Today and tomorrow the University of Pennsylvania Law School hosts a mini-conference on "New World(s) of Faith: Religion and Law in Historical Perspective, 1500-2000." The event is co-sponsored by the University of Pennsylvania Department of History; the American Society for Legal History; the University of Michigan Law School; the University of Chicago Law School; the University of Minnesota Law School and Department of History; and the University of Illinois School of Law. Here's the line-up:
June 12:
Faith and Outsiders in Spanish AmericaKif Augustine-Adams, Brigham Young University
Counting Chinese in a Catholic Country: The 1930 Mexican Census and Religious Difference
Orlando Rivero-Valdés, University of Pittsburgh
Afro-Cuban Religions and Brujería in Post-Colonial Cuba, 1898-1938
Commentators: TBA
Keynote Address and Reception
June 13:Dylan Penningroth, Northwestern UniversityFaith and Property in African American History
Faith and Freedom in Nineteenth Century United States
Abigail Cooper, University of Pennsylvania“A Mere Form”: Marriage Rites and Lived Religion in the Refugee Camps of the American Civil War
Lucas Volkman, University of MissouriFaith and Citizenship in a Secular Polity
Turmoils and Temporalities: The Slavery Question and Church Property Disputes in Missouri
Christopher Tomlins, University of California, Irvine
Debt, Death, and Redemption: Toward a Soterial-Legal History of the Turner Rebellion
Commentators: William Novak, University of MichiganWinston Bowman, Brandeis UniversityFaith and Government in Modern America
A Civil Death: Mormon Disenfranchisement in the Mountain West
Kellen Funk, Princeton Univeristy
“This Stone Which I Erect Shall Be a House of God”: Disestablishment and Religious Corporations in New York, 1784-1854
Jeffrey Perry, Purdue University
“For the Peace of Society”: Baptist Church Discipline and Legalities in Early Kentucky
Commentators: Sarah Barringer Gordon, University of PennsylvaniaKathleen Holscher, University of Minnesota
School Prayer, Bible Reading, and the Catholic Vocabulary of Religious Freedom in Mid-Century America
Ronit Stahl, University of Michigan
Basic Training: The Unintentional Consequences of the Education Requirements for Military Chaplains
Commentators: Barbara Young Welke, University of Minnesota