2018 Law & Humanities Junior Scholar Workshop — Palo Alto, CA

Stanford Law School
When:
June 4, 2018 @ 7:17 pm – June 5, 2018 @ 8:17 pm
2018-06-04T19:17:00-07:00
2018-06-05T20:17:00-07:00
2018 Law & Humanities Junior Scholar Workshop — Palo Alto, CA

Columbia Law School, the University of Southern California Center for Law, History & Culture, UCLA School of Law, Georgetown University Law School, Stanford Law School, and the University of Pennsylvania invite submissions for the annual meeting of the Law & Humanities Junior Scholar Workshop, to be held at Stanford Law School in Palo Alto, California, on June 4–5, 2018.

The paper competition is open to untenured professors, advanced graduate students, and post-doctoral scholars in law and the humanities. In addition to drawing from numerous humanistic fields, we welcome critical, qualitative work in the social sciences. Based on anonymous evaluation by an interdisciplinary selection committee, between five and ten papers will be chosen for presentation at the June Workshop. At the Workshop, two senior scholars will comment on each paper. Commentators and other Workshop participants will be asked to focus specifically on the strengths and weaknesses of the selected scholarly projects, with respect to subject and methodology. The selected papers will then serve as the basis for a larger conversation among all the participants about the evolving standards by which we judge excellence and creativity in interdisciplinary scholarship, as well as about the nature of interdisciplinarity itself.

 

Papers must be works-in-progress that do not exceed 15,000 words in
length (including footnotes/endnotes); most papers selected for inclusion in recent years have been at least 10,000 words long. An abstract of no more than 200 words must also be included with the paper submission.

Submissions must be sent to juniorscholarsworkshop[at]sas.upenn.edu by January 5, 2018. For more information, please see the call for papers.

About the author

Reference & Faculty Services Librarian, Temple University School of Law