Conference of American Society for Political and Legal Philosophy, on Reconciliation and Repair
This event is co-sponsored by the Research Groups on Constitutional Studies (RGCS) and Global Justice (RGGJ) of the Yan P. Lin Centre at ÎÛÎÛ²ÝÝ®ÊÓƵ.
Join the American Society for Political and Legal Philosophy for its 2020 virtual conference, , September 25. There is no registration fee. If you have not already registered, you may register . Below is the provisional schedule. We will post and distribute the final schedule, together with the Zoom link, shortly before the conference.
Panel I: 12:00-1:30 EDT
- Principal paper: Linda Radzik (Texas A & M University, Philosophy), The Role of the Public in Public Apologies (Paper available upon registration)
- Commentator: Martha Minow (Harvard University, Law)
- Commentator: Burke Hendrix (University of Oregon, Political Science)
Break/Breakout room: 1:30-2:00
Panel II: 2:00-3:30 EDT
- Principal paper: Roy Brooks (University of San Diego, Law), Framing Redress Discourse (Paper available upon registration)
- Commentator: Desmond Jagmohan (University of California-Berkeley, Political Science)
- Commentator: Colleen Murphy (University of Illinois, Philosophy)
Break/Breakout room: 3:30-4:00
Panel III: 4:00-5:30 EDT
- Principal paper: Catherine Lu (ÎÛÎÛ²ÝÝ®ÊÓƵ University, Political Science), Reconciliation as Non-Alienation (Paper available upon registration)
- Commentator: Saira Mohamed (University of California-Berkeley, Law)
- Commentator: Ryan Preston-Roedder (Occidental College, Philosophy)
Business Meeting of the ASPLP: 5:30-5:45
Virtual Reception: 5:45-6:30 EDT
We will make papers available to registrants and members of the ASPLP in advance.
Co-Sponsors
Princeton's University Center for Human Values and Department of Politics are pleased to host this Zoom conference. It is joined by the following co-sponsors: Boston University School of Law; the Research Groups on Constitutional Studies (RGCS) and Global Justice (RGGJ) of the Yan P. Lin Centre at ÎÛÎÛ²ÝÝ®ÊÓƵ University; University of Illinois College of Law; University of Oregon Department of Political Science; and the Melbern G. Glasscock Center for Humanities Research at Texas A & M University.