Collective Self-Legislation

Collective Self-Legislation

By Edinburgh Law School, University of Edinburgh

Professor Hans Lindahl` talks on Reconfiguring Global Legal Education Amid Catastrophic Environmental Degradation

Date and time

Location

Edinburgh Law School

South Bridge Edinburgh EH8 9YL United Kingdom

Good to know

Highlights

  • 2 hours
  • In person

About this event

Government • Non-partisan

About the eventGlobal law programs take largely for granted that law is about the self-legislation of human collectives located in a stable natural environment rendered available for the realization of human ends. Catastrophic environmental degradation calls for a critical reconfiguration of collective self-legislation, a reconfiguration that, amongst others, undoes the doctrinal split between private law and public law, on the one hand, and acknowledges the primacy of obligation over rights, on the other. Initiatives to ecologize property and to resocialize corporations build on these two transformations of our legal and political imaginary, intimating a novel concept of lawmaking as decentered self-legislation by collectives composed of humans and other-than-humans, which, joined together in relations of mutual dependency, strive to realize more-than-human ends: geopolities. The neologism’s Greek root, geos, suggests that global law programs must become terrestrial if their claim to approach law globally is to be credible and relevant as a response to the Anthropocene.About the speakerHans Lindahl holds the chair of legal philosophy at Tilburg University, the Netherlands, and a chair of global law at the Law Department of Queen Mary University of London. He obtained law and philosophy degrees at the Universidad Javeriana, in Bogotá, Colombia, before taking a doctorate at the Higher Institute of Philosophy of the University of Louvain (Belgium) in 1994. His primary areas of research are legal and political philosophy. Lindahl has published numerous articles in these fields. His monograph, Fault Lines of Globalization: Legal Order and the Politics of A-Legality, was published with Oxford University Press in 2013 (Italian and Spanish translations; a Japanese translation forthcoming in 2024). A follow-up monograph, Authority and the Globalisation of Inclusion and Exclusion, has been published with Cambridge University Press in 2018 (Portuguese translation; a Spanish forthcoming in 2023). His current research explores how the challenges raised by the Anthropocene demand reconsidering key features of the ways in which modern legal and political philosophy have conceptualized legal order. This project draws on and radicalizes his earlier research on issues germane to globalization processes, such as the concept of legal order in a global setting; a politics of boundary-setting alternative to both cosmopolitanism and communitarianism; transformations of legal authority and political representation. In dealing with these topics Lindahl draws on (post-)phenomenology and theories of collective action of analytical provenance, while also seeking to do justice to the nitty-gritty of positive law.

For more information please visit his personal website: www.hanslindahl.org.Image credit: Freepik

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Oct 29 · 3:00 PM GMT