October 2026

About the Conference

The International Conference on Natural Law is an itinerant academic forum that each year convenes leading law faculties of the Catholic world to reflect on a contemporary legal problem from the perspective of natural law and the dignity of the human person.

History of the Conference

Since its first edition, the International Conference on Natural Law has been a meeting place for legal traditions, academic generations and disciplinary perspectives. Each edition has addressed a central problem of contemporary law: bioethics, social justice, the family, property, religious freedom, among others.

The XVIII edition returns to Santiago in 2026, organized by the Faculty of Law of the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile in partnership with four co-organizing universities from Argentina, Peru, the United States and Italy.

The 2026 theme: freedom of expression in the digital era

Freedom of expression is one of the pillars of democratic societies. During the twentieth century it was understood as a freedom against the State: the citizen had to be protected from public censorship. In the twenty-first century, most of the public conversation occurs on private infrastructure, governed by opaque rules and designed according to commercial incentives.

At the same time, generative artificial intelligence tools allow synthetic content —deepfakes, cloned voices, falsely attributed texts— to be produced at marginal cost close to zero. This raises urgent questions about truth, responsibility, attribution of speech and the integrity of the democratic process.

The Conference proposes to address these challenges from the natural law tradition, which offers a framework to articulate the basic human goods —truth, communication, political participation— as criteria for the evaluation of technological regulation.

Academic focus

  • Human dignity as a normative criterion in the design and regulation of digital platforms.
  • Technological governance from a comparative and international law perspective.
  • Digital public sphere, democratic deliberation and the common good.
  • The role of the State, the courts and platforms in the moderation of speech.
  • Generative artificial intelligence, synthetic content and attribution of responsibility.

Organizing committee

The names and affiliations of the organizing committee will be announced shortly.

Co-organizing universities

Five universities from four continents co-organize this edition of the Conference.