Thursday 19 September
Opening (9.00)
Ivo Cerman – Jan Květina, Welcome Address
I General lectures (9.15-10.15):
Daniel Kroupa (J. E. Purkyně University in Ústí nad Labem), On the role of natural law in restoring the Czech Charter of Fundamental Rights and Liberties in 1991
Knud Haakonssen (Copenhagen/St Andrews), The Study of Natural Law: History or Philosophy?
(Discussion) (Break)
II Reforms of Higher Education: the institutionalization of natural law (10.40-11.40):
Paweł Fiktus (University of Law in Wrocław) and and Marta Baranowska (Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń), Between the Universalism of the Laws of Nature and the Particular National Culture. Hugo Kołłątaj’s Reform of the University of Cracow
Gábor Gángó (Max Weber Centre for Advanced Cultural and Social Studies, University of Erfurt), Catholic natural law in Poland, with focus on Feliks Słotwinski
(Discussion)(Lunch) 12.00-13.00 (Continuation 13.00-14.00)
Volodymyr Kyrychenko (Kharkiv National University of Internal Affairs), Opposition of Tsarism to the Spread of Ideas of Natural Law in the Universities of the Empire at the Beginning of the 19th Century
Volodymyr Kakhnych (Faculty of Law, Ivan Franko National University of Lviv), Natural Law at the University of Lviv
(Discussion)(Continuation, 14.20-15.20)
Ivo Cerman (Faculty of Arts, University of South Bohemia), Were Human Rights in Martini´s Natural Law Real?
Erika Juríková (Faculty of Pedagogy, University of Trnava), The Introduction of Natural Law at the University of Trnava and its Latin Terminology
(Discussion)(Break)(Continuation, 16.00-17.30)
Petrasovszky Anna Mária (Faculty of Law, University of Miskolc): Metamorphosis of Legal Philosophy: The Evolution of Natural Law Conception in 19th Century Hungary
Ivana Horbec (Croatian Institute of History): Nikola Škrlec Lomnički and the Political and Cameral Science at Colleges in Habsburg Croatia
Tibor Bodnár-Király (Eötvös Loránd University, Faculty of Humanities, Institute of History), Staatsklugheit and political science at the University of Pest-Buda and the Protestant Colleges of the Eighteenth-Century Kingdom of Hungary
(Discussion)
Friday 20 September
III Western Influences (9.15-12.00)
Thérence Carvalho (Faculté de droits et des sciences politiques de l´Université de Nantes), The teaching of physiocracy in Poland-Lithuania: between the renewal of natural law and the encouragement of enlightened reforms
Volodymyr O. Abaschnik, (Kharkiv National Medical University), Johann Baptist Schad´s "Institutiones juris naturae", Charkoviae, 1814
Frank Grunert (Interdisziplinäres Zentrum für die Erforschung der Europäischen Aufklärung, Universität Halle), Natural Law and its Application. Ludwig Heinrich von Jakob (1759-1827) in Kharkiv and St Petersburg
(Discussion)(Lunch) 12.00-13.00
IV The Impact on Systematic Codifications (13.30-13.25):
Ondřej Horák (Faculty of Law, University of Olomouc), Natural Law and the Codification of Civil Law in the Habsburg Monarchy
Christian Neschwara (Rechtswissenschaftliche Fakultät, Universität Wien), Natural Law and the Codification of Criminal Law in the Habsburg Monarchy
Paweł Fiktus (University of Law in Wrocław) and Marta Baranowska (Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń), Codification of law in the 18th century in Poland on the example of Andrzej Zamoyski's Code
(Discussion) (Break)
IV Justifying Enlightenment Reforms (15.00-17.00)
Olena Sokalska (Scientific-Research Institute of the Criminal-Executive Service and Probation, Kyiv Ukraine), The Influence of Natural Law on the Cossack Tradition of Early Modern Constitutionalism
Adam Perlakowski (Faculty of History, Jagiellonski University of Cracow), Golden Liberty as a Natural Law in the Polish Political Thought
Jan Květina (History Institute, Czech Academy of Sciences), Instrumentalization of Polish-Lithuanian early modern republicans in the discourse of the Enlightenment: the case of Modrzewski
(Discussion)
For educational materials.see
https://www.opera-historica.com/artkey/inf-990000-1300_Educational-Materials.php