Oct
27
Thu
Naked Statistical Evidence and Verdictive Justice. Sherri Roush (UCLA) @ 716 Philosophy Hall
Oct 27 @ 4:10 pm – 6:00 pm

Naked Statistical Evidence and Verdictive Justice

Apr
2
Sun
Law as Performance @ Yeshiva University Room 1008
Apr 2 all-day

Speakers:

(unaffiliated)
(unaffiliated)
LEIBNIZ CENTER FOR LITERARY AND CULTURAL RESEARCH (ZFL BERLIN)
(unaffiliated)
(unaffiliated)

Organisers:

Peter Goodrich
Yeshiva University

Sep
7
Thu
Colloquium in Legal, Political, and Social Philosophy @ Lester Pollock Colloquium Room, Furman Hall, 9th flr
Sep 7 @ 4:00 pm – 7:00 pm

Colloquium 2023

Professors Jeremy Waldron and Liam Murphy

September 7th
Bonnie Honig, Brown University
Fatal Forgiveness: Euripides, Austin, Arendt, Cavell

September 14th
Jeremy Waldron, NYU

September 21st
Alice Crary, The New School

September 28th
David Enoch, University of Oxford

October 5th
Gina Schouten, Harvard University

October 12th
Daryl Levinson, NYU

October 19th
Barbara Levenbook, North Carolina State University

October 26th
Rob Howse, NYU

November 2nd
Trevor Morrison, NYU

November 9th
John Goldberg, Harvard University

November 16th
Courtney Cox, Fordham University

November 30th
Juliana Bidadanure, Stanford University

 

The Colloquium in Legal, Political, and Social Philosophy was founded by Ronald Dworkin and Thomas Nagel in 1987. It is the original model for all of NYU Law’s colloquia. The Colloquium is now convened by Liam Murphy, Samuel Scheffler, and Jeremy Waldron, two of whom will host in any given year.

Each week on Thursday a legal theorist or moral or political philosopher presents a paper to the group, which consists of students, faculty from the Law School and other departments of NYU, and faculty from other universities. The choice of subject is left to the paper’s author, within the general boundaries of the Colloquium’s subjects, and the discussions are therefore not connected by any structured theme for the term as a whole, though in past years certain central topics were canvassed in several weeks’ discussion. The Colloquium aims, not to pursue any particular subject, but to explore new work in considerable depth and so allow students to develop their own skill in theoretical analysis.

Each week’s paper is posted at least a week in advance on this page, and participants are expected to have read it.

Sep
21
Thu
Colloquium in Legal, Political, and Social Philosophy @ Lester Pollock Colloquium Room, Furman Hall, 9th flr
Sep 21 @ 4:00 pm – 7:00 pm

Colloquium 2023

Professors Jeremy Waldron and Liam Murphy

September 7th
Bonnie Honig, Brown University
Fatal Forgiveness: Euripides, Austin, Arendt, Cavell

September 14th
Jeremy Waldron, NYU

September 21st
Alice Crary, The New School

September 28th
David Enoch, University of Oxford

October 5th
Gina Schouten, Harvard University

October 12th
Daryl Levinson, NYU

October 19th
Barbara Levenbook, North Carolina State University

October 26th
Rob Howse, NYU

November 2nd
Trevor Morrison, NYU

November 9th
John Goldberg, Harvard University

November 16th
Courtney Cox, Fordham University

November 30th
Juliana Bidadanure, Stanford University

 

The Colloquium in Legal, Political, and Social Philosophy was founded by Ronald Dworkin and Thomas Nagel in 1987. It is the original model for all of NYU Law’s colloquia. The Colloquium is now convened by Liam Murphy, Samuel Scheffler, and Jeremy Waldron, two of whom will host in any given year.

Each week on Thursday a legal theorist or moral or political philosopher presents a paper to the group, which consists of students, faculty from the Law School and other departments of NYU, and faculty from other universities. The choice of subject is left to the paper’s author, within the general boundaries of the Colloquium’s subjects, and the discussions are therefore not connected by any structured theme for the term as a whole, though in past years certain central topics were canvassed in several weeks’ discussion. The Colloquium aims, not to pursue any particular subject, but to explore new work in considerable depth and so allow students to develop their own skill in theoretical analysis.

Each week’s paper is posted at least a week in advance on this page, and participants are expected to have read it.

Sep
23
Sat
Twin Conferences in Tribute to The Philosophy of Joseph Raz @ Columbia Law School
Sep 23 – Sep 24 all-day
Professor Joseph Raz, to many of us a lifelong mentor, colleague and dear friend, passed away on May 2nd, 2022. In recognition of Raz’s enormous influence in philosophy and legal theory, organizers of the twin conferences in tribute to his work invite you to attend one or both conferences and to participate in the discussions. The papers will be made available for download in advance of each conference, and participants will be assumed to have read the papers in advance. The sessions will be devoted to open discussion. This event is open to all.
Cornell University
University of Minnesota
University College London
Northwestern University
(unaffiliated)
Harvard University
Queen’s University
University of Southern California
Université de Montréal

Organisers:

(unaffiliated)
University of British Columbia
Stanford University
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Cornell University
New York University
New York University

Topic areas

Talks at this conference

Add a talk

Sep
28
Thu
Colloquium in Legal, Political, and Social Philosophy @ Lester Pollock Colloquium Room, Furman Hall, 9th flr
Sep 28 @ 4:00 pm – 7:00 pm

Colloquium 2023

Professors Jeremy Waldron and Liam Murphy

September 7th
Bonnie Honig, Brown University
Fatal Forgiveness: Euripides, Austin, Arendt, Cavell

September 14th
Jeremy Waldron, NYU

September 21st
Alice Crary, The New School

September 28th
David Enoch, University of Oxford

October 5th
Gina Schouten, Harvard University

October 12th
Daryl Levinson, NYU

October 19th
Barbara Levenbook, North Carolina State University

October 26th
Rob Howse, NYU

November 2nd
Trevor Morrison, NYU

November 9th
John Goldberg, Harvard University

November 16th
Courtney Cox, Fordham University

November 30th
Juliana Bidadanure, Stanford University

 

The Colloquium in Legal, Political, and Social Philosophy was founded by Ronald Dworkin and Thomas Nagel in 1987. It is the original model for all of NYU Law’s colloquia. The Colloquium is now convened by Liam Murphy, Samuel Scheffler, and Jeremy Waldron, two of whom will host in any given year.

Each week on Thursday a legal theorist or moral or political philosopher presents a paper to the group, which consists of students, faculty from the Law School and other departments of NYU, and faculty from other universities. The choice of subject is left to the paper’s author, within the general boundaries of the Colloquium’s subjects, and the discussions are therefore not connected by any structured theme for the term as a whole, though in past years certain central topics were canvassed in several weeks’ discussion. The Colloquium aims, not to pursue any particular subject, but to explore new work in considerable depth and so allow students to develop their own skill in theoretical analysis.

Each week’s paper is posted at least a week in advance on this page, and participants are expected to have read it.

Oct
5
Thu
Colloquium in Legal, Political, and Social Philosophy @ Lester Pollock Colloquium Room, Furman Hall, 9th flr
Oct 5 @ 4:00 pm – 7:00 pm

Colloquium 2023

Professors Jeremy Waldron and Liam Murphy

September 7th
Bonnie Honig, Brown University
Fatal Forgiveness: Euripides, Austin, Arendt, Cavell

September 14th
Jeremy Waldron, NYU

September 21st
Alice Crary, The New School

September 28th
David Enoch, University of Oxford

October 5th
Gina Schouten, Harvard University

October 12th
Daryl Levinson, NYU

October 19th
Barbara Levenbook, North Carolina State University

October 26th
Rob Howse, NYU

November 2nd
Trevor Morrison, NYU

November 9th
John Goldberg, Harvard University

November 16th
Courtney Cox, Fordham University

November 30th
Juliana Bidadanure, Stanford University

 

The Colloquium in Legal, Political, and Social Philosophy was founded by Ronald Dworkin and Thomas Nagel in 1987. It is the original model for all of NYU Law’s colloquia. The Colloquium is now convened by Liam Murphy, Samuel Scheffler, and Jeremy Waldron, two of whom will host in any given year.

Each week on Thursday a legal theorist or moral or political philosopher presents a paper to the group, which consists of students, faculty from the Law School and other departments of NYU, and faculty from other universities. The choice of subject is left to the paper’s author, within the general boundaries of the Colloquium’s subjects, and the discussions are therefore not connected by any structured theme for the term as a whole, though in past years certain central topics were canvassed in several weeks’ discussion. The Colloquium aims, not to pursue any particular subject, but to explore new work in considerable depth and so allow students to develop their own skill in theoretical analysis.

Each week’s paper is posted at least a week in advance on this page, and participants are expected to have read it.

Oct
12
Thu
Colloquium in Legal, Political, and Social Philosophy @ Lester Pollock Colloquium Room, Furman Hall, 9th flr
Oct 12 @ 4:00 pm – 7:00 pm

Colloquium 2023

Professors Jeremy Waldron and Liam Murphy

September 7th
Bonnie Honig, Brown University
Fatal Forgiveness: Euripides, Austin, Arendt, Cavell

September 14th
Jeremy Waldron, NYU

September 21st
Alice Crary, The New School

September 28th
David Enoch, University of Oxford

October 5th
Gina Schouten, Harvard University

October 12th
Daryl Levinson, NYU

October 19th
Barbara Levenbook, North Carolina State University

October 26th
Rob Howse, NYU

November 2nd
Trevor Morrison, NYU

November 9th
John Goldberg, Harvard University

November 16th
Courtney Cox, Fordham University

November 30th
Juliana Bidadanure, Stanford University

 

The Colloquium in Legal, Political, and Social Philosophy was founded by Ronald Dworkin and Thomas Nagel in 1987. It is the original model for all of NYU Law’s colloquia. The Colloquium is now convened by Liam Murphy, Samuel Scheffler, and Jeremy Waldron, two of whom will host in any given year.

Each week on Thursday a legal theorist or moral or political philosopher presents a paper to the group, which consists of students, faculty from the Law School and other departments of NYU, and faculty from other universities. The choice of subject is left to the paper’s author, within the general boundaries of the Colloquium’s subjects, and the discussions are therefore not connected by any structured theme for the term as a whole, though in past years certain central topics were canvassed in several weeks’ discussion. The Colloquium aims, not to pursue any particular subject, but to explore new work in considerable depth and so allow students to develop their own skill in theoretical analysis.

Each week’s paper is posted at least a week in advance on this page, and participants are expected to have read it.

Oct
19
Thu
Colloquium in Legal, Political, and Social Philosophy @ Lester Pollock Colloquium Room, Furman Hall, 9th flr
Oct 19 @ 4:00 pm – 7:00 pm

Colloquium 2023

Professors Jeremy Waldron and Liam Murphy

September 7th
Bonnie Honig, Brown University
Fatal Forgiveness: Euripides, Austin, Arendt, Cavell

September 14th
Jeremy Waldron, NYU

September 21st
Alice Crary, The New School

September 28th
David Enoch, University of Oxford

October 5th
Gina Schouten, Harvard University

October 12th
Daryl Levinson, NYU

October 19th
Barbara Levenbook, North Carolina State University

October 26th
Rob Howse, NYU

November 2nd
Trevor Morrison, NYU

November 9th
John Goldberg, Harvard University

November 16th
Courtney Cox, Fordham University

November 30th
Juliana Bidadanure, Stanford University

 

The Colloquium in Legal, Political, and Social Philosophy was founded by Ronald Dworkin and Thomas Nagel in 1987. It is the original model for all of NYU Law’s colloquia. The Colloquium is now convened by Liam Murphy, Samuel Scheffler, and Jeremy Waldron, two of whom will host in any given year.

Each week on Thursday a legal theorist or moral or political philosopher presents a paper to the group, which consists of students, faculty from the Law School and other departments of NYU, and faculty from other universities. The choice of subject is left to the paper’s author, within the general boundaries of the Colloquium’s subjects, and the discussions are therefore not connected by any structured theme for the term as a whole, though in past years certain central topics were canvassed in several weeks’ discussion. The Colloquium aims, not to pursue any particular subject, but to explore new work in considerable depth and so allow students to develop their own skill in theoretical analysis.

Each week’s paper is posted at least a week in advance on this page, and participants are expected to have read it.

Oct
26
Thu
Colloquium in Legal, Political, and Social Philosophy @ Lester Pollock Colloquium Room, Furman Hall, 9th flr
Oct 26 @ 4:00 pm – 7:00 pm

Colloquium 2023

Professors Jeremy Waldron and Liam Murphy

September 7th
Bonnie Honig, Brown University
Fatal Forgiveness: Euripides, Austin, Arendt, Cavell

September 14th
Jeremy Waldron, NYU

September 21st
Alice Crary, The New School

September 28th
David Enoch, University of Oxford

October 5th
Gina Schouten, Harvard University

October 12th
Daryl Levinson, NYU

October 19th
Barbara Levenbook, North Carolina State University

October 26th
Rob Howse, NYU

November 2nd
Trevor Morrison, NYU

November 9th
John Goldberg, Harvard University

November 16th
Courtney Cox, Fordham University

November 30th
Juliana Bidadanure, Stanford University

 

The Colloquium in Legal, Political, and Social Philosophy was founded by Ronald Dworkin and Thomas Nagel in 1987. It is the original model for all of NYU Law’s colloquia. The Colloquium is now convened by Liam Murphy, Samuel Scheffler, and Jeremy Waldron, two of whom will host in any given year.

Each week on Thursday a legal theorist or moral or political philosopher presents a paper to the group, which consists of students, faculty from the Law School and other departments of NYU, and faculty from other universities. The choice of subject is left to the paper’s author, within the general boundaries of the Colloquium’s subjects, and the discussions are therefore not connected by any structured theme for the term as a whole, though in past years certain central topics were canvassed in several weeks’ discussion. The Colloquium aims, not to pursue any particular subject, but to explore new work in considerable depth and so allow students to develop their own skill in theoretical analysis.

Each week’s paper is posted at least a week in advance on this page, and participants are expected to have read it.