Chicago-Kent College of Law at Illinois Institute of Technology is hosting the Thirteenth Amendment and Racial Justice Conference on November 9–10, 2019. The conference focuses on the ways that the Thirteenth Amendment can be used in legislation and litigation, or in the context of social movements, to promote racial justice in the United States.
The conference organizing committee invites Thirteenth Amendment scholars from all disciplines—including law, politics, and history, as well as practitioners and activists in the field of racial justice—to submit papers that interrogate the relationship of race and other markers of identity such as class, gender, sexual orientation, disability, religion, and immigration status; to forms of subordination both past and present; and strategies for challenging them. The committee is interested in international perspectives and invite scholars from beyond the United States to participate.
This conference will be the third event of the Thirteenth Amendment 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. For more information about the Thirteenth Amendment Project, please visit its website at scholars.law.unlv.edu/amend13/.
The committee is seeking publication opportunities in a variety of outlets for papers presented at the conference. It extends 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 for consideration, please email an abstract of no more than 300 words by May 15, 2019, to [email protected]. The conference organizing committee will notify applicants of its decisions by June 30, 2019. A preliminary program will be posted by September 15, 2019.
Editorial note: This conference is time to fit with the annual Constitutional Law Colloquium at Loyola Chicago Law School. The colloquium at Loyola Chicago ends on Saturday at lunchtime; this conference begins at Chicago-Kent on Saturday afternoon.
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