law&history vol. 3

Volume 3 of the Society’s journal, law&history, will soon be available. Look for it in the next couple of weeks online and hardcopies will be posted to subscribers in early December. A reminder that it is available via Heinonline and Informit, and that you can email shaunnagh.dorsett@uts.edu.au for hardcopy subscription. As a taster, here is the table of contents and editors comments from Diane Kirkby. In addition to the articles below, there are also book reviews on a range of topics.

Table of Contents

1. Shaunnagh Dorsett: Metropolitan Theorising: Legal Frameworks, Protectorates
and Models for Māori Govenance 1837–1838

2. Renae Barker: ‘Under Most Peculiar Circumstances’: The Church Acts in the
Australian Colonies as a Study of Plural Establishment

3. Janine Pizzetti: Judging Protection: ‘The Unintentional Errors of an Unlearned Magistracy’, British Guiana and Port Phillip, 1830s–40s

4. Eugene Schofield-Georgsson: ‘Mad’ Edwin Withers and the Struggle for Fair Trial Rights in Colonial New South Wales

5. Bevan Martin: The Vice Admiralty Court of New Zealand: Imperial Neglect
and Colonial Pragmatism, 1841–1868

6. Kathy Bowery: Speaking of Us, About Us and For Us: Telling Stories About
Aboriginal Peoples From the Archive

 

Editor’s Comments

This is our third issue of law&history. The articles published here are a representation of  papers presented at the ANZLHS Law and History conference and other forums over the past couple of years. They demonstrate the importance of scholarship being done in this region of the world and the emergence of new scholars with an interest in the field. The concentration is on the colonial period of Australian and New Zealand history and its legacy into the late twentieth century.  They reflect a diversity of interests and approaches within the field and the continuing value of comparing colonial experience.

We are delighted for this issue to be publishing the inaugural Francis Forbes Society for Legal History Prize for the best paper presented by a postgraduate student or early-career researcher at the ANZLHS conference. Janine Rizzetti won this prize for her paper presented at the 2014 conference organised by the University of New England and held at Coffs Harbour. We are grateful to the Francis Forbes Society for supporting our new and emerging researchers in this valuable way.

True to our historical orientation, the articles are organised roughly chronologically, starting with the 1830s. In Shaunnagh Dorsett’s analysis of theories for the governance of New Zealand that offered the prospect of Māori involvement we see how historical research can illuminate moments of possibility for paths not taken. The next article moves us to the Australian colonies where Renae Barker shows how a moment of plural establishment of religion can reveal subsequent histories. Staying with the same time period Janine Rizzetti brings in a comparative perspective between colonies of the British Empire, that of Port Phillip and British Guiana, in her view through the lens of a single judge moving between colonies.

The decade of the 1840s was a critical one for the colony of New South Wales and the evolution of fair trial rights as Eugene Schofield-Georgeson demonstrates through the story of ‘Mad’ Edwin Withers. In his focus on New Zealand’s experience of the admiralty jurisdiction Bevan Martin takes us into a new area of colonial legal history and reminds us that identifying the absences of imperial power (the ‘neglect’ of colonial problems) is another window on to the colonial past (the pragmatism of experience). In the last article Kathy Bowery brings us forward in time to the late twentieth century with a reflection on the ethics of legal archives and their powerful impact on the lives of Aboriginal people in Australia today. These articles expand our understanding of law’s history and the importance of knowledge about the colonial past.

We dedicate it to our La Trobe colleague Patrick Wolfe (1949-2016) whose untimely death removed a warm and wonderful colleague and a truly gifted scholar of settler colonialism from our midst. A review of his final book is also published here.

 

 

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Max Planck Summer Academy for Legal History

The Max Planck Summer Academy for Legal History is calling for applications from PhD candidates to attend their annual summer school. The theme is conflict regulation. They cover fees, accommodation and some scholarships are available for travel.

More information is available via the Max Plank Institute.

Hat Tip: Legal History Blog

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National Archives of Australia/Australian Historical Association postgraduate scholarships

Round two of the National Archives of Australia/AHA postgrad scholarships is closing 31 October. This award helps postgraduate scholars with the cost of digitisation of files held by the National Archives. More information is available via the National Archives.

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Legal History and Empires: Perspectives from the Colonized – Save the Date!

Following on (finally!) from the Legal Histories of the British Empire conference in Singapore  in 2012, we are pleased to announce Legal History and Empires: Perspectives from the Colonised, jointly sponsored by  the Faculty of Law and Faculty of Humanities and Education, University of the West Indies,  Cave Hill Campus, Barbados, 11-13 July 2018. A website and CFP will be announced in the new year. But as we know July is always busy, so here is a heads up! Save the Date!

For preliminary inquires please contact Shaunnagh Dorsett (shaunnagh.dorsett@uts.edu.au) or Asya Ostroukh (asya.ostroukh@cavehill.uwi.edu). See you there!

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law&history on HeinOnline and Informit

The society’s journal, law&history, is now available via HeinOnline and Informit. In HeinOnLine it can be found in the core Law Journals library. Australian members should note that despite its location in law the journal is also coded to history for ERA purposes. While it is easy enough to find in Hein under ‘L’, your librarian can make a direct link to it from your university library catalogue. Hard copy subscriptions can be requested to the Business Manager – Shaunnagh.Dorsett@uts.edu.au – and will cost $25 per edition. We encourage all members to submit to the journal. Watch for vol 3, coming out soon. The contents page will be available soon via the ‘Journal’ tab on the main page.

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ANZLHS Annual Prize in Legal History – deadline 30 October

A reminder that nominations are due for the annual ANZLHS Prize in Legal History. The deadline for nominations for any work in the field of legal history in relation to Australasia and which bear the date of 2015 are due to the President or the Secretary by October 30. All further information can be found in the Rules. We look forward to your nominations!

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Annual conference registration, Kercher scholarships and conference program

Early bird registration for the conference has been extended to Friday 7 October. Please take advantage of this to register early.

Congratulations to the recipients of this year’s Kercher Scholarships:

  • Ms Belinda Clarence, PhD candidate, RMIT University
  • Mr Michael Kilminster, PhD candidate, University of Newcastle
  • Ms Alice Rumble, PhD candidate, Australian National University
  • Mr Lucas Smith, PhD candidate, Monash University
  • Mr Seth Tweneboah, PhD candidate, Victoria University of Wellington

The Conference Programme has been updated and is on the conference website: http://business.curtin.edu.au/our-research/conferences/anzlhs-2016/

 

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PhD and Visiting Fellows: Harry Gentle Resource Centre

The Harry Gentle Resource Centre (HGRC) is dedicated to the study of the peoples and lands of Australia, with an initial focus on the area that became Queensland in 1859. It offers a portal of interactive resources, research publications, commentaries and research aids.The centre is now seeking applications for Visiting Fellowships and PhD scholarships.
 
Applications for Visiting Fellowships, Harry Gentle Resource Centre, Griffith University, close Sunday 30 October 2016.
Applications for PhD Scholarship, Harry Gentle Resource Centre, Griffith University, close Friday 21 October 2016.
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PhD and Post-Doc: Call for applications for the Global Humanitarianism Research Academy

A call for applications for PhD and Post-Doctoral scholars for the 2017 Global Humanitarianism Research Academy.  The Academy is to be held in Leibniz and at the Archives of the IRC in Geneva in July 2017. According to their blurb the ‘Research Academy addresses early career researchers who are working in the related fields of humanitarianism, international humanitarian law, peace and conflict studies as well as human rights covering the period from the 18th to the 20th century. It supports scholarship on the ideas and practices of humanitarianism in the context of international, imperial and global history’. More details here. Hat tip Imperial and Global Forum.

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PhD scholarships at Adelaide

News of two phd scholarships at Adelaide – one based in law and one in history – for topics related to English legal order from the 1680s to the 1760s. Applications close 31 October.

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