Event Date : 2027-01-20 - 2027-01-22
Submission Deadline : 2027-01-01
Venue : Mercure Pattaya Ocean Resort (4-star hotel)
Website : https://eaamp.erpub.org/conference/241
All Abstracts, Reviews, short articles, Full articles, Posters are welcomed related with any of the following research fields:
Law represents the codified rules, institutions, and procedural frameworks established by societies to maintain order, resolve disputes, and regulate conduct.
Legal Philosophy: Natural law, legal positivism, legal realism, and critical legal studies.
Sources of Law: Statutory law, common law (judicial precedents), customary law, and constitutional frameworks.
Comparative Legal Systems: Civil law systems vs. Common law systems, and religious/theocratic legal structures.
Public Law: Constitutional law (the architecture of state power), administrative law (regulation of government agencies), and criminal law (state-enforced penal codes).
Private and Civil Law: Contract law, tort law (civil wrongs and liabilities), property law, and family law.
Procedural Law: Rules of civil procedure, criminal procedure, and the laws governing evidence.
Public International Law: Treaties, state sovereignty, diplomatic immunity, and the law of the sea.
International Economic Law: Global trade regulation, international investment law, and the resolution of cross-border commercial disputes.
Justice is the ethical, moral, and philosophical standard by which laws, actions, and social arrangements are judged. It asks what is fair, what is deserved, and how a society ought to distribute its resources and burdens.
Distributive Justice: The fair allocation of wealth, opportunities, and social duties across a population.
Corrective and Retributive Justice: The philosophical justification for punishment, proportionality of penalties, and correcting wrongful gains or losses.
Procedural Justice: The fairness of the processes used to resolve disputes and make collective decisions, emphasizing transparency and neutrality.
Restorative Justice: A framework focusing on repairing the harm caused by criminal behavior through dialogue, involving victims, offenders, and communities.
Transformative Justice: An approach that seeks to address the root social causes of crime and conflict rather than relying solely on state-sponsored punishment.
Social and Spatial Justice: The equitable distribution of environmental benefits, urban resources, and systemic opportunities regardless of identity or location.
Human Rights are the universal, inalienable moral and legal entitlements belonging to every human being by virtue of their humanity, serving as a shield against state overreach and private oppression.
Civil and Political Rights (First-Generation): Freedom of speech, right to a fair trial, freedom of religion, and the right to vote.
Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights (Second-Generation): The right to education, adequate housing, healthcare, fair working conditions, and cultural participation.
Collective and Solidarity Rights (Third-Generation): The right to a clean environment, self-determination for indigenous peoples, and development.
International Treaties and Conventions: The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and specialized treaties protecting children, women, and migrant workers.
Monitoring and Enforcement Mechanisms: The United Nations Human Rights Council, treaty bodies, and regional courts like the European Court of Human Rights.
The truest complexities emerge where these three fields collide, challenge, and shape one another.
How Law, Justice, and Rights meet: The state uses formal criminal law to pursue retributive justice, but this power is structurally limited by constitutional human rights guarantees like the right to due process, protection against arbitrary detention, and the prohibition of torture.
Subtopics: Judicial independence, mass incarceration, the ethics of capital punishment, and police accountability.
How Law, Justice, and Rights meet: When a state transitions from war or authoritarian rule to democracy, normal legal systems are often broken. Specialized legal and non-legal mechanisms are created to deliver justice for past human rights atrocities.
Subtopics: Truth and reconciliation commissions, international criminal tribunals, hybrid courts, and reparations for victims of state violence.
How Law, Justice, and Rights meet: Using the formal mechanisms of the law to achieve economic and social justice by arguing that poverty, discrimination, and lack of healthcare constitute systemic human rights violations.
Subtopics: Public interest lawyering, constitutional protection of welfare rights, and anti-discrimination legal frameworks.
How Law, Justice, and Rights meet: Developing new domestic and international laws to protect the environment by framing ecological destruction as a direct threat to basic human rights, ensuring justice for future generations and vulnerable frontline communities.
Subtopics: Environmental racism, climate change litigation against corporations and states, and the legal recognition of the rights of nature.
How Law, Justice, and Rights meet: The rapid evolution of artificial intelligence and mass surveillance outpaces existing legal statutes, creating urgent challenges for preserving the human right to privacy and ensuring justice against algorithmic bias.
Subtopics: Algorithmic bias in judicial sentencing, data privacy legislation, state surveillance vs. civil liberties, and the legal regulation of AI.
Organized by : EAAMP