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We are delighted to welcome Professor Sundhya Pahuja to the University of Amsterdam to give a public lecture on Thursday 26 March. Sundhya Pahuja is the Director of the Laureate Research Program in Global Corporations and International Law at the University of Melbourne and her research focuses on the history, theory and practice of international law in historical context.
Event details of Metastatic Legality: Companies, States and the Spread of European Law
Date
26 March 2026
Time
15:30 -17:00
Room
Kartinizaal

Abstract

We know the world is deeply plural.  So how has it come to pass that Europe and its heirs (The West) get to decide what counts as Law?  This question becomes more urgent each day. We so obviously need new jurisprudential ideas, and to recover displaced imaginaries and practices, if we are to navigate an uncertain future.

In this lecture, Professor Pahuja asks how European law acquired for itself, a monopoly over legality on the international plane, and how this monopoly is maintained into the present.  Perhaps surprisingly, she will suggest that the company is crucial to the answer.  More specifically, she will locate the VOC and its early adventures in Asia, before the state was really a state (Skinner), and before religion as we know it was invented (Nongbri), in a longer story about the malignant spread of European law through the company-state relation, and the violent displacement of its rivals.

Excavating the techniques by which company and state were co-constituted and arranged as legal forms to travel southward together, can help us see what was crowded out, and may help us plant the seeds of a more jurisplural future.

Biography

Professor Pahuja’s work engages with the practice, and praxis, of international law through critical history, political philosophy, political-economy and postcolonial theories. Her current research focuses on Global Corporations and International Law, funded by an Australian Research Council Laureate Fellowship.

Sundhya is a global faculty member of the Harvard Institute for Global Law and Policy, and has served as Director of Studies in Public International Law at the Hague Academy of International Law.

 

This lecture is co-sponsored by the Decolonial Futures project and Amsterdam Centre for International Law.

Bushuis/Oost-Indisch Huis

Room Kartinizaal
Kloveniersburgwal 48 (main entrance)
1012 CX Amsterdam