Book Colloquium: Law and Memory
How should we commemorate the victims of past atrocities, heroic individuals, or emblematic national and social events?
Recent controversies such as the removal of Confederate monuments in the United States demonstrate just how central such acts of collective remembrance are to our conception of contemporary societies.
Memory laws enshrine state-approved interpretations of these crucial historical events, and have forged both national identities and integration processes in Europe and beyond.
In this book colloquium, a panel of speakers will discuss the recent book Law and Memory: Towards Legal Governance of History and explore both the nature and role of legal engagement in historical memory. They will address a number of key questions, such as:
- When do memory laws conflict with values of democratic citizenship, political pluralism, or fundamental human rights?
- Are the punitive laws inevitably abusive?
- Are the non-punitive ones mostly benign?
- Are there optimal ways for states to propagate historical memory?
Participants include:
Chair: Denis Galligan, Emeritus Professor of Socio-Legal Studies and Director of Programmes, Foundation for Law, Justice and Society, Oxford
Dr Uladzislau Belavusau, T.M.C. Asser Insitute (The Hague), University of Amsterdam
Professor Eric Heinze, Professor of Law and Humanities, Queen Mary University London
Dr Félix Krawatzek, Department of Politics and International Relations, Oxford
For full details and to reserve your place, please visit: www.fljs.org/law-and-memory