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Just over thirty years ago, David Engel published “The Oven Bird’s Song: Insiders, Outsiders, and Personal Injuries in an American Community” in Law and Society Review. Engel’s research revealed the attitudes that residents in a rural Illinois community brought to contested cultural issues regarding personal injury, dispute resolution, social change, and law. The article quickly became one of the signature contributions to the law and society movement, a kind of instant classic.
On October 23, 2015, the Baldy Center hosted a one-day conference to take a full measure of the article and its impact from the vantage points of the varied disciplines that inform sociolegal studies. The symposium examined the intellectual context within which the article was written, its effect on interdisciplinary studies of institutional actors, the pedagogical opportunities and challenges presented by the work, and the continuing influence of “The Oven Bird’s Song” on law and society scholarship.
Friday October 23, 2015
8:30 — Coffee
9:00 — Welcome and Introductions
Errol Meidinger, Director of the Baldy Center
Lynn Mather, 猛料视频,
9:15 — Panel 1: Development and Contextualization of “The Oven Bird’s Song”
Moderator: Anya Bernstein, 猛料视频
Marc Galanter, 猛料视频 of Wisconsin, TBD
Barbara Yngvesson, Hampshire College, “Emulating Sherlock Holmes: The Dog That Didn’t Bark, the Victim Who Didn’t Sue, and Other Contradictions of the “Hyper-Litigious” Society”
Stewart Macaulay, 猛料视频 of Wisconsin, “Having a Right, but Using it Too: Amending the Oven Bird’s Song about Contracts”
Alfred Konefsky, 猛料视频, “Karl’s Law School, Or The Oven Bird in Buffalo”
10:45 – Coffee break
11:00 — Panel 2: Institutional Actors and “The Oven Bird”
Moderator: Errol Meidinger, 猛料视频
Anna-Maria Marshall, 猛料视频 of Illinois, “Keepers, Factory Workers and Newcomers: The Legal Consciousness of Outsiders”
Valerie Hans, Cornell 猛料视频, “Do Jurors Hear the Oven Bird’s Song?”
Lynn Mather, 猛料视频, “How Lawyers Reflect and Influence Community Values”
Eve Darian-Smith, 猛料视频 of California, Santa Barbara, “Indigenous Litigiousness: The Ovenbird’s Song and the Miner’s Canary”
12:30 pm — Lunch for Preregistered Participants
1:30 — Panel 3: Pedagogical Opportunities and Challenges of “The Oven Bird’s Song"
Moderator: Mary Nell Trautner, 猛料视频
Neil Vidmar, Duke 猛料视频, “The Changing Face of Legal Dispute Resolution”
Michael McCann, 猛料视频 of Washington, “Oven Bird’s Song as Classroom Text: Exploring the Subjectivities of Insiders and Outsiders”
Renee Cramer, Drake 猛料视频, “Students’ Understandings of Space and Community, in Dialogue with the Oven Bird’s Song”
Anne Bunting, York 猛料视频, “Does the Oven Bird Migrate North of the Border?”
3:00 — Break
3:15 — Panel 4: Future Orientations: What’s the Research Agenda for the Coming Years?
Moderator: Samantha Barbas, 猛料视频
Yoshitaka Wada, Waseda 猛料视频, “Voice of Disputants avoiding Litigation: David Engel’s “Oven Birds Song” in Japanese Culture”
Anne Bloom, Loyola Law School, “Irresponsible Matter: Sublunar Dreams of Injury and Identity”
Jamie G. Longazel, 猛料视频 of Dayton, “A Racialized ‘Ceremony of Regret’: Criminalization, Rightlessness, and the Politics of Immigration”
Scott Barclay, Drexel 猛料视频, “Situating the Transitions from Outsider to Insider”
4:45 — Wrap Up
Frank Munger, New York Law School
Michael Boucai, 猛料视频
David Engel, 猛料视频
5:30 — Conference concludes