INTERNATIONAL PRIZE

Year Individual(s) Basis for the Award

2011

Rogelio Pérez-Perdomo

  (co-winner)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian

  (co-winner)

 

 

Professor Pérez-Perdomo is a national of Venezuela. He received a law degree from the Central University of Venezuela in 1964, an LL.M. from Harvard University in 1972, and a Ph.D. in law from the Central University of Venezuela in 1975. His career is long and distinguished. He taught at the Central University of Venezuela from 1967 to 1988, at the Institute of Graduate Studies in Business and Public Policy in Caracas from 1988 to 1999, and at the Metropolitan University Law School in Caracas since 2002, serving as its Dean from 2003 to 2009. He has been a frequent visiting professor at Stanford Law School since 1998 and was the Academic Director of the Stanford Program for International Legal Studies from 1999 to 2001.
     Professor Pérez-Perdomo’s main areas of scholarship are legal culture, legal profession, and comparative law. His recent publications in English include Legal Cultures in the Age of Globalization: Latin America and Latin Europe (edited with Lawrence M. Friedman, Stanford University Press, 2003), Latin American Lawyers: A Historical Perspective (Stanford University Press, 2005), The Civil Law Tradition (with John H. Merryman, Stanford University Press, 3rd ed., 2007), and Law in Many Societies (edited with Lawrence M. Friedman, Stanford University Press, to be published soon). He is widely regarded as the most outstanding law and society scholar presently active in Latin America.
    Professor Pérez-Perdomo has also made extraordinary contributions to the development of the international community of socio-legal scholars. He has been highly active both in the Research Committee on the Sociology of Law of the International Sociological Association and in the LSA. He was President of the Research Committee from 1997 to 2000 and a Trustee of the LSA from 1999 to 2001.
    We are honored to select Professor Rogelio Pérez-Perdomo as the first recipient of the International Prize from Latin America.
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Dr. Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian is a national of Israel. She received a Ph.D. in criminology at the Faculty of Law of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 1994 and did post-doctoral work at the University of Southern California from 1995 to 1996. She has been a Senior Lecturer at the Institute of Criminology in the Faculty of Law of the Hebrew University since 2003. She has been an active presenter at LSA conferences and is currently serving on its International Committee.
     Dr. Shalhoub-Kevorkian’s English publications include Women and War in Palestine (with K. Abu-Baker et al., Jerusalem: Women Studies Center, 2005), Women and Political Conflict: The Case of Palestinian Women in Jerusalem (with N. Abdo, Jerusalem: Women Studies Center, 2006), Militarization and Violence Against Women in Conflict Zones: A Palestinian Case-Study (Cambridge University Press, 2009), and Trapped Bodies and Lives: Military Occupation, Trauma, and the Violence of Exclusion (Jerusalem: YWCA, 2010). Her scholarship applies critical feminist theories to the study of crimes against women and children. She has challenged the concept and legal definition of “honor crime” and has suggested the use of the term “femicide.” She has explored human rights violations against women and has also examined the effect of political violence on the crime of “femicide” and child sexual abuse. She navigates the extremely fraught issues associated with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and even more delicate questions surrounding gender, with courage and great sensitivity.
     Dr. Shalhoub-Kevorkian is a scholar in mid-career and is different from the past recipients in this regard. However, one of the functions of the International Prize may be to recognize and encourage socio-legal research by scholars who are working outside the usual circle of Western scholarship.

2009

Yves Dezelay

Yves Dezalay earned his doctorate at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes, working with French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu. Since 1984 he has been at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique. He is currently the center’s director of research. Yves has been a long-time Affiliated Scholar with the American Bar Foundation, and has been a visiting professor at various institutions in the United States and Europe. He describes the Law and Society Association as his main intellectual home for more than 20 years.
    His principal contribution to the law and society movement has been to creatively and painstakingly show how deeply globalization has affected the legal profession. He is an expert on the international market for legal expertise and the role of lawyers in shaping state power under conditions of globalization. His empirical base is impressive: it includes over 3000 interviews in 30 nations.
    Yves Dezalay earned his doctorate at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes, working with French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu. Since 1984 he has been at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique. He is currently the center’s director of research. Yves has been a long-time Affiliated Scholar with the American Bar Foundation, and has been a visiting professor at various institutions in the United States and Europe. He describes the Law and Society Association as his main intellectual home for more than 20 years.
    Yves Dezalay’s principal contribution to the law and society movement has been to creatively and painstakingly show how deeply globalization has affected the legal profession. He is an expert on the international market for legal expertise and the role of lawyers in shaping state power under conditions of globalization. His empirical base is impressive: it includes over 3000 interviews in 30 nations. His contributions emphasize how “globalization provides a forum for competition between professional groups, and how law becomes both the product of, and conduit for, battles to consolidate state power.” Globalization, in short, has internationalized the legal system in unprecedented ways, creating a new internationalized legal order. His is the most exhaustive body of socio-legal research in this area to date, and probably the most insightful. Representative works include his Merchants of Law: The Expansion of the ‘American Model’ and the Construction of a Transnational Juridical Order.  
    Much of Dezalay’s work has been written with Professor Bryant Garth. They have been frequent collaborators since 1986. Together they wrote: Dealing in Virtue: International Commercial Arbitration and the Emergence of a New International Legal Order and The Internationalization of Palace Wars: Lawyers, Economists, and the Contest to Transform Latin American States. Their new book will appear this year: Asian Legal Revivals: Lawyers, Politics and the Re-structuring of States from Colonialism to Hegemony. This will be a major synthetic work covering a wide range of areas in which lawyers work, including neoliberal models of governance, foreign relations, and human rights.
    With this award, we honor a scholar who has opened up a whole new field of law and society research with work that is extensive and will be of lasting influence. We honor a man who has been a public intellectual, a mentor of new scholars from around the world, as well as a very productive research scholar.

2007

Xingliang Chen

  (co-winner)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dario Melossi

  (co-winner)

 

 

Xingliang Chen was among the first generation of Chinese university students after the Cultural Revolution. He studied law at Peking University Law School from 1977 to 1981 and received a LL.B degree there. After graduation, he entered the law school of Renmin University of China for further study, receiving a LL.M in 1984 and another LL.D in 1987. From 1985 to 1998, Prof. Chen taught at the Law School of Renmin University of China. Since 1998, he has been a professor of criminal law, criminology and criminal justice at Peking University Law School and the first Yangtze River Distinguished Scholar in the field of arts and social sciences appointed by the Ministry of Education. In 1997, Prof. Chen created Criminal Law Review and Criminal Case Review and has been the editor-in-chief of both since then. These Reviews have been widely regarded as the most influential and authoritative academic publications in the fields of criminal law and criminology in China.

       Xingliang Chen has made major contributions to the advancement of knowledge in the crime, law, and society field, and has been central to the advancement of the rule of law in China. Among his colleagues in China, Japan, and South Korea, he is widely regarded as the most important scholar of crime and criminal justice policy in the PRC. His studies cover key areas in penology, criminal law, and criminal procedure, usually with an emphasis on the interactions between and among law, politics, society, and culture. In his highly acclaimed Philosophy of Criminal Law, Chen analyzed the social and legal changes during the 1980s and the 1990s in China and underscored the emergence of a civil society relatively autonomous of political society. A Memorandum on Capital Punishment reviewed the Chinese history of capital punishment and criticized its excessive use in contemporary China. Professor Chen recently called for giving review and approval power of death sentences to the Supreme People’s Court, a reform that was instituted on January 1, 2007.

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Dario Melossi received his law degree from the University of Bologna, Italy, in 1972 and his PhD in Sociology from the University of California, Santa Barbara in 1986. He began his career in the Sociology Department at the University of California, Davis, returning to Italy and joining the faculty at the University of Bologna in 1993. From 1997 to 2004, he was a Visiting Professor of Criminology at Keele University. From 1994 to 1996, he was a Visiting Professor in the Masters’ Program of the Oñati International Institute for the Sociology of Law, Oñati, Spain. Beginning in 1998 and continuing to the present, he has been on the Board of the International Doctorate in Criminology at Trento University, Italy. Currently, he is Professor of Criminology on the Faculty of Law at the University of Bologna.

       Dario Melossi has made many important contributions to the area of social control, security, and neo-liberalism, and his scholarship has influenced law and society scholarship internationally for more than two decades. He has authored or co-authored seven monographs and edited or co-edited four other volumes. The Prison and the Factory: Origins of the Penitentiary System (translated from the Italian Carcere e Fabbrica), co-authored with Massimo Pavarini, is a classic in punishment theory. His 2005 piece in the European Law Journal, entitled “Security, Social Control, Democracy and Migration,” is exemplary of his analytic precision and theoretical scope, tackling issues that cross disciplinary and thematic boundaries. In the process of addressing the debate on European constitutionalism, Melossi examines the perceived nexus between migration, criminalization, and security that is so important to contemporary political discourse, not only in Europe but worldwide. Prof. Melossi has published in English, Italian, German, Spanish, and Greek outlets. His work on punishment theory, migration, security, and social control more generally work that is always incisive and often seemingly prescient embodies international scholarship at its best.

2005

Hazel Genn

Hazel Genn was the first person appointed to a chair in Socio-Legal Studies in the UK, a founding member of the Socio-Legal Studies Association and  was its first President. More than any other scholar, Hazel Genn has put socio‑legal studies on the academic 'map' in the UK, and made socio-legal research central to policymakers concerned with law, lawyers and the legal system. Throughout her career, she has engaged in groundbreaking empirical work, shaping the landscape of UK socio‑legal studies and its role in legal change. Her long‑standing research interests are in access to justice, alternative dispute resolution, and civil justice. Hazel's contribution to academia and to socio‑legal studies in particular has been widely recognized in the UK; she was made a Fellow of the British Academy and in 2002 became Vice‑President of its council; in 2000 she was honored as a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) for her work on civil justice. A member of the Research Committee on the Sociology of Law (RCSL), she has maintained longstanding links with international scholars working on the legal profession around the world. Most recently, her Paths to Justice: What People Do and Think About Going to Law (1999) has proved extraordinarily influential world-wide. The study is being replicated in Japan, Hong Kong, the Netherlands, Scotland, Canada and Australia. Her work on mediation has also been widely influential, most notably in Central and Eastern Europe. Hazel has had a major influence on policy-makers around the world. Her stature as an authority in her field has led to numerous invitations to join delegations and to address legislative bodies in Beijing, Hong Kong, Australia, Canada, and Bulgaria, to name just a few. She is part of the Council of Europe's Working Group on the Efficiency of Justice, and a member of the Council's Consortium Comparing European Judicial Systems. She has published widely in the field including Meeting Legal Needs? (1981); Hard Bargaining: Out of Court Settlement in Personal Injury Actions (1987); The Effectiveness of Representation at Tribunals (1989); Tribunals and Informal Justice (1992); Personal Injury Compensation: How Much is Enough? (1994); Survey of Litigation Costs for the Woolf Inquiry into Access to Justice (1996); Understanding Civil Justice (1997); Mediation in Action (1999); and Paths to Justice: What People Do and Think About Going to Law (1999) (with Sarah Beinhart).  Along with teaching at University College London where she is Professor of Socio‑Legal Studies in the Faculty of Laws, she remains a Visiting Professor at the Universities of Tilburg and Leiden in The Netherlands, and at the University of Hong Kong, and is a Fellow of the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science.

2003

Masaji Chiba In 1965-66, Professor Chiba studies with E. Adamson Hoebel and the University of Minnesota. His experience there led him to study customary law in non-Western countries with an emphasis on its interaction with state law. He participated in the founding of the International Association of Legal Anthropology in 1981 and quickly became a leading scholar in legal pluralism. He gave an inaugural lecture at the founding of the International Institute of the Sociology of Law (IISL) in Onati, Spain in 1989. He has been a leading member of the Japanese Association of Sociology of Law (JASL) and was its President from 1987-90. Not only has he influenced scholarship in Japan by his own research and teaching but by translating of the works of Elton McNeil, A.R. Radcliff-Brown, Simon Roberts, and E. Adamson Hoebel has made this scholarship truly transnational.

2001

Neelan Tiruchelvam (posthumously) The first International Prize was awarded to the late Neelan Tiruchelvam for his distinguished scholarship in legal pluralism, human rights, constitutionalism, ethnic conflict, and the capacity of law to contain violence. Neelan was also the founder of the Law and Society Trust and the International Centre for Ethnic Studies in Colombo, Sri Lanka. Neelan's scholarship guided his public stance on the political crisis gripping Sri Lanka, where he became a member of parliament who spoke from the perspective of the Tamil minority and advocated moderation and peaceful political solutions. As Neelan became more prominent in the peace process, his life was repeatedly threatened and, in 1999, was taken by a suicide bomber.