Graduate Student Annual Conference Paper Prize
Applications are now open.
The Stanford Center for Law and History invites paper submissions from graduate students for its eighth annual conference, “Legal History in Times of Crisis.” This one-day conference will be held on Friday, May 15, 2026 at Stanford Law School.
Our contemporary world is in crisis—on this much, there is widespread agreement. But the nature, scope, and causes of our present crisis—indeed, crises—are subject to fierce debate, whether they be crises of democracy, technology, the rule of law, capitalism, public information and knowledge, local ecology, or global climate. Crisis is, at its roots, a historical concept, deriving from the Greek krisis: a turning point. The conference will bring together scholars of law and history to examine crises of the past across time periods and geographies, focusing, in particular, on political, economic, and environmental turning points. A non-exhaustive list of possible topics spanning these three modes of crisis include:
- Turbulent transitions and periods of marked violence, instability, and/or uncertainty
- Inequalities in the social distribution of crisis
- Perceptions of crisis
- Systems and institutions prone to crisis
- Typologies of crisis, e.g. acute versus prolonged, discrete versus overlapping
- Seedbeds for future crises
- Generative possibilities of crisis
- The utility of history in times of crisis, i.e. what good is history during a crisis?
The conference organizers will select one graduate student as the recipient of the paper prize. The winner will present on one of the three conference panels. Funding for travel and accommodations will be provided.
Application Requirements:
- CV
- Paper abstract (500 words or less)
Submissions will be accepted via the application below. The deadline for submission is Sunday, March 1, 2026. Please direct any questions to sclh@law.stanford.edu.
Application
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Past Winners
Elena Telles Ryan
2025 Conference, “Native Legal Histories: Methods, Sovereignties, and Identities”
Elena Telles Ryan, Princeton University History Department, "'Intruders' and 'our best citizens': Manufacturing Belonging in the 19th-century Great Lakes"
Will Holub-Moorman
2024 Conference, “Legal Histories of American Governance: Institutions and the State”
Will Holub-Moorman, Princeton University History Department, “Tough Love: Child Support Enforcement, Welfare Reform, and the US Administrative State, 1970-2000"
Evelyn Kessler
2023 Conference, “Legal Histories of the Body and the State”
Evelyn Kessler, University of Chicago History Department, “Age of Consent: The Making of the Sexual Body and the Body Politic in the Late Nineteenth-Century U.S.”
Beck Boorstein
2022 Conference, “Legal Histories of Disease”
Beck Boorstein, Yale University History Department, “Calling the Shots: Civil Liberties and Anti-Vaccination Lawsuits in the Progressive Era United States, 1900-1920”
Haris A. Durrani
2021 Conference, "Working with Intellectual Property: Legal Histories of Innovation, Labor, and Creativity
Haris A. Durrani, Columbia Law School and Princeton University (History of Science), “The Recent History of Free Space: Law, Technology, and the US Administrative State in the Global Cold War.”
Hardeep Dhillon
2019 Conference, “Legal Histories and Legacies of the Nineteenth Amendment”
Hardeep Dhillon, Harvard History Department, “Bordering Whiteness: Alien Tales and the Making of U.S. Citizenship in the Early Twentieth Century.”
Naama Maor
2018 Conference, “Legal Histories of Policing and Surveillance”
Naama Maor, University of Chicago History Department, “Reforming Delinquent Parents: Adults on Trial in the Progressive Era Juvenile Justice System.”