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Conference/Symposium

Legal History in Times of Crisis | Law & History Conference

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Event Details:

The Stanford Center for Law and History is delighted to share details for our eighth annual conference, Legal History in Times of Crisis. This one-day conference, co-sponsored with the Stanford History Department, will be held on Friday, May 15, 2026 in Room 320D at Stanford Law School.

We kindly request that you register here in advance. Breakfast and lunch will be served.

The full day's agenda can be accessed here. The conference will close with a keynote address — "History and Nostalgia under Constitutional Breakdown" — delivered by Professor Aziz Rana (Boston College Law).

Legal History in Times of Crisis
Our contemporary world is in crisis—on this much, there is widespread agreement. But the nature, scope, and causes of our present crisis—indeed, crises—are subject to fierce debate, whether they be crises of democracy, technology, the rule of law, capitalism, public information and knowledge, local ecology, or global climate. Crisis is, at its roots, a historical concept, deriving from the Greek krisis: a turning point. The conference will bring together scholars of law and history to examine crises of the past across time periods and geographies, focusing, in particular, on political, economic, and environmental turning points. Topics spanning these three modes of crisis include: turbulent transitions and periods of marked instability, uncertainty, and/or violence; inequalities in the social distribution of crisis; perceptions of crisis; systems and institutions prone to crisis; typologies of crisis; seedbeds for future crises; generative possibilities of crisis; and the utility of history in times of crisis—that is, what good is history during a crisis?

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