The legal afterlife of…

The legal afterlife of...
Podcast Description
The world might often seem like it’s ordered and classified in fixed and stable ways. So things are, so they ought to be. Things like war and revolution, citizenship, peace agreements and criminal law, are pinned down by legal definitions, by common understandings, by textbooks… aren’t they?
This 4-episode podcast raises questions about how fixed and stable things really are.
Podcast Insights
Content Themes
Addresses the legal afterlife of significant topics including criminal law, peace agreements, citizenship, and wartime repercussions. Episodes feature discussions on sexual and gender-based crimes during wartime, the complexities of citizenship across regions, and the implications of peace agreements, highlighting unique sociopolitical landscapes.

The world might often seem like it’s ordered and classified in fixed and stable ways. So things are, so they ought to be. Things like war and revolution, citizenship, peace agreements and criminal law, are pinned down by legal definitions, by common understandings, by textbooks… aren’t they?
This 4-episode podcast raises questions about how fixed and stable things really are.

The world might often seem like it’s ordered and classified in fixed and stable ways. So things are, so they ought to be. Things like war and revolution, citizenship, peace agreements and criminal law, are pinned down by legal definitions, by common understandings, by textbooks… aren’t they?
This 4-episode podcast on The legal afterlife of… raises questions about how fixed and stable things really are. Perhaps, as Professor of Literature Frederick Jameson has said, ‘it might be time for us to consider that the living present is scarcely as self-sufficient as it claims to be; that we would do well not to count on its density and solidity, which might under certain circumstances betray us.’
Perhaps the legal afterlife continues for all of us, whether we know, like it, or not.
Acknowledgements
This podcast is part of the legal afterlife of war and revolution slow scholarship project led by Marika Sosnowski and hosted at the University of Melbourne Law School.
The Executive Producer is Marika (Miki) Sosnowski
The Host and Producer is Ian M. Cook
The theme music is taken from a track called Surge2 by James Henderson
The show’s artwork is by Hisham Rifaie
The show is kindly supported by the Peter McMullin Centre on Statelessness and the University of Melbourne.
Many thanks to all the legal afterlife project team: Jenny Hedström, Nasia Hadjigeorgiou, Izzy Rhoads, Anuja Jaiswal, Birgitte Stampe Holst, Charlotte al Khalili, Carlos Antonio Díaz Bolaños, Daniel Ricardo Quiroga-Villamarín, Amanda Blair and Sonia Qadir.
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