09:15-09:30 Welcome address
09:30-10:30 Keynote 1: William Mulligan, ‘Justifying international action: international law and diplomacy before 1914’
11:00-12:30
Panel 1: Arbitration and adjudication
Robert A. Nye, ‘The Duel of Honor and the Origins of Rules for Arms, Warfare, and Arbitration in The Hague Conferences’
Chris Barber, ‘Sir Julian Pauncefote and the Creation of the Permanent Court of Arbitration’
Matthias Packeiser, ‘Adjudication in International Law - A Legacy of The Hague?’
Panel 2: Limiting arms
Miloš Vec, ‘Peace through Juridification of the Means of War? Prohibition of War Technology at the Hague Conferences and its Pitfalls’
Andrew Webster, ‘Reconsidering disarmament at the Hague Peace Conferences of 1899 and 1907’
Marion Girard Dorsey, ‘Bent but not Broken: Chemical Warfare and the 1899 and 1907 Hague Conferences’
Panel 3: Neutrality and Neutralism
Gamarra, Yolanda, ‘“Active” Neutrality: The Influence of the Peace Convention of 1907 on the Spanish Constitution of 1931’
Wolfgang Mueller, ‘What about Permanent Neutrality in Peacetime?’
Marta Stachurska-Kounta. Norway’s legalistic approach to peace in the aftermath of the World War I’
13:30-14:30 Keynote 2: Randall Lesaffer, ‘Peace through Law: The Hague Peace Conferences and the rise of the “jus contra bellum”’
14:30-16:00
Panel 4: The Hague’s Legacies
Sarah Gendron, ‘“Feminigenocide”: Or the Effacement of Women in War’
Thomas Davies, ‘The Multiple Roles of the Hague Conferences in the Development of International Non- Governmental Organizations’
Annalise Higgins, ‘“Law, not war”: James Brown Scott and the construction of the Hague Peace Conferences’ historical legacies’
Panel 5: Political affairs of The Hague
Michael Clinton, ‘The Hague Peace
Conferences & the French Peace Movement, 1899- 1912’
Alan M. Anderson, ‘Jacky Fisher and the 1899 Hague Conference: A New Analysis’
Airton Ribeiro da Silva Júnior, ‘The absence of Brazil in the Hague Peace Conference of 1899’
Panel 6: The Hague’s audiences
Neville Wylie, ‘Muddied waters: Applying the Geneva Conventions to maritime conflicts’
Marco Duranti, ‘The Hague Peace Palace and the Romance of Fin-de-Siècle International Law’
Thomas Munro, ‘The Importance of The Hague for British and American Reactions to the First World War’
16:30-17:30
Conference commentary: Glenda Sluga, Neville Wylie, and Maartje Abbenhuis