Call for Abstracts - Consumer Law Scholars Conference 2023

The 5th Annual Consumer Law Scholars Conference.  March 2-3, 2023.  Hosted by the Berkeley Center for Consumer Law & Economic Justice


Call for Abstracts

If you would like to workshop an unpublished paper, please submit HERE by September 16, 2022: (1) a title, (2) a brief abstract that includes an explanation of how your article relates to other published work and advances the field, and (3) an outline of the article. 

Your abstract should, among other things, situate your paper within existing legal scholarship in a manner that is sufficient for the members of the Organizing Committee to appreciate both the genesis of your project and its contribution to the field. The more the Committee knows about your paper, the better able we are to assess whether this is the right year to include it in the program. 

We welcome doctrinal, theoretical, and empirical approaches. Potential topics include the full breadth of issues involving consumers in the marketplace: common law contracts and products liability; UDA(A)P and disclosure laws; food, drug, and health law and policy; consumer lending, credit reporting, and fintech; loan servicing and debt collection; cryptocurrency; commercial speech and the First Amendment; federalism, preemption, and sovereign immunity as related to consumer transactions; regulation, supervision, and enforcement by public agencies; private enforcement; advertising; application of consumer laws to new areas like criminal justice, domestic violence, and immigration; the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic; and other topics whose study may advance the field.

Examples of submissions from previous years showing the appropriate format may be found here. Please upload your abstract and outline as a single file. We plan to inform authors whose submissions have been accepted by early November. Drafts of complete papers (suitable for workshop discussion) will be due January 31, 2023. We reserve the right to cancel a workshop if a draft paper is not sufficiently developed or provided sufficiently in advance for meaningful review by participants

Questions?

Feel free to contact Ted Mermin (tmermin@law.berkeley.edu), and/or conference logistics coordinator Ben Hiebert (ben.hiebert@law.berkeley.edu).