Nature of Law and Legal Reality (IVR Special Workshop)

June 29, 2026 - July 3, 2026
IVR Central Asia Regional Branch

Cibali, Kadir Has Cd., 34083 Cibali / Fatih/Fatih/İstanbul, Турция
İstanbul
Turkey

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Organisers:

Maqsut Narikbayev University

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The workshop “Nature of Law and Legal Reality” explores how contemporary legal philosophy and jurisprudence understand what law is and how legal phenomena exist in social and empirical reality. It is designed as an intensive discussion where participants reconsider classical debates in the philosophy of law in light of new empirical, ontological, and interdisciplinary developments.

The workshop aims to bring together philosophers of law, legal theorists, doctrinal scholars to articulate more refined accounts of both the nature of law and the structure of legal reality. By confronting traditional jurisprudential questions with contemporary disputes about ontology, pluralism, and empirical method, participants will seek to map promising directions for future research and to clarify what is at stake in ongoing controversies.

Topics for discussion include, among others:

(1) Concept and nature of law

– What do we mean when we claim that law has a “nature”: are we identifying essential properties, common patterns, or merely theoretical constructs?

– Is it still plausible to think that philosophy of law must provide necessary and sufficient conditions for the existence of legal systems, or should we adopt more modest, pluralistic, or practice‑oriented frameworks?

– How should we understand the relationship between law and morality today: as strict separation, necessary connection, or context‑sensitive interaction between moral and institutional facts?

(2) Legal Reality and Ontology

– In what sense do legal entities—rights, duties, persons, corporate bodies, or digital assets—“exist,” and how does their mode of existence differ from that of physical objects or social conventions?

– How do courts and other legal actors exercise “ontological discretion” when they choose among competing ways of construing the reality of contested objects such as death, incapacity, or intoxication?

– Can we speak of multiple, overlapping legal realities generated by different legal orders and epistemic communities, and if so, how do these realities interact in transnational or pluralist settings?

(3) Legal Methodology and Interdisciplinarity

– What is the proper role of conceptual analysis in contemporary legal theory when empirical, sociological, and psychological research increasingly shape our understanding of law in action?

– How can philosophy of law integrate insights from empirical legal studies, new legal realism, and social ontology without losing its distinctive normative and analytical focus?

– To what extent should theories of the nature of law be evaluated not only on their internal coherence, but also on their explanatory power regarding actual institutional practices and disputes about legal reality?

 Prospective participants are invited to submit abstracts (500–1000 words) by 15 May to [email protected] and [email protected].

To facilitate discussion, participants are warmly encouraged to circulate a final paper by 1 June 2026.

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May 15, 2026, 11:45pm EET

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Maqsut Narikbayev University

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#Philosophy of Law, #Reality and Methaphysics, #Nature of Law, #Ontology, #Epistemology