Skip to main content Skip to navigation

Events

Tuesday, February 28, 2023

Select tags to filter on
Mon, Feb 27 Today Wed, Mar 01 Jump to any date

How do I use this calendar?

You can click on an event to display further information about it.

The toolbar above the calendar has buttons to view different events. Use the left and right arrow icons to view events in the past and future. The button inbetween returns you to today's view. The button to the right of this shows a mini-calendar to let you quickly jump to any date.

The dropdown box on the right allows you to see a different view of the calendar, such as an agenda or a termly view.

If this calendar has tags, you can use the labelled checkboxes at the top of the page to select just the tags you wish to view, and then click "Show selected". The calendar will be redisplayed with just the events related to these tags, making it easier to find what you're looking for.

 
-
Export as iCalendar
Dispute Resolution in Focus

Freshfields will be holding a panel presentation delivered by our Associate Supervisors and Trainees, in Dispute Resolution. This virtual presentation will provide you with insight into what it's like to work for a magic circle law firm, based in London. You will gain insight into the firm itself, the types of work undertaken in Dispute Resolution and most importantly information around the relationship between supervisor and trainee.

-
Export as iCalendar
CELPA Seminar
S2.77

Guest Speaker: Ricky Li (Warwick)

-
Export as iCalendar
Sebastian Gehrig (Roehampton), Sovereignty, Law, and Rights in the German Cold War, 1945-1989
FAB 4.52

Law became one of the most important vehicles to organize the German-German Cold War in everyday life. Both the governments in Bonn and East Berlin used legal sovereignty doctrines to make claims to represent post-war German statehood legitimately. Using law to infringe on the other state’s political legitimacy had far reaching consequences for German-German Cold War politics and ordinary Germans’ rights. This talk explores the dynamics at play when law became the object of ideological conflicts as well as a central tool by which the two German governments conducted these ideological skirmishes over domestic and international political legitimacy. This legal battle, fought as much within the corridors of the United Nations and other international organization as in German court rooms, legal scholarship, and by state-sponsored rights activists, forced both German states to open their legal systems to international law making. In doing so, new human rights languages and sovereignty frameworks made the German-German legal confrontation as much part of Cold War ideological conflicts as it inscribed conflicts over postcolonial sovereignty during and after decolonization into German law-making East and West of the Berlin Wall.   

All welcome. Please email Anna Ross (A.Ross.2@warwick.ac.uk) for any questions.

Placeholder