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Event

Husband-Killing in Chicago and the New Unwritten Law

Thursday, November 12, 2015 17:00to19:00
Chancellor Day Hall NCDH 312, 3644 rue Peel, Montreal, QC, H3A 1W9, CA

A Law & Anthropology public lecture with Marianne Constable, University of California, Berkeley. RSVP to constableatmcgill [at] gmail [dot] com by November 6, 2015.

The event was accredited for 2 hours of continuing legal education with the Barreau du Québec (no. 10104747).

Abstract

Between 1866 and 1931, over 250 women in Chicago killed their partners, but all-male coroner’s juries, grand juries and petit juries exonerated most women under a "new unwritten law". Marianne Constable unearths the stories of some of these women, and explores the various possible meanings of this new unwritten law, among them self-defense, temporary insanity, and battered woman syndrome. Her research investigates the ways in which history and law privilege writing as sources, evidence and authority, and it analyzes the turn-of-the-century emergence of an account of law based on social, statistical, and psychological knowledge.Ìý As a contribution to legal philosophy, the project shows how claims about a new unwritten law marked a period in which imperfect and incomplete understandings of law came to be articulated through the formal speech acts that are now often taken - mistakenly - to be wholly determinative of law.

About the speaker

Marianne Constable is Professor of Rhetoric at the University of California, Berkeley and author of The Law of the Other: The Mixed Jury and Changing Conceptions of Citizenship, Law and Knowledge (winner of the Law & Society Association J. Willard Hurst Prize in Legal History); Just Silences: The Limits and Possibilities of Modern Law; and Our Word is Our Bond: How Legal Speech Acts (finalist for two Socio-Legal Studies Association (UK) book prizes).
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Constable earned her B.A. in political science and philosophy, her JD, and her Ph.D. in Jurisprudence & Social Policy, from University of California, Berkeley.Ìý As demonstrated through her publications and service in sociology, political science, anthropology, history, literature, and philosophy, she is committed to the study of law in its broadest sense. She was a member of the Institute for Advanced Study in 2005-2006, taught a short course on law and language at Melbourne University in 2012, and was the Lenore Annenberg and Wallis Annenberg Fellow in Communication at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University in 2014-2015. She is the recipient of numerous fellowships and awards, including the James Boyd White Award from the Association for the Study of Law, Culture and the Humanities (LCH).

Organized by Professor Mark Antaki (McGill Law) and Professor Katherine Lemons (McGill Anthropology).

Sponsors: Crépeau Centre for Private andÌýComparative Law, Katharine A. Pearson Chair in Civil Society andÌýPublic Policy,ÌýDean of Arts Development Fund,ÌýLegal Theory Workshop,ÌýCentre for Human Rights andÌýLegal Pluralism, Department of Anthropology, Critical Social Theory,ÌýInstitute for the Public Life of Arts andÌýIdeas.
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