38th Edition | Module 2023.2 – “Os donos do Direito – The Owners of Law: the collective biography os STF Ministers”
The Ius Commune – Interinstitutional Group on the History of Legal Culture – UFSC/CNPq, coordinated by Profs. Drs. Arno Dal Ri Jr., Caetano Dias Corrêa and Diego Nunes, invites the entire academic community to participate in the 38th module of discussions entitled “Os donos do Direito” – The Owners of Law: the collective biography os STF Ministers.
De discussion aims to analyze the characteristis of STF Ministers among 1988 and 2013, from various points of view: family origin, academic training, regional circulation, aspects arround their legal-professional and political-partisan careers, using the propopographic method, or collective biography.
The module will feature debates and reports on recommended readings, which will be avaliable in PDF, seeking to study in a didatic way the topics covered each week according to the following schedule:
18/09: group presentation and introduction to the subject
25/09: chapter 1: social profile
02/10: chapter 2: cultural notoriety
09/10: chapter 3: the geographical trajectory
16/10: chapter 4: the academic trajetory
23/10: chapter 5: the political-party trajectory
30/10: chapter 6: the legal-professional trajectory
The meetings will be held on mondays, at 5pm, in room 111 of the CCJ/UFSC or remotely via Google Meet.
These are the links to the call, as well as the supporting material and the registrations form.
We wish everyone a good start to the semester!
37th Edition | Module 2023.1 – “The history and rise of the original rights of indigenous peoples in Brazil”
The Ius Commune group invites the entire academic community to its 37th edition, which is entitled “The history and rise of the original rights of indigenous peoples in Brazil”. The module will feature debates and reports on recommended readings, seeking to study in a didatic way the topics covered each week, according to the following schedule:
04/25: Presentation of the group, definition of rapporteurs and brief introduction to the subject
05/02: Indigenous legislation in Colonial Brazil
05/16: Indigenous legislation in Brazilian Empire
05/23: Indigenous legislation in Brazilian Republic
05/30: The Indian Statute – Law 6.001/1973 and the Convention 169 of International Labor Organization – ILO
06/06: The 1988 Constitution and the issue of the “marco temporal”
06/13: The right to education and the Universal Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
The meetings will be hels on tuesdays (except on the 05/09) at 5pm, in room 005 of the CCJ/UFSC. The prior bibliography for the meetings is in a shared folder, which can be accessed via Instagram link, located in bio – @iuscommuneufsc.
Event: IX History of Law Course: The judge’s interpretation of the Law
The Ius Commune Group invites the entire academic community and external public to the lecture series entitled “IX Course on the History of Law: The interpretation of the Law by the judge”. The event will be attended by Professor Serge Dauchy, from the University of Lille (France).
Themes and schedule:
26.04: The judge’s interpretation of the Law;
27.04: The repertoire of decisions and Arrestography in the legal literature of the Old Regime;
28.04: The Rule of Law – a comparative approach between Civil and Common Law in a historical perspective.
It will be on the 26th, 27th and 28th of April, in room 303 of the CCJ/UFSC, at 2:30 pm.
Event: Customary indigenous ordinances as non-state legal systems: the law of the Sateré-Mawé People of the Amazon
We invite the entire academic community and external public to the event “Indigenous customary orders as non-state legal orders: the rights of the Sateré-Mawé people of the Amazon”.
Firstly, there will be a conference with the leaders Sateré-Mawé João and Jafé Ferreira. Afterwards, we will have a debate between professors Arno Dal Ri Jr., Caetano Dias Correa, Danielle de Ouro Mamed and Diego Nunes.
Timeline:
2:30 pm: Opening
2:45 pm: Sateré-Mawé João Ferreira leadership conference
3:15 pm – Conference by Sateré-Mawé leadership and PPGD master’s student Jafé Ferreira
3:45 pm: Discussants: Prof. Arno Dal Ri Jr. Prof. Danielle Mamed Ouro, Prof. Diego Nunes and Prof. Caetano Dias Correa
4:30 pm: Closing
It will be in the auditorium of the UFSC Legal Sciences Center, on April 24th, at 2:30 pm.
Registration can be made through the link, and certificates will be issued.
Event: The costume as a judgment norm, special participation of Professor Raffaele Volante
The Ius Commune – Interinstitutional Group on the History of Legal Culture – UFSC/CNPq, invites the entire academic community to participate in the event entitled “The costume as a judgment norm”, that will be performed by Professor Raffaele Volante of the Padua University, in Italy.
This activity opens the semester of the study group in legal history in 2023.
- It will take place on March 13 at the CCJ/UFSC Auditorium, 8 pm.
- Suscriptions: http://inscricoes.ufsc.br/aula-inaugural-ius-commune-2023.
36th Edition | Module 2022.2 – Bicentennial of the Independence of Brazil: Law in the Construction of the Nation-State
The Ius Commune – Interinstitutional Group on the History of Legal Culture – UFSC/CNPq, coordinated by Profs. Drs. Arno Dal Ri Jr., Caetano Dias Corrêa and Diego Nunes, invites the entire academic community to participate in the 36th module of discussions entitled Bicentennial of the Independence of Brazil: Law in the Construction of the Nation-State.
The present edition of Grupo Ius Commune will address the events before and after the Independence of the tupiniquim country, as well as its more detailed aspects, such as the participation of women, the presence of religion in the Brazilian scenario and the slave-holding context.
Registration at the link: https://forms.gle/gjaiz1a5ao25MkaC6
Previous reading of the base and complementary texts available is expected. To access the bibliography, simply click on this link and access our Drive: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/16XN-fJhDykcS0id4t4VMV3YMs_an4kHc?usp=sharing
A certificate of participation will be awarded to those who participate in 75% of the study group meetings. The module’s opening meeting will be on 10/04 at 5 pm, and other meetings will continue to take place weekly, on Tuesdays, at the same time.
All meetings will take place in room 005 of the UFSC Legal Sciences Center. We count on the participation of all! Until then!
SCHEDULE OF MEETINGS
October 04 – Presentation of the group, definition of reports and brief introduction to the subject
October 11 – Political repression in Empire Brazil
October 18 – Religion and Constitution
October 25 – The Political Constitution of the Empire of Brazil of 1824 – constituent process and organization of the national state
November 01 – The Political Constitution of the Empire of Brazil of 1824 – the Council of State and the Control of Constitutionality
November 8 – Slavery and Free Africans
November 22 – Women in Brazil Empire
November 29 – The Carrancas Revolt and the Post-Independence Revolts
Minicourse “The World of Collective Lands and Quilombos in Brazil”
We invite everyone to our minicourse “The World of Collective Lands and Quilombos in Brazil“!
Within the scenario of changes in agents and themes that have been challenging the field of studies and research in the history of law in recent decades, especially for the implementation of affirmative action policies in public education. The minicourse aims to discuss the relevance of collective property models, considering, therefore, the historical and legal experience of the formation of quilombos in Brazil, as a form of sociability of Africans and Afro-Brazilians who experienced the modern process of the black diaspora and as a counterpoint to the now established model of private property in the western civilizations.
– It will take place on September 27 and 28 at the CCJ/UFSC Auditorium, from 2 pm to 6 pm
– Registration at the link: http://inscricoes.ufsc.br/terras-coletivas-quilombos
*There will be no broadcast
The Implementation of the 17 Goals of the UN 2030 Agenda in the International Community: Sustainability, Peace, Justice and Freedom
The course aims to provide researchers and students of the Graduate Program in Law and other programs involved in the NEXUS/PRINT/CAPES project, as well as operators in the environmental legal area, a current, in-depth and articulated picture of the genesis and policies implementation of the 17 World Sustainability goals provided for in the 2030 Agenda of the United Nations (UN) in Brazil and in the International Community, covering in greater detail some specific themes provided for in the 17 goals, such as Peace, Freedom, Access to Justice, Production and Consumption, and the connection with those specifically foreseen by the NEXUS project closely linked to the UN goals in favor of sustainability, such as Water, Energy and Food. The course structure will be composed of lectures to be given by the invited speakers and from this ateneu and the themes contemplated in the objective are divided into three main axes, that is, the “Promotion of peaceful and inclusive societies”, “Access to justice” and the “Building Effective Institutions”.
Speakers:
– Paolo Palchetti (University Paris 1)
– Claudia Storti (University of Milan)
– Georges Martyn (Universiteit Gent)
– Cristiane Derani (UFSC)
– Arno Dal Ri Jr. (UFSC)
– Aline Beltrame Moura (UFSC)
– Diego Nunes (UFSC)
– Caetano Dias Correa (UFSC)
– Paolo Potiara A. Veloso (CESUSC)
Coordination:
– Arno Dal Ri Jr. (UFSC)
Registration at http://inscricoes.ufsc.br/activities/7744
Full schedule available on Ius Commune and Ius Gentium’s Instagram.
Book: “A Cor da História & A História da Cor”
“How many black professors of History of Law teach in Brazilian universities? How many Law History books, included in the mandatory bibliographies of our schools, were written by black authors? How many black jurists – such as Tobias Barreto, Luís Gama, José do Patrocínio and Evaristo de Morais – are remembered in the discipline of History of Law? How many contributions of Afro-diasporic culture to the construction of the national legal system are we able to cite? The History of Law still silences and makes the non-white community invisible, hiding the “sangue retinto pisado/ atrás do herói emoldurado/ mulheres, tamoios, mulatos”.
This book, A cor da história & a história da cor, opens the Coleção Novos Rumos for the History of Law, and was born from the dreams of freedom of black men and women, inspired by the memories, stories and legacy of ancestors in Africa and the Diaspora. The proposal is to present several themes of History and History of Law, in an Afro-referenced perspective and based on the theoretical-methodological category of intersubjectivation, through the voices of black and black researchers, breaking with epistemic racism and epistemicide. that mark the legal sciences in the Brazilian experience. This initiative is necessary, since “the project of western modernity has largely erased from the legal sciences, in addition to knowledge, the trajectories of black people who produce them” (From the Introduction).
The work has contributions from several researchers / black / Brazilian to African and has a special preface by Professor Dora Lúcia Bertúlio, a leading researcher in the field of Law and Race Relations, a thinker beyond her time. It also has contributions from:
Fodé Abulai Mané
Philippe Oliveira de Almeida
Vanilda Honoria dos Santos
Luciano Góes
Rodrigo Portela Gomes
Jadir Anunciação de Brito
Edmo Cidade de Jesus
Clarindo Epaminondas de Sá Neto
Mario Davi Barbosa
Daniel Carvalho Ferreira
Julio Cesar Costa Manoel
Karen de Souza Silva
Flavio Junio Neres Muniz
Ana Carolina Barros Meireles
Laura Rodrigues Hermando