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XXVII WORLD CONGRESS
ON THE
PHILOSOPHY OF LAW
AND SOCIAL PHILOSOPHY
Law,Reason
and Emotion
27 JULY – 1 AUGUST 2015
WASHINGTON D.C., USA
LAW, REASON
AND EMOTION
WASHINGTON, D.C. 2015
© 2015 Internationale Vereinigung für Rechts- und Sozialphilosophie
IVR Executive Committee 2011\2015
President: Ulfrid Neumann (Germany)
Secretary-General: Lorenz Schulz (Germany)
Treasurer: Frank Saliger (Germany)
Webmaster: Christoffer Wong (Sweden)
Editor-in-Chief of the ARSP: Ulfrid Neumann (Germany)
ARSP Editorial Supervision: Annette Brockmöller (Germany)
Vice-presidents:
Christian Dahlman (Sweden)
Leslie Francis (USA)
Ricardo Guibourg (Argentina)
Éric Millard (France)
Honorary Presidents:
Aulis Aarnio (Finland)
Junichi Aomi (Japan)†
Eugenio Bulygin (Argentina)
Hermann Klenner (Germany)
Enrico Pattaro (Italy)
Carl Wellman (USA)
φιλοσοφία βίου κυβερνήτης
Other Members:
João Mauricio Adeodato (Brazil)
Fernando Atria (Chile)
Pierluigi Chiassoni (Italy)
Emilios Christodoulidis (United Kingdom)
Svein Eng (Norway)
Jorge Cerdio Herran (Mexico)
Martin Krygier (Australia)
Francisco Laporta (Spain)
Kevät Nousiainen (Finland)
Byung-Sun Oh (Korea)
Marijan Pavcnik (Slovenia)
Tetsu Sakurai (Japan)
Tomasz Stawecki (Poland)
Pauline Westerman (Netherlands)
Xu Xianming (China)
Program Compilators:
Marcelo Galuppo, Vitor Medrado, Catherine Moore, Laurie Schnitzer, Mortimer Sellers
4 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 5
HOSTS
American University, Washington College of Law
Georgetown University Law Center
George Washington University Law School
University of Baltimore School of Law
The Library of Congress
6 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
SPONSORS
Amintaphil
IVR
Springer
Wake Forest University
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 7
HOST COMMITTEE
Mortimer Sellers, Chair (University of Baltimore)
Jennifer Dabson (American University, Washington College of Law)
Susan Karamanian (George Washington University)
Gregory Klass (Georgetown University)
David Mao (Library of Congress)
8 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Mortimer Sellers, Chair (University of Baltimore)
Susan Carle (American University, Washington College of Law)
Leslie Francis (IVR)
Joshua Kassner (AMINTAPHIL)
John Mikhail (Georgetown Law Center)
Dalia Tsuk Mitchell (George Washington University Law School)
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 9
DONORS
Alexander Brostl
Dawid Bunikowski
Maritza Dibo
Marcelo Galuppo
Ko Hasegawa
Fernando Martinez
Vitor Medrado
Catherine Moore
Akihiko Morita
Haris Psaras
Rafael Rodriguez Prieto
Tetsu Sakurai
Laurie Schnitzer
Frances Stead Sellers
Mortimer Sellers
American University, Washington College of Law
Amintaphil
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Embassy of Brazil
Embassy of Germany
Embassy of Mexico
Embassy of Turkey
Georgetown University Law Center
George Washington University
Goethe Institute of Washington
German Section of the IVR
IVR
Organization of American States
Springer
University of Baltimore
10 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
More details about the XXVII World Congress and the papers
to be presented there can be found at IVR2015.org
Updates and corrections to the World Congress
program are available on the Congress website and at
the registration desk of the Congress Secretariat.
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 11
CONTENTS
12 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 13
CONTENTS
I. LETTERS OF WELCOME...........................................................................23
Letter of the President of IVR..........................................................................23
Letter of the President of AMINTAPHIL......................................................24
Letter of the Librarian of the Congress..........................................................25
Letter of the Host Organizations.....................................................................26
Letter of the Host Committee..........................................................................27
Letter of the Program Committee...................................................................28
II. PROGRAM.................................................................................................33
Sunday, 26 July 2015.......................................................................................... 33
Monday, 27 July 2015......................................................................................... 33
Tuesday, 28 July 2015.........................................................................................36
Wednesday, 29 July 2015...................................................................................39
Thursday, 30 July 2015.......................................................................................40
Friday, 31 July 2015............................................................................................43
Saturday, 01 August 2015..................................................................................46
Area Map.............................................................................................................47
III. PLENARY LECTURES.............................................................................51
Kwame Anthony Appiah
A Decent Respect: Honor in the Life of the Law........................................... 51
Ko Hasegawa
Interactive Reason in Law................................................................................. 52
Leora Katz
Response Retributivism....................................................................................54
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 15
Contents
Matthias Mahlmann
Mind and Rights: Neuroscience, the Critique of Reason and the
Foundations of Legal Justice............................................................................. 55
Contents
(15) The Validity of Law.................................................................................... 76
(16) Law, Emotion and Society: Recovering the Classics.............................77
Daniel Mendonca Bonnett
Rights, Reason and Emotion: Conflict of Rights and Balancing Rights
(in Spanish).........................................................................................................57
(17) International Human Rights Courts: Enhancers or Enemies of
Democracy ‑ or Both? European and Inter‑American Perspectives.......... 78
Patricia Mindus
The Wrath of Reason and the Grace of Sentiment: Vindicating Emotion
in Law..................................................................................................................58
(19) Transnational Legal Theory......................................................................80
András Sajó
The Constitutional Domestication of Emotions............................................59
Robin West
Lawful Emotions................................................................................................ 61
IV. SPECIAL WORKSHOPS..........................................................................65
(1) Axiology of Law ...........................................................................................65
(2) The Idea of Justice in Literature / Die Idee der Gerechtigkeit in der
Literature.............................................................................................................65
(3) Memory and Oblivion, the Harmonies and Conflicts of Law, Reason
and Emotion, co-sponsored by the Italian Society for Law and Literature
(ISLL)...................................................................................................................66
(4) Communicational Theory of Law (CTL): Communication, Law,
Emotions.............................................................................................................67
(18) Humanidad y derecho: ser, valor y praxis jurídica................................78
(20) Autonomy and Paternalism: Searching for a Socially Built
Normativity for Contemporary Private Law.................................................80
(21) Public Health Surveillance, Fear, and the Use of Law.......................... 81
(22) Scandinavian Legal Positivism: Contemporary Discussions.............. 81
(23) Legal Theory Education: Building Bridges into the Future................82
(24) Artifact or Practice? An Ontology to Explain Law’s Normative
Power...................................................................................................................82
(25) Human Rights, Justice, and Solidarity: International Institutional
Implications........................................................................................................83
(26) Aristotle and the Philosophy of Law: Law, Reason and Emotion.......83
(27) Personhood and Law: Animals, Artificial Agents, Chimeras and
Other Contemporary Challenges....................................................................84
(28) Law and Fraternity.....................................................................................85
(29) Types of Legal Argument..........................................................................85
(5) Bulygin's Philosophy of Law.......................................................................69
(30) The Judicial Control of Public Administration Discretionary
Power.............................................................................................................. 86
(6) Law, Consciousness and Democratic Societies........................................70
(31) The Force of Law: Author Meets Critics..................................................86
(7) The Idea of Basic Liberties.......................................................................... 71
(32) Dworkin/Rawls on Law and Public Reason...........................................87
(8) Law and Coercion........................................................................................72
(33) Poverty From The Global Perspective.....................................................87
(9) Food Justice: Food Sovereignty and the Role of Law..............................72
(34) The Right to Identity..................................................................................88
(10) Philosophical Perspectives on International Law..................................73
(35) Family, Sexuality, Love, and Religion .....................................................88
(11) Truth and Objectivity in Law and Morals..............................................73
(36) The Normativity of Law............................................................................89
(12) The Natural Law Tradition....................................................................... 74
(37) Religious Liberty: Its Nature, Scope and Limits....................................89
(13) The Public Power of Judgement: a Challenge to Phronêsis or
Practical‑Prudential Legal Rationality?.......................................................... 75
(38) Judicial Decision‑Making and the Rule of Law: Old Issues, New
Perspectives.........................................................................................................90
(14) The Morality and Ethics of Tax Law........................................................ 76
(39) Human and Fundamental Rights: a Complex Argumentation of Legal
Philosophy........................................................................................................... 91
16 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 17
Contents
Contents
(40) Compassion and Legal Reasoning: A Multidisciplinary Workshop..... 92
Working Group 2............................................................................................. 110
(41) Theory of Legal Evidence..........................................................................93
Working Group 3............................................................................................. 110
(42) Racial Justice, Emotions and Courts’ Legal Reasoning........................94
Working Group 4............................................................................................. 111
(43) Law, Innovation, and Dissent: Perspectives from Around the World
‑ In Memory of Professor Gilles Cistac...........................................................94
Working Group 5............................................................................................. 112
(44) Cassirer: State, Reason and Emotion.......................................................95
(45) From Net Neutrality to Net profitability? Law, Politics & the
Internet................................................................................................................95
(46) Law and Technology: Regulations Compliance through Deploying
Information Technology...................................................................................96
(47) Historical, Theoretical, and Axiological Foundations of European
Legal Culture......................................................................................................96
(48) Justice and Emotions: The Topos of the Commitment...................97
(49) Metaphor: A New Paradigm in Legal Theory and
Legal Philosophy?..............................................................................................98
(50) Legal Philosophy in the Twentieth Century: The Civil Law World....98
(51) The Anthroparchical Concept of Global Law........................................99
(52) Death, Philosophy and the Law................................................................99
(53) Ibero‑American Legal Thinking............................................................100
(54) Human Rights as an Instrument for Poverty Eradication.................100
(55) From Castle(s) to Maze(s): Law’s Relationships................................... 101
(56) Political Obligation and Political Legitimacy...................................... 101
(57) Political Emotions and Political Virtues............................................... 102
(58) Legal Mediation: Between Reason and Emotion................................. 102
(59) Characteristics of Law and Justice in East Asia................................... 103
(60) The Law on Gender‑Based Violence in Latin America...................... 103
(61) Systemic Implications of Principles Theory..........................................104
Working Group 6............................................................................................. 112
Working Group 7............................................................................................. 113
Working Group 8............................................................................................. 114
Working Group 9............................................................................................. 114
Working Group 10........................................................................................... 115
Working Group 11........................................................................................... 116
Working Group 12........................................................................................... 117
Working Group 13........................................................................................... 118
Working Group 14........................................................................................... 118
Working Group 15........................................................................................... 119
Working Group 16........................................................................................... 119
Working Group 17...........................................................................................120
Working Group 18...........................................................................................120
Working Group 19........................................................................................... 121
Working Group 20...........................................................................................122
Working Group 21...........................................................................................123
Working Group 22...........................................................................................124
Working Group 23...........................................................................................125
Working Group 24...........................................................................................126
Working Group 25...........................................................................................127
Working Group 26...........................................................................................128
(62) Citizenship: Local or Global?.................................................................104
Working Group 27...........................................................................................129
V. WORKING GROUPS.................................................................................109
Working Group 29........................................................................................... 131
Working Group 28...........................................................................................130
Working Group 1.............................................................................................109
18 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 19
I
LETTERS
OF
WELCOME
I
20 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 21
I. LETTERS OF WELCOME
LETTER OF THE PRESIDENT OF IVR
O
Dear Colleagues, Ladies and Gentlemen,
n behalf of the “International Association for Philosophy of Law and
Social Philosophy” (IVR) I very warmly welcome you to the XXVII.
World Congress of the IVR in Washington. After our excellent
congresses in South America and Europe I am glad to be meeting you
this year in North America as another centre of excellence in jurisprudence. Also on behalf of the IVR, I would like to thank Prof. Mortimer Sellers for
organizing this Congress in Washington.
One great strength of our organization is diversity, not only of nationality, but also
of technique and schools of thought. In this respect, the congress topic “Law, Reason
and Emotion” provides a wide range of perspectives.
The philosophy of law and social philosophy establish the basis for all that is best in
human society. I am grateful to have worked with you for the past four years on this
important effort as your president.
For all of you, I wish an interesting conference with new experiences, fruitful discussions and lasting impressions.
I look forward to seeing you again in two years in Istanbul.
Respectfully yours,
Ulfrid Neumann
President of IVR
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 23
I | Letters of Welcome
LETTER OF THE PRESIDENT OF AMINTAPHIL
O
Dear Friends,
I | Letters of Welcome
LETTER OF THE LIBRARIAN OF THE CONGRESS
T
Dear Lawyers and Philosophers of Law:
n behalf of the membership of the American Section of the International
Association for the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy
(Amintaphil), I would like to welcome you to Washington, D.C., and
thank you for your participation in this World Congress.
We are grateful to our colleagues in IVR for the many previous World
Congresses, from which we have learned so much, and we are pleased to have the
opportunity to reciprocate. We hope you will enjoy your visit to the United States and
will dialog with Amintaphil members in attendance. You will, I think, find us eager
to discuss philosophy and any aspects of American life that strike you as interesting.
Thank you for your excellent scholarship and for the good company over the years.
All best wishes,
Ken Kipnis
President of Amintaphil
he Library of Congress is pleased to be among the hosts of the XXVII
World Congress of the International Association for the Philosophy of
Law and Social Philosophy (IVR).
Congress created the first separate department within the Library
of Congress when it established a Law Library in 1832. The Library of
Congress takes great pride in the Law Library and the latter’s role as the world’s
largest and most complete law library. The law collection includes more than 2.89
million volumes, with material spanning the ages and covering virtually every
jurisdiction. We very much want to make sure that our collection serves scholars
everywhere.
I hope that you will all take the opportunity while you are here in Washington to
visit the Library, to familiarize yourself with its collection, and to take note of our
vast on-line resources.
You are among the people best able to appreciate the value of our incomparable
collection. We hope that you will use it, enjoy it, and advise us how to make it better.
Sincerely,
James H. Billington
The Librarian of Congress
24 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 25
I | Letters of Welcome
I | Letters of Welcome
LETTER OF THE HOST ORGANIZATIONS
LETTER OF THE HOST COMMITTEE
A
T
Dear Philosophers of Law,
Welcome to the XXVII the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy!
s Deans of the four law schools hosting this World Congress, we are
very pleased to welcome you to Washington!
Legal philosophy provides the ultimate basis for all legal scholarship
and we are grateful to have the opportunity to support a gathering of
such interest and importance to our profession.
We are grateful also for insights that your varied national experiences and legal
traditions will bring to our understanding of the law of the United States. We have
much to learn from each other.
Our four law schools are very proud of our excellent faculty and curricula. We hope
that while you are here you will take the opportunity to speak with us, and consider
ways in which our universities can cooperate with yours to advance legal education
and justice throughout the world.
Respectfully yours,
Claudio Grossman, Dean
American University
Washington College of Law
Blake D. Morant, Dean
George Washington Law School
William Treanor, Dean
Georgetown Law Center
Ronald Weich, Dean
University of Baltimore
School of Law
he Host Committee is very pleased to welcome you to Washington D.C.
and to the United States. In addition to the exciting academic program,
we hope that you will also participate in the social events that have been
arranged for you, including the excursion to Mount Vernon.
The overall topic for this Congress is “Law, Reason, and Emotion,”
subjects which will raise fundamental questions about the nature and purpose of
law. While all legal systems claim to serve reason and justice, they must also recognize and respect the emotional basis of human society. This relationship between
law, reason, and emotion can be seen as conflict, harmony, or otherwise, but it will
always be present in legal discourse. The theme of this World Congress should reach
all aspects of the philosophy of law and social philosophy and we are eager to hear
your insights.
We are particularly grateful to the hosts of the World Congress and their generous
donation of time, facilities, and financial support. They are American University
Washington College of Law, Georgetown University Law Center, George Washington
University School of Law, the University of Baltimore School of Law, and the Law
Library of Congress.
Mortimer Sellers, Chair
University of Baltimore
School of Law
Jennifer Dabson
American University
Washington College of Law
Susan Karamanian
George Washington
University Law School
Gregory Klass
Georgetown University Law Center
26 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 27
I | Letters of Welcome
LETTER OF THE PROGRAM COMMITTEE
T
Dear Participants in the IVR World Congress,
hank you for the wonderful papers that you have prepared for presentation at this conference! There will be more papers delivered this year than
at any previous IVR World Congress.
The excellence of the contributions is due in large part to the active leadership of the IVR national sections and the IVR Executive Committee,
who encouraged scholars in all parts of the world to contribute their insights. We are
particularly grateful to Prof. Marcelo Campos Galuppo, whose hard work at the IVR
2013 Congress in Brazil was carried on to this meeting, and to Catherine Moore,
Vitor Medrado, and Laurie Schnitzer, who ran the Congress Secretariat. Without
their constant dedication, patience, and kindness, this program would have been
impossible
Law, reason, and emotion provide respectively the substance, the structure, and the
purpose of legal and social philosophy. We hope that by linking them in this conference theme we have provoked reflection, innovation, and perhaps some insight.
Thank you for your scholarship. We look forward to your remarks!
IVR 2015 Program Committee
Mortimer Sellers, Chair
University of Baltimore School of Law
Joshua Kassner
AMINTAPHIL
Susan Carle
American University,
Washington College of Law
John Mikhail
Georgetown Law Center
Leslie Francis
IVR
28 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
Dalia Tsuk Mitchell
George Washington
University Law School
II
PROGRAM
II
30 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 31
II. PROGRAM
Sunday, 26 July 2015
14h00 - 18h00
Registration (Georgetown University Law Center)
Hotung Lobby
19h00
Informal Welcome / Gathering (Georgetown
University Law Center)
Hotung Atrium
Monday, 27 July 2015
08h00 - 18h00
Registration at Georgetown University Law Center
Hotung Lobby
09h00 - 09h30
Opening Ceremony at Georgetown University Law Center
Hart Auditorium
09h30 - 11h00
Plenary Lecture: Robin West (Georgetown University)
Hart Auditorium
Chair: Leslie Francis (University of Utah)
11h00 - 11h30
Coffee Break
11h30 - 13h00
Plenary Lecture: András Sajó
Working Groups
(European Court of Human Rights)
(See page 34)
Hart Auditorium
Chairs: Emilios Christodoulidis (University of Glasgow)
Working Groups
(See page 34)
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 33
II | Program
II | Program
Monday, 27 July 2015 (continued)
Monday, 27 July 2015 (continued)
List of Working Groups on
Monday morning
Working Group 1 [Day 1]
McDonough 156
Working Group 2
McDonough 347
List of Special Workshops
on Monday afternoon
(continued from page 34)
SW7 The Idea of Basic Liberties – [Day 1]
McDonough 220
Working Group 3
McDonough 220
SW8 Law and Coercion – [Day 1]
McDonough 342
Working Group 4 [Day 1]
McDonough 160
SW9 Food Justice:
Food Sovereignty and the Role of Law – [Day 1]
McDonough 164
Working Group 10
McDonough 110
SW10 Philosophical Perspectives on International Law
McDonough 337
Working Group 12 [Day 1]
McDonough 164
SW11 Truth and Objectivity in Law and Morals – [Day 1]
McDonough 160
Working Group 13
McDonough 140
SW16 Law, Emotion and Society:
Recovering the Classics – [Day 1]
McDonough 347
Working Group 19
McDonough 337
13h00 - 14h30
Box Lunch
Hotung Lobby
14h30 - 16h30
Special Workshops (See below)
16h30 - 17h00
Coffee Break
Hotung Lobby
17h00 - 18h30
Special Workshops (See below)
List of Special Workshops
on Monday afternoon
SW3 Memory and Oblivion, co-sponsored by the Italian
Society for Law and Literature (ISLL) – [Day 1]
Gewirz Student Center, 12th floor
SW1 Axiology of Law
Hotung 5027
SW12 The Natural Law Tradition – [Day 1]
McDonough 141
SW13 The Public Power of Judgement:
a Challenge To Phronêsis or PracticalPrudential Legal Rationality?
Hotung 5013
SW14 The Morality and Ethics of Tax Law
McDonough 109
SW5 Bulygin’s Philosophy of Law (English) – [Day 1]
Hart Auditorium
SW15 The Validity of Law
Hotung 5021
SW4 Communicational Theory of Law – [Day 1]
McDonough 110
SW19 Transnational Legal Theory
McDonough 587
SW2 The Idea of Justice in Literature/Die Idee der
Gerechtigkeit in der Literature – [Day 1]
McDonough 140
SW20 Autonomy and Paternalism:
Seaching for a Socially Built Normativity
for the Contemporary Private Law
Hotung 5027
SW17 International Human Rights Courts:
Enhancers or Enemies of Democracy – or Both?
European and Inter-American Perspectives
McDonough 156
34 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
SW18 Humanidad y derecho:
ser, valor y praxis jurídica – [Day 1]
McDonough 200
SW23 Legal Theory Education:
Building Bridges into the Future – [Day 1]
McDonough 588
19h30
Welcome Reception at American University Washington
College of Law (Buses to American University Washington
College of Law from Capitol Hill Hyatt beginning at 19h00)
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 35
II | Program
II | Program
Tuesday, 28 July 2015
Tuesday, 28 July 2015 (continued)
08h00 - 18h00
Registration (Georgetown University Law Center)
Hotung Lobby
9h30 - 11h00
Plenary Lecture: Patrícia Mindus
Working Groups
(University of Uppsala)
(See below)
Hart Auditorium
Chair: Eric Millard (Université Paris X Nanterre)
11h00 - 11h30
Coffee Break
Hotung Lobby
11h30 - 13h00
Plenary Lecture: Anthony Appiah
(New York University)
Hart Auditorium
Chair: Jorge Cerdio Herran
(Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México)
List of Working Groups on
Tuesday morning
Working Group 1 [Day 2]
McDonough 156
Working Group 4 [Day 2]
McDonough 160
Working Group 5 [Day 1]
McDonough 342
Working Group 6
McDonough 337
Working Group 7 [Day 1]
McDonough 347
Working Group 9
McDonough 588
Working Group 20
McDonough 140
Working Group 21
McDonough 220
Working Group 24
McDonough 110
13h00 - 14h30
Box Lunch
Hotung Lobby
14h30 - 16h30
Special Workshops (See page 37)
16h30 - 17h00
Coffee Break
Hotung Lobby
17h00 - 18h30
Special Workshops (See page 37)
36 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
Working Groups
(See below)
List of Special Workshops
on Tuesday afternoon
SW3 Memory and Oblivion, co-sponsored by the Italian
Society for Law and Literature (ISLL) – [Day 2]
Gewirz Student Center, 12th floor
SW5 Bulygin’s Philosophy of Law (Spanish) – [Day 2]
Hart Auditorium
SW4 Communicational Theory of Law – [Day 2]
McDonough 110
SW6 Law, Consciousness & Democratic Societies – [Day 1]
McDonough 156
SW21 Public Health Surveillance, Fear
and the Use of Law – [Day 1]
McDonough 587
SW18 Humanidad y derecho:
ser, valor y praxis jurídica – [Day 2]
McDonough 200
SW7 The Idea of Basic Liberties – [Day 2]
McDonough 220
SW8 Law and Coercion – [Day 2]
McDonough 342
SW22 Scandinavian Legal Positivism:
Contemporary Discussions
McDonough 201
SW23 Legal Theory Education:
Building Bridges into the Future – [Day 2]
McDonough 588
SW24 Artifact or Practice? An Ontology to
Explain Law’s Normative Power
McDonough 203
SW25 Human Rights, Justice and Solidarity:
International Institutional Implications – [Day 1]
McDonough 205
SW26 Aristotle and the Philosophy of Law:
Law, Reason & Emotion – [Day 1]
McDonough 206
SW9 Food Justice:
Food Sovereignty and the Role of Law – [Day 2]
McDonough 164
SW27 Personhood and Law:
Animals, Artificial Agents, Chimeras &
other Contemporary Challenges
McDonough 337
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 37
II | Program
II | Program
Tuesday, 28 July 2015 (continued)
Wednesday, 29 July 2015
List of Special Workshops
on Tuesday afternoon
(continued from page 37)
SW11 Truth and Objectivity in Law and Morals – [Day 2]
McDonough 160
08h00 - 18h00
SW16 Law, Emotion and Society:
Recovering the Classics – [Day 2]
McDonough 347
Excursion to Mount Vernon and Old Town Alexandria
Depart from the Capitol Hill Hyatt at 9 a.m.
(limited capacity – must have RSVPed prior to Conference)
11h00
Library of Congress Group Tour Available
Must sign up at Registration Desk by 17h00
on Monday, 27 July (limited capacity)
SW28 Law and Fraternity
McDonough 202
SW12 Natural Law Tradition – [Day 2]
McDonough 141
SW13 The Public Power of Judgement:
a Challenge To Phronêsis or PracticalPrudential Legal Rationality? – [Day 2]
Hotung 5013
SW29 Types of Legal Argument – [Day 1]
McDonough 109
SW30 A Judicial Control of Public
Administration Discretionary Power
Hotung 5021
SW31 The Force of Law:
Author Meets Critics
McDonough 140
SW32 Dworkin and Rawls:
Law and Public Reason
Hotung 6005
SW33 Poverty from the Global Perspective
Hotung 6006
SW34 Human Rights to Identity
Hotung 2000
18h30 – 20h30
Embassy Receptions (by invitation)
38 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 39
II | Program
II | Program
Thursday, 30 July 2015
Thursday, 30 July 2015 (continued)
List of Special Workshops
on Thursday afternoon
08h00 - 18h00
Registration at Georgetown University Law Center
Hotung Lobby
09h30 - 11h00
Plenary Lecture: Daniel Mendonca Bonnett
Working Groups
(Universidad Católica (See page 41)
“Nuestra Señora de la Asunción”)
Hart Auditorium
Chair: Ricardo Guibourg (Universidad de Buenos Aires)
11h00 - 11h30
Coffee Break
11h30 - 13h00
Plenary Lecture: Matthias Mahlmann
Working Groups
(University of Zurich)
(See page 41)
Hart Auditorium
Chair: Pauline Westerman (University of Groningen)
List of Working Groups on
Thursday morning
Working Group 7 [Day 2]
McDonough 347
SW5 Bulygin’s Philosophy of Law (English) – [Day 3]
Hart Auditorium
SW4 Communicational Theory of Law – [Day 3]
McDonough 110
SW2 The Idea of Justice in Literature/Die Idee der
Gerechtigkeit in der Literature – [Day 2]
McDonough 140
SW36 The Normativity of Law – [Day 1]
McDonough 141
SW6 Law, Consciousness & Democratic Societies – [Day 2]
McDonough 156
SW21 Public Health Surveillance, Fear
and the Use of Law – [Day 2]
McDonough 587
Working Group 8
McDonough 337
Working Group 11
McDonough 160
SW18 Humanidad y derecho:
ser, valor y praxis jurídica – [Day 3]
McDonough 200
Working Group 12 [Day 2]
McDonough 164
SW37 Religious Liberty:
Its Nature, Scope and Limits – [Day 1]
McDonough 164
Working Group 14
McDonough 110
SW38 Judicial Decision-making and the Rule of Law:
Old Issues, New Perspectives – [Day 1]
McDonough 160
Working Group 15
McDonough 588
Working Group 16
McDonough 140
SW39 Human and Fundamental Rights:
A Complex Argumentation of Legal Philosophy – [Day 1]
McDonough 201
Working Group 17
McDonough 156
SW40 Compassion and Legal Reasoning – [Day 1]
McDonough 202
Working Group 18
McDonough 220
SW41 Theory of Legal Evidence – [Day 1]
McDonough 203
13h00 - 14h30
Box Lunch
Hotung Lobby
13h15 - 14h30
Meeting of the National Section Heads of IVR
14h30 - 16h30
Special Workshops
Hart Auditorium
16h30 - 17h00
Coffee Break
Hotung Lobby
17h00 - 18h30
Special Workshops
(See page 41)
40 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
SW35 Sexuality, Love and Religion
Gewirz Student Center, 12th floor
(See page 41)
Reception for the IVR Encyclopedia
of the Philosophy of Law
SW25 Human Rights, Justice and Solidarity:
International Institutional Implications – [Day 2]
McDonough 205
SW26 Aristotle and the Philosophy of Law:
Law, Reason & Emotion – [Day 2]
McDonough 206
SW42 Racial Justice, Emotions and Courts Legal Reasoning
McDonough 220
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 41
II | Program
II | Program
Thursday, 30 July 2015 (continued)
Friday, 31 July 2015
List of Special Workshops
on Thursday afternoon
(continued from page 41)
SW43 Law, Innovation and Dissent:
Perspectives from Around the World
McDonough 337
SW44 Cassirer:
State, Reason and Emotion
McDonough 342
SW45 From Net Neutrality to Net Profitability?
Law, Politics and the Internet
Hotung 5027
SW46 Law and Technology:
Regulations Compliance through Deploying
Information Technology
McDonough 588
09h30 - 11h00
Plenary Lecture: Ko Hasegawa
Working Groups
(Hokkaido University)
(See below)
Hart Auditorium
Chair: Christian Dahlman (University of Lund)
11h00 - 11h30
Coffee Break
Hotung Lobby
11h30 - 13h00
IVR Prize Lecture: Leora Katz
(Yale University)
Hart Auditorium
Chair: Annette Brockmöller (ARSP)
List of Working Groups on
Friday morning
Working Group 5 [Day 2]
Working Group 22
McDonough 110
SW47 Historical, Theoretical, and Axiological
Foundations of the European Legal Culture
Hotung 5013
Working Group 23
McDonough 156
Working Group 24
McDonough 110
SW29 Types of Legal Argument – [Day 2]
McDonough 109
Working Group 25
McDonough 160
SW48 Emotions and Justice:
The Topos of the Commitment
Hotung 5021
Working Group 26
McDonough 164
SW49 Metaphor- A New Paradigm in Legal
Theory and Legal Philosophy
McDonough 347
19h45
Working Group 27
McDonough 220
Working Group 28
McDonough 337
Concert and Amintaphil Reception
Organization of American States
200 17th Street, NW (ticket required)
42 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
Working Groups
(See below)
Working Group 29
McDonough 347
13h00 - 14h30
Box Lunch
Hotung Lobby
14h30 - 16h30
Special Workshops
(See page 44)
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 43
List of Special Workshops
on Friday afternoon
II | Program
II | Program
Friday, 31 July 2015 (continued)
Friday, 31 July 2015 (continued)
SW50 Legal Philosophy in the Twentieth Century:
The Civil Law World
Gewirz Student Center, 12th floor
List of Special Workshops
on Friday afternoon
(continued from page 44)
SW38 Judicial Decision-making and the Rule of Law:
Old Issues, New Perspectives [Day 2]
McDonough 160
SW57 Political Emotions & Political Virtues
McDonough 347
SW58 Legal Mediation:
Between Reason and Emotion
McDonough 588
SW59 Characteristics of Law and Justice in East Asia
Hotung 5013
SW5 Bulygin’s Philosophy of Law (Spanish) – [Day 4]
Hart Auditorium
SW61 Systemic Implications of the Principles Theory
Hotung 5021
SW4 Communicational Theory of Law – [Day 4]
McDonough 110
SW60 The Law on Gender-Based Violence in Latin America
McDonough 109
SW51 The Anthroparchical Concept of Global Law
McDonough 140
SW49 Metaphor- A New Paradigm in Legal
Theory and Legal Philosophy
Metaphor – a new paradigm in legal theory and legal philosophy?
SW36 The Normativity of Law – [Day 2]
McDonough 141
SW52 Death, Philosophy and the Law
McDonough 587
16h30 - 17h00
Coffee Break
Hotung Lobby
SW37 Religious Liberty:
Its Nature, Scope and Limits – [Day 2]
McDonough 164
17h00 - 18h00
General Assembly
Hart Auditorium
Chair: Ulfrid Neumann
SW39 Human and Fundamental Rights:
A Complex Argumentation of Legal Philosophy – [Day 2]
McDonough 201
20h00
Farewell Reception – Library of Congress
Jefferson Bilding
10 First Street, SE
SW40 Compassion and Legal Reasoning – [Day 2]
McDonough 202
SW41 Theory of Legal Evidence – [Day 2]
McDonough 203
SW62 Citizenship:
Local or Global?
McDonough 205
SW53 Ibero-American Legal Thinking
McDonough 206
SW54 Human Rights as an Instrument for Poverty Eradication
McDonough 220
SW55 From Castle(s) to Maze(s):
Law Relationships
McDonough 337
SW56 Political Obligation and Political Legitimacy
McDonough 342
44 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 45
II | Program
II | Program
Saturday, 01 August 2015
Excursions and Sightseeing Tours (Optional)
HYATT REGENCY
WASHINGTON ON
CAPITOL HILL
09h30
In addition to the events listed in this program, please consult the
Congress Secretariat for other excursions, tours, and public events
in Washington, D.C., and outings to the Library of Congress.
46 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 47
III
PLENARY
LECTURES
III
48 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 49
III. PLENARY LECTURES
KWAME ANTHONY APPIAH
A Decent Respect: Honor in the Life of the Law
Professor of Philosophy, Law, New York University
Tuesday, July 28, 11h30 to 13h00
T
he emotion of pride is the apt
response to the belief that one has
gained the right to be respected,
just as a feeling of shame is
appropriate when one has lost
that right. The honor codes of social groups
institute a framework of grounds for gaining,
maintaining or losing rights to respect. So
honor mediates between pride and shame,
on the one hand, and social norms, on the
other. One of the central effects of criminal
punishment on those who belong to a civic
honor world is to express the community’s
judgment that an offender has violated an
important kind of norm: and the natural
response of others in that civic honor world
is to recognize that the offender has thereby
lost the right to respect. If the offender
shares that judgment, he or she feels shame.
The converse mechanism—in response to
honorable actions—plays a prominent role
in generating the experience of civic pride.
I will discuss in this lecture some of the
challenges for the criminal law posed by the
situation where there is a mismatch between
legal norms and the norms of honor; and I
will suggest how some of these challenges
can be met.
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 51
III | Plenary Lectures
KO HASEGAWA
Interactive Reason in Law
Professor of Philosophy of Law, Center for the Advanced Studies of
Law & Politics, Graduate School of Law, Hokkaido University
Friday, July 31, 09h30 to 11h00 a.m.
T
he main thesis in this lecture
is that we utilize our reason
interactively in law, especially
when we face various normative
conflicts within and outside of a
legal system and try to make legal judgments
with the value of justice in complicated
problem situations. In so stating, I maintain
that another interactive working of moral
sentiment, a specific form of emotion in
this problem context, is invaluable for that
reason, and that the interpretivist understanding of law can be extended in a significant way for understanding the ubiquitous
working of our reason in important aspects
of the transformation of law.
I also have in mind that this same issue
has been already explored in recent developments in the field of comparative law.
In this globalizing age, there have been
emerging various moves and changes
in law, in which divergent ideas of law
compete in and between societies. We now
need to understand the implications of
these internal and external multiplicities of
law in the philosophical study of the nature
and concept of law as well. I wish to add that
my exploration is based primarily on East
Asian, especially Japanese, legal experience
after the middle of the 19th century until
today, though I wish to grasp some universally fundamental aspects of human reason
and emotion in law through this particular experience. Entering into substantial
discussion, I will utilize three examples to
clarify my point. One is the problem of hard
cases. The other is the conflict of values in
law in a domestic setting: modern and
postmodern. And another is the encounter
and diffusion of divergent ideas of law in a
global setting. Here we may find the incessant pursuit of the effective combination of
different values and ideas in law. A further
52 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
aspect of these examples concerns the state
of legal plurality, namely the heterogeneity
of legal practice in a legal system.
To consider the real significance of these
practically serious problems, we need some
more reflections with our intellectual capability. Facing these problems, a natural
response would be to argue for a particular
position in these conflicts, in which we could
show the power of reason for defending
that position via rational and reasonable
grounds and theories. Yet I maintain that
this response is narrow‑sighted and simply
adversarial, and that what we really need
here is a reconciliational understanding
of the dynamism of law shown in those
problem situations.
If all this be the adequate starting point
for understanding the real role of reason
and emotion in law today, the question
for my exploration is twofold. That is, it is
concerned with both the interactive features
of reason and emotion in law and the
possible interrelationships between divergent sets of reason and emotion in divergent
ideas and values in law, with the emphasis
on the working of interactive reason.
On the basis of this kind of problem‑interest, I will discuss the following points in
this lecture with reference to the exemplary
cases mentioned above.
1) There are several preceding discussions relevant to my problem interest such
as Ronald Dworkin’s interpretivism in
law, David Wong’s pluralistic relativism
in ethics, and John Rawls’ idea of public
reason in political philosophy.
2) There is a theoretical significance in
explicating the salient features of interactive reason in law for understanding the
actual working of that reason from the
hermeneutic standpoint, especially for
reaching a deep understanding of the logic
III | Plenary Lectures
of accommodation of conflicting values and
ideas in law.
3) There is a practical significance in
explicating the circumstantial conditions
of the fruitful working of interactive reason
in law in terms of the ethic and hope for
that reason.
4) To consider the distinctive role of
emotion in law, it is important to place
emotion in the discussion of interactive
reason in law in a suitably interactive way.
5) We need to identify the future theoretical tasks for the extended discussion on
interactive reason in law.
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 53
III | Plenary Lectures
LEORA KATZ
Response Retributivism
JSD Candidate, Yale Law School, and Fellow, Yale Center for Law and Philosophy
Friday, July 31, 11h30 to 13h00
A
t the heart of retributive theory
lies the mysterious but compelling claim that ‘punishing
the deserving is intrinsically
good.’ This highly controversial
though deeply intuitive claim has been the
subject of much debate among retributivists
and anti‑retributivists who have attempted
to grapple with the difficulty of justifying
the act and institution of punishment, which
impose both moral and non‑moral burdens
upon wrongdoers in the forms of negative
affect, blame, deprivations, suffering and
other burdens. The retributive justification of
punishment proceeds by offering two interrelated claims: that there is positive moral value
to the imposition of punishment, and that
this value is imbued in punishment where it
is ‘deserved.’ Call these the ‘retributive value’
and ‘desert’ claims. While retributivism saw
a resurgence of popularity since the 1970s
and remains popular today, these claims are
commonly regarded by critics as remaining
shrouded in mystery and thus the ability of
retributivism to justify punishment regarded
as suspect. The major strain of retributivism
accredited with overcoming these difficulties,
and the very strain responsible for the retributivist revival of the 1970s and 1980s – Herbert
Morris’ benefits and burdens approach –
grounds the retributive value and desert
claims in the higher order principle of fairness. Yet the ‘benefits and burdens’ approach
has long since been regarded as suffering
from devastating flaws, leaving a justificatory
vacuum in its wake.
This paper offers an alternative account
of retributive value and the moral magic of
desert. On the account offered in this paper,
punishment is to be understood in terms of
the ethics of appropriate response. While
moral values generate primary duties to act
54 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
and refrain from acting in particular ways
(primary duties), this paper focuses on the
fact that such values also generate secondary
duties to react and respond in particular ways
to violations of primary duties. Under specified circumstances, the paper will argue, such
secondary duties entail a duty to respond
negatively and impose burdens upon wrongdoers in response to their wrongdoing – i.e.
to punish wrongdoers. The paper will argue
that the need for such negative response is
grounded in the duty such agents have to
meaningfully dissociate from the devaluation inherent in the action of the wrongdoer.
Failing to respond in this morally appropriate way, it will be argued, is constitutive
of failing to appropriately regard the very
value violated in the wrongdoer’s primary
wrong, constituting a moral wrong in and of
itself (absent reasons to refrain). Thus, under
specified circumstances, there is a moral duty
to punish.
The paper will next introduce the notion
of a ‘language of retribution’ – the vehicles
through which meaningful dissociation can
be effected. It will suggest that while many
object to a retributive duty to punish as
‘barbaric’ or ‘cruel’ demanding the eradication of retributive punishment, retributivism
need not be abandoned in order to address the
underlying concerns that drive such objections. Rather, these concerns can be understood to ground a further duty to mitigate our
language of retribution – i.e. reason to aim at
achieving meaningful dissociation through
less violative means than our current language
of retribution allows – while maintaining the
force of the in principle retributive duty to
respond to wrongdoing through punishment.
The paper will address the tension between
these two duties and its implications for the
scope of justifiable punishment.
III | Plenary Lectures
MATTHIAS MAHLMANN
Mind and Rights: Neuroscience, the Critique of
Reason and the Foundations of Legal Justice
Chair of Philosophy and Theory of Law, Legal Sociology and
International Public Law, Faculty of Law, University of Zurich
Thursday, July 30, 11h30 to 13h00
M
any problems exist that are
worthy of the serious attention and the admirable
work devoted to them in
contemporary human rights
theory. Given the anthropological assertion
in the Universal Declaration, the following
may come to one’s mind, too: What is actually the relationship between human thought,
its structure and exercise, and the idea of
human rights, which is surely among the most
important products of human thinking? This
question will be explored below.
To this end some more thoughts have to be
devoted to the question of why the relationship
between the human mind and rights is of some
theoretical interest. So, the first question will
be: Why does the theory of mind matter for
ethics and law? Second, the concept or idea of
a human right as a subclass of moral and legal
subjective rights used will be outlined and
clarified. This analysis of the concept or idea of
rights is indispensable to answer the question:
What precisely are we talking about? Third,
the question Where do rights come from?
will occupy the attention just long enough to
substantially understand why an answer to
one of the two currently particularly interesting fundamental forms of human rights’
revisionism, the historical, genealogical attack
on human rights, leads necessarily beyond
the limits of human rights history in the deep
waters of the epistemology and ontology
of human rights and thus to those kinds of
problems these remarks intend to explore.
History or historicism, it is argued, offers no
escape route from them. Fourth, the question
Why are rights justified? will be considered.
The assumption behind this discussion is
that there is no meaningful epistemology of
human rights without a normative theory of
how they can be justified. This is because the
latter formulates the claims the epistemological merits of which are to be assessed by the
former. Fifth, after having sufficiently prepared
the ground by the preceding remarks, the core
issue of these reflections can be addressed:
What is, after all, the importance of the theory
of mind for the project of human rights? Here
the second fundamental challenge to the idea
of human rights will be discussed. This attack
stems from the quarters of today’s neuroscientific neo‑emotivism, which is interesting in
itself and has the advantage that the critique
of this form of human rights revisionism has
considerable heuristic merits for a constructive account of the theory of mind and the
foundations of human rights. How a theory of
human rights could draw from the theory of
mind, and more concretely from a mentalist
account of ethics and law, to provide such a
constructive account is the final perspective to
be explored.
There are very serious contemporary political, cultural and theoretical reasons to worry
about the project of human rights. One should
not take the existence of the level of civilisation
epitomised by human rights for granted. The
history of the last century is sobering. Massive
crimes were committed because fantastic
ideologies like National Socialism held their
barbarous sway. Camus called it with good
reasons “le siècle de la peur”, a century of
fear that formulates the categorical imperative: “ni victimes, ni bourreaux”, neither to
become victims, nor hangmen. Given this
and the added experience of the many ways
of suffering after this cataclysm around the
world, the recent past has certainly taught the
lesson not to put too much confidence in the
decent behaviour of human beings. To be sure,
such scepticism does not necessarily imply a
verdict about reason, endorsement of theories
of its intrinsic dark side or the amoral driving
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 55
III | Plenary Lectures
forces of the human will. But it does nourish
the very ancient reluctance to underestimate
the fragility of civilisation. The Athenians did
not lack culture but still sowed destruction in
the Peloponnesian Wars, for others and ultimately for themselves.
Whether a reflection on mind and rights
can serve the thus not only theoretically
56 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
important but practically crucial end to dispel
doubts about the justification of human rights
to strengthen the not at all self‑evident motivation to do something to defend their fragile
rule where it exists and to help to increase
their sway subversive to power, injustice and
bondage in this world is what is to be asked in
the five steps of this reflection.
III | Plenary Lectures
DANIEL MENDONCA BONNETT
Rights, Reason and Emotion: Conflict of Rights
and Balancing Rights (in Spanish)
Catedrático de la Universidad Católica “Nuestra Señora de la Asunción”,
Facultad de Ciencias Jurídicas y Diplomáticas
Thursday, July 30, 09h30 to 11h00
L
as sociedades están repletas de
emociones. Ciertas manifestaciones
emocionales se basan en controversias generadas por el reclamo
de reconocimiento o protección
de determinados derechos. Este ensayo está
dedicado a los conflictos de derechos y a su
resolución mediante el método del balance
de derechos. A partir de una serie de casos, se
ofrece una reconstrucción original del método.
(An English translation of this plenary
lecture will be simulcast in McDonogh 202).
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 57
III | Plenary Lectures
III | Plenary Lectures
PATRICIA MINDUS
The Wrath of Reason and the Grace of
Sentiment: Vindicating Emotion in Law
ANDRÁS SAJÓ
The Constitutional Domestication of Emotions
Associate Professor, Philosophy Department, Uppsala University
Tuesday, July 28, 9h30 to 11h00 a.m.
I
W
hy require Justice to be
blind to passions? The
standard model of jurisprudence offers two lines
of answers: (1) Justice
is about formal rationality and judging is
essentially reason‑giving, while emotions
are irrational feelings, so justice is thus blind
to passions; (2) Justice ought to be predictable to live up to the rule of law and judges
should strive towards impartiality, while
passions obscures judgment and instigates
prejudice and partiality, so justice should
thus be blind to passions, lest it decays into
its very opposite. Mainstream jurisprudence also incorporates two major lines of
attack against these claims: (3) Detractors
58 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
argue against (1) that law suffers from indeterminacy and judges from breakfast biases;
(4) detractors argue against (2) that equity
requires practical reasoning when not
empathy, mitigating the rigour of the law.
These opinions are all grounded on specific,
but often uncritically assumed, accounts of
emotion. While (1), (2) and (3) are rooted
in an irrationalist approach to emotion;
(4) stems from a cognitivist approach to
emotion. Both of these approaches are
problematic. This paper attempts to shed
light on the underlying accounts of emotion
and highlights some problematic aspects
of them. No matter if you defend (1)‑(4),
jurisprudents today need a better grasp on
emotion in law.
Judge, European Court of Human Rights (Hungary)
Monday, July 27, 11h30 to 13h00
n the desiccated tradition of rationalism emotions are separate from
reason and law is described as a
mechanism of conscious deliberation.
The reason‑emotion divide is unsustainable. Scientific evidence indicates that
reason and emotion operate interactively
in human decision‑making and in the
actual process of legal institution building.
Emotion is inherent to cognition.
The development of early liberal constitutions and the consolidation of the institutions of constitutionalism demonstrate
that emotions cannot be separated from the
operations of law.
A descriptive theory of law ought to take
into consideration the role of emotions
in regulatory institutions, including
constitutions.
Constitutional
institutions are the result of emotionally charged
cognitive processes and tools of social
emotion control.
Emotions, and moral emotions in
particular, contribute to the building and
undoing of public emotions because they
provide specific social regulatory functions
(signaling action proneness, reinforcing
other people’s emotions, etc.). While there
can be little doubt about the social regulatory function of emotions, it requires
explanation how emotions – a typically
personal psychological or neural process –
result in human interactions that leads to
institutions. Emotions participate in the
formation of collective moral judgements,
but it remains to be explained how they
contribute to constitutional institution
building. This is explained as a matter of
collective intention (Searle) and the model
is tested by examining the formation of the
fundamental institutions (fundamental
rights, separation of powers) of 18th century
constitutionalism. Fear (particularly fear of
cruelty), compassion, envy, etc., did play
a role not only in the collective actions of
force which created the new institutions,
but also in the specific considerations
reflected in constitutions. The resulting
hypothesis is that the classic constitutions
selected, among emotionally‑ supported
moral judgments, those which seemed to
resonate with some basic human emotional
concerns and fundamental moral intuitions. This is a theory of weak correspondence between constitutional sentiments
and constitutionalism. Core elements of
constitutionalism, human rights in particular, find inspiration and echo in fundamental moral sentiments. This is far from
some kind of emotional nativism.
A descriptive theory of legal (in this case
constitutional) sentiments is of relevance
for legal philosophy dealing with rights
and obligations. It refers to the empirical
foundations of these social practices and
to where the binding force of rights and
obligations comes from. To mention just
one example, it is of obvious relevance to
question the emotional (even neuro‑scientific) difference between the duty to avoid
harming (if such duty exists at all) and
the duty to aid; the former being generally
taken to be a more demanding duty. One
of the differences consists of the emotional
salience of bodily harm.
Understanding the emotional components of law is important for all descriptive theories of law, but it does not lead to
the naturalistic fallacy or to a fallacious
appeal to “human nature”. It is not argued
that moral emotions, and hence moral
precepts, determine legal rights, only that
some correspondence with some rights
and other binding institutional solutions
exists. Such weak correspondence gives
emotional and social credibility to a rights
and duties based system that we call law. A
weak correspondence theory does not claim
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 59
III | Plenary Lectures
that it is because the correspondence of
constitutional institutions (e.g. rights) and
prevailing emotional dictates and moral
emotions that the constitutional system is
sustained, or that it should be sustained for
that reason. It offers a partial explanation as
to why legal institutions are accepted, but it
is not a justification for existing legal institutions. Its normative implication is that one
should be extremely careful with emotionally‑endorsed and emotionally‑dictated
legal solutions of social and legal problems.
III | Plenary Lectures
ROBIN WEST
Lawful Emotions
Frederick J. Haas Professor of Law and Philosophy,
Georgetown University Law Center
Monday, July 27, 09h30 to 11h00
“L
aw and Emotions” Scholarship of the last two decades,
across a range of disciplines
and methods, coalesces
around a handful of shared
commitments: that law is rooted at least
partly in emotion, even as it finds expression
in reason, that judicial interpretation of law is
likewise colored by the emotional responses
of judges to both the litigants before them and
the precedents they apply, that law acts upon
the “emotional subject” no less than upon the
economic or political subject, that law, and
particularly criminal law, tort law, and family
law, often regulates our emotional lives, and
that the ideal of justice toward which law
strives is informed by empathic knowledge
of others which is itself garnered partly from
emotions. These are central and vitally significant contributions to our understanding of
law’s nature. The “law and emotion” scholars
60 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
however have not so clearly investigated
another, and perhaps equally central aspect of
law’s relation to emotional life: law’s capacity
to create, or produce emotions, and therefore to create or produce or further emotional
health or ill health, in the citizens whose lives
it touches. Emotional wellbeing is now recognized by “capabilists” as one of the central
capabilities that a just and liberal state should
seek to nurture. Law produces emotions of fear,
anxiety, hope, frustration, satiation revenge,
rage. Law and Emotion Scholars who are also
interested in the meaning of justice might
therefore fruitfully turn to an investigation of
whether law promotes emotional wellbeing,
and the capacity for moral connections with
others for which emotional wellbeing is so
central, and how it might be reformed with
these emotional values in mind — along side of
law’s more familiar ideals of efficiency, wealth,
integrity, consistency and principle.
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 61
IV
SPECIAL
WORKSHOPS
IV
62 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 63
IV. SPECIAL WORKSHOPS
(1) Axiology of Law
Monday, 14h30 – 16:30 and 17h00 – 18h30
Hotung 5027
1. Niemi, Matti Ilmari
(Chair)
Values and the Concept of Law
2. Bunikowski, Dawid
Legal Protection of the Value of Public
Morality: the Hart‑Devlin Debate
3. Gaudêncio, Ana
Margarida Simões
Law and Value: Beyond Jusnaturalism(s) and
Positivism(s), a Reflection on Alternative Substantial
Autonomous Foundations to Law
4. Isola‑Miettinen, Hannele
Legislation and Rule of Law
5. Szot, Adam
The Conflict of Values in Public Administration Actions
(2) The Idea of Justice in Literature / Die
Idee der Gerechtigkeit in der Literature
Monday and Thursday, 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30 McDonough 140
1. Liu, Shing‑I (Chair)
Widerstand im Namen der Gerechtigkeit
2. Álvarez Gálvez, Íñigo
W. Godwin: What justice? Things as they are
3. Chang, Li‑Ching
Kafka’s Classic “The Trial” ‑ a Portrait of Criminal
Law through the Lens of Literature
4. Conklin, William E.
The Enigma of Kafka’s “Before the Law”
5. Hutt, Donald E. Bello
Democracy, Law, Judges and Solitude – Some Reflections
from Walden and the Lake Isle of Innisfree
6. Kabashima, Hiroshi
Romanticism and Political Violence
7. Kahlig, Eleonora \ Kahlig,
Wolfgang
Rechtsvisualisierung ‑ Viribus Unitis ‑ mit C.O.N.T.E.N.T.
8. Linhares, José Manuel
Aroso
From Brave New World to the Island: Huxley’s
Tales about the Alternatives to Law?
9. Liu, Shing‑I
Widerstand im Namen der Gerechtigkeit
continued on page 66
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10. López, Nuria
A Penny for Your Thoughts: The Conceptions of
Justice in the Literature of Cora Coralina
11. Lütge, Christoph
The Idea of the Honest Businessman in Literature
12. Moraes, Bernardo
Supranzetti de \ Ramos,
Marcelo Maciel
Rule of Law and State of Exception in
arts: a study of “V for Vendetta”
13. Pan, You‑Da
Taming the Anger : One Jurisprudential
Reading of Two Greek Dramas
14. Pavčnik, Marijan
The Meaning of Legal Thought
15. Prada, Aurelio de
Antigone: The Faces of Justice
16. Ribeiro, Karla Pinhel
The Concept of Gewalt in Walter Benjamin Philosophy of Law
17. Rovetta Klyver, Fernando Don Quixote de La Mancha: his Struggle Against Injustice
18. Üye, Saim
Non‑access to Justice: Literature in Times of Coup D’etat
19. Velarde, Caridad
Legal Reasoning in Shakespeare’s Merchant of Venice
20. Wintr, Jan
Kafka und Schwejk ‑ Karikatur des modernen
Rechtssystems und Gefühl der Ungerechtigkeit
21. Xavier, Bruno Gadelha
The Law in Tieta: The Connection between Law and
Literature and the Social Critic of Jorge Amado
IV | Special Workshops
6. Chiarella, Paola
Principles of Liberty and Equality on the
Knees of Music and Novels
7. Domselaar, Iris van
Refreshing a Legal Order: on the Constructive
Role of Tragic Legal Choices
8. Dubowska, Marta
Is Atticus Finch still with us? ‑ The Iconic
Lawyer in Modern Pop‑culture
9. Fagundes, Laura Helena
de Souza
The Rational Emotions in Martha Nussbaum:
relevance in Legal System
10. Lopes, Mônica Sette
Judges and Witnesses: Interviews and Judgements
11. Pethick, Stephen
Harmony, Memory & Emotion: Narcissus
at COHERENCE’S Pool
12. Ribeiro, Fernando
Armando
Contribution of literature in pursuit of the ‘right answer’
13. Sanchotene, Paulo
Law in Plato's Gorgias
14. Whalen‑Bridge, Helena
The Balance of Logic and Emotion in Lawyerly Narrative
(4) Communicational Theory of Law (CTL):
Communication, Law, Emotions
Monday, Tuesday and Thursday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
Friday: 14h30 – 16h30
(3) Memory and Oblivion, the Harmonies and
Conflicts of Law, Reason and Emotion, co-sponsored
by the Italian Society for Law and Literature (ISLL)
Monday and Tuesday:
14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
Gewirz Student Center, 12th floor
1. Gaakeer, Jeanne
(Co‑Chair)
Practical Wisdom and Judicial Practice
2. Galuppo, Marcelo
(Co‑Chair)
Originalism, Living Constitution and the Author`s Intention
3. Rodrigues, Ana Carolina Emotions and Sentiments in Judicial Deliberation
de Faria Silvestre (Co‑Chair)
3. Bombelli, Giovanni
Emotion, Reason and Political‑Legal Bond:
Ideas from Greek Literature
4. Borsellino, Patrizia
End‑of life Care and Dignity of Dying
(Literary Flashes of Inspiration)
5. Çataloluk, Gökçe
On the Borders, In Trial: Sabahattin Ali and his Documents
McDonough 110
1. Robles, Gregorio (Chair)
Caracteres Del Sistema Jurídico En La Tcd
2. Albert, Marta
Phenomenology, Emotions And Ctl
3. Andrade, Laércio \ Valle,
Maurício Dalri Timm do
Os Conflitos Aparentes De Competencia
Sobre Os Impostos Sobre Serviços
4. Aparisi Miralles, Ángela
La Noción De Persona Y La Teoría Comunicacional Del Derecho
5. Belchior, Germana
Convergências entre a Teoria Comunicacional do
Parente Neiva \ Pacobahyba, Direito e o Constructivismo Lógico‑Semântico:
Fernanda Mara de Oliveira emoções e complexidade na geração de sentido
Macedo Carneiro
6. Britto, Lucas Galvão de
On The Notions Of Space And Place On A Ctl Framework
7. Câmara, Edna Torres
Felício \ Valencia Tello,
Diana Carolina
Emociones, Nuevas Tecnologías Y Política
Em Democracias Representativas
8. Cascudo, Leonardo Soares The Law As Text
Matos
continued on page 68
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XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 67
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IV | Special Workshops
29. Tomazini, Aurora
A Importancia Da Teoria Comunicacional
Para O Estudo Do Direito
30. Washington, Eliane A.
Dorico
Communicational Theory Of Law: Law As
Originator Language Of The Juridical Reality
9. Cavalcante, Mantovani
Colares
Los Momentos De La Acción En El Derecho Procesal
Y Algunas Situaciones Jurídicas Que Se Producen En
El Proceso: Una Propuesta De Convergencia De Las
Teorias De Gregorio Robles Y James Goldschmidt
10. Cavalcante, Denise
Lucena \ Favacho, Fernando
Gomez
Definition Of “Tax” By Communicational Theory Of Law
11. Cavalcante, Denise
Lucena \ Freitas, Juárez
Legal Hermeneutics, Language And Communication
12. Conde Gaxiola,
Napoleón
El concepto de derecho in la Hermenéutica
Analítica de Gregorio Robles
13. Galindo, Fernando
Protección de datos personales, emociones y
Teoría Comunicacional del Derecho
14. Gonçalves, Carla
Theory Of Judicial Decision
15. Grupenmacher, Betina
Treiger \ Grupenmacher,
Giovana Treiger
Teoria Comunicacional do Direito e Positivismo
Jurídico na experiência jurídico‑tributária brasileira
16. Hermida, Cristina
Relaciones Entre El Derecho De La Eu Y El Derecho De
Los Estados Miembros Desde La Perspectiva De La Tcd
17. Holanda, Flávia
Legal Pluralism And Intersistemic Relations
18. Hutt, Donald E. Bello
Jurisprudence, Legal Reasoning And Legal Gaps
In Communicational Theory Of Law
19. La Porta, Antonio María
The Preambles Of Legal Texts From Textual And
Hermeneutical Perspective Of The Communicational
Theory Of Law: Communication, Reason And Emotion
20. Llano Alonso, Fernando
La Teoría Comunicacional Del Derecho Y El
Experiencialismo Jurídico Como Concepciones
Globales Del Derecho: Afinidades Y Contrastes
21. Medina Morales, Diego
Nuevas Tecnologías, Técnica Y Teoría
Comunicacional Del Derecho
22. Moraes, Guilherme
Lopes de
Emoções na aplicação do direito
10. Corvalán, Juan Gustavo \ Sentencia judicial y Derecho administrativo
Lumiento, María Elena
23. Neves, Luis Fernando
Ctl And The Matrix‑Rule Of Tax Incidence In
Logical Semantical Constructivism
12. García Berger, Mario
24. Pérez Triviño, José Luís
Suerte, Justicia Y Jerarquía En El Deporte
Eugenio Bulygin y la tesis kelseniana de la
creación epistemológica del derecho
25. Prada, Aurelio de
The Ctl, A Work In Progress
13. Huerta, Carla
Validez y vigencia en Bulygin
26. Sánchez Díaz, Félix F.
Ámbito Jurídico Y Sistema Jurídico
27. Santos, José‑Antônio
Presupuestos Hermenéuticos De La Teoría
Comunicacional Del Derecho
28. Valle, Maurício Dalri
Timm do
Acerca De Las Normas Permisivas
68 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
(5) Bulygin's Philosophy of Law
Monday, Tuesday and Thursday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
Friday: 14h30 – 16h30
McDonough, Hart Auditorium
1. Alonso, Juan Pablo
(Co‑chair)
De la lógica de normas de Alchourrón y Bulygin
a la lógica de principios de Alexy
2. Bulygin, Eugenio
Presentation of the book ESSAYS IN LEGAL
(Co‑chair) \ Paulson, Stanley PHILOSOPHY, by Eugenio Bulygin
Redondo, María Cristina
(Co‑chair)
3. Scataglini, María Gabriela
(Co‑chair)
Bulygin‑Redondo: desencuentros cercanos sobre
enunciados hartianos del tercer tipo
4. Antonov, Mikhail
Integrity of Legal System in Eugenio Bulygin's Philosophy
5. Barbarosch, Eduardo
La objetividad en la moral y el derecho
6. Calzetta, Alejandro
Competencia y Producción Normativa en Alchourrón y Bulygin
7. Cella, José Renato Gaziero
\ Oliveira, Marlus Heriberto
Arns de
The Debate between Bulygin and Kelsen on
the Validity and the Law Effectiveness
8. Cerdio, Jorge \ Sucar,
German
The A & B's Concept of Legal Order: A
Defense against All Comers
9. Chiassoni, Pierluigi
Bulygin’s Theory of Jurisdiction: A Critical Appraisal
11. D’Almeida, Luís Duarte \ Implications of a Normativist Conception
Toh, Kevin
of Internal Legal Statements
14. Andrade, Melanie Merlin La relevancia del debate entre Alexy y Bulygin
de \ Câmara, Edna Torres
en la Teoría del Derecho Contemporánea
Felício
15. Millard, Eric
Bulygin on Validity
continued on page 70
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4. Costa, Paulo Sérgio Weyl Prudence and Legal Interpretation
Albuquerque \ Taxi, Ricardo
Dib
16. Monti, Ezequiel
Sobre islas y puentes
17. Moreso, José Juan
On Deontic Truth and Values
18. Paulson, Stanley L.
Hans Kelsen Follows Eugenio Bulygin?
19. Rábanos, Julieta A.
El filósofo, el legislador y el sistema. Un comentario
sobre la postura (o falta de ella) de Eugenio Bulygin
sobre el legislador y su rol en los sistemas jurídicos
5. Costa, Paulo Sérgio Weyl
Albuquerque \ Martins,
Ricardo E. Santos
The Relation between Morality and Legal Science from Kelsen to
Gadamer: the Hermeneutical Atualization of the Legal Science
6. Fernandes, Karina
Macedo
Facticity and Validity of Habermasian Theory of
Discourse in the Context of Peripheral Countries
7. Lepper, Adriano Obach
Responsibility to Protect (R2P) and Humanitarian
War after Hume and the Fall of Natural Law
20. Ruiz Manero, Juan
Un examen crítico de la Teoría del Derecho de Eugenio Bulygin
21. Sardo, Alessio
Let's Talk about Antinomies: Normative System Reloaded
22. Scataglini, María
Gabriela
Bulygin‑Redondo: desencuentros cercanos sobre
enunciados hartianos del tercer tipo
8. Oliveira Júnior, José
Alcebíades de
The Importance of Judiciary for Democracy and Justice in Brazil
23. Serbena, Cesar Antonio
Georg Henrik Von Wright, Eugenio Bulygin and
the historical development of Deontic Logic
9. Reckziegel, Janaína
Humans, Drugs, Ethical Limits and Human Dignity
10. Romaguera, Daniel
Carneiro Leão \ Teixeira,
João Paulo F. de Souza
Allain
A Decolonial View of Human Rights: Facing Universalism
and the Occidental Ideology of Human Rights
11. Silva, Érica Guerra da
The Acknowledgment of Human’s Rights through
the Moral Awareness of Disaster Victims
24. Squella, Agustín
El positivismo jurídico y los Derechos Humanos (Un
análisis del punto de vista de Eugenio Bulygin)
25. Stamile, Natalina
La polémica sobre la relación entre derecho y
moral: Robert Alexy y Eugenio Bulygin
26. Valle, Maurício Dalri
Timm do
Eugenio Bulygin y la distinción entre enunciados
jurídicos, normas y proposiciones normativas: en busca
del tratamiento claro del lenguaje normativo
27. Villa Rosas, Gonzalo
Commanding and Defining On Eugenio
Bulyginʼs Theory of Rules of Competence
28. Zalewska, Monika
On Bulygin’s Reconstruction of Kelsen’s Norm Theory
29. Zuleta, Hugo R.
On some objections to the deductive closure of Legal Systems
(6) Law, Consciousness and Democratic Societies
Tuesday and Thursday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
McDonough 156
Barretto, Vicente de Paulo
(Co‑chair)
Bragato, Fernanda Frizzo
(Co‑chair)
1. Baez, Narciso Leandro
Xavier
Human Dignity Double Dimension´s Theory
2. Bichara, Carlos David
Carneiro
The Rule of Law and Undercitzenship: the Intersubjective
Internalization Deficit in Brazilian Modernity
3. Brito, Adriano Naves de
Moral Agency, Freedom & Emotions: a Naturalistic
Revision of our Approach to Responsibility in Law
70 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
(7) The Idea of Basic Liberties
Monday and Tuesday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
McDonough 220
1. Platz, Jeppe von (Chair)
Basic Economic Rights: Work, Education, and Healthcare
2. Arnold, Samuel
Putting Liberty in its Place
3. Bernstein, Alyssa
Human Rights and Democracy: The Capabilities
Approach versus Contractualism
4. Flannigan, Jessica
Freedom of Contract and Accommodation in Liberal Societies
5. Gowder, Paul
Market Mobility and Freedom
6. Layman, Daniel
Property, Competition, and the Scope
of Republican Basic Liberty
7. Martin, Rex
The Locus of Basic Economic Liberties
and Practices in Rawls's Theory
8. Nickel, James
Law and Philosophy
9. Reidy, David A.
Securing Democratic Citizenship: Basic Rights and Beyond
10. Stanczyk, Lucas
Marginal Liberalism
11. Tomasi, John
The Idea of Basic Liberties
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(8) Law and Coercion
Monday and Tuesday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
Friday: 14h30 – 16h30
11. Werkheiser, Ian
Food sovereignty, Self‑determination, and the Law
12. Whyte, Kyle
Food Sovereignty, Collective Food
Relations and Indigenous Rights
McDonough 342
Lopes, Lucas Miotto (Chair)
1. Anderson, Scott
Coercion as a Structuring Feature of Society: a Challenge
for Attempts at Conceptualizing Coercion
2. Coyne, Steven
Coercion and Obligation as Exercises of Authority
3. Edmundson, Willian
Law, Coercion, and Legitimacy in Rawls
4. Himma, Kenneth
Is Law Necessarily Coercitive?
5. Hughes, Robert
The Ethics of Imprisonment
6. McGregor, Joan
Power and Autonomy
7. Phillips, Cindy
The Presumption of Liberty and Coerciveness of Law
8. Raponi, Sandra
(10) Philosophical Perspectives on International Law
Monday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
McDonough 337
1. Kassner, Joshua (Co‑chair) A Contractualist Reconciliation of Orthodox
and Political Accounts of Human Rights
2. Lefkowitz, David
(Co‑chair)
Ideal Ends and Possible Means: Integrating the Philosophical
and Social Scientific Study of International Law
The Role of Coercion in Law: An Analysis of International
3. Hessler, Kristen
9. Rodriguez‑Blanco,
Veronica
I am the Origin of my Actions: the Role of Legal Sanctions
in the Phenomenology of Legal Compliance
Theory, Politics, and Practice: Setting the Agenda for
the Philosophy of International Human Rights Law
4. Lister, Matthew
10. Schauer, Frederick
Coercion and Conditional Rewards
The Disunity of International Law: What Legal Philosophy
Can Learn from International Economic Law
5. Mandle, Jon
Ideal and Non‑Ideal Theory in International Law
6. Martí, José Luis
Democratic Legitimacy and the Sources of International Law
7. Roughan, Nicole
Officials and Authorities in the International Legal System
(9) Food Justice: Food Sovereignty
and the Role of Law
Monday and Tuesday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
McDonough 164
1. McGregor, Joan (Chair)
Why Just outcomes aren’t enough: Public Interest
and ‘Sovereignty’ of our Food System
2. Cohen, Mathilde
Of Cows and the Constitution
3. Dieterle, Jill
Food Sovereignty, Farm Protection Laws,
and Resistance to GM Labeling
4. Deng, Yi
Farmer Cooperatives and Food Sovereignty
5. Malm, Heidi
Water’s Role in Limiting the Realization of Food Sovereignty
6. Navin, Mark
Food Sovereignty and Gender Justice:
The Case of La Vía Campesina
7. Raponi, Sandra
The Feasibility and Justiciability of the Right to Adequate Food
8. Saghai, Yashar
Food Sovereignty, Right Claims, and Political Demands
9. Schanbacher, Will
Food Sovereignty, Gender Justice and Nodes of Power
10. Tsosie, Rebecca
Food Sovereignty and Cultural Sustainability: The
Future of Food Security for Indigenous Peoples
72 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
(11) Truth and Objectivity in Law and Morals
Monday and Tuesday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
McDonough 160
1. Paula, André de
(Co‑chair)
Revisiting Discovery and Justification in Legal Theory
2. Santacoloma, Andrés
(Co‑chair)
Semantical Rules and the Theory of the Limit of
the Wording: Seeking for Objectivity in Law
3. Villa Rosas, Gonzalo
(Co‑chair)
Objectivity and Correctness. Excursus on Epistemic
Objectivity and Practical Reasoning
4. Anderson, Bruce \ Shute,
Michael
The Role of Feelings in Legal Decision Making
5. Araszkiewicz, Michał \
Koszowy, Marcin
One Right Answer Thesis, Objectivity and Judicial Authority
6. Camargo, Margarida
Maria Lacombe Maria
Lacombe
Scientific Arguments as Legislative Facts in the Superior Courts
continued on page 74
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continued from page 73
(13) The Public Power of Judgement: a Challenge to
Phronêsis or Practical‑Prudential Legal Rationality?
7. Chang, Chih‑Ping
Scientific Objects and Legal Objectivity
8. Chilovi, Samuele
The Speaker Dilemma in Legal Implicatures
9. Di Donato, Flora
Emotions as essential elements of a fact discovery process
10. Niemi, Matti Ilmari
Objective Legal Reasoning – Is It Possible?
11. Puliatti, Donatello
Monday and Tuesday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
Hotung 5013
Can the Constructivistic Epistemology Successfully Meet
the Correspondence Truth‑theory? Three Suggestions
for Legal Reasoning and Legal Dogmatics
1. Cern, Karolina M.
(Co‑chair)
The Public Power of Judgement and Democratic
Credentials in Self‑Reflexive Polities
2. Linhares, José Manuel
Aroso (Co‑chair)
The Rehabilitation of Practical Reasoning and the
Persistence of Deductivism: An Impossible Challenge?
12. Pulido, Catalina
La construcción del dictamen de inimputabilidad por causal de trastorno mental
3. Wojciechowski, Bartosz
(Co‑chair)
The “Interpretative” Power of Judges – the New Approach
to Autonomy of the Court and Judicial Independence
13. Yoshino, Hajime
The Truth of Law and the Inference to Decide On It
Mis/Trust & Public Power of Judgement
14. Zhao, Jing
Objectivity and Relativity in Law under the Influence of Kant
4. Bengez, Rainhard \
Eckert, Cláudia \ Stoll,
Jennifer
5. Bengez, Rainhard \
Lachmayer, Friedrich \
Schaffer, Burkhard
Unequal Application of Equality ‑ Diskriminierende
Anwendung des Gleichheitsgrundsatzes
6. Brito, José de Sousa e
Judicial Recognition and Sources of Law
7. Gaudêncio, Ana
Margarida Simões
Jurisdictional Realization Of Law’ As Judicium:
A Methodological Alternative, Beyond Deductive
Application And Finalistic Decision…
8. Matos, Saulo de
Zum Menschenbild des Grundgesetzes nach Gadamer
9. Mazur, Paweł \ Nowak,
Ewa
Being a Judge vs. Facing the Other. The Infinite
Tension between Responsibility and Justice
10. Oliveira, Maria Lucia de
Paula
The Reflexive Judgment and the Prudential Rationality: a
Contribution to an Inclusive Judicial Application of Law
11. Ralli, Tommi
The Arguable Character of Law and its Profound Explanation
(12) The Natural Law Tradition
Monday and Tuesday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
1. Poole, Diego (Chair)
McDonough 141
The Moral Order as a Prolongation of the Metaphysical
Order into the Dimensions of Human Freedom
2. Aparisi Miralles, Ángela
Practical Reason and the Praxis of Legal Operators
3. Arias, Joséph M.
Marriage and Natural Law in The Thought of Saint
Thomas Aquinas: The Relevance of Thomistic Teaching
for Ancient and Contemporary Discussions
4. Bordoni, Gianluca Sadun
Kant on Law, Reason And Moral Sentiment
5. Bunikowski, Dawid
Going Back to Natural Law in Contract Law.
Necessity of Metaphysics in Law
6. Danisor, Gheorghe
Law and Justice
7. Fernández Ruiz‑Gálvez,
Encarnación
Natural Law and International Law in Francisco de Vitoria
8. Garzón Vallejo, Iván
Dworkin in the Colombian Constitutional Court
9. Josse, Léon
Droit naturel et droit positif, la querelle
de la quelle de la coercition
10. Madrid, Raúl
Existence and Claimability of the Right to Happiness
11. Matava, Robert
Reason, Emotion and Moral Disagreement
12. Garcia, Aurelio de Prada
Nature and Society: Towards a Royal Democracy
13. Sartea, Cláudio
"New Rights" and Natural Law Tradition. The
Restless Borders between Public and Private
14. Vidal, Ángela
The Balance between Reason and Emotion
in Lon Fuller´s Jurisprudence
74 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
12. Rodrigues, Ana Carolina Emotions and Sentiments in Judicial Deliberation
de Faria Silvestre
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(14) The Morality and Ethics of Tax Law
(16) Law, Emotion and Society:
Recovering the Classics
Monday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
1. Macei, Demetrius Nichele
(Chair)
McDonough 109
Monday and Tuesday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
The Morality and Ethics of Tax Law
2. Cella, José Renato Gaziero Moralidad y Derecho Fiscal
McDonough 347
1. Cotterrell, Roger
(Co‑chair)
Law and Affective Community
2. Del Mar, Maksymilian
(Co‑chair)
Affective Typologies of Norms: Petrazycki’s Contribution
3. Antonov, Mikhail
Emotions as a Viable Criterion to Make Difference
between Law and Morality? A Comparative Analysis of
the Legal Conceptions by E. Ehrlich and L. Petrazycki
3. Fagundes, Taísa Fernanda
Bazzo \ Oliveira, Marlus
Heriberto Arns de
A Brief Discussion of the Current Crisis of Legal Philosophy
4. Gionedis, Louise Rainer
Pereira \ Pilotto, Melissa
Abramovici
Ethics and Sustainable Society
4. Conklin, William
Alfred Schutz’ Meanings of Emotion in Social/Legal Relations
5. Pilotto, Melissa
Abramovici
Moral and Social Aspects of Environmental Taxation
5. Fittipaldi, Edoardo
Jural Emotions, Anger, Aggressiveness: Cross‑Fertilizing
Petrażycki’s Theory of Law with Modern Theories of Emotions
6. Ptak, Joanna
The Case of Polish Regulation of Value‑Added Tax (VAT)
6. Kurczewski, Jacek
Normativity, Emotions and Law in Society
7. Wojciechowski, Bartosz
Is the Principle in dubio pro tributario Relevant in
the Process of the Interpretation of Tax Law?
7. Motyka, Krzysztof
Petrażycki’s Conception of Emotion and its Critique
8. Rodak, Lidia
How Petrażycki’s Psychological Theory of Law
Could Influence Legal Education?
9. Schmidt, Katharina Isabel
Towards a More “Authentic” Jurisprudence: German Free
Lawyers Between Reason and Emotion, 1903‑1914
10. Tonkov, Evgenii
Ideas of L. Petrazycki and Formation of the Realistic
Approach to Statutory Interpretation in Russia
(15) The Validity of Law
Monday: 11h30 – 13h00; 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
Hotung 5021
1. Kirste, Stephan
(Co‑chair)
The Distinction between the Concept and the Validity of Law
2. Westerman, Pauline
(Co‑chair)
The Validity of Law
3. Aki, Irem
Legal Validity within the Framework of Lon L. Fuller
4. Carpentier, Mathieu
Inclusive Legal Positivism and the Concepts of Validity
5. Fabra Zamora, Jorge Luis
The Argumentative Conception of Validity
6. Fittipaldi, Edoardo
To Analyze the Phrase Validity of Law
Stipulative Concepts are Needed
7. Jovanovic, Miodrag
Is Legality like Virginity? The Case of International Law
8. Klink, Bart van \
Lembcke, Oliver W.
The Normative Force of the Factual” On the Relation
between Legal and Social Validity in Jellinek and Kelsen
9. Pfordten, Dietmar von der A Critique of Validity
10. Sakurai, Tetsu
The Legal Validity and Moral Basis of a Right
of the State to Control Immigration
76 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 77
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(17) International Human Rights Courts:
Enhancers or Enemies of Democracy ‑ or Both?
European and Inter‑American Perspectives
Monday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
McDonough 156
1. Føllesdal, Andréas (Chair) ECtHR’s Margin of Appreciation and Subsidiarity: Better human
rights protection, more deference to democracy – or both?
2. Corradetti, Cláudio
Emotional Politics and the ‘Militant Turn’ of the European
Court of Human Rights. The Case of the Party Bans
3. Dobson, Lynn
Liberalism, Paternalism, and the Margin of Appreciation
in the European Court of Human Rights
4. Gargarella, Roberto
Due Deference for Democracy?
5. Iglesias Vila, Marisa
Subsidiarity, Margin of Appreciation and International
Adjudication from a Political Conception of Human Rights
6. Puppo, Alberto
Emotions and Compassion in Interamerican
Adjudication: Irrationality as a Threat to Democracy
7. Zoethout, Carla M.
The European Court of Human Rights and Democracy ‑
Does it Strengthen or Threaten Democracy?
(18) Humanidad y derecho: ser, valor y praxis jurídica
Monday, Tuesday and Thursday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
McDonough 200
1. Bellver Capella, Vicente
(Co‑chair)
Presupuestos antropológicos del Bioderecho y el
Derecho ambiental: la propuesta de Jesús Ballesteros
2. Saúl Ramírez García,
Hugo (Co‑chair)
Pro personae como primacía jurídica de la
humanidad vulnerable. Una aproximación
desde el pensamiento de Jesús Ballesteros
3. Aparisi Miralles, Ángela
Theories of gender and biolaw: an approach from human dignity
4. Albert, Marta
Vida humana, persona y derecho. Fundamentos
para una fenomenología biojurídica
9. Flores, Alfredo de J.
Lo humano en el derecho: las nociones de “acción”
y “experiencia jurídica” en Giuseppe Capograssi
como crítica al formalismo positivista
10. Gutiérrez Flores,
Benjamín
Fundamentación filosófica de los derechos humanos: punto
de partida de la recuperación de la humanitas en el derecho
11. Lozano Díez, José
Antonio
La recuperación de la ontología en el fenómeno
jurídico, con especial atención en el caso mexicano
12. Martínez Muñoz, Juan
Antonio
El derecho personalista. Consideración
a la obra de Jesús Ballesteros
13. Miranda‑Novoa, Martha Las políticas de planificación familiar y el concepto de persona
14. Pulido‑Ortiz, Fabio E.
Acerca de las relaciones entre derecho y sanciones
15. Salcedo Romo, Alejandro Las deficiencias evitables e inevitables de la condición humana
para la reflexión biojurídica: una lectura desde Jesús Ballesteros
16. Santos, José‑Antônio
Modernidad ampliada y hombre tecnológico
17. Sartea, Cláudio
Dignidad de la generación humana: ¿contractualizar lo que no tiene precio?
18. Saldaña Serrano, Javier
Gobernanza global y cambio estructural del sistema jurídico mundial
19. Valdés Martínez, Jacinto
Derecho y ecología: algunas consideraciones para superar el
imperativo tecnológico desde el realismo jurídico clássico
20. Vázquez Varela, Óscar
Javier
La importancia de la Humanitas en la construcción
social del límite entre la civilización y la barbárie
21. Velarde, Caridad
Solidaridad, mercado y estado
22. Vigo, Rodolfo L.
Vías contemporáneas para la recuperación de
la razón práctica en el ámbito jurídico
5. Bellver Capella, Vicente / Derecho a la privacidad y a la libertad sexual:
Masferrer, Domingo Aniceto bases filosóficas de una evolución jurídica
6. Carabante, José María
¿Es posible recuperar el Derecho Natural en un contexto
postmoderno? Eric Voegelin en diálogo con Jesús Ballesteros
7. Díez Spelz, Juan Francisco Humanitas y falsedad jurídica. El sentido de lo
jurídico y el pensamiento de Jesús Ballesteros
8. Fernández Ruiz‑Gálvez,
Encarnación
El Derecho como no discriminación y no violência
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(19) Transnational Legal Theory
(21) Public Health Surveillance,
Fear, and the Use of Law
Monday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
McDonough 587
Tuesday and Thursday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
1. Riesthuis, Thomas
(Co‑chair)
Law’s Integrity and Transnational Law
2. Taekema, Sanne
(Co‑chair)
A Transnational Rule of Law: Softening
Some Conceptual Dichotomies
3. Been, Wouter de
Transnationalism, Superdiversity and Citizenship
4. Chen, Chi‑Shing
The Design of a Governance Web to Facilitate
Transnational Data Protection Law Making
5. Cirkovic, Elena
International Legal Unity and Pluralism on Case‑By Case Basis:
Responsibility to Protect vs. ‘Unable And Unwilling Standard’
in Syria and Northern Iraq
6. Corradetti, Cláudio
Updating the Kantian Project: Cosmopolitanism
as Poliarchical Constitutionalism
7. Fabra Zamora, Jorge Luis
Analytic Jurisprudence Beyond the State:
Rules, Institutions, and Reasons
8. Goldmann, Matthias
A Matter of Perspective: Global Governance and the Distinction
between Public and Private Authority (and Not Law)
9. Kirchmair, Lando
Descriptive vs. Prescriptive (Global) Legal Pluralism: A
gentle reminder of David Hume’s is–ought divide
(20) Autonomy and Paternalism:
Searching for a Socially Built Normativity
for Contemporary Private Law
Tuesday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
Hotung 5027
1. Rohrmann, Carlos A.
(Co‑chair)
Closing browsewrap agreements: reason or emotion?
2. Sampaio Jr., Rodolpho
Barreto (Co‑chair) \
Martins, Thiago Penido
The (Im)Possibility of Motherhood: The Forcible Removal of
Children from Drug Addicted Mothers in Belo Horizonte, Brazil
3. Brasileiro, Ricardo
Adriano Massara
Legislation and Rule of Law
4. Forghieri, Marisa C.
Nietzsche, art and self‑knowledge: reason and emotion
5. Szot, Adam
The Conflict of Values in Public Administration Actions
80 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
McDonough 587
1. Francis, Leslie (Chair)
Public Health Surveillance and the Right to be Forgotten
2. Flanigan, Jessica
The ethics of large‑scale biomedical research
3. Francis, John
Regulating the Benefits of Health Surveillance
4. Malm, Heidi
Quarantine and Compensation
5. Navin, Mark
Pediatricians as Political Actors: Childhood
Vaccination as Outbreak Prevention
6. Robison, Wade
Emotional Reasoning
(22) Scandinavian Legal Positivism:
Contemporary Discussions
Tuesday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
McDonough 201
1. Eriksen, Christoffer C.
(Chair)
International Law, Global Governance and Critique ‑ Beyond
the Legal Politics of the Scandinavian Legal Realists
2. Eliasz, Katarzyna
Ernst Cassirer and Axel Hägerström on
the Origin of Legal Concepts
3. Eliasz, Katarzyna
Idealism and Scandinavian Legal Realism
4. Eng, Svein
Kelsen’s Empty Normativity – An Intermediate Step Between
Scandinavian Legal Realism and Practical Reason
5. Høgberg, Alf Petter
Ethics in Scandinavian Legal Realism
6. Stubberud, Jorgen
The Presupposed Concept of Law
7. Tøssebro, Henriette
Nilsson
Between Moral Consideration and Judicial
Discretion: The Concept of “Rettsstridighet”
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(23) Legal Theory Education: Building
Bridges into the Future
(25) Human Rights, Justice, and Solidarity:
International Institutional Implications
Monday and Tuesday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
1. Schulz, Lorenz (Chair)
McDonough 588
Tuesday and Thursday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
McDonough 205
European Co‑operation and Best Practice in Legal
Theory Education: The LLM Legal Theory at Goethe
University Frankfurt and other universities of the
EALT Network ‑ Past, Presence, Future
1. Gould, Carol (Co‑chair)
Motivating Solidarity with Distant Others: Empathic
Politics and the Problem of Global Justice
Human Rights and Justice: Against Human Rights Minimalism
2. Anderson, Joshua \
Arjona, César
What Law for Transnational Legal Education?
A Cooperative View on an Introductory Course
to Transnational Law and Governance
2. Macleod, Alistair M.
(Co‑chair)
3. Bohman, James
Domination, Global Harms, and the Priority of Injustice
4. Buchwalter, Andréw
3. Ladavac, Nicoletta
Theory and Practice: The Two Dimensions of Law
Human Rights, Interculturality, and the Idea
of a Transnational Public Sphere
4. Schauer, Frederick
Legal Education as Graduate Education:
The North American Model
5. Christiano, Thomas
Fairness and the Democratic Legitimacy
of International Institutions
5. Vinx, Lars
Education in Legal Theory in Turkey
6. Føllesdal, Andréas
6. Yoon, Zai‑Wang
Remarks on the Education in Legal Theory in Korea
Legitimacy Discourses about International
Courts: Reason or Emotion?
7. Gilabert, Pablo
Why Dignity Matters for the Theory
and Practice of Human Rights
8. Lefkowitz, David
Democratic Legitimacy and International Law
9. Scholz, Sally
Feminist Solidarity, Global Social
Movements, and Ideals of Justice
10. Weinstock, Daniel
What Kind of Legitimacy for International Institutions?
(24) Artifact or Practice? An Ontology
to Explain Law’s Normative Power
Tuesday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
McDonough 203
1. Ehrenberg, Kenneth M.
(Co‑chair)
Law is an Artifact and a Practice
2. Rodriguez‑Blanco,
Veronica (Co‑chair)
Processes and Artifacts: How our Knowledge of the
Performing Arts illuminates our Understanding of Law
3. Burazin, Luka
The Rule of Recognition and the Emergence of a Legal System
4. Gkouvas, Triantafyllos \
Pavlakos, George
Intentions to Exchange: The Normativity of the Legal Relation
5. Himma, Kenneth
Law as an Artifact: Does Law Have a Conceptual Function?
6. Mumford, Stephen
(26) Aristotle and the Philosophy of
Law: Law, Reason and Emotion
Tuesday and Thursday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
McDonough 206
1. Coelho, Nuno M.M.S.
(Co‑chair)
On Pathos and Polis
Causal Powers and the Law
2. Huppes‑Cluysenaer,
Liesbeth (Co‑chair)
The Meaning of Passion for the Development Of Society
7. Novak, Marko
On Archetypes and Artefacts in Law
3. Bombelli, Giovanni
8. Psarras, Haris
Artifacts, Practices and the Nature of Legal Norms
Emotion and Rationality: on Some Fundamental
Dimensions of Aristotle’s Model
9. Roversi, Corrado
Conceptual Metaphors behind Legal Artifacts
4. Bonanno, Daniela
Nemesis and Law: What Indignation Has
to Do with Legal Reasoning
5. Brito, José de Sousa e
Aristotle’s Theory of Emotions and the Moral Action
continued on page 84
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continued from page 83
6. Fuselli, Stefano
Logoi enuloi. Aristotle’s Contribution to the Contemporary
Debate on Emotions and Decision‑Making
7. Jang, Misung
Friendship as Solidarity ‑ Aristotle’s Political Friendship
(Politikē Philia) in Nicomachean Ethics
8. Matos, Saulo de
Aristotle’s Functionalism and the Rise of
Nominalism in Law and Politics
9. Nascimento, Daniel Simão Rhetoric, Emotions and the Rule of Law in Aristotle
10. Penteado, Luciano
Emotion as a Guide to Judgements. The
Aristotelian and Thomistic Approach
11. Pinho, Fabiana O.
On Logos, Pathos and Ethos in Judicial Argumentation
12. Ralli, Tommi
Empathic Political Animal: What a North Korean Prison
Camp Tells about the Aristotelian Political Association
13. Rodrigues, Ana Carolina Emotions, Cognition and Legal Education: A Discuss
de Faria Silvestre
from the Aristotelian Theory of Emotions
14. Zaluski, Wojciech
(28) Law and Fraternity
Tuesday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
McDonough 202
1. Amaya, Amalia (Co‑chair) Virtue and Fraternity
2. Martí, José Luis
(Co‑chair) \ Moreso, José
Juan
Epistemic Fraternity in Law and Democracy
3. Cotton, Simon Robert
Fraternity and the Market
4. Gargarella, Roberto
The Material Conditions of Fraternity
5. Gaudêncio, Ana
Margarida Simões
Fraternity and Tolerance as Juridical Boundaries
6. Michelon, Cláudio
Law, Civic Friendship, and the Private Sphere
7. Puppo, Alberto
Fraternity, Joint Action and Judicial Motivation
The Golden Mean as a Synthesis of Extremes
(29) Types of Legal Argument
Tuesday and Thursday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
(27) Personhood and Law: Animals, Artificial Agents,
Chimeras and Other Contemporary Challenges
Tuesday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
McDonough 337
McDonough 109
1. D’Almeida, Luís Duarte
(Co‑chair) \ Michelon,
Cláudio (Co‑chair)
The Structure of Arguments by Analogy in Law
1. Pietrzykowski, Tomasz
(Chair)
Towards Modestly Speciest Approach to the Personhood in Law
2. Shecaira, Fábio P.
(Co‑chair)
Legal Arguments from Scholarly Authority
2. Barbosa‑Fohrmann, Ana
Paula \ Barreto, Gustavo
Augusto Ferreira
Are Beings With Extreme Mental Disabilities and
Animals Comparable? An Approach On Personhood
3. Araszkiewicz, Michał
Argumentative Closure of Legal Systems
4. Brewer, Scott
The Logocratic Method
3. Bielska‑Brodziak,
Agnieszka \ Rodak, Lidia
Is (Only) Sex Essential For Personhood? to Be
“Between” Male and Female Under Polish Law
5. Gascón, Marina \
Marcilla, Gema
Slippery Slope Arguments in the Legal Field:
Not Just Appealing to Emotion
4. Kurki, Visa A.J.
Why Things Can Hold Rights:
Reconceptualizing the Legal Person
6. Gur, Noam
Should Judges Use the Floodgates Argument?
Policy vs Principle in Adjudication
5. Manasiev, Ilija
Redefining Legal Personhood in Order to Cope With the
Challenges and Realities of the New Legal Realities
7. Herdy, Rachel
Argument from Position to Know: Its
Ubiquity in the Courtroom
6. Michalczak, Rafal
Animals' Race Against the Machines
8. Jansen, Briain
Legality and Vagueness: Avoiding a Precedential
Slippery Slope in Criminal Law
7. Motyka, Krzysztof
Antigone, Natural Law and the Human Rights of the Dead
9. Pethick, Stephen
Coherence in Legal Argument: A Matter of Degree?
8. Palazzani, Laura
Person and Human Being in Bioethics and Biolaw
10. Ribeiro, Gustavo
9. Silva, Denis Franco
From Humans to Persons: Detaching
Personhood From Human Nature
Can there be a Burden of the Best Explanation?
Standards of Proof, Inference to the Best Explanation,
and Practical Reasons in Legal Fact Finding
10. Xiangyang, Qian
The Right of A House
11. Trivisonno, Alexandré
Travessoni Gomes
The Place of the Argument from Authority
in Legal Argumentation
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(30) The Judicial Control of Public
Administration Discretionary Power
(32) Dworkin/Rawls on Law and Public Reason
Tuesday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
Tuesday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
Hotung 5021
1. Szot, Adam (Chair)
The Influence of Jurisdiction on Public Administration
Decision Making Policies – General Overview
2. Leszczynski, Leszek
A Model of Judicial Control of Administration and the
Need for Holistic Review of Interpretative Discretion
3. Liżewski, Bartosz \
Myślińska, Marzena
European Convention on Human Rights and Charter of
Fundamental Rights ‑ as an Argument in Decision‑Making
an Administrative Type of Application of Law
4. Rzucidło‑Grochowska,
Iwona
The Role of Written Justifications of Judicial Decisions in
Controlling Public Administration Discretionary Power
5. Wojciechowski, Bartosz
The Balancing of the Methods of the Interpretation
as the Element of the Judicial Discretion
Hotung 6005
1. Al‑Hakim, Mohamed
(Co‑chair)
On the Kantian Turn: Rawls, Dworkin and Public Reason
2. Vujadinovic, Dragica
(Co‑chair)
Rawls and Dworkin on Public Reason
(Domestic and International)
3. Lacerda, Ludmila Lais
Costa
The Procedure of Public Hearings in the Brazilian
Constitutional Jurisdiction and the Contributions/
Criticism of the Conception of Public Reason
4. Langvatn, Silje Aambø
Should International Courts Use “Public Reason”?
5. Morita, Akihiko
Public Reason Alone?
6. Papaefthymiou, Sophie
Anti‑foundationalism in Rawls and Dworkin
7. Zhang, Wei‑wei
Public Reason, Personality and Intellectuals
(33) Poverty From The Global Perspective
(31) The Force of Law: Author Meets Critics
Tuesday: 9h30 – 11h00, 11h30 – 13h00, 14h30 – 16h30
and 17h00 – 18h30
McDonough 140
Tuesday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
1. Morigiwa, Yasutomo
(Co‑chair)
Hotung 6006
Why the Rule of Law for Global Justice?
1. Schauer, Frederick (Chair)
The Force of Law
2. Uygur, Gülriz (Co‑chair)
2. Bezemek, Christoph
The Good, the Bad, the Pure: Schauer, Holmes
and Kelsen on the Force of Law
3. Akbaş, Kasım
A Roadmap for 21st Century’s Legal
Theory: Struggle for the Rights
3. Bustamante, Thomas
Coercion and the Normativity of Law: A Comment
on Frederick Schauer’s ‘The Force Of Law’
4. Çağlar, İrem
How Neo‑Liberalism Affects and Transforms the Social
Provisioning Activities of the State in Turkey
4. Chiassoni, Pierluigi
The Force of Law and the Evolutionary Sting
5. Çataloluk, Gökçe
The Legality of Poverty
5. Ladavac, Nicoletta
Coercion and Sanctions as Elements of Normative Systems
6. Papaefthymiou, Sophie
Anti‑foundationalism in Rawls and Dworkin
6. Morris, Christopher W.
Schauer on the Force of Law
7. Türkbağ, Ahmet Ulvi
Islamic Outlook on Capitalism and Poverty
7. Núñez, Jorge Emilio
Normative Systems as Law in Synergy: Validity and Effectiveness
8. Üye, Saim
Legal Reproduction of Poverty
8. Schauer, Frederick
Response to the Criticisms and Comments
9. Vinx, Lars
Coercion, Sovereignty, and the Differentiation of Law
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(34) The Right to Identity
(36) The Normativity of Law
Tuesday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
1. Tiedemann, Paul (Chair)
Hotung 2000
Identity and Human Rights
2. Carvalho, Felipe Quintella Body Integrity Identity Disorder: An Interface
M. \ Lara, Mariana A. \
between Body and Personal Identity
Pereira, Fabio Q.
3. İspir, Zeynep
Human Dignity as a Common Identity
4. Keil, Rainer
A Kantian Approach to the Question: Is It Reasonable to
Postulate a Negative Right to Identity – a Right to Change? A
Philosophical Aspect of Death Penalty and Life Imprisonment
5. Maliska, Marcos Augusto
Individual Identity as an Expression of Collective
Identity in the Context of Consti‑tutional Pluralism
6. Morita, Akihiko
Making New Collective Identity in Deeply Divided Society
7. Tu, Zhang
Is a Right to Identity a Fundamental Human Right?
(35) Family, Sexuality, Love, and Religion
Thursday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
Thursday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
Friday: 14h30 – 16h30
1. Marmor, Andréi
(Co‑chair)
McDonough 141
Legal Normativity
2. Waluchow, Wil (Co‑chair) Normativity, Constitutional Rights, and
the Detached Point of View
3. Asgeirsson, Hrafn
The “Real” Normativity of Law
4. Green, Michael S.
Hart on Presupposing Social Facts
5. Linhares, José Manuel
Aroso
In Defense of a Non‑Positivist Separation
Thesis Between Law And Morality
6. Psarras, Haris
Exclusionary Reasons, Authoritative Reasons and Legal Norms
7. Rodriguez‑Blanco,
Veronica
The Habit Does Not Make the Monk:
Understanding Legal Normativity
8. Shecaira, Fábio P.
Legal Scholarship and the Subject Matter of Jurisprudence
9. Sciaraffa, Stefan
Institutional Legitimacy: Its Collectivist
Structure and Juridical Justification
10. Schauer, Frederick
Against Normativity
11. Stevens, Katharina
The Role of Analogy and Metaphor in Reasoning by Precedent
Gewirz Student Center, 12th floor
1. Babst, Gordon A. (Chair)
A Liberal Response to the Peculiar Belief that Sexual
Freedom Infringes on Religious Freedom
2. Flores, Imer B.
Same‑Sex Marriage and the Normative Turn in Jurisprudence
3. Galuppo, Marcelo
Should the State Allow Any Kind of Marriage?
4. Higgins, Peter W.
Three Hypotheses for Explaining the
So‑Called Oppression of Men
5. Lago, Pablo Antonio
Same‑Sex Marriage: A Defense Based on
Foundations of Natural Law
6. Nicoli, Pedro Augusto
Gravatá \ Ramos, Marcelo
Maciel
The Feminine Duty of Care and the (Im)Possibilities of
Emancipation: The Resisting Religious, Moral and Legal
Foundations of Gender Roles in Contemporary Societies
7. Pilchman, Daniel
Why You Have to Kiss Aunt Mildred: The
Associative Nature of Familial Obligation
8. Varden, Helga
Kant on the Intersection between Reason, the Law, and
Emotion with Regard to Sexual Love and Religion
9. Xavier, Bruno Gadelha
What’s Gender Got to Do with It?
Judith Butler and the Possibility of a Critic of the
Masculinity in the Brazilian Legal Culture
(37) Religious Liberty: Its Nature, Scope and Limits
Thursday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
Friday: 14h30 – 16h30
McDonough 164
1. Menuge, Angus (Chair)
The Secular State’s Interest in Religious Liberty
2. Adolphe, Jane
Freedom of Religion and the Holy See’s Comments
to the Committee on the Rights of the Child
3. Alouane, Rim‑Sarah
God, the Pencil and the Judge: Making Sense of
Paradoxes Regarding Protections of Freedom
of Religion and Expression in France
4. Bach‑Golecka, Dobrochna Freedom of Religion and Freedom of Conscience
within the Contemporary Human Rights Debate
5. Breda, Vito
Over the Secular Ridge: The Constitutional Legitimacy
of Secular‑State Funding of Religious Education
6. Calvert, John
The Nature, Scope and Limits of Religious Liberty of Parents
and Students in the Public Schools of a Secular State
continued on page 90
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continued from page 89
7. Cliteur, Paul
The New Censorship: Or how to deal with theoterrorist intimidation cartoonists and creative writers?
8. Copan, Paul
The Biblical Worldview Context for Religious Liberty
9. Kaptein, Hendrik
Being God ‑ Tracing Stoic totalities of religious freedom
10. Kittel, Laura
Thomas Jefferson and the Pursuit of Happiness at the
Founding of America: What it means for us today
11. Kozicki, Katya \ Pugliese, Religious liberty in Brazil: piecing the puzzle
William Soares
through contemporary decisions
9. Etcheverry, Juan B.
Rule of Law y Discrecionalidad Judicial Compatibilidad
y Recíproca Limitación
10. Fachin, Melina Girardi
Democratic Legitimation of the Judiciary Discourse
towards Social and Economic Rights
11. Hutt, Donald E. Bello
Normative Foundations for Popular Constitutionalism
12. Kozicki, Katya \ Polewka, Ist das “Judicial Review” in den modernen
Gabriele
Demokratien noch zu rechtfertigen?
13. Leszczynski, Leszek
Precedential Type of Uniformity of Judicial
Practice and The Rule of Law
14. Macedo, José Arthur
Castillo de
Amendments, Constitutional Dialogues and
Judicial Review: Some Reflections from Brazil
15. Pavčnik, Marijan
The Rule of Law Argument and the (Non)
Political Nature of Legal Decision‑Making
12. Miller, Dallas
The Ironic Threats to Religious Freedom
13. Montgomery, John
Warwick
A Non‑Politically‑Correct Remedy to
Muslim Terrorist Immigration
14. Newman, Dwight
The Trinity Western University Law School Debate
and the Challenging Parallelisms of Rights Claims
Based on Religious Identity and Sexual Identity
16. Pereira, Paula Pessoa
Reconstrucción racional del derecho y las decisiones colegiadas
17. Stevens, Katharina
Originalism and Fairy‑Tales
Redefined secularism, a priori assumptions, and
the place of religious believers in Canada
18. Valle, Maurício Dalri
Timm do
Argumentos consecuentalistas en los juicios tributarios
en el Supremo Tribunal Federal de Brasil
15. Pennings, Ray
(38) Judicial Decision‑Making and the Rule
of Law: Old Issues, New Perspectives
Thursday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
Friday: 14h30 – 16h30
McDonough 160
(39) Human and Fundamental Rights: a Complex
Argumentation of Legal Philosophy
Thursday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
Friday: 14h30 – 16h30
McDonough 201
1. Barboza, Estefânia Maria
de Queiroz (Co‑chair)
New Possibilities for Judicial Decision‑Making in Brazil:
An Approximation with the Common Law System
1. Merle, Jean‑Christophe
(Co‑chair)
Globalization and Responsibility for Realizing Human
Rights. An Instructive Misunderstanding of Human Rights
2. Chueiri, Vera Karam de
(Co‑chair)
Democratic Constitutionalism and the Challenge
for Constitutional Decision‑Making
2. Oliveira, Júlio Aguiar de
(Co‑chair)
Are Natural Rights Human Rights? A
Discussion inside Natural Law Tradition
3. Kozicki, Katya (Co‑chair)
\ Pugliese, William
What Is It That Judges Do? From Cardozo
to Contemporary Legal Theory
The Distinction between Judicial and Legislative Discretion
and Its Relation to the Definition of Fundamental Rights
4. Serbena, Cesar Antonio
(Co‑chair)
The Limits of Logic in the Legal Reasoning
3. Trivisonno, Alexandré
Travessoni Gomes
(Co‑chair)
5. Andrade Neto, João
The Normativity of Judicial Borrowings: A Blind
Spot in Judicial Decision‑Making Studies
4. Brasileiro, Ricardo
Adriano Massara \ Decat,
Thiago Lopes
The Question of Infanticide among some
Native South American Tribes
6. Barbosa, Cláudia M.
Juristocracy in Brazil
7. Câmara, Edna Torres
Felício
El Argumento de Injusticia de Gustav Radbruch
y el Concepto de Derecho de Robert Alexy
5. Brasileiro, Ricardo
Adriano Massara \ Decat,
Thiago Lopes
Charlie Hebdo: Does the Tolerance Ethics
Comprehends the Intolerance Discourse?
8. Davydova, Marina
The Judicial Thinking as One of the
Main Types of Juristic Thought
6. Holl, Jessica
Jus Cogens: Legal Tradition or Legal Morality?
continued on page 92
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continued from page 91
7. Leal, Fernando Angelo
Ribeiro
What Does “Optimizing Colliding Principles” Mean?
One Question, Three Answers, Three Problems
8. Ribeiro, Fernando José
Is There a Fundamental Right to Civil Disobedience?
9. Silveira, Cláudia Maria
Toledo da
Fundamental Social Rights’ Application and the
Determination of the Existential Minimum
(41) Theory of Legal Evidence
Thursday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
Friday: 14h30 – 16h30
McDonough 203
1. Dahlman, Christian
(Co‑chair)
The Felony Fallacy
2. Tuzet, Giovanni
(Co‑chair)
Evidence Assessment and Standards of Proof – A Messy Issue
3. Accatino, Daniela
The architecture of evidential justification. A
(limited) defense of an atomistic approach
4. Hamer, David
Comparative structural typologies of other misconduct evidence
5. Kaptein, Hendrik
Evidence and Proof of Harm and Compensation by
Abduction and Analogy: Inferences to the Best Explanation
6. Kolflaath, Eivind
Combining Inferences and Stories
1. Amaya, Amalia (Co‑chair) Should Judges be Compassionate? An Argument from Fraternity
7. Maggiolino, Mariateresa
2. Del Mar, Maksymilian
(Co‑chair)
Compassion, Imagination and Impartiality
Economics in the courtrooms. Insights
from the U.S. antitrust experience
8. Ribeiro, Gustavo
3. Blum, Lawrence
The Moral Value of Fellow‑Feeling
4. Christodoulidis, Emilios
Compassion and Solidarity: How Significant a Distinction?
Can There be a Burden of the Best Explanation?
Standards of Proof, Inference to the Best Explanation,
and Practical Reasons in Legal Factfinding
5. Deigh, John
Leniency in Punishment
9. Pardo, Michael S.
Group Agency and Evidence Theory
6. Denno, Deborah W.
Neuroscience, Compassion, and Culpability in the Criminal Law
10. Schauer, Frederick
Statistical Evidence: Themes and Variations
7. Gordon, Randy
Compassion and the Rhetoric of Rules
11. Sevelin, Ellika
Statements of Fact as Statements of Non‑Law
8. Harbou, Frederick
Compassion and Empathy as a Basis for Human Rights
12. Stein, Alex
Second‑Personal Evidence
9. Kim, Yeonmi
Liberty based on Compassion – Searching
for the Possibility of Legal Poetics
13. Strandberg, Magne
Anglo‑American and Germanic standards of evidence
10. Michelon, Cláudio
Legal Reasoning and Legal Perception
11. Puppo, Alberto
Reason, Emotions and Compassion in
Interamerican Adjudication
12. Struchiner, Noel
The Perils of Empathy‑Based Decision‑Making
in Law and Morality
13. White, Emily Kidd
An Unbearable Pity for the Suffering of Mankind: Compassion’s
Role in the Adjudication of Human Dignity Claims
14. Zaluski, Wojciech
On Three Types of Empathy: the Complete,
the Truncated, and the Contaminated
15. Zipursky, Benjamin C.
Compassion, Impartiality, and the Rule of Law
(40) Compassion and Legal Reasoning:
A Multidisciplinary Workshop
Thursday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
Friday: 14h30 – 16h30
92 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
McDonough 202
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5. Buzanello, José Carlos
(42) Racial Justice, Emotions and
Courts’ Legal Reasoning
Thursday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
Civil Liability for Damage Caused by Crowd
6. Cella, José Renato Gaziero Brazilian Judiciary Power and Access to
\ Kurtz, Lahis Pasquali
Information: Innovative approach, old models
McDonough 220
1. Elósegui, María (Co‑chair) The Denial or Justification of Genocide as a
Criminal Offense in European Law
2. Hermida, Cristina
(Co‑chair)
Argumentation of the Court of Strasbourg's Jurisprudence
regarding the Discrimination against Roma‫‏‬
3. Arnold, Rainer
Minority Protection and Non discrimination ‑ European
Legal Experiences in a Global Perspective
4. Bjerregaard, Merete
Multiple discrimination and reasonable accommodation as
tools for interpreting legislation with a view to ensuring better
protection of human rights in culturally diverse societies
5. Cella, José Renato Gaziero Racism from the perspective of the Brazilian
\ Kurtz, Lahis Pasquali
Courts of Justice: A Critical Analysis
7. Jin, Zhenbao
The Image of Mankind and the Evolution of Law
8. Zhai, Xiaobo
Legal Benthamism and Legal Reform
(44) Cassirer: State, Reason and Emotion
Thursday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
McDonough 342
1. Hochhuth, Martin (Chair) Cassirer on Democratic Institutions, Seven Decades after
His “Myth”, and a Century after “Freedom and Form”
2. Cao, Liming
Betrachtung der Welt mit chinesischen Augen – Einflüsse des
ältesten chinesischen Mythos auf den Geist der Chinesen
3. Dadkhah, Maliheh
Judgment at Nuremberg: Judges dealing with
genocide and crimes against humanity
State, Revolution and Transformation of Law: An
Overview of Universalism and Cultural Relativism
of Human Rights in Post‑Revolutionary Iran
4. Favuzzi, Pellegrino
The <<Reasonable Loving Citizen>>:
towards a real interculturality
Das Vernunftpathos: Die Kulturphilosophie Cassirers
zwischen Demokratie und politischem Mythos
5. Steinhauer, Fabian
Ernst Cassirer und Aby Warburg. Kritik eines
Verhältnisses am Beispiel staatlicher Symbole
6. Stoppenbrink, Katja
Cassirer on Political Emotions: ‘The Myth of the State’
7. Zhao, Jing
Das Verhältnis von Geltung und Macht im Recht Der
Idealismus Cassirers und seine Theorie vom Naturrecht
im Naturrechtsaufsatz und im „Mythus des Staates“
6. Galindo, Fernando
Gypsies, administration of justice and automation
7. Hermida del Llano,
Cristina
Argumentation of the Court of Strasbourg's Jurisprudence
regarding the Discrimination against Roma
8. Manzanero, Delia
9. Novales, Aránzazu
(43) Law, Innovation, and Dissent:
Perspectives from Around the World ‑ In
Memory of Professor Gilles Cistac
Thursday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
McDonough 337
1. Carvalho, Maria Clara
Calheiros (Co‑chair)
Truth and Science in the Legal Process
2. Halis, Denis de Castro de
Castro (Co‑chair)
Forms of Controlling Innovation by Controlling
Dissent; Fundamental Rights and Legal Justification:
In Memory of Professor Gilles Cistac, Murdered
for his Ideas on March 3, 2015, Mozambique
3. Silveira, Cláudia Maria
Toledo da (Co‑chair)
Fundamental Social Rights in the XXI Century –
Justiciability and Viability of their Effectiveness
4. Arruda Jr., Edmundo
Lima de
The Identity of the Law as a Minimum Ethical
(45) From Net Neutrality to Net profitability?
Law, Politics & the Internet
Thursday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
Hotung 5027
1. Prieto, Rafael Rodríguez
(Chair)
From Net Neutrality to Net profitability?
Reason & Power in the Internet
2. Anjos, Lucas Costa dos \
Polido, Fabrício B. Pasquot
Inadequacies of Legal Discourse in Social and Online Activism:
Exploring Reason and Emotion on Internet Governance
continued on page 96
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IV | Special Workshops
IV | Special Workshops
continued from page 95
3. Belowska, Joanna
Are We All Pirates? In Search of Common Sense
in Copyright and Digital Technology Law
4. Fioriglio, Gianluigi
The Myth of Web Neutrality: Search Engines
and Censorship by Algorithm
5. González Pascual, Alberto The Mindset of Science in 21st Century Capitalism:
Cultural Long‑Term Change and Class Struggle
6. Martínez, Fernando
3. Ondřejek, Pavel
Principle of Proportionality as a Product
of European Legal Culture
4. Puppo, Alberto
European Legal Culture in Domestic and International Law
5. Vaičaitis, Vaidotas A.
The 16th Century Lithuanian Statutes in the
Context of European Legal Culture
6. Wintr, Jan
Canones of Savigny as the Basis for Interpretation of
the Law in European Continental Legal Culture
E‑Democracy and Open Data: An Analysis of the
Condition of Possibility of the Internet Political Revolution
from the Critic of the Intellectual Property Rights
(48) Justice and Emotions: The
Topos of the Commitment
(46) Law and Technology: Regulations Compliance
through Deploying Information Technology
Thursday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
McDonough 588
Thursday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
1. Sierra González, Ángela
(Chair)
Políticas públicas. El compromiso con la justicia
– Public Policy: commitment to justice
Hotung 5021
1. Kitahara, Munenori
(Chair)
Law and Technology: Regulations Compliance
through Deploying Information Technology
2. Câmara, Edna Torres
Felício \ Valencia Tello,
Diana Carolina
Justicia y emociones en el proceso de paz colombiano ‑
Justice and emotions in Colombian peace process
2. Bitencourt, Manoela
Transnational Telework: Collision of Fundamental
Principles in the Space Labor Law Conflict Composition
2. Ferreira Ospino, Javier
3. Brandão, André Martins
A Society of Information and Control
Caracterización de una teoría de la justicia de las víctimas
en el modelo transicional colombiano: ley de justicia y
paz, ley de víctimas y marco jurídico para la paz
4. Brandão, André Martins
Big Data and Legal Practice: A Conjecture
about Technological Impacts
3. González Novoa, Andrés
5. Kitahara, Munenori
Law and Computer: Legal Justice through Deploying Technology
No estis sub lege: Experiencia y pasión frente a una
ley sin emoción ‑ No estis sub lege: Experience
and passion face the law without emotion
6. Küzeci, Elif
The Evolution of the Right to Privacy in the Age of Technology:
From “right to be let alone” to “privacy by‑design”
(47) Historical, Theoretical, and Axiological
Foundations of European Legal Culture
Thursday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
1. Bunikowski, Dawid
(Chair)
What Is Jurisprudence? Is It Still Justinian’s
‘Science of Things Divine and Human’? Is It Still
‘the Science of the Just and the Unjust’?”
2. Champeil‑Desplats,
Véronique
The Legal Dogmatic Method and its Critics in
Europe around the 19th‑20th Century
96 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
Hotung 5013
4. González Luis, Lourdes C. Lo singular, lo plural, lo justo: ensayo en tres movimientos ‑
The singular, the plural, the right: an essay in three acts
5. Hernández Rodríguez,
Ana Isabel
Emoción, justicia y reconocimiento en Judith Butler
6. Pais Álvarez, Natalia Pais
Álvarez
Las inteligencias del mal en la interpretación de la justicia ‑
The intelligences of evil in the interpretation of justice
7. Perera Méndez, Pedro
Políticas impúdicas: la estandarización emocional de la injusticia ‑ Indecent policies: emotional standardization of justice
8. Simó González, Ariadna
Derechos Humanos: entre la omisión y la justicia. La
re‑ significación en el arte. ‑ Human rights: between
omission and justice. The new meaning in art
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 97
IV | Special Workshops
IV | Special Workshops
(49) Metaphor: A New Paradigm in Legal Theory and
Legal Philosophy?
(51) The Anthroparchical Concept of Global Law
Thursday: 14h30 – 16h30 and 17h00 – 18h30
McDonough 347
1. Wojtczak, Sylwia (Chair)
Metaphor – a New Paradigm in Legal
Theory and Legal Philosophy?
2. Gahng, Taegyung
Why Should Jurists Care about Cognitive
Metaphor? The Three‑Dimensional Role of
Cognitive Metaphor in Legal Thinking
3. Kociołek‑Pęksa, Anna
A New Paradigm of Security in the International
Law Dimension as a Cause and Effect of the New
Metaphorisation of International Law
4. Pieniążek, Marcin
Paul Ricoeur’s Concept of Metaphor and Its
Application in the Analysis of the Legal Text
5. Smolak, Marek
Application of the Weight Formula and Moral Reasoning
in the Situation of Legal and Moral Pluralism
6. Zalewska, Monika
Cognitive Theory of Metaphor and Jerzy
Wróblewski's Concept of Legal Interpretation
(50) Legal Philosophy in the Twentieth
Century: The Civil Law World
Friday: 14h30 – 16h30
Friday: 14h30 – 16h30
1. Dobrzeniecki, Karol
(Co‑chair)
Natural Law and States of Emergency
2. Dybowski, Maciej
(Co‑chair)
Law as Discursive Practice and Its Implicit Anthropology
3. Jakubiak, Aneta
Global Normative Sphere as a Network of Regulations
4. Romanowski, Marcin
Human Being as a Person ‑ Historical Approach
(52) Death, Philosophy and the Law
Friday: 14h30 – 16h30
Overview and Assessment of the Project and Its Results
2. Roversi, Corrado
(Co‑chair)
Present and explain how its structure has been conceived,
what kind of theoretical problems have emerged during its
ten‑year preparation, and whether general historical trends for
legal philosophy in the 20th century can be derived from it
McDonough 587
1. Lora, Pablo de (Chair)
How Can Death Be a Legal Fiction?
2. Jeewanthi, M.K. Geethani
‘Opt‑in’ or ‘Opt‑out’ in Organ Donation
3. Nair‑Collins, Michael
Can the Brain Dead Be Harmed or Wronged?
on the Moral Status of Brain Death and Its
Implications for Organ Transplantation
4. Ortega‑Deballon, Iván
The Thin Line between Life and Death Is
Still under Construction. Resuscitation,
Cardiac Death and Organ Donation
5. Timmerman, Travis
Death and Appropriate Attitudes
Gewirz Student Center, 12th floor
1. Postema, Gerald
(Co‑chair)
McDonough 140
3. Several contributors to the Several contributors to the volume will be
book
present and possibly speak or answer questions
concerning their respective contributions
98 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
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IV | Special Workshops
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(53) Ibero‑American Legal Thinking
(55) From Castle(s) to Maze(s): Law’s Relationships
Friday: 14h30 – 16h30
McDonough 206
Flores, Imer (Co‑Chair)
Galuppo, Marcelo
(Co‑chair)
Price, Jorge Douglas
(Co‑chair)
1. Coelho, Luiz Fernando
Political Macro‑philosophy
2. Faria, Ana Paula
Rodrigues Luz \ Krohling,
Aloisio
New constitutional approaches in Latin America and (re)
construction of identities from the perspective of Anibal Quijano
3. Krohling, Aloisio \ Silva,
Heleno Florindo da
O Novo Constitucionalismo Latino‑Americano: Por uma
Epistemologia do ser a partir da América‑Latina (Sul)
4. Xavier, Bruno Gadelha
A Dialética que não se calará: Roberto Lyra Filho
e o Direito que (Ainda) se ensina errado
Friday: 14h30 – 16h30
McDonough 337
1. Franca, Marcílio (Chair) \
Carneiro, Maria Francisca
WHAT LAW TASTES LIKE ‑ A Free Conjecture on the Palate
of Juridicity (« Menu Dégustation en Quatre Services »)
2. Ciuffoletti, Sofia
Dialogue among Castles ‑ From the Phenomenon of the Judicial
Borrowing to the Building of the Transnational Judicial Dialogue
3. Franca, Alessandra
Correia Lima Macedo
The Maze´s Entrances: Complexity, Chess and Law
4. Rabay, Gustavo
Constitutional Law, Images and Dreams: the Pulsating
Architecture of Democratic Legitimacy
5. Vieira, Adriana
Law as a Castle, Law as a Labyrinth: Ambiguities
in Modern Legal Discourse
6. Vieira, Giuliana Dias
The Maze Pathways: Interactions Through Human Rights
(56) Political Obligation and Political Legitimacy
Monday: 09h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
(54) Human Rights as an Instrument
for Poverty Eradication
Friday: 11h30 – 13h00 and 14h30 – 16h30
McDonough 220
1. Pribytkova, Elena (Chair)
Securing an Access to a Decent Social Minimum:
A Human Rights‑Based Approach
2. Hochhuth, Martin
Law as a System and the Existential Needs of Man
3. Moura, Julia Sichieri
Nancy Fraser’s Political Theory and Distributive
Justice: Questioning the Liberal Framework
4. Ostroukh, Asya
Simeon Macintosh's Contribution to Chattel‑House
Problem Solution as Means of Reduction Poverty
in the Commonwealth Caribbean
5. Ramos, Marcelo Maciel
Why Human Rights Haven’t Been Able to Eradicate
Poverty? Liberalism and Liberty Rhetoric
100 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
McDonough 342
1. Takikawa, Hirohide
(Chair)
Human Death and Political Obligation
2. Carvalho, Alan Mariano
Bezerra de
A Culturalist Perspective on Political Obligation
3. Tatsuya, Yohohama
Disagreement and Political Obligation
4. Yaylali, Mustafa
Associative Obligation: Is it a Contradiction in
termis or another form of political obligation?
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 101
IV | Special Workshops
IV | Special Workshops
(57) Political Emotions and Political Virtues
(59) Characteristics of Law and Justice in East Asia
Friday: 14h30 – 16h30
McDonough 347
1. Hardy, Joerg (Co‑chair)
Autonomy and the Love of Dignity
2. Stoppenbrink, Katja
(Co‑chair)
The ‘Sense of Belonging’ as a Political Emotion
3. Dufner, Annette
Negative Emotions and Criminal Punishment
4. Ralli, Tommi
Political Virtues and Dystopian Emotions
5. Tavares, Rodrigo de Souza It Makes Sick to my Stomach: Law, Politics and Disgust Revisited
Friday: 14h30 – 16h30
1. Oh, Byung‑Sun (Chair)
Legality versus Justice: A Characteristic
of the Rule of Law in East Asia
2. Morita, Akihiko
The principle of salience and the post San Francisco system
3. Wang, Ying
How Chinese Judges Handle the Relationship
between Law, Reason and Emotion
4. Xiangyang, Qian
Love beyond Law: Qing v. Fa in China
5. Yun, Jin‑Sook
Patriarchal Power and Domestic Violence
7. Zhang, Anbang
The Problem of “Mian Zi” in Chinese Judicial Operations:
An Inquiry in Terms of Institutional Economics
6. Zhang, Wei‑wei
The Integrity of Hercules and the Personality
of Confucianism‑‑Junzi (君子)
(58) Legal Mediation: Between Reason and Emotion
Friday: 14h30 – 16h30
Hotung 5013
McDonough 588
1. Pointel, Jean‑Baptiste
(Chair)
How Administrative Mediation can still be (some sort
of) Mediation? Study from a French point of view
2. Cardoso, Simone Alves
\ Yaghisisian, Adriana
Machado
The intertwining of mediation with the
Environmental Education Law in Brazil
3. Carvalho, Alan Mariano
Bezerra de
Legal Mediation, Truth and Power in
the resolution of legal disputes
4. Garcez, Gabriela Soldano
The Mediation as an Instrument to Effective
Access to Justice in Brazil
5. Wróbel, Marcin
Privatization of law? Dilution of state monopoly?
Mediation in civil procedure from the perspective of state and judicial system functions
(60) The Law on Gender‑Based
Violence in Latin America
Friday: 14h30 – 16h30
1. Borges, Clara M. Roman
(Co‑chair) \ Lucchesi,
Guilherme B. (Co‑chair)
Machismo in the Dock: A Critical Feminist
Analysis of Brazilian Criminal Policy Concerning
the Combat of Violence Against Women
2. Lucchesi, Guilherme B.
The Battered Spouse Syndrome Defense: An Analysis
Under Brazilian Criminal Law and Judicial Precedents
3. Pugliese, William Soares \ The New Definition of Femicide in the Brazilian Penal Code
Xavier, Marília Pedroso
4. Xavier, Luciana Pedroso
102 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
McDonough 109
The Current Overview of Obstetric Violence in Brazil
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 103
IV | Special Workshops
(61) Systemic Implications of Principles Theory
Friday: 14h30 – 16h30
1. Duarte, David (Co‑chair)
Hotung 5021
Rethinking The Theory of Gaps After The Principles Theory
Jovanovic, Miodrag
(Co‑chair)
2. Himma, Kenneth Einar
Immodesty in Dworkin’ s “Third” Theory: Modest Conceptual
Analysis, Immodest Conceptual Analysis, and the Lines
Dividing Conceptual and Other Kinds of Theory of Law
3. Leal, Fernando
What Does “Optimizing Colliding Principles” Mean?
One Question, Three Answers, Three Problems
4. Lopes, Pedro Moniz
The Logical Description of the Structure of
Principles and Its Impact on the Perception of
Axiological Gaps as Conflicts of Norms
5. Spaić, Bojan
Rules and Principles: What Kind of Difference?
(62) Citizenship: Local or Global?
Friday: 14h30 – 16h30
1. Lee, Steven (chair)
McDonough 205
Cosmopolitan Citizenship
2. Bach‑Golecka, Dobrochna Citizenship within the European Union
Institutional Arrangement
3. Landesman, Bruce M
The Concept of Citizenship
4. Parker, Richard Barron
Familial Emotion versus Good Citizenship
5. Robison, Wade
What Makes a Person a Citizen?
104 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
V
WORKING
GROUPS
V
106 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 107
V. WORKING GROUPS
Working Group 1
Monday and Tuesday: 9h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
McDonough 156
1. Arcanjo, Samira Costa /
Pereira, Daniel Nunes
Material Democracy - A Skeptic and Constitutionalist Approach
2. Bunikowski, Dawid
How to Enhance Responsibility? What About the Effects of
Cognitive Enhancement on Moral and Legal Responsibility?
3. Castro, Felipe
The Federal Pact as an Impediment to the
Concretization of Education Rights in Brazil
4. Chung, Fang-Hua
Justice, Legal Argument, and Legal Decision Under
Uncertainty: The Thinking About the Rationality of Legal
Decision Under the Condition of Indeterminacy of Law
from the Point of View of Luhman's System Theory
5. Dellavalle, Sergio
Addressing Diversity in Post-Unitary Theories of Order
6. Etcheverry, Juan B.
"Rule of Law" y Discrecionalidad Judicial
Comptabilidad y Reciproca Limitacion
7. Feyen, Stef
The Dogmatic Slumbers of Constitutional Doctrine
8. Geenens, Raf / Schutter,
Helder de
"Tripartite" Federalism as a Means to Democratize the
Allocation of Competences in a (Con)federal Setting
9. Kawamura, Arinori /
Maksymov, Sergiy
Rule of Law: The Apothesis of Reason or the
Result of an Emotional Choice?
10. Krygier, Martin
Legal Pluralism and the Value of the Rule of Law
10. Maia, Alexandré da
"Rights" as Structural Coupling Between
Psychic and Social Systems
11. Menezes, Daniel
Francisco Negão / Moraes,
Gerson Leite de
Dignity of the Human Person - a Collective Perspective
12. Qicai, Wang
Competition Among Local Governments and the Rise
of Evaluation of Rule of Law in Mainland China
13. Ribeiro, Karla Pinhel
Brazilian Army in Federal Constitution
14. Zou, Xiao-mei
Study on Methods of the Systemic Jurisprudence
15. Zurn, Christopher F.
Democratic Constitutional Change:
Assessing Institutional Possibilities
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 109
V | Working Groups
V | Working Groups
Working Group 2
Working Group 4
Monday: 9h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
McDonough 347
Monday and Tuesday: 9h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
McDonough 160
1. Dierksmeier, Claus
Secular or Spiritual Reasons for Human Rights?:
Learning From Francisco de Vitoria
1. Calheiros, Maria Clara
From "Intime Conviction" to Rational Decision Making: A
Critical View Drawing on Antonio Damasio's Findings
2. Galuppo, Marcelo /
Medrado, Vitor
Intolerance and the 99th Amendment to the Brazilian
Constitution: A Critical Approach of State's Neutrality
2. Camargo, Margarida
Maria Lacombe
Legislative Facts and Judicial Notice in
the Judicial Rulemaking Process
3. Kosielinska-Grabowska,
Urszula
Law, Democracy, and Religion
3. Cardoso, Simone Alves /
Garcez, Gabriela Soldano
The Mediation as an Instrument to Effective
Access to Justice in Brazil
4. Markova-Murashova,
Svetlana
Legal Spirituality, Judicial Spirit and Mentality
as the Basis of the Legal System
4. Levenbook, Barbara
Baum
Beyond Legislative Intent
5. Hwang, Shu-Perng
Religious Freedom and Religious Law in Taiwan: Is
There Any Conflict Between Religion and State?
5. Coelho, André
Judicial Process as a Remedial Discourse
6. Robison, Wade L.
Hume on Religion and Politics
6. Craiovan, Ion
Some Steps Through Juridical Knowledge: How
Do We Build an Epistemological Way?
7. Stolojescu, Grigore
Spirit and Law
7. Dolabella, Gabriel
The Relevance of the Generalist Judge's Discretionary
Limits in the Institutional Debate
8. Fernandes, Bernardo
Goncalves Alfredo /
Lacerda, Ludmila Lais
Costa
The Moral and Legal Reasoning in the
Constitutional Issues and Judicial Discretion
9. Freitas, Raquel Barradas
de
Minimalism: A Few Notes on the Claims of Judges as Interpreters
10. Mathilde, Cohen
Foreign Clerks
Working Group 3
Monday: 9h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
McDonough 220
1. Cullen, Patrick
Aquinas on Law & Justice: Conflict of Human
Law and Justice in the Orderly Society
2. Jang, Misung
Friendship as Solidarity - Aristotle's Political
Friendship in Nicomachean Ethics
3. Klappstein, Verena
How Much of Aristotle's Four Causes Can Be Foundin
in the German Legal Method to Interpret Laws?
4. Martins, Angela Vidal
da Silva
Law, Reason, and Emotion: Revisiting Aristotle
to Enlighten the Dialogue Between Reason and
Emotion in Post-Modern Legal Thinking
5. Munteanu, Dana
11. Morais, Fausto Santos de The Problem of Proportionality as an Operative Technique
to Decide Hard Cases by the Brazilian Supreme Court
12. Morais, Fausto Santos de The Problem of the Concept of Legal Principle as Optimization
Requirement in the Brazilian Supreme Court
13. Nadal Sánchez, Helena
What is the most Appropriate System of Disputes Resolution? The
Subjectivity Criterion and the Emacipatory Mediation Approach
14. Park, Joonseok
Double Effect Reasoning in Korean Constitutional Review
15. Pereira, Daniel Nunes
Reconsidering the Role of Emotions in Courts:
From Aristotle's Rhetoric to Current Problems
Epistemological Limits Towards Judicial Review - A
Stir Between Skepticism and the Decisionism
16. Puppo, Alberto
Fraternity, Joint Action, and Judicial Motivation
6. Panaccio,
Charles-Maxime
Constitutional Equality: Aristotle Before Kant
17. Puppo, Alberto
Reasons and Emotions in Inter-American Adjudication
7. Souza, Karla Harada
Human Rights: Digressions, Fundamentals,
and Aristotelian Ideals
18. Raymond, Msaule
What is Good for the Goose is not
(Necessaily) Good for the Gander
19. Stromberg, Caroline
Ethics in Legal Interpretation
20. Tao, Huang
On the Judicial Reform Which is the Trial-Centered in China
21. Vaicaitis, Vaidotas A.
State of Exception and Judicial Power
22. Wang, Ying
How Chinese Judges Handle the Relationship
between Law, Reason, and Emotion
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XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 111
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V | Working Groups
Working Group 5
Tuesday and Friday: 9h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
McDonough 342
1. Barbosa, Evandro
Realism and Constructivism
2. Barboza, Priscila da
Silva / Fabres, Ana Cristina
Porto
The Legal Rearrangements Regarding Labor in Brazil
(Law Project 4330/2004): Perverse Inclusions
3. Brandão, André Martins
Subject and Decision in Law Systems: A
Conjecture of Pugliesi's Constructionism
4. Bunikowski, Dawid
Emotions in Law: Psychological Theory of
Law by Petrazycki (and Olivercrona)
5. Conklin, William
The Role of Experience in the Foundation of a Legal Structure
6. Dyrda, Adam
The Holistic Account of Value-Judgements
and It's Relevance for Legal Theory
7. Fittipaldi, Edoardo
Reducing Norms to Dispositions to
Experience in Ethical Emotions
8. Fittipaldi, Edoardo
7. Wróbel, Marcin
Overslept Transition in Values in Environmental Law: Case
Study of Expropriation of Land in Tatra National Park
8. Zabalza, Alexandré
L'Ethique de la Terre et la Possession Biodomestique de la Terre
Working Group 7
Tuesday and Thursday: 9h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
1. Becak, Rubens
McDonough 347
Internet as a Global Public Sphere and the
Changing Role of Parliaments
2. Broekhuijse, Irene / Quik- A Case Study: Law and Emotions within
Schuijt, Nanneke
the Kingdom of the Netherlands
3. Costa, Cynthia Lessa
Three Complementary Approaches to Custom: LegalSociological, Legal-Domatic, Legal-Political
Dispute DS472 (European Union v. Brazil): The
Role of the World Trade Organization in the
Maintenance of Poverty in the World Order
4. Costa, M. Victoria
9. Pereira, Daniel Nunes
Weberian Marxism and the Stahlhartes Gehäuse
The International State System, Border Controls,
and Freedom as Non-Domination
10. Skoczen, Izabela
Is an Implicature Just(ified)?
5. Gray, Kevin
Democratic Legitimization and International
Law: The Case of the ECJ
11. Xavier, Bruno Gadelha
Fetishism of the Subject of Law: Analysis
from Marx to Pashukians
6. Li, Zhao / Qi, Haibin
Individuals on the Crisis: Caused by the Invation of
the IGOs and NGOs in International Politics
8. Hsu, Jimmy Chia-Shin
Bringing the Sunflower Movement Into Perspective
Through Theories of Democractic Consolidation
9. Li, Haibin Qi Zhao
How diverse Occasions Shape the Authority of
Wourld Government in Opposite Directions?
10. O'Brien, Maggie
Communities as Moral Agents
11 Rabasa, Amb. Emilio
What Kind of Informal Norms and Institutional
Culture Could Develop as Efficacy Decision Making
Process of an International Regional Organization
such as the Organization of American States?
12. Ribeiro, Karla Pinhel
Brazilian Army in Peacekeeping Missions
13. Saporiti, Michele
4. Liguori, Carla / Machado, Underwater Cultural Heritage: The International Protection
Adriana / Proenca, Maria
of Marine Funds Through Peaceful Settlement of Disputes
Valdenice Sousa Crus /
Silva, Denise Vital e
On the Legitimacy and Validity of Legal
Authority: The Concept of Sovereignty and the
Transnational Challenge of Global Religions
14. Souris, Renee Nicole
5. Nunes, Cláudia Ribeiro
Pereira
Panoramic of Human Right to Adequate Food and
Nutrition in the Brazilian Legal Amazon Region
Does Defective Moral Development Ever Excuse?
Adult Soldiers Recruited as Children, Emotional
Harm, and International Criminal Law
15. Souza, Karla Harada
The Protector-Receives Principle and the UN-REDD Program
6. Souza, Karla Harada
Internationalization of Environmental Law: Considerations
about Environmental Law in the European Union and Brazil
Working Group 6
Tuesday: 9h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
McDonough 337
1. Garcez, Gabriela Soldano
Governance for a Sustainable Development Scenario After Rio+20
2. Garcez, Gabriela Soldano
Popular Participation from the Access to
Quality Environmental Information
3. Johannsen, Kyle
Positive Obligations to Wild Animals: the Case of r-Strategists
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XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 113
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V | Working Groups
Working Group 8
Thursday: 9h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
McDonough 337
1. Andrade, Melanie Merlin
de
The Adoption of the Substantive Rationality by
the Bureaucracy Model of Public Administration:
Claim to Correctness Beyond Legality
2. Bencze, Matyas
The Assessment of the Legal Argumentation of Judgments
3. Bolwerk, Aloisio A. /
Freitas, Isa O. Machado
de / Haonat, Angela I. /
Marques, Vinicius P. /
Vieira, Murilo B.
Law and Art: For a Narrative Theory of Legal Discourse
4. Cascudo, Leonardo
Soares Matos
Law as text
5. Chang, Chia-yin
On the Distinction between Interpretation and Construction:
A Misleading Premise of New Originalism
6. Freitas, Raquel Barradas
de
Interpretation and Authority in Law and Music
7. Gama, João Felipe
Calmon Nogueira da
The Cooperation between the Parties in Judicial Procedure:
a Philosophical Analysis of the Judicial Procedure from
the Thoughts of Robert Alexy and Jürgen Habermas
8. Hattori, Hiroshi
The Balancing Theory of Heinrich Hubmann
9. Henzel, Melissa Beth
A Theory of Counterfactuals for Negligence:
Possible World Semantics and Torts
The Dialogical Concept of Law
6. Starger, Colin
Constitutional Law and Rhetoric
7. Yang, Bei
What Can and Can't Argumentation Theory Offer?
Working Group 10
Monday: 9h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
10. Santos, Maria Charpinel Robert Alexy's theory and its application in the Brazilian Collective Process
11. Staden, Marius van
5. Rossmanith, Anna
Values of Interpretation of Statutes
McDonough 110
1. Barbosa, Cláudia M. /
Freitas, Cinthia Obladen de
A. / Santin, Priscila L. L.
Detection of Online Child Grooming on Chat Logs
2. Chen, Hung-Ju
A Right to Civil Disobedience and its Impact on
Criminal Prosecution in a Transitional Society
3. Henley, Kenneth
Luck and the Equal Worth of Victims: Limiting
the Relevance of Victim Impact
4. Hsu, Jimmy
A New Two Standpoints Account of Free Will
and What it Means to Punishment
5. Katz, Leora
Mediating Desert and Punishment
6. Kolber, Adam
Punishment and a Portfolio of Beliefs
7. Lee, Hswin-wen
A New Societal Self-Defense Theory of Punishment
- The Rights-Protection Theory
8. Marcantonio, Jonathan
Hernandes
From Guilty to Shame: The Law through the post-modern
Individualization process - a theoretical inquiry
9. Meyer, Emilio Leluso
Neder
Enforcing the Concept of Crimes against Humanity
as an International Rule odf Law Category
10. Moraes, Rhara / Ribeiro, Reflections on the Punishment Forms
Karla Pinhel
Working Group 9
Tuesday: 9h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
McDonough 588
1. Adeodato, João Maurício
The Aristotelian Reduction of Rhetoric to Persuasion
- A Strategy Only for "Good" Emotions
2. Adeodato, João Maurício
Three Points of Departure for a Realistic Rhetoric of Law
11. Pogorzelski, Oskar
The Concept of Conjugated Norms in
Polish Criminal Law Theories
12. Simon, Thomas
Comparing Injustices: The Centrality of Genocide
13. Simon, Thomas
Terrorism: Law's Fearful Emotion
14. Xavier, Bruno
La Gloria Hecha de Castigo: El Imaginario Punitivo de Brasil
y el Sentimento de Justicia en la Realidad Neoliberal
3. Alves, Fernando de Brito / Between Consensus and Dissensus: Institutional Dialogue
Lima, Jairo Neia
Between the Dichotomy Deliberation vs. Agonism
4. Chengwen, Mou
Analysis on the Relations Between Emotion, Rationality and
Law Under the Perspective of Deliberative Democracy
114 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 115
V | Working Groups
V | Working Groups
Working Group 11
Thursday: 9h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
Working Group 12
McDonough 160
1. Andraka-Christou,
Barbara
Science, not Spirituality: The Need for Pharmaceutical
Treatment of Opioid Addiction in the Criminal Justice System
2. Alves, Luiz Filipe Araújo
Was Schopenhauer a Neuroscientist? Reflections on Neurolaw
3. Brockdorff, Marie-Luise
Grafin von / Michailov,
Michael Ch. / Neu, Eva /
Schulz, Guntram-Edith /
Weber, Germain
Scientific Regulation in Context of Philosophy
of Law: Necessity of Scientific Tribunals
4. Cao, Jianxiong / Qi,
Haibin
5. Dunn, Mark / Hill,
Hamner
McDonough 164
1. Accatino, Daniela
Judicial Decisions and Collective Memory in
Transitional Contexts: On the Cognitive and
Emotional Functions of Human Rights Trials
2. Alves, Fernando de
Brito / Lima, Jairo Neia
When Constituent Power Challenges Constituted Power:
A Philosophical Approach on Democratic Confidence in
Civil Disobedience and in the Right to Social Protest
3. Bach-Golecka,
Dobrochna
Abortion and the Limits of Flexibility in Human Rights Law
Law and Social Cognitive Neuroscience (SCN) in China
4. Baló, Michelle / Silva,
Camila Barreto Pinto
The Mandatory or Involuntary Detention of Chemicals
Dependents and Warranty of Fundamental Rights
Using Cognitive Science for Better Litigation
5. Costa, Cynthia Lessa
Labor Protection Within the Free Trade
Areas: The Co-Management System
6. Fioriglio, Gianluigi
Surveillance Practices: Power, Control, and Democracy
7. Fyfe, Shannon
Tracking Hate Speech as Incitement to Genocide
in International Criminal Law
8. Hachler, Matthias
Belief and Reason - A Justification and
Boundaries of Religious Freedom
9. Kim, Eun-Jung K.
Permission versus Promise: What is the Significance
of State Consent for Human Rights Conventions?
10. Kolber, Adam
The Contours of First Amendment Freedom of Thought
11. Pereira, Daniel Nunes /
Saigg, Patrick De Almeida
Brutalized Citizenship: "Minima Moralia" and Human Rights
12. Onazi, Oche
[Disability] Justice Dictated by the Surfeit
of Love: Simone Weil in Nigeria
13. Stern, Julia
Autonomy and the Foundations of Human Rights
14. Xiangyang, Qian
The Journey of Human Rights: Vehicles v. Terrains
6. Jeewanthi, M.K. Geethani Law, Reasons, and Emotions: "Opt-in" or
"Opt-out" in Organ Donation
7. Kirchmair, Lando
Monday and Thursday: 9h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
What We Legal Theorists and Philosophers Can Learn
from Great Apes: A Critical Account of the Innate
"Universal Moral Grammar" Thesis and Its Claimed
Relevance for the Law as Represented by John Mikhail
8. Lütge, Christoph /
On Philosophy of Law: Fundamental Interdisciplinary Science
Michailov, Michael Ch. /
Neu, Eva / Stainov, Gentcho
Rumen / Welsher, Ursula
9. Michailov, Michael Ch. /
Neu, Eva / Neu, Renate /
Schulz, Guntram-Edith /
Senn, Tatjana-Natalija /
Zebuhr, Lothar-Yorck
Philosophy of Law and Integral Anthropology
10. Morales, Leticia
Judicial Interventions in Health Policy:
Epistemic Competence and the Courts
11. Palazzani, Laura
Cognitive and Mood Enhancement: Bioethical Perspectives
12. Salardi, Silvia
The Concept of "Nature" and its Derivatives in the PostHuman Age: A Rational or Emotive Foundation for a Legal
Regulation of New Scientific and Technological Advances?
13. Starger, Colin
Between Public and Private: DNA and the Law's
Rhetoric of Corporeal Boundaries
14. Takahashi, Hideharu
Some Points When Dealing with Emotions
Legally in the Age of Neuroscience
15. Tate, Joshua
Personal Reality: Delusion in Law and Science
16. Xavier, Bruno
Why the Law Should be Concerned with Psychoanalysis?
Law, Unconscious, and Social Critique
116 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 117
V | Working Groups
V | Working Groups
Working Group 13
Working Group 15
Monday: 9h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
1. Costa, Evandro Barbosa /
Alves, Thais Cristina
McDonough 140
Contractualism and the Metaphor of Construction in John Rawls
Thursday: 9h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
McDonough 588
1. Feng, Fei
The Right of Name and the Emotion About Family in China
2. He, Xuefeng / Qi,
Haibin / Wei, Chenglin
Why Did Theories of "China Collapse" Callapse
Themselves?: A Study on the Dual-track Stratification
and Elastic Social Structure of China
3. Liu, Yigong
On Mondernization and Transformation
of Traditional Chinese Law
4. Bichued, Marina /
John Rawls and Robert Nozick Theories
Galuppo, Marcelo / Midory, Analyzed Under Public International Law
Luiza / Tavares, Deborah
4. Liu, Yigong
Traditional Chinese Legal Philosophy and its Modernization
5. Zhang, Anbang
5. Costa, Beatriz Souza /
Oliveira, Márcio Luís de
The culture of sustainability forged upon public
reason: the contribution of John Rawls’ Theory
The Problem of "Mian Zi" in Chinese Judicial Operations:
An Inquiry in Terms of Institutional Economics
6. Zhu, Ying
The Selected Approaching Routine of Rule of Law in China
6. Dyrda, Adam
A Theoretical Reason to Disagree: A Legal Case
7. Johannsen, Kyle
Justice in Personal Choice: Cohen's Equivocal
Attack on Rawl's Basic Structure Restriction
8. Liu, Jia
On Rawls, Global Justice, and Global Public Political Culture
9. Randall, Pierce
Blaming, Shaming, and Public Reason
10. Shahidipak,
Mohammadreza
The Comparative Investigation at Philosophy
of Right from Aristotle to Rawls
11. Usami, Makato
The Core, Scope, and Ground of Luck Egalitarianism
2. Barbosa, Evandro / Costa, The Limits of Affirmative Action Model in Dworkin's Thought
Thais Cristina Alves
3. Basile, Rafael Faria
The Interpretative Dimension of Legal
Positivism From the Concept of Law
Working Group 16
Thursday: 9h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
1. Cavalaglio, Lorenzo
"The Parents of the Trust Were Fraud and Fear, and
a Court of Conscience was the Nurse": The Role
of Confidence in the Origins of the Trust
2. Dierksmeier, Claus
A Precursor of Capability Theory: Karl
Christian Friedrich Krause (1781-1832)
3. Garbellini, Henrique
Rudolph von Jhering and Friederich W. Nietzsche: Geneology
of Ethics and Law and the Historical Development
as Determinant of the Origin of Legal Feeling
4. Halis, Denis de Castro
The Use of Justice Holmes' Legal Pragmatism to Analyze
the Case Law of the Highest Court of Macau (China)
5. Sanza, Maria Teresa
Cicero in Pro Archia: The Law and Other Knowledges
in Roman Law Between Reason and Emotion
6. Schmidt, Katharina
Towards a More "Authentic" Jurisprudence: German Free
Lawyers Between Reason and Emotion, 1903-1914
Working Group 14
Thursday: 9h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
McDonough 110
1. Badescu, Mihai
Law, Norm, and Normativity
2. Badescu, Mihai
The Elements and the Manner of Constituting the Norm of Law
3. Fittipaldi, Edoardo
Contradictions as Empirical Incompatibilities: Bridging
Psychology of Ethical Emotions with Normative Dogmatics
4. Grellette, Matthew
A Case for Rethinking Legal Existence and Legal Validity
5. Janik, Bartosz
Logic and Legal Obligation: a Pluralist View
6. Puppo, Alberto
Logic, Fear, and the Presupposition of the Basic Norm
7. Studnicki, Tomasz
The Social Sources Thesis and Metaphysics
8. Thanigaivelan,
Shanmugam
Is Law a Normative Science?
118 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
McDonough 140
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 119
V | Working Groups
V | Working Groups
Working Group 17
Working Group 19
Thursday: 9h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
McDonough 156
1. Chen, Jinghui
The Conceptual Framework of Legitimate Authority
2. Cizewski, Wojciech
Rawlsian Acceptability Criterion and
the Content of Public Reason
3. Galuppo, Marcelo /
Medrado, Vitor
Demands of Justice: A Controversial Reception of Kant by
the Theories of Justice of John Rawls and Robert Nozick
4. Platz, Jeppe von
Locke's Theory of Political Legitimacy
5. Ribeiro, Karla Pinhel
Monday: 9h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
McDonough 337
1. Alves, Luiz Filipe Araújo / The Lost Pathos: the Human Being, Power, and
Cardoso, Renato César
Affections on Law in Friedrich Nietsche
2. D'Alton, Aymeric
La Place de l'Emotion dans la Structure Objective du Droit
3. Bittar, Eduardo C.B.
Modern Reason, Emotion and Justice
3. Boiteux, Elza / Lucenti,
André
The Sentimental Enlightenment
Political Science Today - High Studies Towards
Democracy, Republicanism, and Federalism
4. Brandão, André Martins
Reason and Emotion in Human DecisionMaking: A Paretian Approach
6. Silva, Rogerio Luiz Nery
da / Tramontina, Robinson
Law: Duty and Political Obligation in Democractic Societies
5. Carvalho, Alan Mariano
Bezerra de
Considerations on Value and Emotion in
Law from a Culturalist's Perspective
7. Tideman, Nicolaus
Ethical Foundations of a General Right to Secede
8. Warren, Paul
Wilt Chamberlain and Karl Marx, or: Luck Egalitarianism,
Exploitation, and the Possibility of Cleanly Generated Capitalism
6. Cavalcanti, Rodrigo de
Camargo
The Importance of Pathos in Law: the Dogmas and the Feelings
Towards the Supposed Pure Rationalism in Judicial Rhetoric
7. Chen, Chi-Shing
Reason and Passion in Plato's Laws
8. Dibo, Maritza
The Maria of Penha: Reasoning or Emotion
9. Jun, Hae Jong
Distortion of Emotion in Legal Reasonin
10. López, Nuria
Beyond the Dichotomy of Reason and Emotion:
The Complexity of Decision Making
11. Lorenzo, Vincent Di
Reason, Cognition, and Emotion: A Study of
Regulatory Standards and Enforcement Policy
12. Palazzani, Laura
Care and Justice: Rationality and Emotion
Between Ethics and Law
13. Pointel, Jean-Baptiste
Law as Adequate Emotion: Spinoza's Legacy
Working Group 18
Thursday: 9h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
McDonough 220
1. Butler, Brian E.
Oliver Wendell Holmes, Paul Feyerabend,
and Critical Legal Studies
2. Cabral, Gabriel
Legal Normativity and Moral Credibility
3. Cabral, Gabriel
Revisiting H.L.A. Hart: Legal Normativity
and Normative Attitudes de re
4. Coelho, André
Why Secondary Rules Might Emerge?
Hart's Fable as a Cautionary Tale
5. Kaino, Michihiro
The Common Law Context of Jurisprudence
6. Necio, Lukasz
Friedrich Hayek und der Rechtspositivismus
- ein Offensichtlicher Widerspruch oder
eine Umgehung des Problems?
7. Niemi, Matti
Do You Have a Consistent Legal Conception? A Test
8. R. Nye, Hillary
Hart's Methodology and the Eliminativist
Turn in Legal Philosophy
9. Zamboni, Mauro
A Legal Pluralist World or the Black Hole
for Modern Legal Positivism
120 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 121
V | Working Groups
V | Working Groups
Working Group 20
Working Group 21
Tuesday: 9h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
Hotung 2000
1. Abrams, Yuval
How to be Causally Liable Without
Causing: The Case of Omissions
2. Adachi, Hidehiko
Classification of Relations Between Law and Morality
3. Bombelli, Giovanni
Remarks for a Contemporary Theory of
Emotion in Political-Legal Debate
4. Britto, Lucas Galvão
de / Aurora Tomazini de
Carvalho
Tuesday: 9h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
McDonough 220
1. Abreu, Daniel
Albuquerque de
Family, Democracy and Diversity: An Analysis
of the Brazilian Estatuto da Familia (Family
Statute) Under the Lights of Human Rights
2. Alves, Fernando de Brito
Notes for an Economy of Moral
Disagreements in Unequal Societies
The Logical-Semantic Constructivism
3. Dias, Maria Tereza
Informal Urban Settlements in Belo Horizonte
Metropolitan Area, Brazil: An Approach of
the Use of Legal Discourse by Dwellers
5. Bueno, José Geraldo
Romanello / Delpupo,
Michely Vargas / Moraes,
Gerson Leite de
Semiotics of Law Comes from Philosophy
4. Imparato, Mary C.
From Public Morality to Individual Liberty: understanding the
decriminalization of violations of traditional sexual morality
5. Juzaszek, Maciej
Moral Insitutions and Disagreements on the
Principles of Justice in Health Care
6. Bueno, José Geraldo
Romanello / Delpupo,
Michely Vargas / Menezes,
Daniel Francisco Negão
The Reason Why Lawyers Should Read Charles Sanders Peirce
6. Masson, Daiane Garcia /
Silva, Rogéro Luiz Nery da
Existential damage: Concept, Perspectives and
Relationship with Human Dignity
7. Moraes, Kelly Cardoso
Mendes de
Social Segregation and the Right of Habitation
8. Nunan, Richard
Intersex Rights and the Triumph of Emotion
over Reason in the American Judiciary
9. Vale, Murilo Melo
The Institute of Expropriation for the Common Good
in Acoordance with the Principle of Democracy
7. Chahaira, Bruno Valverde Law as a Sociocultural Discursive Practice
8. Freitas, Raquel Barradas
de
Minimalism v. Scepticsm?
9. Golba, Filip
Legal Objectivity and Institutional Facts
10. Hongzhen, Liu
Sense of Justice, Public Reason, and Social Acceptability
of Judicial Decisions of Influential Hard Cases
10. Wellington, Alex
Yes Means Yes, or Does it?: Complexities of Consent
for Women's Reproductive and Sexual Labour
11. Matejkowska, Ewa
Rethinking the Role of Neutrality in Language Policy
12. Michalczak, Rafal
Can Science be Uncontroversial?
11. Yien, Marcio Andre de
Souza Kao
13. Wei, Layun
The Objectivity Obligations of Chinese Public Prosecutors
The Domestic Violence against Women in Brazil and the
Culture of Punishment: the Microphysics of Power and Gender
Performativity as a Feminis Methodological Subversion
122 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 123
V | Working Groups
V | Working Groups
Working Group 22
Working Group 23
Friday: 9h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
McDonough 110
Friday: 9h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
McDonough 156
1. Abenoza, Sira / Arjona,
César
Emotions and the Frontiers of Legal Education
1. Asano, Kozi
Intra-generational or Inter-generational
Equality? Steinerian Exercises
2. Abenoza, Sira / Arjona,
César
Socrates Behind Bars
An Informative Approach to Personal Identity: Its
Conception as a Fluid and Mutable Element
3. Bolwerk, Aloisio A. /
Freitas, Isa O. Machado
de / Haonat, Angela I. /
Marques, Vinicius P. /
Vieira, Murilo B.
Law and Cinema: Interdisciplinary Dialogue and Legal Education
2. Carvalho, Felipe
Quintella M. de / Lara,
Mariana A. / Pereira, Fabio
Q.
3. Kolber, Adam
Free Will as a Matter of Law
4. Juzaszek, Maciej
Moral Luck - A Threat of Our Retributive Intuitions
5. Romanynets, Marta
Genesis of the Idea of Responsibility in Law:
Philosophical and Legal Aspects
6. Saporiti, Michele
A Disobedient Conscience. For a General Legal Theory
of Conscientious Objection as a Positive Right
7. Trujillo, Isabel
Institutional Loyalty and Cooperation - Basis
for a Theory of Compliance with Law
8. Wilson, M. Blake
Winking, Nudging, Shoving: Law’s Punishment Problem
The Intertwining of Mediation with the
4. Bonavides, Renata
Environmental Education Law in Brazil
Soares / Cardoso, Simone
Alves / Yaghisisian, Adriana
Machado
5. Brockdorff, MarieLuise Grafin von /
Holler, Manfred / Lütge,
Christoph / Martin,
Daniele / Michailov,
Michael Ch. / Neu, Eva /
Schratz, Michael Ch. /
Senn, Tatjana-Natalija /
Srivastava, Pratap R. /
Stainov, Gentcho Rumen /
Weber, Germain / Welsher,
Ursula
On Global Approaches to Philosophy and Law
6. Castro, Felipe Araújo /
Ramos, Marcelo Maciel
Brazilian Judicial Aristocracy
7. Madrid, Raúl
On the Existence of the Right to Academic
Freedom in Scholastic University
8. Piccolo, Thuany
Klosowski / Sarlet, Ingo
Wolfgang / Silva, Rogerio
Luiz Nery da
The Social Right to Education as a Tool of Inclusion
9. Spaolonzi, Ana /
Vedovato, Luis Renato
Professor/Student Relationship and the Democratic State
10. Xavier, Bruno
Legal Education Beyond the Capital: Dialogue Between
Istvan Meszaros and Paulo Freire in the Critic of
Neoliberal Impacts on Brazilian Legal Education
124 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 125
V | Working Groups
V | Working Groups
Working Group 24
Working Group 25
Tuesday: 9h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
McDonough 110
Friday: 9h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
McDonough 160
1. Assaf, Matheus /
Galuppo, Marcelo / Santos,
Thiago Braga Silva dos
Truth, Verisimilitude and Fiction in the
Making of Procedural Narrative
1. Allcock, Martin
Corrective Justice and Kantian Right as a Mechanism
to Reconcile "Substantially Clashing Interests" in
Cases of Negligently Inflicted Psychiatric Injury
2. Bueno, José Geraldo
Romanello / Menezes,
Daniel Francisco Negão
Medicine as Paideia
2. Barretto, Vicente de
Paulo / Garcia, Jace Rene
Costa
Reflective Judgment and Critical Hermeneutic Ethics: First
Notes about an Epistemological Orientation to the Law,
From the Relation Between Sensitivity and Understanding
3. Calmon, João Felipe
The Power's Immutability: The Res Judicata
as a Form of Corporal Discipline
Pax Kantiana: On Philosophical and Juridical
Fundamentals of Globalization
4. Flodin, Mats
Moral Impact on Law and Legislation
5. Guedes, Carlos Eduardo
Paletta
Isn't It Ironic: Judges as Rorty's Ironists
3. Brockdorff, MarieLuise Grafin von / Lütge,
Christoph / Michailov,
Michael Ch. / Neu, Eva /
Weber, Germain
6. López, Nuria
A Penny for your Thoughts: the Conceptions of
Justice in the Literature of Cora Coralina
4. Cudd, Anne
Contractarianism and the Exclusion Problem
5. Deng, Yi
Kant's Publicity Principle as Dynamic Consent
7. Magalhães, José Antônio / Law and Violence in Kafka and Derrida
Silva, Natasha Pereira
6. Galuppo, Marcelo /
Medrado, Vitor
The Law in Kant A Controversy Between
Natural Law and Legal Positivism
8. Monteiro, Eduardo
Aleixo
Law and Literature in Brazil
7. Granato, Marcelo
Publicity and Right: the Kantian Connection
8. Maggen, Danny
Building a Post-Enlightened Conception of Liberal Law
9. Wellington, Alex
Corporate Responsibility and Liability to
Punishment: Hart's Sea Captain Revisited
9. Ozcan, Mehmet Tevfik
Right as Power: Non Moral Nexus of Law in Modern Society
10. Wiratraman,
Herlambang
Dropping a Case, Between Journalism
Attacked and Legal Emotional Distress
10. Varden, Helga
Freedom, Nature, and Secession - A Kantian Approach
126 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 127
V | Working Groups
V | Working Groups
Working Group 26
Working Group 27
Friday: 9h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
1. Barbarosch, Eduardo
McDonough 164
La Objectividad en la Moral y el Derecho
2. Barbosa, Daniela Dantas / Particiones equilibradas bajo ponderación
Miranda, Lossiah Barbosa
Bacelar / Miranda, Lohans
de Oliveira / Miranda,
Oannes de Oliveira
Friday: 9h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
McDonough 588
1. D'Alton, Aymeric
On the Cultural Dimension of the Law: Ortega y Gasset
and the Latin American Legacy in Legal Philosophy
2. Cohen, Sarah A. M.
Interpretation of Tax Standards: A Comparative Analysis of Legal
Thought and Precedent Between Systems of the Civil Law Branch
3. Foltinova, Janka / Iyengar, On Moral and Social Philosophy
V. Govindaraja / Michailov,
Michael Ch. / Neu, Eva /
Schulz, Guntram-Edith /
Weber, Germain
3. Custódio, Márcio
Ferezin / Afonso, Tulio
Augusto Tayano
Teoría de lo Reconocimiento y Trabajo Decente: Una
Existencia Digna en su Concepción Política
4. Foroughi Nik, Rahim /
Smith Rangel Perez,
Johanna
Hacia Una Nueva Filosofía de la Pena en Menores
4. Hu, Lung-Lung
Legal Conflict and Literary Resistance in
Colonized Taiwan in Lai He's Novels
5. Gonçalves, Fabio /
Machado, Flávia
Las Relaciones de Poder y las Relaciones de Consumo
5. Iqbal, Rao Javaid /
Mahmood, Tahir
Objectives of Governance: a Comparison
of Islamic and Western Traditions
6. Hernandez, Ana Isabel
Emocion, Justicia y Reconocimiento en Judith Butler
6. Li, Zhao / Qi, Haibin
Potential Impacts on Individuals Caused by the Invasion
of IGOs and NGOs into International Politics
7. Moraes, Guilherme Lopes Emociones y Impuestos por la Perspectiva de
de
la Teoria Comunicacional des Derecho
7. Magalhães, José Antônio
Institution and Interpretation in Derrida's "Force of Law":
Dialogues with Stanley Fish and Samuel Weber
8. Pamplona, Danielle
Anne / Rossi, Amelia
Sampaio
Derecho, Constitucion y la Razon: Entre la
Logica Instrumental y las Pasiones
8 Naav, Maria
"Only One Can Survive"? The Case When Two Legal Cultures
Fight Within the Same Norms - The Example of Equality
9. Pulido Ortiz, Fabio
Enrique
Acerca de las Relaciones entre Derecho y Sanciones
9. Ptak, Joanna
Problem of "Honor Violence" in Western Europe - The
Issue of Evalaution of Efficacy of Legal Solutions
10. Rodenas, Angeles
La Metrica de las Instituciones Politicas: El Enfoque
Trascendental y el Enfoque Comparativo
10. Sampaio, Augusto C.
A Comparative Study About Institutional Tensions
and the Peculiarity of the Brazilian ones
11. Santos, José-Antônio
Memoria Post-Auschwitz, Lenguaje
Negacionista y Huellas Genocidas
11. Xiangyang, Qian
Understanding Culture in Comparative Law
12. Sterling Casas, Juan
Pablo
Hermeneutica y Dialogo Como Limite Arbitrariedad Judicial
13. Zabalza, Alexandre
La dignité de la terre et dignité humaine
128 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 129
V | Working Groups
V | Working Groups
Working Group 28
Working Group 29
Friday: 9h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
McDonough 337
Friday: 9h30 – 11h00 and 11h30 – 13h00
McDonough 347
1. Aldave, Ana
La Búsqueda de Consenso Para Una
Definición Universal de "Terrorismo"
1. Amaral, Paulo Adyr Dias
do
The Protection of Human Rights by the Tax System
2. Anjos, Lucas Costa dos /
Calixto, Vinícius Machado
The Philosophy of International Law in Contemporary Academia:
Overcoming Negligence Through the Context of Legal Pluralism
2. Avellar, Bruno
A Surrealistic Deconstruction Law: How Sensibility in Legal
Studies is Crucial to the Realization of Human Rights
3. Broekhuijse, Irene /
Venter, Roxan
Constitutional Law from an Emotional Point
of View: Considering Regional and Local
Interests in National Decision-Making
3. Cullen, Patrick
The Negative and Moral Right to Life: A
Basis for Functional Human Rights
4. Druzin, Bryan
Our Massive Castles in the Sky: Why
the Nation State is Illegitimate
5. Fyfe, Shannon
Grotius on Harm and Self-Defense: Is
Preventing Rape a Just Cause for War?
6. Geenens, Raf
Sovereignty as Autonomy
7. Gray, Kevin
The Collapse of Practice Dependence
8. Kaku, Shun
Is Constitutional Democracy Compatible with the Common
Pursuit of Global Justice? The Changing Stucture of
Global Governance and the Domestic Legal System
9. Szabó, Miklós
Deep Structure of Language(s) of Law
10. Valentini, Chiara
Reasonableness as a Global Legal Standard
11. Zhai, Xiaobo
Bentham`s Relative Sovereignty
130 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
4. Guangyu, Cao / Li, Ling / The Consideration of the Legitimacy of
Yanying, Fei
Abandoning the Right to Life
5. Hryshchuk, Oksana
Human Dignity as the Basis of Fundamental Human Rights
6. Lago, Pablo Antonio
Same-Sex Marriage: A Defense Based on
Foundations of Natural Law
7. Silva, Hitalo
The Doctrine of Hate Speech and Other Fundamental Rights:
A Comparative Analysis Inside a Global Legal System
8. Tucak, Ivana
Rethinking the Mandatory Rights
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 131
INDEX OF NAMES
Abenoza, Sira 124
Abrams, Yuval 122
Abreu, Daniel
Albuquerque de 123
Accatino, Daniela 93, 117
Adachi, Hidehiko 122
Adeodato, João Maurício 114
Adolphe, Jane 89
Afonso, Tulio Augusto
Tayano 128
Akbaş, Kasım 87
Aki, Irem 76
Albert, Marta 67, 78
Aldave, Ana 130
Allcock, Martin 127
Alonso, Juan Pablo 69
Álvarez Gálvez, Íñigo 65
Alves, Fernando de
Brito 114, 117, 123
Alves, Luiz Filipe
Araújo 116, 121
Alves, Thais Cristina 118
Amaral, Paulo Adyr
Dias do 131
Amaya, Amalia 85, 92
Anderson, Bruce 73
Anderson, Joshua 82
Anderson, Scott 72
Andrade, Laércio 67
Andrade, Melanie
Merlin de 69, 114
Andrade Neto, João 90
Andraka-Christou,
Barbara 116
Anjos, Lucas Costa
dos 95, 130
Anthony Appiah, Kwame 51
Antonov, Mikhail 69, 77
Aparisi Miralles,
Ángela 67, 74, 78
Araszkiewicz, Michał 73, 85
Arcanjo, Samira Costa 109
Arias, Joséph M. 74
Arjona, César 82, 124
Arnold, Rainer 94
Arnold, Samuel 71
Arruda Jr., Edmundo
Lima de 94
Asano, Kozi 125
Asgeirsson, Hrafn 89
Assaf, Matheus 126
Aurora Tomazini de
Carvalho 122
Avellar, Bruno 131
Babst, Gordon A. 88
Bach-Golecka,
Dobrochna 117
Badescu, Mihai 118
Baez, Narciso Leandro
Xavier 70
Baló, Michelle 117
Barbarosch, Eduardo 69, 128
Barbosa, Cláudia M. 90, 115
Barbosa, Daniela Dantas 128
Barbosa, Evandro 112, 118
Barboza, Estefânia Maria
de Queiroz 90
Barboza, Priscila da Silva 112
Barreto, Gustavo
Augusto Ferreira 84
Barretto, Vicente de
Paulo 70, 127
Basile, Rafael Faria 118
Been, Wouter de 80
Belchior, Germana
Parente Neiva 67
Bellver Capella, Vicente 78
Belowska, Joanna 96
Bencze, Matyas 114
Bengez, Rainhard 75
Bernstein, Alyssa 71
Bezemek, Christoph 86
Bichara, Carlos David
Carneiro 70
Billington, James H. 25
Bitencourt, Manoela 96
Bjerregaard, Merete 94
Blake D. Morant 26
Blum, Lawrence 92
Bohman, James 83
Boiteux, Elza 121
Bolwerk, Aloisio A. 114, 124
Bombelli, Giovanni
66, 83, 122
Bonanno, Daniela 83
Bonavides, Renata Soares 124
Bordoni, Gianluca Sadun 74
Borges, Clara M. Roman 103
Borsellino, Patrizia 66
Bragato, Fernanda Frizzo 70
Brandão, André Martins
96, 112, 121
Brasileiro, Ricardo Adriano
Massara 80, 91
Breda, Vito 89
Brewer, Scott 85
Brito, Adriano Naves de 70
Brito, José de Sousa e 75, 83
Britto, Lucas Galvão
de 67, 122
Brockdorff, Marie-Luise
Grafin von 116, 124, 127
Broekhuijse, Irene 113, 130
Brostl, Alexander 10
Buchwalter, Andréw 83
Bueno, José Geraldo
Romanello 122, 126
Bulygin, Eugenio 69
Bunikowski, Dawid 10,
65, 74, 96, 109, 112
Burazin, Luka 82
Bustamante, Thomas 86
Buzanello, José Carlos 95
Cabral, Gabriel 120
Çağlar, İrem 87
Calheiros, Maria Clara 111
Calixto, Vinícius
Machado 130
Calmon, João Felipe 126
Calvert, John 89
Calzetta, Alejandro 69
Câmara, Edna Torres
Felício 67, 69, 90, 97
Camargo, Margarida
Maria Lacombe 73, 111
Cao, Jianxiong 116
Cao, Liming 95
Carabante, José María 78
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 133
Index of Names
Cardoso, Renato César 121
Cardoso, Simone Alves
102, 111, 124
Carle, Susan 9, 28
Carneiro, Maria
Francisca 101
Carpentier, Mathieu 76
Carvalho, Alan Mariano
Bezerra de 101, 102, 121
Carvalho, Felipe
Quintella M. 88, 125
Carvalho, Maria Clara
Calheiros 94
Cascudo, Leonardo
Soares Matos 67, 114
Castro, Felipe 109, 124
Çataloluk, Gökçe 66, 87
Cavalaglio, Lorenzo 119
Cavalcante, Denise
Lucena 68
Cavalcante, Mantovani
Colares 68
Cavalcanti, Rodrigo
de Camargo 121
Cella, José Renato
Gaziero 69, 76, 94, 95
Cerdio Herran, Jorge 36
Cerdio, Jorge 69
Cern, Karolina M. 75
Chahaira, Bruno
Valverde 122
Chang, Chia-yin 114
Chen, Chi-Shing 121
Chengwen, Mou 114
Chen, Hung-Ju 115
Chen, Jinghui 120
Chiarella, Paola 67
Chiassoni, Pierluigi 69, 86
Chilovi, Samuele 74
Christiano, Thomas 83
Christodoulidis,
Emilios 33, 92
Chueiri, Vera Karam de 90
Chung, Fang-Hua 109
Cirkovic, Elena 80
Ciuffoletti, Sofia 101
Cizewski, Wojciech 120
Claudio Grossman 26
Cliteur, Paul 90
Coelho, André 111, 120
Coelho, Luiz Fernando 100
Coelho, Nuno M.M.S. 83
Cohen, Mathilde 72
Cohen, Sarah A. M. 129
Conde Gaxiola, Napoleón 68
Conklin, William 65, 77, 112
Copan, Paul 90
Corradetti, Cláudio 78, 80
Corvalán, Juan Gustavo 69
Costa, Beatriz Souza 118
Costa, Cynthia Lessa 113, 117
Costa, Evandro Barbosa 118
Costa, M. Victoria 113
Costa, Paulo Sérgio Weyl
Albuquerque 71
Costa, Thais Cristina
Alves 118
Cotterrell, Roger 77
Cotton, Simon Robert 85
Coyne, Steven 72
Craiovan, Ion 111
Cullen, Patrick 110, 131
Custódio, Márcio
Ferezin 128
Dabson, Jennifer 8, 27
Dadkhah, Maliheh 95
Dahlman, Christian 43, 93
D’Almeida, Luís
Duarte 69, 85
D’Alton, Aymeric 121, 129
Danisor, Gheorghe 74
Davydova, Marina 90
Decat, Thiago Lopes 91
Deigh, John 92
Dellavalle, Sergio 109
Del Mar, Maksymilian 77, 92
Delpupo, Michely Vargas 122
Deng, Yi 72, 127
Denno, Deborah W. 92
Dias, Maria Tereza 123
Dibo, Maritza 10, 121
Di Donato, Flora 74
Dierksmeier, Claus 110, 119
Dieterle, Jill 72
Díez Spelz, Juan Francisco 78
Dobrzeniecki, Karol 99
Dobson, Lynn 78
Dolabella, Gabriel 111
Domselaar, Iris van 67
Druzin, Bryan 130
Duarte, David 104
Dubowska, Marta 67
Dufner, Annette 102
Dunn, Mark 116
Dybowski, Maciej 99
Dyrda, Adam 112, 118
134 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
Index of Names
Eckert, Cláudia 75
Edmundson, Willian 72
Ehrenberg, Kenneth M. 82
Eliasz, Katarzyna 81
Elósegui, María 94
Eng, Svein 81
Eriksen, Christoffer C. 81
Etcheverry, Juan B. 91, 109
Fabra Zamora, Jorge
Luis 76, 80
Fabres, Ana Cristina
Porto 112
Fachin, Melina Girardi 91
Fagundes, Laura Helena
de Souza 67
Fagundes, Taísa
Fernanda Bazzo 76
Faria, Ana Paula
Rodrigues Luz 100
Favacho, Fernando
Gomez 68
Favuzzi, Pellegrino 95
Feng, Fei 119
Fernandes, Bernardo
Goncalves Alfredo 111
Fernandes, Karina
Macedo 71
Ferreira Ospino, Javier 97
Feyen, Stef 109
Fioriglio, Gianluigi 96, 117
Fittipaldi, Edoardo
76, 77, 112, 118
Flanigan, Jessica 81
Flannigan, Jessica 71
Flodin, Mats 126
Flores, Alfredo de J. 79
Flores, Imer 88, 100
Føllesdal, Andréas 78, 83
Foltinova, Janka 129
Forghieri, Marisa 80
Foroughi Nik, Rahim 128
Franca, Alessandra Correia
Lima Macedo 101
Franca, Marcílio 101
Francis, John 81
Francis, Leslie 9, 28, 33, 81
Freitas, Cinthia
Obladen de A. 115
Freitas, Isa O. Machado
de 114, 124
Freitas, Juárez 68
Freitas, Raquel Barradas
de 111, 114, 122
Fuselli, Stefano 84
Fyfe, Shannon 117, 130
Gaakeer, Jeanne 66
Gahng, Taegyung 98
Galindo, Fernando 68, 94
Galuppo, Marcelo 10, 66, 88,
100, 110, 118, 120, 126, 127
Gama, João Felipe Calmon
Nogueira da 114
Garbellini, Henrique 119
Garcez, Gabriela Soldano
102, 111, 112
Garcia, Aurelio de Prada 74
García Berger, Mario 69
Garcia, Jace Rene Costa 127
Gargarella, Roberto 78, 85
Garzón Vallejo, Iván 74
Gascón, Marina 85
Gaudêncio, Ana Margarida
Simões 65, 75, 85
Geenens, Raf 109, 130
Gilabert, Pablo 83
Gionedis, Louise
Rainer Pereira 76
Gkouvas, Triantafyllos 82
Golba, Filip 122
Goldmann, Matthias 80
Gonçalves, Carla 68
Gonçalves, Fabio 128
González Luis, Lourdes C. 97
González Novoa, Andrés 97
González Pascual, Alberto 96
Gordon, Randy 92
Gould, Carol 83
Gowder, Paul 71
Granato, Marcelo 127
Gray, Kevin 113, 130
Green, Michael S. 89
Grellette, Matthew 118
Grupenmacher, Betina
Treiger 68
Grupenmacher, Giovana
Treiger 68
Guangyu, Cao 131
Guedes, Carlos Eduardo
Paletta 126
Guibourg, Ricardo 40
Gur, Noam 85
Gutiérrez Flores,
Benjamín 79
Hachler, Matthias 117
Halis, Denis 94, 119
Halis, Denis de
Castro 94, 119
Hamer, David 93
Haonat, Angela I. 114, 124
Harbou, Frederick 92
Hardy, Joerg 102
Hasegawa, Ko 10, 52
Hattori, Hiroshi 114
Henley, Kenneth 115
Henzel, Melissa Beth 114
Herdy, Rachel 85
Hermida, Cristina 68, 94
Hermida del Llano,
Cristina 94
Hernandez, Ana Isabel 128
Hernández Rodríguez,
Ana Isabel 97
Hessler, Kristen 73
He, Xuefeng 119
Higgins, Peter W. 88
Hill, Hamner 116
Himma, Kenneth 72, 82, 104
Hochhuth, Martin 95, 100
Høgberg, Alf Petter 81
Holanda, Flávia 68
Holler, Manfred 124
Holl, Jessica 91
Hongzhen, Liu 122
Hryshchuk, Oksana 131
Hsu, Jimmy 113, 115
Hsu, Jimmy Chia-Shin 113
Huerta, Carla 69
Hughes, Robert 72
Hu, Lung-Lung 129
Hutt, Donald E.
Bello 65, 68, 91
Hwang, Shu-Perng 110
Iglesias Vila, Marisa 78
Imparato, Mary C. 123
Iqbal, Rao Javaid 129
İspir, Zeynep 88
Iyengar, V. Govindaraja 129
Jakubiak, Aneta 99
Jang, Misung 84, 110
Janik, Bartosz 118
Jansen, Briain 85
Jeewanthi, M.K.
Geethani 99, 116
Jin, Zhenbao 95
Johannsen, Kyle 112, 118
Josse, Léon 74
Jovanovic, Miodrag 76, 104
Jun, Hae Jong 121
Juzaszek, Maciej 123, 125
Kabashima, Hiroshi 65
Kahlig, Eleonora 65
Kahlig, Wolfgang 65
Kaino, Michihiro 120
Kaku, Shun 130
Kaptein, Hendrik 90, 93
Karamanian, Susan 8, 27
Kassner, Joshua 9, 28, 73
Katz, Leora 54, 115
Kawamura, Arinori 109
Keil, Rainer 88
Kim, Eun-Jung K. 117
Kim, Yeonmi 92
Kipnis, Ken 24
Kirchmair, Lando 80, 116
Kirste, Stephan 76
Kitahara, Munenori 96
Kittel, Laura 90
Klappstein, Verena 110
Klass, Gregory 8, 27
Klink, Bart van 76
Kolber, Adam 115, 117, 125
Kolflaath, Eivind 93
Kosielinska-Grabowska,
Urszula 110
Koszowy, Marcin 73
Kozicki, Katya 90, 91
Krohling, Aloisio 100
Krygier, Martin 109
Kurczewski, Jacek 77
Kurki, Visa A.J. 84
Kurtz, Lahis Pasquali 94, 95
Küzeci, Elif 96
Lacerda, Ludmila Lais
Costa 87, 111
Lachmayer, Friedrich 75
Ladavac, Nicoletta 82, 86
Lago, Pablo Antonio 88, 131
Landesman, Bruce M 104
Langvatn, Silje Aambø 87
La Porta, Antonio María 68
Lara, Mariana A. 88, 125
Layman, Daniel 71
Leal, Fernando 92, 104
Lee, Hswin-wen 115
Lee, Steven 104
Lefkowitz, David 73, 83
Lembcke, Oliver W. 76
Lepper, Adriano Obach 71
Leszczynski, Leszek 86, 91
Levenbook, Barbara
Baum 111
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 135
Index of Names
Liżewski, Bartosz 86
Liguori, Carla 112
Li, Haibin Qi Zhao 113
Li, Ling 131
Lima, Jairo Neia 114, 117
Linhares, José Manuel
Aroso 65, 75, 89
Lister, Matthew 73
Liu, Jia 118
Liu, Yigong 119
Li, Zhao 113, 129
Llano Alonso, Fernando 68
Lopes, Lucas Miotto 72
Lopes, Mônica Sette 67
Lopes, Pedro Moniz 104
López, Nuria 66, 121, 126
Lora, Pablo de 99
Lorenzo, Vincent Di 121
Lozano Díez, José
Antonio 79
Lucchesi, Guilherme B. 103
Lucenti, André 121
Lumiento, María Elena 69
Lütge, Christoph 66,
116, 124, 127
Macedo, José Arthur
Castillo de 91
Macei, Demetrius Nichele 76
Machado, Adriana 112
Machado, Flávia 128
Macleod, Alistair M. 83
Madrid, Raúl 74, 124
Magalhães, José
Antônio 126, 129
Maggen, Danny 127
Maggiolino, Mariateresa 93
Mahlmann, Matthias 55
Mahmood, Tahir 129
Maia, Alexandré da 109
Maksymov, Sergiy 109
Maliska, Marcos Augusto 88
Malm, Heidi 72, 81
Manasiev, Ilija 84
Mandle, Jon 73
Manzanero, Delia 94
Mao, David 8
Marcantonio, Jonathan
Hernandes 115
Marcelo Galuppo 4, 10
Marcilla, Gema 85
Markova-Murashova,
Svetlana 110
Marmor, Andréi 89
Marques, Vinicius P. 114, 124
Martí, José Luis 73, 85
Martin, Daniele 124
Martinez, Fernando 10
Martínez, Fernando 96
Martínez Muñoz,
Juan Antonio 79
Martin, Rex 71
Martins, Angela Vidal
da Silva 110
Martins, Ricardo
E. Santos 71
Martins, Thiago Penido 80
Masferrer, Domingo
Aniceto 78
Masson, Daiane Garcia 123
Matava, Robert 74
Matejkowska, Ewa 122
Mathilde, Cohen 111
Matos, Saulo de 75, 84
Mazur, Paweł 75
McGregor, Joan 72
Medina Morales, Diego 68
Medrado, Vitor 10,
110, 120, 127
Mendonca Bonnett,
Daniel 57
Menezes, Daniel Francisco
Negão 109, 122, 126
Menuge, Angus 89
Meyer, Emilio Leluso
Neder 115
Michailov, Michael Ch.
116, 124, 127, 129
Michalczak, Rafal 84, 122
Michelon, Cláudio 85, 92
Midory, Luiza 118
Mikhail, John 9, 28
Millard, Eric 36, 69
Miller, Dallas 90
Mindus, Patricia 58
Miranda, Lohans de
Oliveira 128
Miranda, Lossiah
Barbosa Bacelar 128
Miranda, Oannes de
Oliveira 128
Mitchell, Dalia Tsuk 28
Monteiro, Eduardo
Aleixo 126
Montgomery, John
Warwick 90
Monti, Ezequiel 70
136 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
Index of Names
Moore, Catherine 10
Moraes, Bernardo
Supranzetti de 66
Moraes, Gerson Leite
de 109, 122
Moraes, Guilherme
Lopes de 68, 128
Moraes, Kelly Cardoso
Mendes de 123
Moraes, Rhara 115
Morais, Fausto Santos de 111
Morales, Leticia 116
Moreso, José Juan 70, 85
Morigiwa, Yasutomo 87
Morita, Akihiko 10,
87, 88, 103
Morris, Christopher W. 86
Motyka, Krzysztof 77, 84
Moura, Julia Sichieri 100
Mumford, Stephen 82
Munteanu, Dana 110
Myślińska, Marzena 86
Naav, Maria 129
Nadal Sánchez, Helena 111
Nascimento, Daniel
Simão 84
Navin, Mark 72, 81
Necio, Lukasz 120
Neu, Eva 116, 124, 127, 129
Neumann, Ulfrid 23
Neu, Renate 116
Neves, Luis Fernando 68
Newman, Dwight 90
Nickel, James 71
Nicoli, Pedro Augusto
Gravatá 88
Niemi, Matti 65, 74, 120
Novak, Marko 82
Novales, Aránzazu 94
Nowak, Ewa 75
Nunan, Richard 123
Nunes, Cláudia Ribeiro
Pereira 112
Núñez, Jorge Emilio 86
O’Brien, Maggie 113
Oliveira, Júlio Aguiar de 91
Oliveira Júnior, José
Alcebíades de 71
Oliveira, Márcio Luís de 118
Oliveira, Maria Lucia
de Paula 75
Oliveira, Marlus Heriberto
Arns de 69, 76
Onazi, Oche 117
Ondřejek, Pavel 97
Ostroukh, Asya 100
Ozcan, Mehmet Tevfik 127
Pacobahyba, Fernanda Mara
de Oliveira Macedo 67
Pais Álvarez, Natalia
Pais Álvarez 97
Palazzani, Laura 84, 116, 121
Pamplona, Danielle
Anne 128
Panaccio, CharlesMaxime 110
Papaefthymiou, Sophie 87
Pardo, Michael S. 93
Parker, Richard Barron 104
Park, Joonseok 111
Paula, André de 73
Paulson, Stanley 69, 70
Pavlakos, George 82
Pavčnik, Marijan 66, 91
Pennings, Ray 90
Penteado, Luciano 84
Pereira, Daniel Nunes
109, 111, 112, 117
Pereira, Fabio Q 88, 125
Pereira, Paula Pessoa 91
Perera Méndez, Pedro 97
Pérez Triviño, José Luís 68
Pethick, Stephen 67, 85
Pfordten, Dietmar von der 76
Phillips, Cindy 72
Pieniążek, Marcin 98
Pietrzykowski, Tomasz 84
Pilchman, Daniel 88
Pilotto, Melissa
Abramovici 76
Pinho, Fabiana O. 84
Platz, Jeppe von 71, 120
Pogorzelski, Oskar 115
Pointel, Jean-Baptiste 121
Polewka, Gabriele 91
Polido, Fabrício B.
Pasquot 95
Poole, Diego 74
Postema, Gerald 98
Prada, Aurelio de 66, 68
Pribytkova, Elena 100
Price, Jorge Douglas 100
Prieto, Rafael Rodríguez 95
Proenca, Maria Valdenice
Sousa Crus 112
Psaras, Haris 10
Psarras, Haris 82, 89
Ptak, Joanna 76, 129
Pugliese, William 90, 103
Puliatti, Donatello 74
Pulido, Catalina 74
Pulido Ortiz, Fabio
Enrique 128
Puppo, Alberto 78, 85,
92, 97, 111, 118
Qicai, Wang 109
Qi, Haibin 113, 116, 119, 129
Quik-Schuijt, Nanneke 113
Rábanos, Julieta A. 70
Rabasa, Amb. Emilio 113
Rabay, Gustavo 101
Ralli, Tommi 75, 84, 102
Ramos, Marcelo Maciel
66, 88, 100, 124
Randall, Pierce 118
Raponi, Sandra 72
Raymond, Msaule 111
Reckziegel, Janaína 71
Reidy, David A. 71
Ribeiro, Fernando
Armando 67
Ribeiro, Fernando José 92
Ribeiro, Gustavo 85, 93
Ribeiro, Karla Pinhel 66,
109, 113, 115, 120
Riesthuis, Thomas 80
R. Nye, Hillary 120
Robison, Wade 81, 104, 110
Robles, Gregorio 67
Rodak, Lidia 77, 84
Rodenas, Angeles 128
Rodrigues, Ana Carolina de
Faria Silvestre 66, 75, 84
Rodriguez Prieto, Rafael 10
Rohrmann, Carlos A. 80
Romaguera, Daniel
Carneiro Leão 71
Romanowski, Marcin 99
Romanynets, Marta 125
Rossi, Amelia Sampaio 128
Rossmanith, Anna 115
Roughan, Nicole 73
Roversi, Corrado 82, 98
Rovetta Klyver, Fernando 66
Ruiz Manero, Juan 70
Saghai, Yashar 72
Saigg, Patrick De
Almeida 117
Sajó, András 59
Sakurai, Tetsu 10, 76
Salardi, Silvia 116
Salcedo Romo, Alejandro 79
Saldaña Serrano, Javier 79
Sampaio, Augusto C. 129
Sampaio Jr., Rodolpho
Barreto 80
Sánchez Díaz, Félix F. 68
Sanchotene, Paulo 67
Santacoloma, Andrés 73
Santin, Priscila L. L. 115
Santos, José-Antônio 128
Santos, Maria Charpinel 114
Santos, Thiago Braga
Silva dos 126
Sanza, Maria Teresa 119
Saporiti, Michele 113, 125
Sardo, Alessio 70
Sartea, Cláudio 74, 79
Saúl Ramírez García,
Hugo 78
Scataglini, María
Gabriela 69, 70
Schaffer, Burkhard 75
Schanbacher, Will 72
Schauer, Frederick 72,
82, 86, 89, 93
Schmidt, Katharina 77, 119
Schmidt, Katharina Isabel 77
Schnitzer, Laurie 10
Scholz, Sally 83
Schratz, Michael Ch. 124
Schulz, GuntramEdith 116, 129
Schulz, Lorenz 82
Schutter, Helder de 109
Sciaraffa, Stefan 89
Sellers, Mortimer 8,
9, 10, 27, 28
Senn, Tatjana-Natalija
116, 124
Serbena, Cesar
Antonio 70, 90
Sevelin, Ellika 93
Shahidipak,
Mohammadreza 118
Shecaira, Fábio P. 85, 89
Shute, Michael 73
Sierra González, Ángela 97
Silva, Camila Barreto
Pinto 117
Silva, Denise Vital e 112
Silva, Denis Franco 84
XXVII World Congress on the Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy | 137
Index of Names
Silva, Érica Guerra da 71
Silva, Heleno Florindo da 100
Silva, Hitalo 131
Silva, Natasha Pereira 126
Silva, Rogéro Luiz
Nery da 123
Silveira, Cláudia Maria
Toledo da 92, 94
Simó González, Ariadna 97
Simon, Thomas 115
Skoczen, Izabela 112
Smith Rangel Perez,
Johanna 128
Smolak, Marek 98
Souris, Renee Nicole 113
Souza, Karla Harada
110, 112, 113
Spaić, Bojan 104
Spaolonzi, Ana 124
Squella, Agustín 70
Srivastava, Pratap R. 124
Staden, Marius van 114
Stainov, Gentcho
Rumen 116, 124
Stamile, Natalina 70
Stanczyk, Lucas 71
Starger, Colin 115, 116
Stead Sellers, Frances 10
Stein, Alex 93
Steinhauer, Fabian 95
Sterling Casas, Juan
Pablo 128
Stern, Julia 117
Stevens, Katharina 89, 91
Stoll, Jennifer 75
Stolojescu, Grigore 110
Stoppenbrink, Katja 95, 102
Strandberg, Magne 93
Stromberg, Caroline 111
Struchiner, Noel 92
Stubberud, Jorgen 81
Studnicki, Tomasz 118
Sucar, German 69
Szabó, Miklós 130
Szot, Adam 65, 80, 86
Taekema, Sanne 80
Takahashi, Hideharu 116
Takikawa, Hirohide 101
Tao, Huang 111
Tate, Joshua 116
Tatsuya, Yohohama 101
Tavares, Deborah 118
Tavares, Rodrigo
de Souza 102
Taxi, Ricardo Dib 71
Teixeira, João Paulo F.
de Souza Allain 71
Thanigaivelan,
Shanmugam 118
Tideman, Nicolaus 120
Tiedemann, Paul 88
Timmerman, Travis 99
Toh, Kevin 69
Tomasi, John 71
Tomazini, Aurora 69
Tonkov, Evgenii 77
Tøssebro, Henriette
Nilsson 81
Treanor, William 26
Trivisonno, Alexandré
Travessoni Gomes 85, 91
Trujillo, Isabel 125
Tsosie, Rebecca 72
Tsuk Mitchell, Dalia 9
Tucak, Ivana 131
Türkbağ, Ahmet Ulvi 87
Tuzet, Giovanni 93
Tu, Zhang 88
Usami, Makato 118
Üye, Saim 66, 87
Uygur, Gülriz 87
Vaičaitis, Vaidotas A. 97
Vaicaitis, Vaidotas A. 111
Valdés Martínez, Jacinto 79
Vale, Murilo Melo 123
Valencia Tello, Diana
Carolina 67, 97
Valentini, Chiara 130
Valle, Maurício Dalri
Timm do 67, 68, 70, 91
Varden, Helga 88, 127
Vázquez Varela,
Óscar Javier 79
Vedovato, Luis Renato 124
Velarde, Caridad 66, 79
Venter, Roxan 130
Vidal, Ángela 74
Vieira, Adriana 101
Vieira, Giuliana Dias 101
Vieira, Murilo B. 114, 124
Vigo, Rodolfo L. 79
Villa Rosas, Gonzalo 70, 73
Vinx, Lars 82, 86
Vujadinovic, Dragica 87
Waluchow, Wil 89
138 | Washington D.C., USA | 27 July – 1 August 2015
Wang, Ying 103, 111
Warren, Paul 120
Washington, Eliane
A. Dorico 69
Weber, Germain 116,
124, 127, 129
Wei, Chenglin 119
Weich, Ronald 26
Wei, Layun 122
Weinstock, Daniel 83
Wellington, Alex 123, 126
Welsher, Ursula 116, 124
Werkheiser, Ian 73
Westerman, Pauline 40, 76
West, Robin 61
White, Emily Kidd 92
Whyte, Kyle 73
Wintr, Jan 66, 97
Wiratraman,
Herlambang 126
Wojciechowski,
Bartosz 75, 76, 86
Wojtczak, Sylwia 98
Wróbel, Marcin 102, 113
Xavier, Bruno 66, 88, 100,
112, 115, 116, 124
Xavier, Luciana Pedroso 103
Xavier, Marília Pedroso 103
Xiangyang, Qian 84,
103, 117, 129
Yaghisisian, Adriana
Machado 102, 124
Yang, Bei 115
Yanying, Fei 131
Yaylali, Mustafa 101
Yien, Marcio Andre de
Souza Kao 123
Yoshino, Hajime 74
Zalewska, Monika 70, 98
Zaluski, Wojciech 84, 92
Zamboni, Mauro 120
Zebuhr, Lothar-Yorck 116
Zhai, Xiaobo 95, 130
Zhang, Anbang 103, 119
Zhao, Jing 74, 95
Zhu, Ying 119
Zipursky, Benjamin C. 92
Zoethout, Carla M. 78
Zou, Xiao-mei 109
Zuleta, Hugo R. 70
Zurn, Christopher F. 109
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