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3 to 5 May 2010
Prague, Czech Republic

Website: http://www.inter-disciplinary.net/critical-issues/transformations/good-sex-bad-sex-sex-law-crime-and-ethics/call-for-pap
Contact name: Dr Rob Fisher
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Conference Announcement / Call for papers

2nd Global Conference
Good Sex, Bad Sex: Sex Law, Crime and Ethics

Monday 3rd May 2010 – Wednesday 5th May 2010
Prague, Czech Republic

Call for Papers
After the success of the inaugural conference for
this project, we are pleased to announce the
Second Annual Conference, to be held in Prague
in May 2010. The conference is a keystone of the
'Good Sex, Bad Sex' interdisciplinary.net project
that seeks to explore the nature, character and
issues around the prohibition, regulation or
permission of different and distinct forms of
sexuality and debates around their legal, ethical
and cultural status in contemporary societies.

The sorts of questions the project wishes to
address are: How do we regulate and seek to deter
sex crime? How do we support victims, prosecute
perpetrators and encourage lawful and discourage
unlawful sexual conduct? Should our strategies for
perpetrators be rehabilitation, punishment or
deterrence and what are the implications
of elements of each? What about when the law
prosecutes 'victimless crimes' or seems unjust in
relation to particular sexualities? Or fails
to adequately protect the innocent or regulate the
guilty? How does law relate to ethics and our
understanding about what good and bad sex are?
What ethical grounds do we have for distinguishing
good sex and bad sex?

The project seeks to explore the terrain around
sex law, sexual ethics and sex crime with a
critical edge that moves beyond simple
disciplinary attentions to policy, laws, social
conventions or values to recognise
the complexities and contested questions around
the way states and social institutions regulate
sexual conduct in contemporary societies
and on what basis of principles. The project will
explore the role of law and ethics in guiding
prohibitions, permissions and regulations of
different sexual conduct and sexualities. It will
explore the way in which law and other forms of
regulation have been used to police and
repress desire and pleasure, and the ways in which
such prohibitions and regulations have been
changed, subverted, challenged or transgressed.
This project seeks to generate inter-disciplinary
work that has a definite and critical engagement
with both sex law and sexual values and
conventions in contemporary societies, and
collectively represents intellectual work for the
betterment of sexual ethics in sexual conduct
in society and more informed and just regulation
of different sexualities.

The project welcomes papers, panels and
presentations from all disciplines, professions
and vocations who have an interest in sex law
and sex crime and the development of a more
ethical sexuality and ethical regulation of
sexuality. It welcomes critical engagements that
challenge convention and make us think anew about
issues of sex and society within a framework of
ethical beneficence and just legality.

This year papers are particularly (but by no means
exclusively) sought on two oft neglected themes:

Sexual Rights, Sexual Justice?
What do we mean by sexual rights and sexual
justice? How are sexual rights and justice
understood in contemporary societies and how might
they be? Does this mean we all have a right to
fulfil sexual desires, and if it does, how do we
reconcile this with prohibitions/regulations on,
for example, some disabled people? Can a sexual
right have the same character of political, social
or legal rights and how does this reflect on ideas
of sexual citizenship and belonging? Has an idea
like justice any place in the discussion of sexual
desires? How can desire be just or unjust and what
do we mean when we say desire is just or unjust?

Prohibiting Perversions or Repressing Desires?:
Regulating Diverse Sexualities
How should we make sense of attempts across the
Globe to progressively develop specific legal
guidelines – prohibiting or defining and
regulating – to deal with diverse sexual desires?
How far are the legal prohibitions or regulation
of a range of activities – from BDSM to
fetishism, from adult incest to public sex, from
bestiality to necrophilia to other diverse desires
– ethically justifiable, aesthetically driven
and/or political determined? What are the
consequences for the ethical regulation of
dangerous desires of notions for acting against
public decency within heterosexual cultures? Were
these sexualities always and everywhere taboo and
under what conditions might they become
'mainstream' in the future? How far are their
foundational bases for determining whether desires
should regulated, prohibited and permitted and how
far are they effective in the face of diverse
sexualities?

More broadly, papers, panels and workshops are
welcome on any of the following general themes –
or just mail and enquire if you have a
different option to present!:

1. Sex Crime and the Law

* Rape and the law against sexual coercion
and violence
* Sex laws and diversity in sexual identity
and conduct
* Sex laws and the regulation of sex and
sexuality in comparative societies
* The relationship between sex law and
notions of good or ethical sexuality
* Sex laws and sexual pathology and prejudice
in contemporary societies
* Sex law and the lessons of historical legal
prohibitions or regulations of sex and sexuality

2. Sex Law and Its Agencies

* Sex law and the judicial process
* Sex Law and policing sex and sexualities
* Sex Law and the selectivities of the state
* Sex Law and the role of the state in
regulating and prohibiting sex and sexualities
* Sex Law and the discretion within criminal
justice systems

3. Ethics and the Principles of Sexual Conduct

* What are the principles and standards of
sexual ethics?
* What sex and sexualities should be
prohibited, regulated or permitted?
* What forms of sexual orientations,
behaviours and relationships are ethical or unethical?
* How should ethics relate to sex law and
what other ideas of principles should inform sex
law apart from ethics?
* Can we have ethically unsound sex that is
legally permissible?
* What are the problems of talking ethically
about desire and pleasure?

4. Sex Law and Regulating Desire

* Sex law and Sexual Commerce – pornography
and prostitution
* Sex Law and Sex Acts – permissible and
impermissible sex
* Desires, pleasures and the conceptual bases
for ethical or legal forms of prohibition or
regulation
* Regulation through knowledge – sex
education and institutional sexual regulation
* Regulation of particular sexual agents –
disability, mental illness and other regulatory
discourses
* Regulation and culture – representing good
and bad sex

5. Sex Crime and Its Agents

* Understanding and treating the perpetrators
of sex crime
* Support and services for the victims of sex
crime
* Sex crime and the impact on survivors
* Sex crime and its impact upon police and
support agencies
* Justice and obligation – the legal system
and its impact on sex crime perpetrators and victims

The Steering Group particularly welcomes the
submission of pre-formed panel proposals.

Papers will also be considered on any related
theme. 300 word abstracts should be submitted by
Friday 27th November 2009. If an abstract is
accepted for the conference, a full draft paper
should be submitted by Friday 19th March 2010.

300 word abstracts should be submitted
simultaneously to both Organising Chairs;
abstracts may be in Word, WordPerfect, or RTF
formats with the following information and in this
order:

a) author(s), b) affiliation, c) email address, d)
title of abstract, e) body of abstract.

Please use plain text (Times Roman 12) and abstain
from using footnotes and any special formatting,
characters or emphasis (such as bold,
italics or underline). We acknowledge receipt and
answer to all paper proposals submitted. If you do
not receive a reply from us in a week you
should assume we did not receive your proposal; it
might be lost in cyberspace! We suggest, then, to
look for an alternative electronic route or resend.

Joint Organising Chairs:

Paul Reynolds
Reader in Sociology and Social Philosophy
Edge Hill University, Lancashire
United Kingdom
E-mail: prr@inter-disciplinary.net

Rob Fisher
Network Founder and Leader
Inter-Disciplinary.Net
Freeland, Oxfordshire,
United Kingdom
E-mail: gsbs2@inter-disciplinary.net

The conference is part of the 'Transformations'
research hub at ID.Net. We aim to bring together
people from different areas and interests to
share ideas and explore innovative and challenging
routes of intellectual and academic exploration.
All papers accepted for and
presented at this conference are eligible for
publication in an ISBN eBook. Selected papers may
be developed for publication in a themed hard
copy volume, or for the Global Journal of
Sensuality, Sexuality and the Erotic, published by
the Inter-Disciplinary Press.

For further details about the project please visit:
http://www.inter-disciplinary.net/critical-issues/transformations/good-sex-bad-sex-sex-law-crime-and-ethics/

For further details about the conference please visit:
http://www.inter-disciplinary.net/critical-issues/transformations/good-sex-bad-sex-sex-law-crime-and-ethics/call-for-papers/

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