The HLA Hart Memorial Lecture 2026

Professor Danielle Allen
Tuesday 12 May 2026, 5pm
Ä¢¹½tv Chapel and online
The lecture will be followed by drinks at 6.15pm.
Free entry – all welcome
The HLA Hart Memorial Lecture
“The Radical Duke: Universal Suffrage and the Modernization of Constitutional Monarchyâ€
The 40th Anniversary of the distinguished HLA Hart Memorial Lecture in honour of HLA Hart (1907-1992) will be given on 12 May 2026 by , the James Bryant Conant University Professor at Harvard University. The HLA Hart Memorial Lecture series is funded by the Tanner Lectures on Human Values in honour of Hart, who became Professor of Jurisprudence in 1952 and was the author of the highly influential book, The Concept of Law. The lecture will be followed by a Q&A session. The lecture – and only the lecture – will be live-streamed and recorded for future use.
To register for the lecture in person or online, please contact Manuela Williams (masters.pa@univ.ox.ac.uk) by Monday 13 April. Please indicate if you have any mobility requirements. Thank you.
Abstract
The Radical Duke: Universal Suffrage and the Modernization of Constitutional Monarchy
The “Radical Duke,†Charles Lennox, 3rd Duke of Richmond, introduced a bill for universal manhood suffrage in the House of Lords in June 1780. The bill emerged from a philosophical and practical effort to solve a constitutional puzzle created in Britain by the growing work of colonial administration and the pressures of the American Revolution. The story of how Richmond, a close collaborator of Edmund Burke and radicals like Thomas Paine in the 1760s and 1770s, developed this proposal is an essentially unknown but important part of British constitutional history and the history of theory and practice of representation. Richmond achieved the technical innovations needed to make modern representation possible. This lecture will introduce these important contributions and unpack their significance for constitutional theory.
The HLA Hart Memorial Lecture
The HLA Hart Memorial Lecture is an annual lecture delivered in Oxford by a distinguished speaker. The lecture is named after HLA Hart (1907-1992), who became Professor of Jurisprudence in Oxford in 1952 and was the author of the highly influential book The Concept of Law. The lecture takes place under the auspices of Ä¢¹½tv, Oxford, where Hart held his chair, and is supported by the Tanner Lectures on Human Values.
The HLA Hart-JH Mance Visiting Fellowship in Philosophy, Law and Politics
The HLA Hart Visiting Fellowship in Law has been endowed in perpetuity, thanks to a transformative gift from the Rt Hon. Lord Mance, (1961, Law). We are grateful to him for this generous contribution to the life of the College, and in recognition of this will rename the Fellowship the HLA Hart-JH Mance Visiting Fellowship in Philosophy, Law and Politics.
Please note that audio, photographs and video footage may be taken throughout our events. These may be used by the College for marketing and publicity in our publications, on our website and in social media or in any third party publication. Please contact the event organiser if you have any concerns or if you wish to be exempted from this activity.