Search for: "Mitra Sharafi" Results 321 - 340 of 356
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9 Jul 2016, 10:26 pm by Brooke
Crabtree on Talitha LeFlouria's Chained in Silence: Black Women and Convict Labor in the New South, Ellen Pearson on Ted Maris-Wolf's Family Bonds, Brittany Gilmer on Emily Burrill's States of Marriage, and Amrita Shodhan on (LHB blogger) Mitra Sharafi's Law and Identity in Colonial India.This month's The Federal Lawyer includes a brief review of Susanna Blumenthal's Law and the… [read post]
2 Apr 2021, 9:15 am by Unknown
I’m grateful to the editors of the Legal History Blog for inviting me to contribute this month, and especially to Professor Mitra Sharafi for the warm welcome! [read post]
4 Mar 2021, 10:30 pm by Mitra Sharafi
Please send proposals by email attachment to: bchs@leeds.ac.ukThe conference organising committee is: Eleanor Bland (Oxford Brookes University); David Churchill (University of Leeds); Kisby Dickinson (University of Leeds); Elliott Keech (University of York); Craig Newbery-Jones (University of Leeds); Henry Yeomans (University of Leeds).Please direct any queries to: bchs@leeds.ac.uk--Mitra Sharafi [read post]
16 Aug 2019, 9:30 pm by Karen Tani
  The PHC is currently accepting submissions of panels and papers.Now out in paperback:Women's Legal Landmarks: Celebrating the History of Women and Law in the UK and Ireland (Hart), edited by Erika Rackley and Rosemary Auchmuty.Update: LHB blogger Mitra Sharafi's post for India's Independence Day (Aug.15) on how one law journal survived the partition of British IndiaUpdate: Check out the Teaching Law and Religion Case Study Archive by Winnifred Fallers Sullivan… [read post]
27 Aug 2018, 9:30 pm by Mitra Sharafi
By focusing on these three key historical periods from a comparative perspective, this project seeks to study how and why the U.S. has failed to adopt national consumption taxes, such as the VAT.Tuesday, October 2 (4:30 pm)Mitra Sharafi, Professor of Law, University of Wisconsin-MadisonMitra Sharafi is Professor of Law and Legal Studies at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, with History affiliation. [read post]
27 Nov 2016, 4:00 am by Mary L. Dudziak
Tomiko-Brown Nagin, Karen Tani, and more recently Mitra Sharafi also joined the LHB blogging team. [read post]
4 Sep 2019, 5:41 am by Caroline Shaw
My sincere thanks to Mitra, Karen, and Dan for the opportunity to write for the Legal History Blog this month. [read post]
4 Jun 2019, 9:30 pm by Mitra Sharafi
Mitra Sharafi, Liz Thornberry, Natasha Weatley, Barbara Welke deal with temporal regimes of law and memory, be it contested memories of imperial legal discourses, or traumatic memories that lawsuits failed to heal. [read post]
9 Dec 2021, 10:30 pm by Mitra Sharafi
This is the third in a five-part series on the Letter of Recommendation (LOR) system, describing feedback received in spring 2021 by Ronit Stahl and Mitra Sharafi to an online poll and survey. [read post]
5 Jun 2019, 9:30 pm by Mitra Sharafi
We asked the 2018-19 Davis Fellows the following question: how has your time at the Davis Center led to new insights about the reach and limits of law and legalities? [read post]
15 Aug 2019, 9:30 pm by Mitra Sharafi
 Response from Mitra Sharafi (@mjsharafi): The piece I've assigned on Cornelia Sorabji is Mary Jane Mossman, "Gender and Professionalism in Law: The Challenge of (Women's) Biography," Windsor Year Book of Access to Justice 27 (2009), 19-34Sanjay Hegde (@sanjayuvacha): Thackeray Mansions by Shankar. [read post]
28 Sep 2021, 11:10 am by Bonnie Shucha
Indian Law by Mitra Sharafi, UW Law School This chapter considers what the future holds for the field of Indian legal history, which has burgeoned since the late 1990s. [read post]
29 Jan 2019, 2:11 pm by Tamar Herzog
Back in June 2018, when Mitra Sharafi invited me to be a guest blogger for a month, she mentioned, among other things, that she would love a post with tips on research productivity. [read post]
19 Nov 2019, 9:30 pm by Mitra Sharafi
Or at least I don’t notice that (which may be something different).In conversation, Mitra Sharafi reminds me that we may be exclusionary in ways I am not adequately acknowledging. [read post]