Call for papers for The Thirteenth Amendment and Economic Justice, at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, William S. Boyd School of Law, March 2-3, 2018
Scholars have recently applied the Thirteenth Amendment to a number of contemporary problems ranging from minimum labor standards to mass incarceration. This Conference aims to gather scholars of the Thirteenth Amendment from law schools and academic departments throughout the United States and beyond. This conference focuses specifically on the ways that the Thirteenth Amendment can be used now in legislation, litigation and discussions aimed at reducing economic injustice in the United States.
We also welcome analysis that interrogates the interactions between economic justice and other forms of subordination such as race, gender, sexual orientation, disability, religion and immigration status. This conference will be the inaugural event of the Thirteenth Ama cendment Project, an interdisciplinary association of scholars of labor, class, race, caste and poverty at law schools and universities throughout the United States and the wider world.
We are seeking publication opportunities in a variety of outlets for papers presented at the conference. We extend a special invitation to scholars new to the field (including junior faculty and senior scholars) to submit proposals for works in progress. Senior scholars who have written extensively in this field will provide feedback and detailed commentary for planned publication.
To submit a paper to be considered for presentation at the Conference, please upload an abstract of no more than 300 words at the following link https://law.unlv.edu/event/thirteenth-amendment-and-economic-justice-symposium no later than 11:59 pm Pacific Time on Monday, October 23, 2017. The conference organizing committee will notify applicants of its decisions by November 15, 2017. A preliminary program will be posted on December 1, 2017. Completed papers will be due by February 1, 2018. The conference will take place Friday-Saturday March 2 and 3, 2018 at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Boyd School of Law.
Please e-mail us with any other questions at [email protected].
Ruben Garcia, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, James Pope, Rutgers University, Aviam Soifer, University of Hawa’ii, Lea VanderVelde, University of Iowa, Rebecca Zietlow, University of Toledo
If you are poor in the US, you are a slave. A good example from current events are the nine elderly people that died at that Florida assisted living facility. I would be that all were indigent Medicare patients and their primary care givers were all $9.00/hour wage slaves. The Masters were the absentee owners (read: investors) and nursing home administrators living in the Big House.
Posted by: Deep State Special Legal Counsel | September 21, 2017 at 06:11 PM