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Legal Pluralism in the Roman Empire

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Legal Pluralism in the Roman Empire

and the Perception of the Law of the Other


Maison française d'Oxford

 

Legal Pluralism in the Roman Empire and the Perception of the Law of the Other

 

Oxford

15-16 juin 2015

 

CONVENERS

  • Katell Berthelot (CNRS/Aix-en-Provence)

  • Capucine Nemo-Pekelman (Paris-Ouest Nanterre University)

  • Martin Goodman (Oxford Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies)

  • Catherine Darbo-Peschanski (CNRS/MFO)

 

ORGANISERS

  • GDRI JUDROME and CURERE network; Oxford Center for Hebrew and Jewish Studies

 

Program

From 15th June, 9.00am to 16th June, 5.30pm

 

Monday, June 15

  • 9am | Welcome and Introduction

Chair: Alan Bowman

  • 9.30-10am | Caroline Humfress (Birkbeck University of London): Introduction: “Rethinking Forum Shopping in the Context of Ancient Law”

10am | Coffee break

 

Egypt

  • 10.30am | Jakub Urbanik (University of Warsaw): “Legal Pluralism in Roman Egypt: It is best to declare law for them upon the law of the Egyptians”

  • 11.30am | Jose Luis Alonso (The University of the Basque Country): “Legal Pluralism in Roman Egypt: the 'Laws of the Egyptians' and the Roman Jurisdiction”

12.30am | Lunch

 

Chair: Soazick Kerneis

 

Egypt (continued)

  • 1.30pm | Anna Dolganov (Institut für Kulturgeschichte der Antike, Vienna): “'Men of the Law': Legal and Forensic Practitioners in the Provinces in the Early and High Empire”

 

Asia Minor

  • 2.30pm | Georgy Kantor (St John's College, Oxford), “Legal Pluralism in Roman Asia Minor”

3.30pm | Coffee break

 

Chair: Caroline Humfress

 

The West

  • 4pm | Soazick Kerneis (Paris-Ouest Nanterre University – Maison Française d'Oxford) “Legal Pluralism in the Western Roman Empire: Popular Legal Sources and Legal History”

  • 5pm | Marie Roux (Paris-Ouest Nanterre University): “'Forum shopping' and special jurisdictions in the context of the first regna in Gaul: the example of the Visigothic kingdom”

 

Tuesday, June 16

Chair: Martin Goodman

  • 9am | Carlos Lévy (Paris Sorbonne University): “Cicero and the Barbarian Laws: A Philosophical Problem?”

10am | Coffee break

 

Judea/Palestine

  • 10.30am | Hannah Cotton (Hebrew University of Jerusalem): “Back to the Application of 'Private International Law' to Jurisdiction in the Roman Empire”

  • 11.30am | Kimberley Czajkowski (University of Münster): “Law made Local: The Babatha Archive”

12.30am | Lunch

 

Chair: Hannah Cotton

 

Judea/Palestine (Continued)

  • 1.30pm | Katell Berthelot (CNRS, Aix-en-Provence): “The Roman Legal System in Jewish Literary Sources”

  • 2.30pm | Yair Furstenberg (Ben Gurion University of the Negev): “'The Custom of the State': The Shifting Status of Foreign Legal Practices in Early Rabbinic Law”

3.30pm | Coffee break

  • 4pm | Ron Naiweld (CNRS, Paris): “The Judge as a Sovereign. The Rabbinic Invention of the Beit-din in its Historical and Hermeneutical Context”

  • 5pm | Jill Harries (University of St Andrews): Conclusions

 

Please register your interest here: www.mfo.ac.uk/node/4102/register

 




Maison française d'Oxford
2-10 Norham Rd
Oxford OX2 6SE, Royaume-Uni

Information transmise par C. Némo-Pekelman