Georgy Kantor
I am interested in political, social and institutional history of the early Roman Empire, history of Roman law, epigraphy of the Roman world (both Latin and Greek), and regional history of Hellenistic and Roman Asia Minor and Black Sea area.
I am preparing for publication in the Oxford Classical Monographs series a monograph (based on my Oxford D.Phil. thesis) concerned with the interaction of Roman and local law and judicial institutions in Asia Minor before the constitutio Antoniniana. My next research project is on social and institutional history of the province of Lycia-Pamphylia from its creation by Claudius to the beginning of the fourth century AD.
I am also an assistant editor of the Supplementum Epigraphicum Graecum (http://www.brill.nl/seg) with responsibility for the Northern and Western Black Sea coast and the Danubian region, and in particular for publications in Slavonic languages.
Address: St John's College
Oxford
OX1 3JP
UK
I am preparing for publication in the Oxford Classical Monographs series a monograph (based on my Oxford D.Phil. thesis) concerned with the interaction of Roman and local law and judicial institutions in Asia Minor before the constitutio Antoniniana. My next research project is on social and institutional history of the province of Lycia-Pamphylia from its creation by Claudius to the beginning of the fourth century AD.
I am also an assistant editor of the Supplementum Epigraphicum Graecum (http://www.brill.nl/seg) with responsibility for the Northern and Western Black Sea coast and the Danubian region, and in particular for publications in Slavonic languages.
Address: St John's College
Oxford
OX1 3JP
UK
less
InterestsView All (10)
Uploads
Edited volumes
The articles here, ranging from Roman provinces to modern-day piracy in Somalia, address questions such as: How are legal property regimes intertwined with economic, moral-ethical, and political prerogatives? How far do the assumptions of the western philosophical tradition explain property and ownership in other societies? Is the 'bundle of rights' a useful way to think about property? How does legalism negotiate property relationships and interests between communities and individuals? How does the legalism of property respond to the temporalities and materialities of the objects owned? How are property regimes managed by states, and what kinds of conflicts are thus generated?
Property and ownership cannot be reduced to natural rights, nor do they straightforwardly reflect power relations: the rules through which property is articulated tend to be conceptually subtle. As the fourth volume in the Legalism series, this collection draws on common themes that run throughout the first three volumes: Legalism: Anthropology and History, Legalism: Community and Justice, and Legalism: Rules and Categories consolidating them in a framework that suggests a new approach to legal concepts.
Papers
The articles here, ranging from Roman provinces to modern-day piracy in Somalia, address questions such as: How are legal property regimes intertwined with economic, moral-ethical, and political prerogatives? How far do the assumptions of the western philosophical tradition explain property and ownership in other societies? Is the 'bundle of rights' a useful way to think about property? How does legalism negotiate property relationships and interests between communities and individuals? How does the legalism of property respond to the temporalities and materialities of the objects owned? How are property regimes managed by states, and what kinds of conflicts are thus generated?
Property and ownership cannot be reduced to natural rights, nor do they straightforwardly reflect power relations: the rules through which property is articulated tend to be conceptually subtle. As the fourth volume in the Legalism series, this collection draws on common themes that run throughout the first three volumes: Legalism: Anthropology and History, Legalism: Community and Justice, and Legalism: Rules and Categories consolidating them in a framework that suggests a new approach to legal concepts.