminar Methoden der Rechtsgeschichte

Meet the author Hans Joas

Meet the Author

What comes after the Secularization Thesis? Religious and Secular Sources of Moral Universalism

Max Planck Lecture in Legal History and Legal Theory

The Butcher's Wife, Race Relations and Death by Hanging in Cuba and the Spanish Atlantic, 1830s-1930s.

Max Planck Lecture in Legal History and Legal Theory

Meet the Author: Daniel Bonilla (Universidad de los Andes)

Legal Barbarians, Identity, Modern Comparative Law and the Global South
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