7 research outputs found

    On Historical Contextualisation: Some Critical Socio-Legal Reflections

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    This article examines the relationship of historico-legal studies to the wider context of socio-legal studies. It issues a challenge to rethink the nature and role of legal history in the light of socio-legal theory and the extent to which it out to be used by legal scholars. The discussion explores the benefits to socio-legal studies of interdisciplinarity. It suggests that historical reconstructions that contextualise the law should be properly acknowledged as a subgenre at least of the socio-legal movement, not simply perceived as an add-on methodology

    On the Dangerous Game of Collaborating with Nazis: An Historico-Socio-Legal Reconstruction of that Forgotten Past Located within Silence, Absence and [Dis]Connections between Law’s History and Critical Legal Scholarship

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    Responses to the deliberately provocative title are contextualised within this writer’s research findings to date concerning the Allied investigation and prosecution of ‘minor’ war crimes trials after WWII. From these the writer considered the survival of certain categories of Nazi thought, permitting some critical legal theorists to admit the Nazi Carl Schmitt and his anti-liberal concept of ‘concrete orders’ into its canon of critical texts. In this, some theorists appear concerned more with testing or searching for a ‘pure idea’ of law than noting a moral absence within such legal scholarship. That is, the nature of the transgressive, taboobreaking, politically and culturally sanctioned behaviour of the Nazi state to which Schmit and others contributed. In order to widen this debate this work considers neglected alternative contemporary and co-existing legal and cultural norms revealed in the actions of Allied soldiers prosecuting Germans and others for appalling breaches of legal and human rights. The work follows an original methodology in drawing upon research into the actions of individuals, British soldiers, of Nazi theorists and of the German post war population’s silence. Its aim is to recontextualise Schmitt’s work within his very political commitment to the Nazi cause. This article further suggests that decency, understood as a personal sense of justice within shared cultural and political values, serves as an alternative if less elegant framework to counter the tendency of legal theory to devalue the human. A further question thus emerges: do some strands of modern theory, as occurred under Nazi rule, collude in this devaluation by failing to acknowledge and validate positive human cultural values as a defence against perverse political pressures that lead inevitably to the corruption of legal process and law itself

    Forgotten justice: forgetting law's history and victim's justice in British "minor" war crime trials in Germany 1945-8

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    This article considers some of the reasons for and consequences of then minimal interest shown to date by academic reserachers in the investigation and prosecution of German war criminals by Allied military tribunals between 1945-48Article by Dr Lorie Charlesworth (Reader in Law and History at the Law School, Liverpool John Moores University and Visting Fellow at the IALS) published in Amicus Curiae - Journal of the Society for Advanced Legal Studies. The Journal is produced by the Society for Advanced Legal Studies at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, University of London

    Conference report: War Crimes - Retrospectives and prospects, February 19-21, 2009

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    Report of a Conference held at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies in 2009, published in the IALS News section of Amicus Curiae - Journal of the Society for Advanced Legal Studies. The Journal is produced by the Society for Advanced Legal Studies at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, University of London

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