Social Class and Law Workshop
Date
Wed, 9 Sep 2026 | 09:30 - 18:00
Location
Wolfson College
Speakers
Professor Mike Savage (LSE), Professor Diane Reay (Cambridge), Dr Conor McCabe (DCU), Dr Adam Elliott-Cooper (QMUL), Professor Jo Littler (Goldsmiths), Dr Alexandra Kelbert (UCL), Dr Rima Saini (Middlesex University)
Event Price
Free
Booking Required
Required
We invite PhD students and Early Career Researchers in Law to apply to participate in a Social Class and Law Workshop.
Please note that entry to the workshop is by application only.
We request that applicants fill out this form by 30 June 2026, 6:00 pm BST.
Applicants will be informed of their application outcome by 10 July 2026.
This one-day workshop is designed for legal scholars interested in researching social class in the legal profession, substantive law and/or legal procedure and processes. It aims to provide attendees with a broad grounding in the social class literature to support current or future research projects that consider how law and legal process hold the potential to contribute to or disrupt the construction of class.
Speakers: Professor Mike Savage (London School of Economics), Professor Diane Reay (University of Cambridge), Dr Conor McCabe (Dublin City University), Dr Adam Elliott-Cooper (Queen Mary University of London), Professor Jo Littler (Goldsmiths, University of London), Dr Alexandra Kelbert (University College London), Dr Rima Saini (Middlesex University).
Workshop Programme:
Session 1: Theories of Social Class
Session 2: Social Class, Poverty, and Neoliberalism
Session 3: Social Class, Race, and Gender
Session 4: Social Class Research in Legal Settings
This workshop is free to attend. Lunch and refreshments will be provided, but we are unable to fund travel costs. This is an in-person only event.
This event is hosted by the Law in Societies Research Cluster at Wolfson College and the Centre for Socio-Legal Studies, University of Oxford.
Contact: If you have any questions, please email Vanessa Long (Centre for Socio-Legal Studies, Oxford).