Tue, 21 Mar

7 pm

Organizing Rule.

Lecture series Colonialism and Law by Sebastian M. Spitra

lecture
90 min
Participation with valid museum ticket

Modernity brings a consolidation of power relations both within and outside Europe. An international (legal) community with its own increasingly consolidated institutions and international law as a common language emerges. Colonial powers create systems of unequal treaties and formulate a universal standard of civilization to distribute or negate rights and secure their own position.

Duration: 90 min.
To participate in the event, all guests need a valid museum ticket (or an annual ticket, a KHMembership or a Weltmuseum Wien Friends membership).
Registration  online (limited number of participants)
Meeting Point: WMW Forum

 

Colonialism and Law - A Changeful Relationship

Lecture series by Sebastian M. Spitra

This lecture series focuses on the interrelationship between colonialism and law in the history of European expansion since the late 15th century. In the modern era marked by such transformative processes as the Enlightenment, industrialization, and the rise of capitalism, European hegemony over the rest of the world achieved a previously unattained extent and, at the same time, penetration of societies. In many narratives of the history of colonialism, law is described merely as a means of colonial and later imperial power politics. This lecture series aims to expand this picture, for colonialism and law were manifoldly interrelated. Law was not only an instrument for governing colonies, but it constructed the colonial constellation comprehensively with numerous repercussions for the metropolises. It prefigured and opened up horizons of action for the most diverse actors. Three lectures will take a closer look at this changeful relationship between colonialism and law in different periods of colonization. Finally, an interdisciplinary panel will address decolonization and today's lines of continuity of colonialism.

Sebastian M. Spitra researches and teaches at the Institute for Legal and Constitutional History at the University of Vienna and is a member of the Junge Akademie of the Akademie der Wissenschaften und Literatur | Mainz. He studied law and philosophy at the University of Vienna and the University of Michigan as a Fulbright Grantee and with a Grotius Scholarship. His book Die Verwaltung von Kultur im Völkerrecht. Eine postkoloniale Geschichte (Nomos 2021) was awarded the prize of the 43rd Legal Historians' Day in Zurich in 2022.

 

The leaves of the palmyra palm were used as writing material in Bali. These manuscripts, dated 1884, called lontar, are described with notes about legal cases (Inv. No. 29587).
lecture
90 min
Participation with valid museum ticket

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