The Stanford Center for Law and History has announced the lineup for its 2020-2021 workshop:
Oct. 6, 2020: Lisa Surwillo, Stanford Iberian and Latin American Cultures
Trafficked from Free Soil: María de Jesús and 19th Century Spanish Cuba
Oct. 20, 2020: H. Timothy Lovelace, Jr., Duke Law
Foreign Interference in US Elections is Nothing New
Oct. 27, 2020: Michelle McKinley, University of Oregon Law
Bound Biographies: Transoceanic Itineraries and the Afro-Iberian Diaspora in the Americas
Jan. 19, 2021: Magdalene Zier, Stanford Law and History
Crimes of Omission: State Action Doctrine and Anti-Lynching Legislation in the Jim Crow Era
Feb. 2, 2021: Ari Bryen, Vanderbilt Classical and Mediterranean Studies
Law and/as Flesh: Provincial Aristocrats and the Law in the Eastern Roman Empire
Feb. 23, 2021: Kimberly Welch, Vanderbilt History and Law
“Eulalie Mandeville’s Money:” Black Moneylenders and Economic Citizenship in the Antebellum U.S. South
April 20, 2021: Anne Twitty, University of Mississippi History
Remaking Bondage: The Persistence of Unfreedom in the Northwest Territory
April 27, 2021: Rohit De, Yale History
Decolonization, Diasporas and the Origins of Emergency Lawyering
May 11, 2021: Nathaniel Hay, Stanford History and Yale Law
Patenting the Guillotine: Intellectual Property Law in Revolutionary France
--Mitra Sharafi