Dear all, A reminder about the upcoming consent conference this weekend (with more details in the original email forwarded below.)
The 3.45pm-5.45pm keynotes by Kim Ferzan (Friday 13th) and Victor Tadros (Saturday 14th) are open to all, no registration required, as joint events with the Cambridge Forum for Legal and Political Philosophy. For the rest of the event, registration is required and we have now hit the capacity of 40 (exactly), so I am running a waitlist. That said, the main reason for the cap of 40 is that there are limited funds for lunch and refreshments. So if you don't mind taking care of this yourself, then I'm happy to add people above the cap. Best wishes, Tom On 2018-03-12 20:12, Tom Dougherty wrote: > Dear all, > > On 13th & 14th July, I'll be organising a conference on consent — > details in the boilerplate email forwarded below. > > Best wishes, > Tom > > What? A conference on the ethics of consent, bringing together moral > philosophers and legal philosophers to discuss questions like: Does > consent need to be communicated or is a mental decision sufficient? > What forms of deception or coercion invalidate someone’s consent? When > someone gives their consent, which rights do they waive? > > When? 13th & 14th July 2018 > > Where? University of Cambridge, Room SG1, Alison Richard Building, 7 > West Road, CB3 9DP, Cambridge UK > > Who? Keynote Speakers: Kimberly Ferzan (University of Virgnia), > Victor Tadros (University of Warwick); Speakers: Kate Greasley > (University College London), Hugh Lazenby (University of Glasgow), > Hallie Liberto (University of Maryland), Massimo Renzo (Kings College > London); Respondents: David Archard (Queen’s University Belfast), > Karam Chadha (University of Cambridge), Mark D’Souza (University > College London), Mollie Gerver (Newcastle University), David Owens > (Kings College London), Peter Schaber (University of Zurich) > > More info: https://sites.google.com/site/consentinmoralitylawconference > > Registration: Tom Dougherty, tj...@cam.ac.uk. The conference is open > to all and free. For the regular conference, participation is limited > to 40 participants and advance registration is necessary. The keynote > talks are open to all, as joint events in conjunction with the > Cambridge Forum for Legal and Political Philosophy. > > The conference is financially supported by the Arts and Humanities > Research Council, and the Society for Applied Philosophy. _____________________________________________________ To unsubscribe from the CamPhilEvents mailing list, or change your membership options, please visit the list information page: http://bit.ly/CamPhilEvents List archive: http://bit.ly/CamPhilEventsArchive Please note that CamPhilEvents doesn't accept email attachments. See the list information page for further details and suggested alternatives.