2013-2014iglp.law.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/FINAL_A… · 2013-2014. a Alai Aab...
Transcript of 2013-2014iglp.law.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/FINAL_A… · 2013-2014. a Alai Aab...
nurturing innovative approaches to global law and policy
year in review
INSTITUTE FOR GLOBAL LAW & POLICYHARVARD LAW SCHOOL
2013-2014
Albania Algeria Argentina Australia Austria Bangladesh Belarus Belgium Bosnia and Herzegovina Botswana Brazil Bulgaria Cameroon Canada Chile Colombia Cote d’Ivoire Croatia Denmark Egypt Eritrea Ethiopia Finland France Georgia Germany Ghana Greece Guinea Hong Kong Hungary India Iran Ireland Israel Italy Jamaica Jordan Kazakhstan Lebanon Macedonia Malaysia Mauritius Mexico Morocco Netherlands New Zealand Niger Nigeria Norway Pakistan Palestine Panama P.R. China Peru Philippines Poland Portugal Qatar Romania Russia Senegal Serbia Sierra Leone Singapore Slovakia Slovenia South Africa South Korea Spain Sri Lanka Sudan Taiwan Tanzania Thailand The Bahamas Turkey Uganda United Kingdom United States Uzbekistan Venezuela Zimbabwe
2013-2014annual report
IGLP’s Year at a Glance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-2
The Institute
Mission . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Research Agenda . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
The Network . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Scholarly Resources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5-6
Institute Administration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7-8
Faculty Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Councils . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-10
Program Partners & Sponsors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11-12
IGLP Working Formats . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13-14
IGLP Events
The Workshop . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15-16
June 2014 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17-26
Other Events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27-32
Lectures & Presentations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
table
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IGLP Research
Current Research Projects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35-38
Collaborative Research Grants. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39-42
Doha - Santander Research Grants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43-46
People at the IGLP
IGLP Fellows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47-50
Visiting Researchers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51-52
Travel Grants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52-54
Event Participants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55-71
Alumni Opportunities. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73-74
263scholars at the June 2014 events
64countries represented at the June 2014 events
Albania Algeria Argentina Australia Austria Bangladesh Belarus Belgium Bosnia and Herzegovina Botswana Brazil Bulgaria Cameroon Canada Chile Colombia Cote d’Ivoire Croatia Denmark
“I had a great time, and learnt so much (both content and methodology- and I haven't even mentioned the networks) and my academic life is truly reborn.”
-2014 Workshop Participant
“This is the best professional, cultural, and personal experience that I’ve had.”
-2014 Workshop Participant 141universities represented at June 2014 events
year at a glanceIGLP’s2013-2014
“…thank you for creating this space for us to come together”
“An amazing experience. This workshop has broadened my horizons – and moving forward, I see issues of global policy and governance from a totally new lens. ”-2014 Workshop Participant
academic sessions since 2010
702“IGLP is not only organizing a great community, but also building bridges across many lines.”-2014 Workshop Participant
facebook likes1000
“I have been disenchanted, provoked,bewildered - and loved every minute of it!”-2014 Workshop Participant
invited participants since 2010
628164scholars at the 2014 Workshop in Doha
as of July 2014
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mission The Institute for Global Law and Policy (IGLP) at Harvard Law School is a collaborative faculty effort to nurture innovative approaches to global policy in the face of a legal and institutional architecture manifestly ill-equipped to address our most urgent global challenges. Global poverty, conflict, injustice and inequality are also legal and institutional regimes. The IGLP explores the ways in which they are reproduced and what might be done in response. Scholars associated with the Institute are working to understand and map the levers of political, economic and legal authority in the world today. The Institute focuses on young scholars and policy makers who bring new ideas and perspectives to comparative and international legal research and policy. The IGLP aims to facilitate the emergence of a creative dialogue among young experts from around the world, strengthening our global capacity for innovation and cooperative research. We aim to provide a platform at Harvard for new thinking about international legal and institutional arrangements, with particular emphasis on ideas and issues of importance to the global South.
research agenda The Institute is an international collaborative project to foster research and policy dialogue about the structure and potential for global governance and international law affecting pressing issues of global regulation and policy. The Institute aims to foster innovative approaches to global policy and political economy, and new thinking about international legal and institutional arrangements.
At the IGLP, we are convinced that governance is not only rules, institutions and procedures. Ideas also matter. If for a generation everyone thinks an “economy” is an input output mechanism to be managed, and then suddenly everyone thinks an economy is a market for allocating resources to their most efficient use in the shadow of a price system, a great deal has changed. That is also governance. At the IGLP, we encourage research into the genealogy of governance ideas as they have played out in the fields of international law, international economic law, regulatory policy, human rights and development policy.
All of our academic programming is designed to support our research agenda, starting with our signature IGLP Doha Workshop for young scholars, and continuing through opportunities for Workshop alumni and IGLP scholars to build collaborative teams, deepen their thinking and develop research for publication through multiyear participation in our various conferences and other program formats. We also aim to provide a framework at Harvard for students and faculty interested in pursuing innovative and heterodox research on foundational questions of theory and history as well as pressing issues of global policy.
We seek to engage the policy community and to sponsor important transnational dialogue. In recent years, we have convened policy-makers and scholars in Colombia, Chile, Brazil, Thailand, Russia and China, as well as in the United States to engage with our ongoing research activities. We regularly convene international research teams for on‐site investigations of policy directions and experience, through site visits and discussions with policy makers, often followed by an academic conference reflecting a first cut on the findings of the research inquiry.
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challenging expertise
new thinking
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tethe network The IGLP encourages academic collaboration and progressive research to nurture alternative ideas about international law, society, and political economy. We have developed a global network of scholars and policy makers who share our belief that ideas matter, and we have a commitment to cultivating a space for new voices and viewpoints to emerge around ideas about global governance, social justice and economic policy. Our common goal is to better understand how power is exercised in the world today, and how original and critical thinking can transform the ways in which policy experts, intellectual leaders and citizens understand our common global situation.
More than 500 young scholars from more than 50 countries are alumni of our intensive Workshop. Well over 1000 young scholars have joined our online network and participate in our research activities.
The IGLP network portal on our website is designed to strengthen that network and to assist all those who share our critical impulse and concern about the ideas which govern our world to share new ideas, events, research, and experiences with others in the field. This space is designed to be a haven of collaboration and sharing, all with the purpose of advancing global governance thinking and ideas.
Members of the IGLP community are encouraged to reach out to one another to share their work, syllabi and their ideas through the Network News, New Thinking/New Writing, Events of Interest, or Working Papers sections of our website. The community connects with each other by posting on IGLP’s Facebook, following us on Twitter and by signing up to receive our bimonthly e-newsletter.
scholarly resources Fellowship Program
The Fellowship Program offers full or partial student and post‐doctoral fellowship support to a small number of scholars pursuing research in areas related to the IGLP’s ongoing work. Applicants considered for Fellowships are those whose work is challenging, original and focused on progressive and alternative ideas about global law and policy. Often, work of this nature is not supported by mainstream institutional resources, and the IGLP strives to give opportunities for diverse ideas to flourish. IGLP Fellows are integral members of the Institute and provide valuable programming insight and assistance with the execution of our conferences and workshops. The number of Fellowships awarded each year depends upon the available funding.
Visiting Researchers Program
The IGLP accommodates a small number of Visiting Researchers and Visiting Scholars each academic year, funded by outside sources. Visiting Researchers and Scholars apply to do research at Harvard Law School for periods of three months to one year. In making selections, the Institute considers the applicant’s background, field of interest, scholarly achievements, availability of Harvard Law School faculty for consultation in the proposed research area, and English language proficiency. Applicants should have completed their basic legal studies with high academic standing.
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Applicants at a relatively senior stage of their professional career may be designated Visiting Scholars. This designation is made on the basis of the nature of the applicant’s proposal, the expected duration of their research, and prior academic experience. Visiting Scholar applicants are required to be affiliated with a university, research institute or governmental program in their home country.
Collaborative Research Grants
Our Collaborative Research Grant Program provides modest funding to small groups of young scholars who are seeking to carry out substantive research on projects related to the core research mission of the Institute. The IGLP encourages the development of progressive and alternative ideas about international law, society and political economy by supporting provocative and challenging intellectual work that might not otherwise find support from mainstream institutional resources.
Travel Grants
The IGLP provides modest research and travel support to a small number of scholars conducting research in areas closely related to the IGLP’s ongoing work. Applications are open to current Harvard Law School students and alumni of The Workshop. We hope to encourage focus on the life of the mind, on interdisciplinary reading, and on developing the intellectual background to understand and contribute to critical analyses of global law and social justice. Preference is given to current doctoral students and awards are limited to students who have been invited to present their scholarly work at academic conferences.
Doha - Santander Research Grants
The Doha - Santander Grants Program is generously supported by our Leading Sponsor, Santander Universities, to aid research by the IGLP Doha Workshop alumni and faculty pursuing innovative scholarship. Preference is given to work aiming to revitalize the Arab and Islamic traditions of law and governance and engaging issues of comparative law, global law, and policy in Qatar, the Middle East, and North African Region. The grants are intended to further the dialogue which begun at the January IGLP Workshop through long-term research collaboration.
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administrationFaculty Director of the Institute: David Kennedy
David is the Manley O. Hudson Professor of Law at Harvard Law School. He has taught international law, international economic law and policy, legal theory, law and development, and European law. He joined the Harvard Law faculty in 1981 and holds a Ph.D. from the Fletcher School at Tufts University and a J.D. from Harvard. He is the author of numerous articles on international law and global governance. His research uses interdisciplinary materials from sociology and social theory, economics, and history to explore issues of global governance, development policy, and the nature of professional expertise. He has been particularly committed to developing new voices from the third world and among women in international affairs.
Professor Kennedy also has extensive experience as a practicing lawyer, having worked on numerous international projects, both commercial and public, including work with the United Nations, the Commission of the European Union, and with the private firm of Clearly, Gottlieb, Steen and Hamilton in Brussels. A member of the Council on Foreign Relations, he is past Chair of the World Economic Forum’s Global Advisory Council on Global Governance.
At Harvard, he served as Chair of the Graduate Committee and Faculty Director of International Legal Studies. He founded the European Law Research Center at Harvard in 1991 and has served continuously as Faculty Director. He has advised a number of educational institutions on their academic programs, and lectured as a Visiting Professor at numerous universities across the world. In 2008-2009, he served as Vice President for International Affairs, University Professor of Law and David and Marianna Fisher University Professor of International Relations at Brown University.
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Administrative Director: Neal O’Connor
Neal joined the European Law Research Center in 2003. In 2010, with the launch of the new Institute for Global Law and Policy, Neal was appointed Program Manager and in 2012, he became Administrative Director. He oversees the organizational and administrative functions for the Institute. Neal received a B.A. in history from Harvard University.
Events Manager: Kristen Verdeaux
Kristen joined the IGLP in July of 2013 as Events Manager. She has a B.A. in English and Political Science from the University of Connecticut. Kristen specializes in non-profit event planning, program management, and service delivery.
Web & Communications Coordinator: Alexis Brooke Felder
Alexis joined the IGLP in May of 2014 as Web and Communications Coordinator. She has a B.A. in English and Spanish from Simmons College, and a Certificate in Graphic Design from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts (Boston). Alexis is a graphic designer, communications specialist, and photographer.
Program Coordinator: Melinda Peterson
Melinda joined the IGLP in September of 2012. Melinda received a B.A. in Legal Studies and Criminal Justice from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Melinda administers the Institute’s grants and financials, and assists with general office administration.
Program Assistant: Delia Harrington
Delia joined the IGLP in April of 2014 as Program Assistant. She has a B.A. in International Affairs from Northeastern University. Delia assists in event planning and manages several of the Institute’s programs, including the Fellowship and Visiting Researcher Programs.
IGLP Fellows 2014-2015
Lina M. Céspedes-Baez (Colombia) is currently pursuing her S.J.D. degree at the James E. Beasley School of Law, Temple University as a Fulbright Scholar.
Julia Dehm (Australia) is a Ph.D. Candidate at Melbourne University Law School.
Tomaso Ferrando (Italy) is a Ph.D. Candidate at Sciences Po Law School and has been an Italian barrister since 2011.
Maja Savevska (Macedonia) is a Ph.D. Candidate at the GEM PhD School, Erasmus Mundus Joint Doctorate on Globalization, EU and Multilateralism, where she was awarded a full scholarship by the European Commission.
Arnulf Becker (Chile/United States) Arnulf is currently a Visiting Faculty member at the Watson Institute for International Relations at Brown University. Arnulf received his S.J.D. from Harvard Law School.
Zinaida Miller (United States) is a doctoral Candidate in International Relations at The Fletcher School, Tufts University.
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faculty contributorsThe Institute draws on the expertise and experience of a wide range of Harvard Law School faculty. Each year we work closely with faculty on projects concerning global law and policy. Numerous faculty members have mentored our Visiting Researchers and Fellows over the years.
Christine Desan contributes regularly to our program through her work on the history of capitalism and the global economy. Duncan Kennedy is a regular participant in our work on comparative law, globalization and social theory. We have supported clinical projects in Africa developed by Lucie White in the fields of global health policy and human rights. We have supported Janet Halley’s work in the fields of comparative family law, social theory and the feminist legacies of global governance. Gerald Frug’s work on international local government law has sparked a number of events, and we have supported his comparative research on the city as a legal concept.
Janet Halley, Allen Ferrell, Elizabeth Bartholet, Martha Field, Terry Fisher, Mark Ramseyer, Jesse Fried, Steven Shavell, Cass Sunstein, and Scott Brewer have participated in our Spanish training programs co-organized with the Garrigues law firm. Lucian Bebchuck, Reinier Kraakman, Robert Clark, Einer Elhauge, Guhan Subramanian, Allen Ferrell, Howell Jackson and Alan Dershowitz have all been participants in our conferences on corporate law and regulation. We work closely with the graduate program at the law school, encouraging interactions among doctoral students and their faculty colleagues, and are grateful for William Alford’s ongoing engagement and support.
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councilsHonorary CouncilFERNANDO HENRIQUE CARDOSO,
Former President of Brazil
JACQUES DELORS, Former President of
the European Commission
CLAUS-DIETER EHLERMANN, Former
Spokesperson and Special Adviser
to the President of the European
Commission
H.M. FELIPE VI, King of Spain, as
Honorary President of the Real
Colegio Complutense, Madrid, Spain
ALFRED GUSENBAUER, Former
Chancellor of Austria
ALEKSANDER KWAŚNIEWSKI, Former
President of Poland
RICARDO LAGOS ESCOBAR, Former
President of Chile
MARK MALLOCH-BROWN, Former
United Nations Deputy Secretary
General, and Former Minister of
State in the British Foreign and
Commonwealth Office
JOSÉ MANUEL RAMOS-HORTA, Former
President of the Democratic Republic
of Timor-Leste
JACQUES SANTER, Former Prime
Minister of the Grand Duchy of
Luxembourg and Former President of
the European Commission
SURAKIART SATHIRATHAI, Former
Foreign Minister and Deputy Prime
Minister of Thailand
NUR HASSAN WIRAJUDA, Former
Foreign Minister of Indonesia
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Advisory CouncilDANIELA CARUSO, Boston University School
of Law, Boston, MA
MATTHEW CRAVEN, SOAS, University of
London, London, United Kingdom
CHRISTINE DESAN, Harvard Law School,
Cambridge, MA
KAREN ENGLE, University of Texas School of
Law, Austin, Texas
JORGE ESQUIROL, Florida International
University College of Law, Miami, Florida
GERALD FRUG, Harvard Law School,
Cambridge, MA
ANTONIO GARRIGUES WALKER, J&A
Garrigues, S.L.P, Madrid, Spain
JANET HALLEY, Harvard Law School,
Cambridge, MA
DUNCAN KENNEDY, Harvard Law School,
Cambridge, MA
MARTTI KOSKENNIEMI, University of
Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland
JOSÉ MANUEL MARTÍNEZ SIERRA, Real
Colegio Complutense, Cambridge, MA
SALVADOR MEDINA CHAO, Ciudad Grupo
Santander, Madrid, Spain
KERRY RITTICH, University of Toronto
Faculty of Law, Toronto, Canada
LEOPOLD SPECHT, Specht Böhm, Vienna,
Austria
JOSEPH STIGLITZ, Columbia University, New
York, New York
ROMANO SUBIOTTO, Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen
& Hamilton, Brussels, Belgium
LUCIE WHITE, Harvard Law School,
Cambridge, MA
MIKHAIL XIFARAS, Sciences Po Law School,
Paris, France
Academic CouncilTALAL ABDULLA AL EMADI, Qatar University
College of Law, Doha, Qatar
GIANMARIA AJANI, University of Turin,
Turin, Italy
PHILIP ALLOTT, Trinity College, Cambridge
University, Cambridge, England
HELENA ALVIAR, Universidad de Los Andes,
Bogotá, Colombia
JOSE MARIA BENEYTO, Parliamentary
Assembly, Council of Europe, Strasbourg,
France
YISHAI BLANK, Faculty of Law, Tel Aviv
University, Tel Aviv, Israel
HILARY CHARLESWORTH, The Australian
National University, Canberra, Australia
B.S. CHIMNI, Jawaharlal Nehru University,
New Delhi, India
DAN DANIELSEN, Northeastern University
Law School, Boston, MA
DENNIS DAVIS, High Court of Cape Town,
South Africa
JAMES DER DERIAN, University of Sydney,
Sydney, Australia
ALFREDO SAAD FILHO, SOAS, University of
London, London, United Kingdom
GÜNTER FRANKENBERG, Johann-Wolfgang-
Goethe-University, Frankfurt, Germany
CHRISTOPHE JAMIN, Sciences Po Law
School, Paris, France
SHIELA JASANOFF, Harvard Kennedy
School, Cambridge, MA
EMMANUELLE JOUANNET, Sciences Po Law
School, Paris, France
SORAJAK KASEMSUVAN, Chulalongkorn
University, Bangkok, Thailand
ANDREW LANG, London School of
Economics and Political Science, London,
United Kingdom
KISHORE MAHBUBANI, Lee Kuan Yew School
of Public Policy, National University of
Singapore, Republic of Singapore
SUSAN MARKS, London School of
Economics and Political Science, London,
United Kingdom
PRATAP BHANU MEHTA, Centre for Policy
Research, New Delhi, India
HORATIA MUIR WATT, Sciences Po Law
School, Paris, France
VASUKI NESIAH, New York University, New
York, New York
SUNDHYA PAHUJA, Melbourne Law School,
Melbourne, Australia
ILEANA PORRAS, University of Miami School
of Law, Miami, Florida
PHILIPPE SANDS, University College London
Faculty of Laws, London, United Kingdom
CALIXTO SALOMAO FILHO, University of Sao
Paulo Faculty of Law, Sao Paulo, Brazil
HANI SAYED, The American University in
Cairo, Cairo, Egypt
AMR SHALAKANY, The American University
in Cairo, Cairo, Egypt
GUNTHER TEUBNER, Johann-Wolfgang-
Goethe-University, Frankfurt, Germany
CHANTAL THOMAS, Cornell Law School,
Ithaca, NY
DAVID TRUBEK, University of Wisconsin Law
School, Madison, Wisconsin
ROBERT WAI, Osgoode Hall Law School,
York University, Toronto, Canada
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partners & sponsorsQatar Foundation
The Qatar Foundation was established with a mission to lead human, social, and economic development of Qatar, through education and research; making Qatar a vanguard for productive change in the region and a role model for the broader international community. As part of its flagship project, Hamad bin Khalifa University, the Foundation is seeking to establish a global law school and research center in Doha, with a mission to become a leader in new thinking about law and governance and
to revitalize Arab law and governance traditions. An integral part of its law school project is to contribute to higher education worldwide by convening a global network of young scholars of law and governance, and to place young scholars and aspiring leaders from the region in dialogue with global peers. The Foundation aims to extend its global outreach by supporting institutions that share its belief in the values of global dialogue and research, in a way that will help the Foundation fulfill its mission. The Foundation now seeks to support the capacity of the IGLP to develop projects and pursue research of interest to the global community and the region. To obtain more information on the Qatar Foundation, visit their website: www.qf.org.qa
The Qatar Foundation is the Lead Sponsor of our intensive Workshop held in January in Doha, which is hosted by Hamad bin Khalifa University.
Santander Universities
Santander Universities, was created by Banco Santander on the conviction that the best way of contributing to growth and economic and social process is by backing
the higher education and research system. Banco Santander’s commitment to progress finds its expression in the Santander Universities Global Division, whose activities form the backbone of the bank’s social action and enable it to maintain a stable alliance with the academic world in Latin America, China, United States of America, Spain, Morocco, Portugal, United Kingdom, Germany, Poland, Singapore, and Russia. Santander Universities Global Division, a team of more than 2,100 professionals distributed across 17 countries, coordinates and manages Banco Santander’s commitment to higher education. Between 1997 and 2012, Banco Santander channeled $1 billion into sponsorship of academic, research and technological projects in support of higher education. There are now over 1,000 academic institutions receiving support from Banco Santander for the development of academics initiatives including Harvard University and the IGLP. To obtain more information on Santander Universities, visit their website: www.santanderbank.com/us/universities.
Santander Universities is the Lead Sponsor of our June Residential Programing at Harvard, including our Colloquium.
The Real Colegio Complutense
The Real Colegio Complutense, Cambridge, MA, is a non-profit organization established in 1990 by Complutense University of Madrid, Spain to foster scholarly and scientific exchange between Harvard University and Spanish universities and institutions. The Real Colegio Complutense is a founding partner of the IGLP. To obtain more information on the RCC, visit their website: www.rcc.harvard.edu
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Visa International, Inc.
Visa is a global payments technology company that connects consumers, businesses, banks and governments in more than 200 countries and territories, enabling them to use digital currency instead
of cash and checks. Visa has built one of the world’s most advanced processing networks. It’s capable of handling more than 20,000 transactions per second, with reliability, convenience and security, including fraud protection for consumers and guaranteed payment for merchants. Visa does not issue cards, extend credit or set rates and fees for consumers. Visa’s innovations, however, enable its bank customers to offer consumers more choices: Pay now with debit, ahead of time with prepaid or later with credit products. In fact, approximately 70 percent of Visa payment transactions in the United States are debit and prepaid, not credit. Governments here and abroad have switched to digital currency instead of checks for benefits payments and purchasing in order to increase efficiency and lower costs, saving taxpayers money. From the world’s major cities to remote areas without banks, people are increasingly relying on digital currency along with mobile technology to use their money any time, make purchases online, transfer funds across borders and access basic financial services — all of which makes their lives easier and grows economies. To obtain more information on Visa International, visit their website: www.visa.com
J&A Garrigues, S.L.P
Founded in 1941, J&A Garrigues, S.L.P. is one of the longest established law firms in Spain. During the second half of the twentieth century, J&A Garrigues was a central pillar of the Spanish legal profession
and was routinely consulted on all key reforms to Spanish law, particularly during the country’s transition to democracy. Playing key roles in the development of the country and its laws ensured that Garrigues became one of the most knowledgeable and respected law firms in Spain. To obtain more information on &A Garrigues, S.L.P., visit their website: www.garrigues.com.
Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen, & Hamilton
A leading international law firm with 12 offices located in major financial centers around the world, Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP has helped shape the globalization of the legal profession for
more than 60 years. Their worldwide practice has a proven track record for innovation and providing work of the highest quality to meet the needs of our domestic and international clients. In recognition of the firm’s strong global practice, its effectiveness in dealing with the different business cultures of the countries in which it operates, and its success in multiple jurisdictions, Cleary Gottlieb received Chambers & Partners’ inaugural International Law Firm of the Year award. To obtain more information on Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP, visit their website: www.cgsh.com.
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IGLP working formatsThe Workshop
Held in Doha, Qatar each January, the Workshop is an intensive residential program designed for doctoral and post-doctoral scholars and junior faculty. Sponsored by the Qatar Foundation and hosted by Hamad bin Khalifa University, the Workshop brings together more than 100 young scholars and more than 50 senior and junior faculty from around the world for serious research collaboration and debate. While in residence in Doha, participants review current scholarly developments, reconsider canonical texts and network with colleagues from across the world. Our aim is to strengthen the next generation of scholars by placing them in collaboration with their global peers as they develop innovative ideas and alternative approaches to issues of global law, economic policy, social justice and governance. Intensive writing workshops offer participants the opportunity to receive valuable feedback on their own research from their peers and more senior colleagues in small group settings. More than 500 young scholars from over 50 countries count themselves as alumni of the Workshop.
The Pro-Seminars
Pro-seminars are designed for small groups of scholars engaged in collaboration aimed towards publication. They bring together between ten and fifteen scholars by invitation and application, to work on a common topic. They typically meet in June at Harvard to brainstorm their evolving scholarly writing and advance their work towards publication. Pro-seminars are typically convened by senior Harvard Law School or IGLP faculty. The June 2014 Pro-seminar was entitled “The Role of Law in Structures of Global Production,” and explored the role of law in the construction, operation and governance of global value chains and production networks.
The Colloquium
Each June, we convene a Colloquium at Harvard for invited IGLP Faculty, Docents and guests to strengthen our work through intensive discussion and engagement with leading scholars from other disciplines. Each year’s Colloquium pursues a common theme across a range of research fields. In 2012, the Colloquium focused on the political economy of the modern global order. In 2013, we focused on questions of method raised by the effort to think vertically about the relationship between global and local, macro and micro; and to think horizontally about comparison and differentiation among local or national arrangements. The goal of the 2014 Colloquium was to engage in a cross-disciplinary conversation about the mechanics of stability and change within and across fields.
The Conference
In 2013, our first international conference at Harvard brought together over 350 scholars working on innovative approaches to global governance, social justice and economic policy for two days of scholarly exchange. The IGLP Conference will be held every other June at Harvard Law School and is open to all those who are interested in pursuing new thinking about law and global policy, including those who are new to our network as well as IGLP alumni and friends. Our aim is to provide an ongoing opportunity for scholars connected to the Institute to return to Cambridge to present their research, to reconnect with peers from across the globe, and to find new opportunities for collaborative research with other innovative scholars. We will host our second conference in June 2015 at Harvard.
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Workshops and Conferences
The IGLP regularly sponsors conferences and workshops, ranging from informal events at the Harvard Faculty Club to large meetings convening over 100 scholars in Cambridge and Doha, Qatar for intensive discussion. Our most important annual events take place in January and June.
Policy Roundtables
The IGLP periodically sponsors policy roundtables, ranging in duration from one to three days, concerning specific issues important to one or more of the IGLP’s constituencies, in which participants from industry, the practicing profession, government, and academia discuss topics of common interest in a relaxed setting. In recent years, we have held Policy Roundtables in China, Spain and Russia as well as Harvard on topics ranging from new approaches to regulation in developing economies to financial inclusion and new conceptions of international law.
Student Initiatives
The IGLP supports activities organized and led by doctoral students and Visiting Researchers at Harvard Law School. Students often prepare presentations based on their current research or invite smaller groups of students to informal discussions. These formats facilitate ongoing debate about a selection of themes of interest to both IGLP and students and scholars associated with our ongoing work. We regularly provide support for student groups at the school pursuing projects related to our research mandate.
Lectures and Informal Seminars
During the academic year, the IGLP sponsors a variety of lectures and informal seminars in which faculty and professional scholars share ongoing research in the areas of global law and policy. These events, which are generally open to all members of the Harvard community, aim to bring the best new thinking about global law and policy to the community for discussion and debate.
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the workshopFrom January 3-11, 2014, the IGLP held its 5th annual Workshop in Doha, as part of our collaboration with the Qatar Foundation. The Workshop was generously hosted by Hamad bin Khalifa University (HBKU), a member of the Qatar Foundation. This year’s Workshop convened 164 People, including faculty, docents and participants, representing 50 countries and 101 Universities. Qatar offered a perfect location for convening scholars from countries outside the North Atlantic area, allowing us to focus on recent developments in the region and to benefit from synergies with intellectual and cultural activities already underway in Education City.
At the 2014 Workshop we continued our tradition of seeking new ways of deepening the network of collaboration among our Workshop Alumni, and we also invigorated our core program with new participants and themes. We hosted a new group of IGLP alumni Docents, each of whom assisted with the organization of a Workshop Stream or convened a Writing Workshop. We also continued our program for Young Policy Professionals (YPP), designed for young professionals from Qatar and the surrounding region who have an interest in sharing their ideas with global academic peers.
The Workshop again focused on a series of substantive Streams. Exploration of each Stream was led by a team of junior and senior scholars, and was designed to promote discussion of recent scholarly trends and policy problems, as well as classical texts. In 2014 our new themes included: the role of corporate power in global society, the relationships among science, technology, and political power in contemporary societies, and theoretical approaches to plural economic governance. We continued our efforts to stimulate new thinking about the legal foundations of global monetary affairs, economic development policy, global political economy and the struggle for social, political and economic justice. As an extension of the core curriculum the Workshop also featured guest speakers and panel discussions.
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2014 Workshop Streams
The Corporation in Global Society
Conveners: Dan Danielsen (United States)
Northeastern University School of Law, Dennis Davis (South Africa) Judge, High Court of
Capetown, Gary Gereffi (United States)
Duke University. Docent: Grietje Baars (The
Netherlands) The City Law School, City
University of London.
Comparative Legal Studies
Conveners: Dan Brinks (United States) University
of Texas at Austin, Günter Frankenberg (Germany)
Johann-Wolfgang-Goethe University, and
Horatia Muir-Watt (France) Sciences Po Law
School. Docents: Boris Mamlyuk (United States)
University of Memphis School of Law, and Zoran Oklopcic (Croatia & Italy) Carleton University.
Globalization and Labor
Conveners: Kerry Rittich (Canada) University
of Toronto Faculty of Law, and Adelle Blackett (Canada) McGill University. Docent: Vidya Kumar
(Canada) University of Birmingham.
Global Science and Technology Studies
Conveners: Sheila Jasanoff (United States)
Harvard Kennedy School, and Andrew Lang
(United Kingdom) The London School of
Economic and Political Science. Docents: Ben Hurlbut (United States) Arizona State University
and Vesco Paskalev (Bulgaria) European
University Institute.
Human Rights, Global Poverty and Development
Conveners: Jeremy Perelman (France) The
Sciences Po Law School, and Lucie White (United
States) Harvard Law School. Docents: Alejandra Azeuro Quijano (Colombia) Harvard Law School.
and Mohammad Osama Siddique (Pakistan)
Lahore University of Management Sciences.
Human Rights and Social Justice
Conveners: Karen Engle (United States) University
of Texas Law School, Vasuki Nesiah (United
States) New York University, and Ratna Kapur (India) Jindal Global Law School. Docents:
Madelaine Chiam (Australia) Melbourne Law
School, and Paul Clark (United Kingdom) Garden
Court Chambers.
International Economic Law and Regulation
Conveners: Robert Wai (Canada) Osgoode Hall
Law School at York University, and Alvaro Santos (Mexico) Georgetown Law. Docents: Sadeq Bigdeli (Iran) University of Waikato School of Law,
and Nicolas Perrone (Argentina & Italy) London
School of Economics.
International Law / International Relations
Conveners: Friedrich Kratochwil (Germany)
Central European University, and Nathaniel Berman (United States) Brown University.
Docents: Tor Krever (Canada) London School
of Economics, and Nikolas Rajkovic (Canada)
University of Kent Law School.
Islamic Law and Policy
Convener: Intisar Rabb (United States) New
York University School of Law. Docents: Noha Aboueldahab (Egypt) Durham University,
Cyra Akila Choudhury (United States) Florida
International University, Vanja Hamzić (Bosnia &
Herzegovina) SOAS, University of London.
Law and Economic Development
Conveners: Jorge Esquirol (United States) Florida
International University, and Scott Newton
(United States) SOAS, University of London.
Docents: Yugank Goyal (India) University of
Hamburg, Germany, and Onur Ince (Turkey) KOC
University.
Legacies of Colonialism for Global Policy
Conveners: Sundhya Pahuja (Australia)
Melbourne Law School, and Matt Craven (United
Kingdom) SOAS, University of London. Docents:
Luis Eslava (Australia) Melbourne Law School,
and Rose Parfitt (United Kingdom) Melbourne
Law School.
Plenary Lectures and Panel Discussions
“Global Legal Education”
Panelists: Vivek Kanwar (United States) Jindal
Global Law School, Mikhail Xifaras (France)
The Sciences Po Law School, Talal Abdulla Al-Emadi (Qatar) Qatar University College of Law, Dan Danielsen (United States) Northeastern
University School of Law), and Richard Lehun (Canada) McGill Universitt.
“International Adoption and Commercial
Surrogacy”
Panelists: Elizabeth Bartholet (United States)
Harvard Law School, Cyra Akila Choudhury
(United States) Florida International University, David Kennedy (United States) Harvard Law
School, Ratna Kapur (India) Jindal Global
Law School, John Ohnesorge (United States)
University of Wisconsin, Sundhya Pahuja
(Australia) Melbourne University Law School),
and Jeremy Perelman (France) The Sciences Po
Law School.
“Heterodoxy in International Law & Policy”
Speaker: David Kennedy (United States) Harvard
Law School).
“Food Security in the Middle East”
Panelists: Dennis Davis (South Africa) High Court
of Cape Town), Gary Gereffi (United States) Duke
University, Ghada Ahmed (United States) Duke
University, Robert Wai (Canada) Osgoode Hall
Law School, Jorge Esquirol (United States) Florida
International University College, Osama Siddique
(Pakistan) Lahore University of Management
Sciences, Fahad Al Attiya (Qatar) Qatar National
Food Security Program.
“Labor Rights”
Panelists: Adelle Blackett (Canada) McGill
University, Kerry Rittich (Canada) University
of Toronto, and Faouzi Belknani (Qatar) Qatar
University.
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june 2014 at IGLPIn June 2014, the IGLP convened its 5th annual residential program at Harvard Law School. From June 2 - 3 we convened three Research Conferences and hosted 16 IGLP Collaborative Research Teams. From June 4-6 we convened our annual Colloquium along with a new IGLP Pro-Seminar. The Conferences and Pro-Seminars were designed to showcase the new thinking about law and global policy among our network of IGLP alumni and friends. The Collaborative Research Groups provided an opportunity for scholars connected to the Institute to return to Cambridge to present their research, reconnect with peers from across the globe, and find new opportunities for collaborative research with other innovative scholars. IGLP’s June 2014 events demonstrated the breadth of scholarship developed by members of the IGLP network and showcased ongoing and new research projects by IGLP alumni and faculty. The events brought together more than 263 scholars from over 64 countries and 141 Universities. We convened over 154 Academic Sessions on topics ranging from current thinking in the field of Islamic Law and Policy, to exploring the notion of “corporate power.” Harvard Faculty members participated in many of the panels and served as moderators, including David Kennedy, Janet Halley, Sheila Jasanoff and Duncan Kennedy.
The three June 2-3 Conferences included:
Corporate Power in Global Society: Explication, Critique, Engagement, and Resistance, which interrogated the nature, structure, and effects of corporate power, convened by Grietje Baars (The Netherlands) The City Law School, City University of London; Dan Danielsen, (United States) Northeastern University School of Law; Dennis Davis (South Africa) Judge, High Court of Cape Town; Andre Spicer (United Kingdom) Cass Business School, City University of London.
Heterodox Approaches to Islamic Law and Policy, which compared critical and comparative methodologies and approaches to Islamic law and jurisprudence, and explored topics including Islamic legal history, family law, and finance, convened by: Cyra Akila Choudhury, (United States) Florida International University and Vanja Hamzić (Bosnia and Herzegovina) SOAS, University of London.
Global Legal Thought: The Legacies of Heterodoxy, which compared the development and reception of heterodoxy in legal thought in various regions and legal traditions. This conference also offered the opportunity to reflect comparatively on Duncan Kennedy’s contributions to American and global legal thought in anticipation of his retirement in 2015, convened by: David Kennedy (United States) Harvard Law School and Mikhail Xifaras (France) The Sciences Po Law School.
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The June 2014 Pro-Seminar
IGLP Pro-Seminars are designed for small groups of scholars engaged in collaboration aimed towards publication. From June 4-6, 2014 the IGLP convened a Pro-seminar on The Role of Law in Structures of Global Production. Over the course of three days the group met to discuss and explore the role of law in the construction, operation and governance of global value chains and production networks: structures that have been theorized by sociologists and political economists to map the disaggregated modes of production that comprise much of modern global capitalism. Participants examined how diverse local, national, regional, international and transnational legal regimes, together with cultural norms and business practices, shape the expectations, background entitlements, institutional forms and bargaining positions of various players in global production networks. The group considered how those legal entitlements and normative expectations interact with material factors of production to produce particular forms of commercial relations as well as particular attributions of power and value creation. Finally, the group explored how those legal rules and norms come to shape value chain governance, including the allocation of economic surplus and power, as well as the perceived limits of possible regulatory interventions to distribute rents more equitably or to reduce adverse externalities that result from a networked organization of production.
The Pro-Seminar was organized by: Grietje Baars (The Netherlands) The City Law School, City University London, Dan Danielsen (United States) Northeastern University School of Law, Dennis Davis (South Africa) Judge, High Court of Cape Town, Jason Jackson (The Bahamas) Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, and Brishen Rogers (United States) Temple University Beasley School of Law.
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june 2014 at IGLPThe June 2014 Colloquium
The 2014 Colloquium, Does Heterodoxy Have a Politics? A Method? explored the history and contemporary potential for heterodox and critical approaches to scholarly work in the social sciences and law. The 2014 IGLP Colloquium was convened by IGLP Faculty Director David Kennedy (United States) Harvard Law School.
Launched in 2012, the IGLP Colloquium, held each June at Harvard, is designed to offer IGLP Core Faculty, Docents and guests an opportunity to strengthen their work through intensive discussion and engagement with leading scholars from other disciplines. Each year’s Colloquium pursues a common theme across a range of research fields.
The goal of the 2014 Colloquium was to engage in a cross-disciplinary conversation about the mechanics of stability and change within and across fields. What is a heterodox intervention in anthropology, international relations, history, law, or economics? How has the history of critique differed in each field? What are the politics of heterodoxy in each field? Is there a method or many methods associated with a heterodox approach? What have been the game-changing moments, politically and intellectually, for each field? Our guest speakers included experts in several fields as well as IGLP Core Faculty and alumni.
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Panels and Presentations at the 2014 Colloquium Included:
Academia in the Public Realm: The Problem
of Boycotts
Moderator: Zinaida Miller (United States) Tufts
University. Panelists: Dennis Davis (South
Africa) Judge, High Court of Cape Town; Janet Halley (United States) Harvard Law
School; and Rose Parfitt (United Kingdom)
Melbourne Law School.
Bringing Heterodoxy to Bear: New
Approaches to Syria
Moderator: David Kennedy (United States)
Harvard Law School. Panelists: Hani Sayed (Syria) The American University in Cairo; Zoran Oklopcic (Croatia and Italy) Carleton
University; Anne Orford (Australia) Melbourne
Law School; and Usha Natarajan (Australia)
The American University in Cairo.
Circulations of Modernity in East Asia: New
Approaches to Comparative Law
Moderator: Mikhail Xifaras (France) Sciences
Po Law School. Panelists: Dongsheng Zang (China) University of Washington School
of Law; Hajime Yamamoto (Japan) Keio
University Law School; Yun Ru Chen (Taiwan)
Harvard Law School; and Mika Yokoyama
(Japan) Kyoto University School of Law.
Comparative Heterodoxies: Science &
Technology Studies | Critical Legal Studies |
Third World Approaches to International Law
Panelists: Arnulf Becker (Chile) Brown
University; Duncan Kennedy (United States)
Harvard Law School; and Sheila Jasanoff (United States) Harvard Kennedy School.
Critical Approaches to International Criminal
Law
Panelists: Heidi Matthews (Canada) Harvard
Law School; Tor Krever (Canada) London
School of Economics and Political Science;
Paul Clark (United Kingdom) Garden Court
Chambers; Grietje Baars (The Netherlands)
The City Law School, City University London;
and Michelle Burgis-Kasthala (Australia)
University of Edinburgh.
Genealogy of Heterodoxy in Economics
Alfredo Saad Filho (United Kingdom) SOAS,
University of London.
Genealogy of Heterodoxy in History
Judith Surkis (United States) Rutgers
University.
Heterodoxy in International Finance and
Banking
Panelists: Tamara Lothian (United States)
Columbia Law School; and Leopold Specht (Austria) Specht Böhm Rechtsanwalt GmbH,
Vienna.
Genealogy of Heterodoxy in International
Law
Martti Koskenniemi (Finland) University of
Helsinki.
Genealogy of Heterodoxy in International
Relations
Helen Kinsella (United States) University of
Wisconsin-Madison.
The Postcolonial Turn as Heterodox
Intervention
Panelists: Samera Esmeir (Israel/Palestine)
University of California, Berkeley; and Saba Mahmood (Pakistan/United States), University
of California-Berkeley.
World Making and Norm-Making:
Heterodoxy in Science and Technology
Studies
Ben Hurlbut (United States) Arizona State
University, School of Life Sciences; and Sheila Jasanoff (United States) Harvard Kennedy
School.
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June 2014 Colloquium
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June 2014 Colloquium
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june 2014 at IGLPIGLP Faculty Research Projects at June 2014
Research at the IGLP is organized in multi-year projects spearheaded by our affiliated faculty. Together, these projects provide a focal point at Harvard Law School for new thinking in the fields of comparative law, global governance and international law. In June 2014 we were pleased to convene the IGLP Faculty Research Project Team working on Bandung and the Global South: 60 Years of Transformative International Law.
Participants included:
Raj Balakrishnan (United States) Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Arnulf Becker (Chile) Brown University
Matthew Craven (United Kingdom) SOAS, University of London
Luis Eslava (Australia) Melbourne University Law School
Michael Fakhri (Canada) University of Oregon School of Law
Robert Knox (United Kingdom) London School of Economics and Political Science
Vidya Kumar (Canada) University of Birmingham
Boris Mamlyuk (United States) University of Memphis School of Law
Vasuki Nesiah (United States) The Gallatin School, New York University
Sundhya Pahuja (Australia) Melbourne University Law School
Charlotte Peevers (United Kingdom) University of Technology Sydney
Akbar Rasulov (Uzbekistan) University of Glasgow
Hani Sayed (Syria) The American University in Cairo
Mohammad Shahabuddin (Bangladesh) Jahangrinagar University
Mai Taha (Egypt) University of Toronto
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IGLP Collaborative Research Grant Teams at June 2014
In June 2014 the IGLP was pleased to convene six of our IGLP Collaborative Research Grant Teams. The IGLP Collaborative Research Grant Program is designed to provide modest funding to small groups of young scholars who are seeking to carry out ongoing substantive research on projects related to the core research mission of the IGLP. In June 2014 the following IGLP Collaborative Research Grant teams joined us in Cambridge:
Critical Approaches to International Criminal Law (CAICL)
Convener: Heidi Matthews (Canada) Harvard Law School. Contributors: Alejandra Azuero-Quijano (Colombia) Harvard Law School; Grietje Baars (The Netherlands) The City Law School, City University London; Michelle Burgis-Kasthala (Australia) University of Edinburgh; Paul Kingsley Clark (United Kingdom) Garden Court Chambers; Delphine Dogot (Belgium) Sciences Po Law School; Christopher Gevers (South
Africa) Melbourne Law School; Ioannis Kalpouzos (Greece) The City Law School, City University London; Tor Krever (Canada) London School
of Economics and Political Science; Itamar Mann (United States) Georgetown Law School; John Reynolds (Ireland) National University of
Ireland, Galway; Jamie Rowen (United States) University of Toronto; Christine Schwöbel (Germany) University of Liverpool Law School; and Immi Tallgren (Finland) University of Helsinki.
Global Art Law and Cultural Property: Productions of Value
Convener: Vivek Kanwar (United States) Associate Professor of Law, Jindal Global Law School. Contributors: Deval Desai (United Kingdom)
Harvard Law School; Yugank Goyal (India) University of Hamburg; Priya Gupta (United States) Southwestern Law School; Richard Lehun (Canada) McGill University; Lucas Lixinski (Brazil) University of New South Wales; James Parker (United Kingdom) Melbourne Law School;
and Jonathan Walz (United States) The Rollins College.
Legal Education on International Public Law: Rethinking the Latin American Experience
Convener: Paola Acosta (Colombia) Universidad Externado de Colombia. Contributors: Laura Betancur (Colombia) Universidad de Los
Andes; Enrique Prieto Rios (Colombia) Birkbeck School of Law, University of London; and Jimena Sierra (Colombia) Universidad del Rosario.
Locating Nature: Making and Unmaking International Law
Convener: Usha Natarajan (Australia) The American University in Cairo Department of Law. Contributors: Nadia Ahmad (United States)
Sustainable Development Strategies Group; Saptarishi Bandopadhyay (India) Harvard Law School; Aurélien Bouayad (France) Sciences Po
Law School; Julia Dehm (Australia) Melbourne Law School; Hélène Mayrand (Canada) University of Sherbrooke; Roger Merino Acuña (Peru)
University of Bath; Areli Valencia (Peru) University of Ottawa; Karolina Zurek (Poland) Swedish Institute for European Policy Studies.
Indicators as Political Spaces
Convener: Rene Urueña (Colombia) Universidad de Los Andes. Contributors: Dawood Ahmed (United Kingdom) University of Chicago
Law School; Siobhan Airey (Ireland) University of Ottawa; Lina Buchely (Colombia) Universidad de Los Andes; Marie Guimezanes (France)
Toulouse 1 Capitole University; Marta Infantino (Italy) University of Trieste; Jothie Rajah (Singapore), American Bar Foundation; and Michael Riegner (Germany) New York University School of Law.
International Legal Structuralism
Convener: Justin Desautels-Stein (United States) University of Colorado Law School. Contributors: Paulo Barrozo (United States) Boston
College Law School; Arnulf Becker (Chile) Brown University; and Akbar Rasulov (Uzbekistan) University of Glasgow.
See page 39 for more information about these, and all other ongoing IGLP Collaborative Research Grant initiatives.
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June 2014 at IGLP
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June 2014 at IGLP
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International Business Law Program at Centro de Estudios GarriguesMadrid, Spain July 3-9, 2013The IGLP and our Leading Sponsors at the law firm J&A Garrigues, S.L.P held a week-long professional development program at the Centro de Estudios Garrigues in Madrid. The program, which focused on international business law, was designed for young mid-career attorneys in Spain. Harvard Law School Professor Scott Brewer offered one-day courses on International Dispute Resolution and International negotiations and contracts. Harvard Law Professor Jesse Fried taught a course on Corporate Bankruptcy and Financial Regulation as well as a course on Insider Trading. Centro de Estudios Garrigues is a teaching institution affiliated with the Firm and aims to pursue activities in the field of training and the study of and research on legal and economic subjects relating to the Firm’s professional activity: legal, tax, finance, and human resources.
Reforming the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance CourtHarvard Law School, August 8, 2013On August 8, 2013 the IGLP was pleased to co-sponsor a major policy address by U.S. Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) on legislation he’s proposed to reform the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court of Review – collectively, the FISA courts. The senior senator from Connecticut called the court established by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act a “black box” that had remained secret both to the public at large and even to most members of Congress and vowed to continue his fight for passing his proposed legislation, co-sponsored by Senators Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) and Tom Udall (D-N.M.) aimed at addressing the court’s procedural issues. The talk was presented in cooperation with Harvard Law School’s Programs on the Legal Profession, the Human Rights Program, the Berkman Center for Internet and Society, International Legal Studies, and the Harvard University Institute of Politics.
Strategic Management of IP AssetsMadrid, Spain, September 26, 2013On September 26, 2013 the IGLP, along with our Leading Sponsors J&A Garrigues, S.L.P, hosted a seminar in Madrid for Garrigues attorneys on “Strategic Management of IP Assets.” Harvard Law School Professor Terry Fisher and Harvard Business School Professor Felix Oberholzer-Gee presented a joint program on “Strategic Management of Intellectual Property - An Integrated Approach.”
11th Annual Business Law Seminar, IGLP/ Real Colegio ComplutenseHarvard Law School, October 7-9, 2013From October 7-9, 2013 the IGLP and our Leading Sponsor, the Real Colegio Complutense, hosted our 11th Annual Business Law Seminar at Harvard Law School. This year’s event, which focused on “Restructuring of the Financial System and New Negotiation Strategies” featured presentations and roundtable discussions focused on comparative issues between US and European corporate law. Harvard Law School Professors Reinier Kraakman, Steve Shavell, Guhan Subramanian, and Cass Sunstein presented talks at this event.
Our Harsh Logic: A Forum on Israeli Occupation of the Palestinian TerritoriesHarvard Law School, October 17, 2013On October 17, 2013 the IGLP was pleased to sponsor a discussion at Harvard Law School about the landmark work “Our Harsh Logic: Israeli Soldiers’ Testimonies from the Occupied Territories, 2000-2010.” The event, which was convened by Harvard Law School Professor Janet Halley, featured presentations by Avner Gvaryahu, former paratrooper and Dotan Greenvald, former combat soldier with the Israel Defense Forces. The event was co-sponsored by The Harvard Law School Human Rights Program and the Harvard Graduate School of Education’s Civic Education Initiative.
other events
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Property From Below: SYMPOSIUMMIT, February 28, 2014On February 28, 2014, the IGLP co-sponsored a public symposium at MIT on “The Global Commodification of Land.” The symposium resulted from a research project on property rights in land through the Displacement Research and Action Network at MIT, which is a collaborative project between MIT and the University of Louvain, Belgium. The Symposium addressed the key dilemmas of property theory in the context of global commodification of land that has led to widespread dispossession and contributing to the current world food, housing, energy and environmental crises, and explored alternatives to dominant property rights paradigms such as the commons, social mobilization, and peasant rights. Presenters included: Balakrishnan Rajagopal (Department of Urban Studies and Planning, MIT); Eran Ben-Joseph (Head, Department of Urban Studies and Planning, MIT); Olivier DeSchutter (University of Louvain); Philip McMichael (Cornell University); Saskia Sassen (Columbia University); and Ruth Hall (University of the Western Cape); Duncan Kennedy (Harvard Law School).
Book Talk: Innovations in Refugee ProtectionHarvard Law School, March 6, 2014On March 6, 2014, the Harvard Law School Library and the Weatherhead Center for International Affairs, Harvard University and the IGLP co-sponsored a book talk and panel discussion in honor of International Women’s Day and in celebration of Luise Druke’s recently published book, “Innovations in Refugee Protection: A Compendium of UNHCR’s 60 Years Including Case Studies on IT Communities, Vietnamese Boatpeople, Chilean Exile, and Namibian Repatriation.” Book talk panelists included Martha Minow, Harvard Law School Dean, Jonathan Moore, former U.S. Refugee Coordinator, U.S. State Department, and Christianne Lemke, Max Weber Chair in German and European Politics at New York University. Luise Druke is a former Visiting Researcher at the IGLP.
Doing a Distributional AnalysisHarvard Law School, March 17, 2014On March 17, 2014, the IGLP and the Program on Science, Technology and Society at the Harvard Kennedy School co-sponsored a program on “Doing a Distributional Analysis” which focused on new work by IGLP affiliated faculty. Presenters included Isabel Cristina Jaramillo Sierra (Universidad de los Andes) who shared her paper “Uncertainty as Method: Distributional Analysis as Critique and Reconstruction,” Duncan Kennedy (Harvard Law School) who shared his new work “Analyzing Distribution: Ricardo, Marx, CLS,” and Janet Halley (Harvard Law School) who shared her article “Steps in a Distributional Analysis.”
Informal Enforcement of Competition Law: Perspectives from the U.S. and EuropeCenter for European Studies, March 24, 2014On March 24, 2014 at the Center for European Studies, the IGLP co-sponsored the Harvard European Law Association’s Spring Conference, “Informal Enforcement of Competition Law: Perspectives from the U.S. and Europe.” The conference was an opportunity for young antitrust students and practitioners to present and debate their work with prominent antitrust scholars as well as prominent competition enforcement officials. Speakers included: Einer Elhauge (Petrie Professor of Law, Harvard Law School), Damien Geradin (Professor of Law, George Mason University School of Law), and Jacques Steenbergen (Director General in the Belgian Competition Authority).
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How the Law Responds to Unique Catastrophes: Personal Reflections When it Comes to Tragic ChoicesHarvard Law School, April 1, 2014 On April 1, at the Harvard Law School, the IGLP along with the Program on Science, Technology and Society at the Harvard Kennedy School co-sponsored a talk by Ken Feinberg who offered personal reflections on how he became an expert in managing compensation in unique catastrophes. He spoke of the issues he has faced in achieving a sense of justice in the aftermath of tragedy through his various roles and appointments, including serving as Special Master of the U.S. government’s September 11th Victim Compensation Fund, Special Master for TARP Executive Compensation, and as the government-appointed administrator of the BP Deepwater Horizon Disaster Victim Compensation Fund.
Technological Visions and Revisions: An STS WorkshopHarvard Kennedy School, April 4, 2014 On April 4, 2014 the IGLP co-hosted this workshop at the Harvard Kennedy School, which drew together several strands of current research on socio-technical imaginaries in the Program on Science, Technology and Society at the Harvard Kennedy School. Through multiple engagements with new, emerging, and reemerging technologies, the workshop explored the material, discursive, and political resources with which societies create shared visions of what they want, or do not want, from advances in technology. Of primary interest throughout was the connection of remembered techno-scientific pasts to the threats and promises of imagined futures. Alfred Nordmann, from the Technical University of Darmstadt, delivered the keynote address entitled “Beyond Conservation - Revisioning Critiques of Technological Reason.”
Unbound: This Land is Your Land: Remaking Property after NeoliberalismHarvard Law School, April 5, 2014 On, April 5, 2014 at Harvard Law School, the IGLP co-sponsored a day-long conference with the student journal “Unbound: The Harvard Journal of the Legal Left,” entitled, “This Land is Your Land: Remaking
Property After Neoliberalism.” Participants critiqued the property regime that enables the neoliberal order and collectively explored how property law can be re-oriented to promote social flourishing over the needs of capital. Presenters included Harvard Law School Professor Duncan Kennedy and Professor Rashmi Dyal-Chand from Northeastern University School of Law.
Critical Perspectives on Human RightsHarvard Law School, April 8, 2014 On April 8, 2014, at Harvard Law School, the Human Rights Program and the IGLP co-sponsored an event on “Critical Perspectives on Human Rights,” as part of a series to foster discussion around human rights practices and concepts. The event featured Jeanne Charn, a Senior Lecturer on Law at Harvard Law School, in conversation with Meera Shah, who is a Clinical Advocacy Fellow at the Human Rights Program at Harvard Law School. The discussion focused on comparing and contrasting the methodologies of international human rights advocacy projects and projects involving direct client representation. In particular, it explored how these different approaches to legal work address the ethical and pedagogical questions involved in navigating power dynamics, informed consent, and connection to affected communities.
The Modern American Right’s Thinking About Expertise: Taxonomy and ReflectionsHarvard Law School, April 9, 2014On April 9, 2014, the IGLP along with the Program on Science, Technology and Society at the Harvard Kennedy School co-sponsored a talk by Boston College Professor Ken Kersh on “The Modern American Right’s Thinking About Expertise: Taxonomy and Reflections.” In his recent work, Professor Kersch has sought to demonstrate the ways in which modern American conservatism’s cultivation of a core set of symbolic commitments (e.g., the U.S. Constitution) and historical narratives (e.g., about the meanings of the Founding, the Civil War, and the Progressive Era) bridge these divides, unifying and motivating the movement in ways missed by
other events
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political theory’s standard analytic frames. In his talk, he considered the possibility that critiques of, and stories about, science and experts, and their role in the modern regulatory/administrative/social welfare state – what others have variously called the “statutory,” “legislative,” or “policy” state – have been a critical component of this set of unifying narratives and symbols.
Harvard Law School Brazilian Studies Association event featuring Brazilian Secretary of Foreign CommerceHarvard Law School, April 11, 2014On April 11, 2014, the IGLP co-sponsored an event with Brazilian Studies Association which featured Daniel Marteleto Godinho, Brazilian Secretary of Foreign Commerce. The talk was focused on economic and social development in Brazil, focusing on infrastructure.
Science, Identity, and Ethnicity: States and Citizens in Global Knowledge RegimesCenter for Government and International Studies, April 24-25, 2014From April 24 -25, 2014, the IGLP along with the Program on Science, Technology and Society at the Harvard Kennedy School and the Harvard Center for Middle Eastern Studies co-hosted a two-day interdisciplinary workshop focused on Science, Identity, and Ethnicity. Participants sought to understand the extent genetic sciences have expanded or circumscribed the ways of authorizing ethnic and national belonging. How has research in population genetics and human biogeography affected legal and political rights to
citizenship, and territorial disputes? Are biological sciences, technologies, and society entangled to the point of being co-produced, and if so in what ways? The symposium tackled these questions from a global perspective, with the hope of fostering dialogue across disciplinary divides and geographical regions. Nadia Abu El-Haj, Associate Professor of Anthropology at Barnard College & Columbia University delivered the keynote address entitled “The Nature of Politics.”
Prosecutions, Politics and TransitionsDurham Law School (UK), May 6, 2014 On May 6, 2014, the IGLP co-supported this event with the Centre for Criminal Law and Criminal Justice, Law and Global Justice, and Islam, Law and Modernity. This conference addressed the question of the prosecution of political leaders in the Arab region, with a focus on four countries whose leaders were ousted during the Arab Spring uprisings: Egypt, Libya, Tunisia, and Yemen. As much of the transitional justice literature is currently heavy on analyses of the Latin American experience, panelists also considered that region’s varied experiences with transitional justice since the 1970’s. Panelists included: Elin Skaar (Senior Researcher, Chr. Michelsen Institute), Moataz El Fegiry, (former Executive Director, Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies, SOAS Law School), Elham Saudi (Director, Lawyers for Justice in Libya), Greta Barbone (Senior Associate, International Justice Programme, No Peace Without Justice), and Khaled Fattah, (Guest Lecturer, Centre for Middle East Studies, Lund University and non-resident scholar on Yemen, Carnegie Middle East Center).
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Workshop: Global Poverty and Heterodox Development PathwaysSciences Po Law School (France), May 17-19, 2014From May 17-19, 2014 the IGLP and The Sciences Po Law School co-sponsored a Workshop in Paris, France, as part of our ongoing research project on Global Poverty and Heterodox Development Pathways. This workshop explored emerging ideas about organizing political economies that push back against global inequalities. Participants examined emerging ideas in sectors of contemporary global political economies, such as finance, agriculture, industrial organization, supranational governance, political movement, and critique. Participants included: David Kennedy (Professor of Law and IGLP Director, Harvard Law School), Duncan Kennedy (Carter Professor of General Jurisprudence, Harvard Law School), Roy Kreitner (Faculty of Law, Tel Aviv University), Willy Forbath (Lloyd M. Bentsen Chair and Associate Dean of Research, UT Austin School of Law), Dennis Davis (Global Professor of Law, New York University School of Law), Lucie White (Louis A. Horvitz Professor of Law, Harvard Law School), Mushtaq Kahn (Professor, Department of Economics, SOAS London), Olivier de Schutter (Professor of Law, University of Louvain), Lauren Coyle (Doctoral Candidate, Dept. of Anthropology, University of Chicago), Meghan Morris (Doctoral Candidate, Dept. of Anthropology, University of Chicago), and Nate Ela, (Ph.D. candidate in Sociology, University of Wisconsin-Madison).
International Workshop. The Death Penalty: Modern Research Perspectives (History, Law, Politics)Harvard Law School, June 2, 2014On June 2, 2014, the IGLP co-sponsored a day of lectures on the death penalty by experts and scholars to RCC fellows and associates, professors, students of Harvard Law School and other relevant schools and centers of Harvard University. There was an academic discussion about the origins of the death penalty, its evolution and its modern day implications and other key questions related to capital punishment. Other sponsors included: Real Colegio Compultense, Universidad Compultense de Madrid, Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, and Fundación Universitaria Española.
International Digital Business SeminarHarvard Law School, July 7-11, 2014On July 7-11, 2014, the IGLP and Real Colegio Compultense co-sponsored the International Digital Business Seminar organized in collaboration with Instituto Superior para el Desarrollo de Internet (ISDI). The aim of the seminar was to begin a vibrant dialogue on Technology, Internet, Business Models and Entrepreneurship, and Social Networks. It brought together students, professionals and researchers from different backgrounds, who attended lectures delivered by prestigious professors from Harvard University, MIT and Cornell University, as well as acknowledged professionals in the field of Innovation and New Technologies.
Seminar on International TaxationHarvard Law School, July 7-9, 2014On July 7-9, 2014, the IGLP, The Universidad Rey Juan Carlos de Madrid, and the Real Colegio Complutense co-sponsored the Summer Course on International Taxation. The seminar addressed main issues in International Taxation, such as state aids, tax havens, anti-abuse clauses in double taxation conventions, and aggressive tax planning techniques. The so- called “BEPS” (Base Erosion and Profits Shifting), that has been the subject of important research and policy-making initiatives promoted by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and the EU Commission, was also dealt with.
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Lectures and Presentations by Professor David Kennedy
• Conference Convener, “Global Legal Thought: The
Legacies of Heterdoxy,” Harvard Law School, Cambridge,
MA, June 3, 2014.
• “Critique and Speculation,” Heterodox Innovations and
Development Pathways: Mapping, Method, and Critique”
Workshop, Sciences Po, Paris, France, May 18, 2014.
• Plenary Remarks, “Globalization and Legal Education,”
Law and Boundaries Annual International Conference,
Sciences Po, Paris, France, May 19 - 20, 2014.
• “Law and Global Political Economy,” Baldy Center for Law
and Social Policy, SUNY Buffalo Law School, Buffalo, NY,
March 28, 2014.
• “Global Governance and Political Economy,” Cornell Law
School, Ithaca, NY, March 26, 2014.
• Remarks, “Global Governance and Political Economy”
Workshop, Tulane University School of Law, New Orleans,
LA, February 26, 2014.
• Remarks, “The Global Context for Risk Management,” 7th
Annual PwC Global Economic Crime Survey Roundtable,
New York, NY, February 19, 2014.
• Plenary Remarks,”Heterodoxy in International Law &
Policy,” 2014 IGLP Workshop, Hamad bin Khalifa University,
Doha, Qatar, January 3, 2014.
• “Rule of Law and Economic Development after 2015:
The Importance of Choices,” at the conference: “Investing
in the Rule of Law, Justice and Security for the Post 2015
Development Agenda”, Thailand Institute of Justice,
Bangkok, Thailand, November 15-16, 2013.
• “Fostering Peace and Development,” at the conference:
“Dialogue on Diversity, Peace and Diplomacy”, Institute
of Strategic and International Studies (ISIS), Putrajaya,
Malaysia, November 11, 2013.
• Opening Remarks/Keynote speaker, “The New Law of
Economic Development,” at the LANDS Conference, FGV
Law School, São Paulo, Brazil, July 1-4, 2013.
• Panel, “International Law and Global Political Economy,”
“Power, Privilege and the Pursuit of Justice: Legal
Challenges in Precarious Times,” 2013 Annual Meeting of
the Law and Society Association, Boston, MA, June 1, 2013.
• Remarks, “International Law and Religion Working Group
Meeting,” Helsinki, Finland, May 13, 2013.
• “Formulating a Global Agenda, Next Left: Framing a New
Narrative,” FEPS Conference, IDEC-Universitat Pompeu
Fabra, Barcelona, Spain, May 9-11, 2013.
• Remarks, ARPC Council Meeting, Beijing, China, April 23-
25, 2013.
• Speaker, “American Conference Institute’s 29th
National Forum on the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act,”
PricewaterhouseCoopers, New York, NY, April 16-17, 2013.
• Moderator, “Koskenniemi Workshop: Does International
Law Needs a ‘Progressive’ Idea of History?” Temple
University, Philadelphia PA, April 12-13, 2013
• Keynote Panel, “Reducing Poverty and Inequality:
Persistent Challenges and New Solutions,” The Lauder
Institute and the Wharton School, Philadelphia, PA, April
11-12, 2013.
• Interview, “Risk Management and Resilience in Today’s
Global Regulatory Environment,” PricewaterhouseCoopers,
Washington DC, March 28, 2013.
• “Critical Approaches to International Law and Warfare”,
The American University in Cairo, Egypt, March 10, 2013.
• “Global Governance for the Political Economy of Today”,
Rafael del Pino Foundation, Madrid, Spain, February 21,
2013.
• “Risk Management and Corporate Anti-Corruption
Compliance Strategies -- A Discussion with Prof. David
Kennedy”, American Bar Association, Washington, D.C.,
February 14, 2013.
• “Critical Legal Scholarship”, Birkbeck Law School, London,
January 24, 2013.
• “Law and Global Political Economy”, IGLP Workshop, Doha,
Qatar, January 11, 2013.
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Rethinking Law and Finance in the Global Economy
This project, organized by Christine Desan (United States) Harvard Law School, of our Advisory Council, focuses on the lessons of heterodox and institutionalist traditions in both economic and legal science for understanding global political economy in the aftermath of the crisis. We are particularly interested in the relationships among private law, private ordering, national regulation, and opportunities for multilateral governance or coordination. We are exploring the significance of disarticulation and intended inefficiencies in global systems in avoiding systemic risk – when introduced both within the transnational governance of private financial institutions and through regulation. The project focuses on the legal structure of money, credit, and financial liquidity. It considers capital dynamics as a matter engineered over time by different government, non‐governmental organizations and private actors, paying particular attention to the ways in which capital dynamics cross borders, studying the domestic and global dimensions of capital dynamics in tandem. During the 2012-2013 academic year, we co-sponsored a graduate student-faculty research seminar on Financial Capitalism, which focused on the structures of finance and money, with an eye towards the financial crisis.
Expertise and Governance
This project aims to strengthen research linking efforts to understand the role of expertise in global governance among IGLP scholars with parallel work undertaken in the Science and Technology Studies field. The focal point for collaboration has been a series of lectures, research workshops, and an inter-faculty reading group organized by IGLP Director David Kennedy (United States) Harvard Law School, and Sheila Jasanoff (United States) Harvard Kennedy School of Government. Questions under discussion include: Who are experts, whom do they represent, what are the sources of their authority, and how can expertise be held accountable? What kinds of institutions employ expertise, and what are the organizational characteristics of such institutions? How does the growing global reliance on experts affect the quality, effectiveness, and accountability of public policy and governance? Through readings and/or presentations from several fields—including law, anthropology, history, sociology, and science and technology studies—the reading group considers the ways expertise is defined, constituted, challenged, defended, or defeated in contemporary societies. The research initiative is supported by a seminar jointly taught by Jasanoff and Kennedy at Harvard Law School and the Harvard Kennedy School of Government. each spring.
Global Genealogy of Family Laws
The rise of colonialism, capitalism, liberalism, modernity, and nationalism across much of the world was strongly inflected by the idea that legal and social life divides naturally into two opposite orders – the market and the family. The idea was that the market was or should be governed by contract law that would ideally be uniform across the world and that would enable contracts giving effect to the will of the parties; while the family was or should be governed by family law that gave effect to the spirit of each national people and that enforced interpersonal duties. The idea is so pervasive that it seems inevitable that commercial law will be uniform and western everywhere and that family life, gender and sexuality will be local and “different.” It also is so structural that it helps to explain how political economy imagines itself to encompass everything crucial about global governance while chronically “forgetting” the family, gender and sexuality. This IGLP project, led by Harvard Law School professor Janet Halley (United States), seeks to compare the spread of this idea and its various implementations across the world, both in the formation of colonial relations and in the breakdown of the colonial system. We believe that by understanding it genealogically and comparatively, we can better pry away the glue fixing us to it even today.
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Global Poverty and Heterodox Development Pathways: Mapping, Method and Critique
This Project, which is led by Harvard Law Professor Lucie White and Sciences Po Law Professor Jeremy Perelman, is a collaborative effort among critical law and development scholars to present, map, and critique alternative development pathways that are emerging in the confused phase of the post-Washington Consensus. The initiative was launched as a Pro-Seminar in 2012 where members of the group presented short papers that tease out the methodological features of their respective approaches, as well as the distributional effects of the developmental pathways that they identify. In May 2014 The IGLP and Sciences Po Law School co-sponsored a Workshop in Paris, France, May 17-19, 2014 as part of our ongoing research project on Global Poverty and Heterodox Development Pathways. This workshop explored emerging ideas about organizing political economies that push back against global inequalities. Participants examined such emerging ideas in sectors of contemporary global political economies, such as finance, agriculture, industrial organization, supranational governance, political movement, and critique.
Bandung and the Global South: 60 Years of Transformative International Law
The Bandung Conference of April 1955 brought together twenty-five countries to oppose colonialism and neocolonialism and develop forms of political, economic and cultural cooperation across the Third World. The legacies of the Bandung Conference have long reach within critical traditions in international law. This project brings together scholars who have been influenced by the Bandung Conference and seeks to provide an opportunity for them to reflect on the legacies of the conference that animate their work today and the ways they can think about alternative futures going forward. There are many intersecting and overlapping conversations that Bandung inspires amongst critical international law scholars. Some contributions will provide more historical analysis on the conference and its milieu; others will focus on more contemporary themes that resonate with Bandung’s legacies of South-South cooperation and anti-imperialism. Some ground their interventions in Third World Approaches to International Law (TWAIL); others may locate it within the many spaces after nationalism in their countries. The project has been defined quite broadly to enable a range of different kinds of contributions with the goal of producing a scholarly volume for publication. This project has been organized by Vasuki Nesiah (United States) Harvard Law School, of our Academic Council, with the support of IGLP Docents Luis Eslava (Australia) University of Melbourne Law School), and Michael Fakhri (Canada) University of Oregon School of Law. The members of this project convened a series of meeting at Harvard Law School in June 2014.
Heterodox Approaches to Islamic Law and Policy
This project, which is led by Cyra Akila Choudhury (United States) Florida International University College of Law, and Vanja Hamzić (Bosnia and Herzegovina) University of London, and advised by Harvard Law Professor Intisar Rabb (United States), explores current thinking in the field of Islamic Law and Policy. Specifically, it brings together a diverse group of established and emerging scholars to share critical and comparative methodologies and approaches to Islamic law and jurisprudence. Scholars from law, history, political science, anthropology, economics, and other social sciences share research on topics including Islamic legal thought, legal history, family law, finance, and the arts. The organizers of this project convened a two-day conference at Harvard Law School in June 2014.
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Corporate Power in Global Society: Explication, Critique, Engagement, and Resistance
This project, convened by Dan Danielsen (United States) Northeastern University School of Law, Dennis Davis (South Africa) High Court of Cape Town, and Jason Jackson (United States) Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania), explores the role of law in the construction, operation and governance of global value chains and production networks: structures that have been theorized by sociologists and political economists to map the disaggregated modes of production that comprise much of modern global capitalism. Research is focused on examining how diverse local, national, regional, international and transnational legal regimes, together with cultural norms and business practices, shape the expectations, background entitlements, institutional forms and bargaining positions of various players in global production networks. Taken into consideration are how legal entitlements and normative expectations interact with material factors of production to produce particular forms of commercial relations as well as particular attributions of power and value creation. The group also explores how those legal rules and norms come to shape value chain governance, including the allocation of economic surplus and power, as well as the perceived limits of possible regulatory interventions to distribute rents more equitably or to reduce adverse externalities that result from a networked organization of production. The organizers of this project convened a two-day conference as well as a Pro-Seminar at Harvard Law School in June 2014.
Project on Global Financial Regulation and Financial Inclusion
This project, supported by IGLP’s Leading Sponsor, VISA International, encompassed inquiries into three related areas: liquidity in the global economy, including foundational research on the nature of global liquidity and capital as legal institutions; financial inclusion and banking services for the “unbanked” as an aspect of development policy; financial service regulation in emerging markets and alternative paths to economic development. Through a series of sponsored student and faculty research projects and public policy discussions we sought to develop a transnational research network of young scholars and IGLP faculty working on research themes related to global financial regulation. The initiative’s inaugural event was a policy workshop on March 30, 2012, which brought scholars from the IGLP network into sustained conversation with high-level government officials and industry representatives. In August 2012, the IGLP convened a research mission and workshop in Bangkok focused on new financial services regulation and development strategies in the emerging markets of the ASEAN region. In 2012 and 2013, the initiative sponsored a competitive research grant program for young scholars.
The Next Left – The Challenges and Opportunities for Social Democratic Politics in a Global Economy
This project, which we are co-sponsoring with Dr. Alfred Gusenbauer (Former Chancellor of Austria) of our Honorary Council, encourages dialogue among those rethinking the politics of the left after globalization in various regions of the world, with a particular emphasis on the dynamics within Europe and between Europe and Latin America. The IGLP convened a meeting of the group at Harvard Law School in April 2012. On May 10 -11, 2013, the IGLP co-sponsored the policy roundtable, “Next Left: Framing a New Narrative”, in Barcelona, Spain. The event explored topics such as restoring a sense of politics, distinguishing modern progressivism, and building a welfare society. IGLP will cosponsor a further exploration of these themes in 2014.
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Law and the New Developmental State
Law and the New Developmental State was a collaborative faculty project led by IGLP Advisory Council Member David Trubek that sought to examine the modern revival of the developmental state. This project, co-sponsored with the network on Law and the New Developmental State (LANDS) explored relations between the legal order and new state policies in Brazil, Mexico, Colombia and Venezuela. As part of this initiative the IGLP co-sponsored a seminar and research mission to Brazil in July 2013 which explored the emerging forms of new state activism in Brazil and elsewhere. In July 2013, research done for the LANDS initiative resulted in the publication of “Law and the New Developmental State: The Brazilian Experience in Latin American Context“. The project was spear-headed by David Trubek (United States) University of Wisconsin, in conjunction with other IGLP alumni including Diogo Coutinho (Brazil) University of São Paulo Law School, Mario Schapiro (Brazil) Fundação Getulio Vargas/São Paulo Law School, Shunko Rojas (Argentina) Harvard Law School, Alvaro Santos (Mexico) Georgetown Law School), Michelle Ratton Sanchez Badin (Brazil) Fundação Getulio Vargas/ São Paulo Law School), and Helena Alviar Garcia (Colombia) Universidad de los Andes Law School. The book explores the emergence of a new developmental state in Latin America and its significance for law and development theory.
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T collaborative research grantsThe IGLP Collaborative Research Grant Program is designed to provide modest funding to small groups of young scholars seeking to carry out substantive research on projects related to the core research mission of the IGLP. Through the Research Grants Program, we seek to facilitate innovative group research and writing projects in these fields, and to deepen collaboration among our network of Harvard Law School graduate students, IGLP Workshop alumni, and IGLP faculty. These Grants are designed for small teams of two or more scholars. Preference is given to groups whose ideas or projects emerged out of the IGLP’s Workshop.
Collaborative Research Grants awarded in 2014 inlcude:
Global Art Law and Cultural Property: Productions of Value
Convener: Vivek Kanwar (United States) Jindal Global Law School.
Contributors: Deval Desai (United Kingdom), Harvard Law School; Yugank Goyal (India) University of Hamburg; Priya Gupta (United States) Southwestern Law School; Richard Lehun (Canada) McGill University; Lucas Lixinski (Brazil) University of New South Wales; James Parker (United Kingdom) Melbourne Law School; and Jonathan Walz (United States) Rollins College.
Description: If the art market were a country, it would be the 67th largest country in the world by GDP, and yet there is little understanding of the production of value in art practice and its legal regulation. This project will explore the potential for new methodologies to contribute to art law: from critical legal studies, science and technology studies, law and economics, archaeology, legal aesthetics, and value-chain analyses.
Indicators as Political Spaces
Convener: Rene Urueña (Colombia) Universidad de Los Andes.
Contributors: Dawood Ahmed (United Kingdom) University of Chicago; Siobhan Airey (Ireland) University of Ottawa; Lina Buchely (Colombia) Universidad de Los Andes; Marie Guimezanes (France) Toulouse 1 Capitole University; Marta Infantino (Italy) University of Trieste; Jothie Rajah (Singapore) American Bar Foundation; and Michael Riegner (Germany) New York University School of Law.
Description: Since the early 1990s, indicators have played an important role in reshaping governance, policy, and the parameters of law. In exploring the new political spaces that are opened up by qualitative technologies of governance, this group will examine how indicators are used to perpetuate, shift, or resist power relations, and to achieve or prevent social change. Is global power experienced differently if it is exercised through an indicator? Does the emphasis on numbers take attention away from context, history, and questions of power?
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International Legal Structuralism
Convener: Justin Desautels-Stein (United States) University of Colorado Law School.
Contributors: Paulo Barrozo (United States) Boston College Law School; Arnulf Becker (Chile) Brown University; and Akbar Rasulov (Uzbekistan) University of Glasgow.
Description: This research initiative will re-examine the works of international legal scholarship influenced by “structuralism” from the 1980s forward (David Kennedy’s “International Legal Structures” and Martti Koskenniemi’s “From Apology to Utopia”. The group will meet at New York University in the fall of 2014 to explore the current application of legal structuralism in international legal scholarship, now a generation later. The group aims to produce an edited volume for publication.
Legal Education on International Public Law: Rethinking the Latin American Experience
Convener: Paola Acosta (Colombia) Universidad Externado de Colombia.
Contributors: Laura Betancur (Colombia) Universidad de Los Andes; Enrique Prieto Rios (Colombia) Birkbeck, University of London; and Jimena Sierra (Colombia) Universidad del Rosario.
Description: This project aims to build a working academic platform in Latin America for the promotion of interdisciplinary and critical teaching of Public International Law. Although Latin America has long been a source of intellectual and political innovation in international law, the contemporary scholarly tradition is often characterized by a dogmatic form of teaching, based on a reproduction of a Western approach. The group hopes to generate a regional movement organized around rethinking approaches to teaching and researching in the field.
Locating Nature: Making and Unmaking International Law
Convener: Usha Natarajan (Australia) The American University in Cairo.
Contributors: Nadia Ahmad (United States) Sustainable Development Strategies Group; Saptarishi Bandopadhyay (India) Harvard Law School; Aurélien Bouayad (France) Sciences Po Law School; Julia Dehm (Australia) Melbourne Law School; Hélène Mayrand (Canada) University of Sherbrooke; Roger Merino Acuña (Peru) University of Bath; Areli Valencia (Peru) University of Ottawa; and Karolina Zurek (Poland) Swedish Institute for European Policy Studies.
Description: This project aims to locate nature as a central disciplinary concept in the international legal field, alongside sovereignty, jurisdiction, trade, and development. The project steps beyond the category of “international environmental law,” urging the unmaking and reformulation of central disciplinary tenets to encapsulate healthier understandings of nature. The group will explore ideas of the ‘human’ that underpin global law and policy, including the relationship between human rights law and the environment, environmental justice, and ‘environmentality,’ and the evolution of new areas of expertise.
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T collaborative research grantsOngoing IGLP Alumni Collaborative Research Initiatives include:
Critical Approaches to International Criminal Law (CAICL)Organized by: Heidi Matthews (Canada) Harvard Law School; Alejandra Azuero-Quijano (Colombia) Harvard Law School; Grietje Baars (The Netherlands) The City Law School, City University London; Michelle Burgis-Kasthala (Australia) University of Edinburgh; Paul Kingsley Clark (United Kingdom) Garden Court Chambers; Delphine Dogot (Belgium) Sciences Po Law School; Christopher Gevers (South Africa) Melbourne Law School; Ioannis Kalpouzos (Greece) The City Law School, City University London; Tor Krever (Canada) London School of Economics and Political Science; Itamar Mann (United States) Georgetown Law School; John Reynolds (Ireland) National University of Ireland, Galway; Jamie Rowen, University of Toronto; Christine Schwöbel (Germany), University of Liverpool Law School; and Immi Tallgren (Finland) University of Helsinki.
Description: Mainstream debates in the international criminal law (ICL) field by and large do not examine the complicities of ICL in injustice and conflict. In contrast, CAICL aims to uncover and understand the exclusions and biases in the contemporary understanding of ICL and to question the assumptions that inform the field. In so doing, the Group hopes to identify and assemble an expanded range of sites of critique of (and within) ICL. With IGLP collaborative research support, in 2014 CAICL produced an edited collection, “Critical Approaches to International Criminal Law: An Introduction” (Christine Schwöbel, ed., Routledge).
Turf and Texture: Narrating the Legal InternationalOrganized by: Lucas Lixinski (Brazil) University of New South Wales; Nikolas M. Rajkovic (Canada) University of Kent Law School; and Surabhi Ranganathan (India) King’s College Cambridge.
Description: Current debates in international law are informed by narratives about what the international legal order “is” or “should be.” Dominant labels include: “global administrative law,” “constitutionalization of international law,” “international legal pluralism,” and “fragmentation of international law.” While these narratives attempt to explain alleged convergences and divergences of international legal rules and institutions, little work has scrutinized the contribution of these narratives to an idea of the “legal international.” This project aims to compare and analyze these narratives across specific specialized regimes in order to understand how they function, and to evaluate their impact on positive international law.
Global Law in ContextOrganized by: Luis Eslava (Colombia) Melbourne Law School; Vanja Hamzić (Bosnia & Herzegovina) SOAS, University of London; Vidya Kumar (Canada) University of Birmingham; Yoriko Otomo (Australia) SOAS, University of London; and Henrique Carvalho (Brazil) King’s College London.
Description: This project responds to the inadequacy of current global law texts in addressing the rich variety of ways in which law is being produced, globalized and used across jurisdictions, scales of governance and social contexts. The group will generate an introductory undergraduate textbook, “Global Law in Context,” that will offer fresh and under-explored perspectives on global law as it relates to core legal subjects. The book will explore the plurality of mechanisms, rationalities, epistemologies, approaches, legal concepts and institutional arrangements that give a global shape to particular legal fields. It will provide an understanding of how global law is being constituted both as a new subject of knowledge and as a mode of practice and reasoning. At the same time, it will examine how existing (and emerging) understandings of global law build on, reinforce, and conflict with competing conceptions of law and globalization that are used to characterize the relationship between the Global North, Global South and elsewhere. Our textbook will be followed by a companion collection of essays entitled, “Global Law: Problems and Promises of a Concept.”
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Rethinking Political EconomyOrganized by: Jason Jackson (United States & The Bahamas) Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania; and Anush Kapadia (United States) City University London.
Description: This project seeks to address the narrow nature of academic and policy discourse around the socioeconomic and governance challenges we face, epitomized by the financial crisis, but also in long-standing debates on economic development and global governance. It seeks to promote new thinking on economic governance by analyzing the distributional implications of the crisis and how the responses to it were constructed through political contestation, rather than the dominant (depoliticized) view of these being technocratic outputs from “experts.” Pursuing Your Enemies in the South: International Law and the War Against Crime and TerrorOrganized by: Arnulf Becker (Chile) Brown University; Justin Desautels-Stein (United States) University of Colorado Law School; John Haskell (United States) Mississippi College School of Law; Akbar Rasulov (Uzbekistan) University of Glasgow; and Vivek Kanwar (United States) Jindal Global Law School.
Description: Legal experts have explored the tensions between new forms and goals of warfare and the traditional law of war. Western states with strategic interests and military capabilities to pursue their enemies by using armed force beyond their own frontiers take an expansive reading of the law of war. On the contrary, international lawyers situated in the West, but who see the law from the perspective of the interest of the international community, generally advance a more restrictive interpretation of the law of war. Remarkably, however, there is no view interpreting rules and balancing policy objectives in light of the interests and position of those most commonly affected by the new modes of military intervention and conflict: weaker states of the semi-periphery. The collection that the group will produce will attempt to fill this gap. Before and After Method: Histories and Sociologies of International LawOrganized by: John Haskell (United States) Mississippi College School of Law; Akbar Rasulov (Uzbekistan) University of Glasgow; Alejandro Lorite Escorihuela (Colombia) The American University in Cairo; and Umut Özsu (Canada) University of Manitoba.
Description: This two-year project on the methodologies of international legal scholarship will attempt to “sociologize” the enterprise of international legal historiography. Broaching international legal history as a field of competing projects driven by rival visions of world order and state sovereignty, this enterprise will contribute to the increasingly self-reflexive literature on the sociology of international legal thought and practice.
Critical Approaches to Human RightsOrganized by: Aziza Ahmed (United States) Northeastern University School of Law; Michelle Burgis-Kasthala (Australia) University of Edinburgh; and Zinaida Miller (United States) The Fletcher School, Tufts University.
Description: This project will examine critical approaches to human rights with an eye towards understanding where and how the critiques have become absorbed into mainstream human rights work without significant transformation of the field.
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T Doha-Santander research grantsThe Doha - Santander Grants program is generously supported by Santander Universities. The initiative supports research by IGLP alumni and faculty pursuing innovative scholarship aiming to revitalize the Arab and Islamic traditions of law and governance and to explore issues of comparative law, global law, and policy in Qatar, the Middle East, and North African Region. The grants are intended to further the dialogue begun at The Workshop through long-term research collaboration.
Collaborative Grants
Critical Approaches to Islamic Law and Economy II
Principal Investigators: Karen Rhone (USA), Doctoral Fellow, University of Chicago, and Laura Elder (USA), Assistant Professor, Saint Mary’s College
This project emerged out of Karen’s earlier Santander Grant Project on Islamic Law and Economy, which she launched in 2013. This project is focused on questions of Islamic law and policy that address genealogies of knowledge production and expertise, particularly those that coalesce around notions of moral economy, moral finance, and the resultant connections, and disconnections, to modes of global law and policy.
Chinese and Indian Land Grabs in Africa: Economic Imperialism?
Principal Investigators: George Forji Amin (Finland), PhD Candidate, University of Helsinki, and Razak Jaha (Ghana), Assistant Lecturer, University Cape Coast
This project investigates recent land acquisition patterns in Sub-Saharan Africa by Chinese and Indian investors in order to assess their effects on the proprietary rights of the African populace and their socio-economic impact on the livelihood of the latter. The researchers expect that analysis of these relatively new instruments of south-south economic hegemony may challenge the view that the “Third World” is inherently anti-imperialistic, enriching the literature on Third World Approaches to International Law while questioning the wisdom among African political elites of considering China and India as “Third World friends.”
Individual Grants
Plural Customs and Formalization: Land Registration in Ethiopia
Mekonnen Ayano (Ethiopia), S.J.D. Candidate, Harvard Law School
This study analyzes the relationship between the plurality of customs and socio-economic relations respecting land in Ethiopia and the ongoing land registration program. The research will map customary practices and the history of land title and registration systems, examine theories justifying formalization, and analyze the consequences of the current formalization model. The work aims to develop
alternative formalization procedures that could minimize damage to customary titles, practices and traditions. The grant will support field research in the Dugda district (Ethiopia) to identify the process of rural land registration and to examine whether and how it interferes with customary property titles.
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Women in the new legal profession in India
Swethaa Ballakrishnen (United States), Ph.D. Candidate, Stanford University
Using in-depth interviews and new survey data, this project explores the institutional emergence of new legal professional spaces in India with egalitarian advantages for women legal professionals. As elsewhere, legal practice in India has been a male-dominated profession. Yet data suggests that women are less disadvantaged in new “global” legal workspaces in India emerging in the wake of market liberalization. These findings challenge conventional
explanations of the persistence of professional gender hierarchy and of the organizational homogenizing impact of globalization. The grant will support comparative study of women lawyers working on global work in global firms, in traditional law practice, and those doing non-global work in global firms.
Authority and Islam: An Ethnography of Fatwa in Myanmar
Melissa Crouch (United States), Research Fellow, National University of Singapore
This ethnographic exploration of religious authority in Myanmar will use the practice of fatwa (Islamic legal opinions) to explore the contours of authority among the Islamic communities in Myanmar and to enrich our understanding of authority in Southeast Asia. The research will focus on the Islamic Religious Affairs Council, one of the peak Islamic bodies in Myanmar to issue fatwa, primarily in relation to questions of marriage, inheritance and divorce. The grant
will support field research in Yangon and Mandalay, Myanmar, including interviews and the collection of primary materials.
Towards an Interruptive History of Islamic Law
Vanja Hamzić (Bosnia and Herzegovina), Lecturer, SOAS, University of London
This project aims to identify factors shaping the Islamic legal tradition that have been overlooked in much Islamic law historiography, including cyclical globalization, vernacular knowledge systems, cultural revolutions, crude periodizations, and modernist re-configurations. The project began by assessing the major sources of Islamic legal historiography, and then focusing on issues befalling ‘scripturalist’ and ‘new historian’ works
and their authors, including those of early Muslim imperialism and European colonialism. Earlier phases of the project, also supported by Doha - Santander grants, focused on archival and ethnographic work in Pakistan (2011), Egypt (2012), and Palestine (2013). This grant will support a third phase of research: a case study of newly emerging literature on the Mamluk historians of Islamic law and society undertaken through archival work in the UK, including translation and acquisition of research materials.
Constitutional Reform and Women’s Rights in Today’s Tunisia
John Hursh (United States), LL.M. Candidate, McGill University, Centre for Human Rights and Legal Pluralism
This project will deepen our understanding of the potential for local and international participation in legal reform and constitutionalization in Islamic majority nations, using the example of the Tunisian constitution’s provisions on women’s rights and gender equality. The grant will support travel to meet with influential academics, women’s rights supporters,
and civil society organization leaders in Tunisia to discuss their role in securing a gender equality provision within the new constitution.
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Individual Grants (Continued)
Islamic Practices of International Heritage Protection & the Politics of Regionalism in International Law
Lucas Lixinski (Brazil), Lecturer, University of New South Wales
This project examines the (relatively sparse) participation of Islamic countries in the international heritage work of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) in light of the international heritage protection practices of the Islamic Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
(ISESCO). The project will interrogate the politics of regionalism in international law, examining Islamic traditions of international law-making, and standard-setting, and the relationships between the Islamic tradition and universal-aspiring bodies.
Islamic Law and the Struggle for Governance in Somalia
Mark Massoud (United States), Assistant Professor, University of California, Santa Cruz
This project will contribute to scholarship on the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region by using the case of Somalia to illuminate how law (including Islamic law) plays a role in state formation and governance. Building on research in Sudan and Somalia, this interdisciplinary study of law and development
focuses on how lawyers, activists, and community leaders use legal mechanisms to build peace and security. The study combines ethnographic fieldwork in Somaliland and archival research at the British Library. The grant will also support additional qualitative interviews in summer 2014.
Managing Foreign Investment in Natural Resources: Can Colombia Learn from Qatar?
Nicolás Perrone (Argentina), Assistant Professor, Universidad Externado de Colombia
This project explores the lessons Colombia may learn from Qatar’s laws on foreign investment in natural resources. The natural resource boom in South America makes the management of natural resources a policy priority for
countries like Colombia. Harnessing foreign investment without a loss of control or benefit has been a recurring challenge. Gulf countries, including Qatar, have moved from concession to joint venture agreements for the production of oil and gas in the last thirty years, allowing a higher degree of control and giving the government voice and authority over operations, risks and benefits. Although these alternative structures for foreign investment were discredited by the World Bank and the OECD during the nineties, this project examines the potential relevance of the Qatari experience for resource management in Colombia.
Doha-Santander research grants
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G20 “outreach” to Islamic and MENA Region NationsSusan Harris Rimmer (Australia), Director of Studies at the Asia-Pacific College of Diplomacy, Australian National University
This project investigates whether Muslim nations represented on the G20 (Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Indonesia) feel a responsibility to provide leadership in the G20 in ways influenced by Islamic conceptions of finance and banking, and whether and how these nations provide outreach about their G20 discussions to other Islamic states or Middle East and North Africa
(MENA) countries. The study will explore the success of the “outreach” strategy—diplomatic meetings and communications strategies used by the host state to let the rest of the international community know the priorities of the G20 Summits—with particular focus on the Islamic world and the MENA region. The grant will support research in Jakarta, Saudi Arabia and Turkey.
The Reconfiguration of Migration through Islamic Finance
Shanthi Senthe (Canada), Ph.D Candidate, Osgoode Hall Law School
This research project explores the contours of Islamic finance within non-Islamic jurisdictions, its ‘legal’ integration into the financial system, and its links to remittance and migration patterns using Sri Lanka as a case study. The study supported by this grant—drawing upon earlier qualitative research in Sri Lanka on the regulation of financial inclusion—will examine the specific conditions propelling the rise and extension of Islamic finance in specific
non-Islamic jurisdictions and the ways in which Islamic finance has transformed the financial regulatory landscape and influenced national dialogue on migration issues.
The Role of Ethnicity in the Political Organization of Nation-States: The Case of Uyghur Muslims in China
Mohammad Shahabuddin (Bangladesh), Assistant Professor, Chairman, Department of Law & Justice, Jahangrinagar University
Although ethnic conflicts typically result from a number of inter-related issues, this research focuses on the tension between two political ideologies: the secular political ideology of the Communist Party of China and the ever-increasing salience of Islam as a political ideology
among Uyghur Muslims. The study aims to examine the concept of statehood in Islamic jurisprudence, and address its compatibility with nationalist movements by Muslim minorities along the religious line. The grant will support research using secondary literature and a short field visit to Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang.
The Rise of the Term ‘Shari’a-Compliant’ in 21st Century Finance
Nurfadzilah Yahaya (Singapore), Mark Steinberg Weil Early Career Fellow in Islamic Studies, Washington University School of Law
This study places the recent rise of the term and practice of “shari’a-compliant” banking products and investments in Islamic finance in historical perspective. The project will examine the determination of shari’a compliance, if by other names, in financial arrangements during
the colonial period in Southeast Asia, and explore the process by which this yielded to today’s more explicit certification of compliance with shari’a. The grant will support archival work in Indonesia and Malaysia to examine colonial documents pertaining to Islamic law and commercial affairs in both Netherlands Indies and Malaya during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
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T IGLP fellowsInaugurated in 2006, the IGLP Fellowship Program offers doctoral and post-doctoral fellowship support to a small number of scholars pursuing research in areas related to the IGLP’s ongoing work. Through the Fellowship Program the IGLP seeks to encourage the development of progressive and alternative ideas about international law, society and political economy by supporting original, provocative and challenging intellectual work that might not otherwise find support from mainstream institutional resources and which contributes to the emergence of new approaches to international law and global social justice.
The IGLP is very pleased to announce the appointment of six new Fellows. Joining the IGLP in 2014-15 as Residential Fellows are Lina Maria Céspedes-Baez, Julia Dehm, Tomaso Ferrando, and Maja Savevska. Our 2014-15 Non-Residential Fellows are Arnulf Becker, and Zinaida Miller.
2014-15 Residential Fellows
Lina Maria Céspedes-Baez (Colombia) Temple University
Idealized Women, Idealized Harms: Governance Feminism and the Narrowing of Women’s Experiences in Colombia’s Armed Conflict
Lina M. Céspedes-Baez is a Colombian lawyer, currently pursuing her S.J.D. degree at the James E. Beasley School of Law, Temple University as a Fulbright Scholar. Her research has focused on the interactions between private law, international law, human rights and gender. Lina received her law degree from Universidad del Rosario (Colombia). She has a specialized degree in tax law from Universidad del Rosario, a Masters in Gender Studies from Universidad Nacional de Colombia, and
an LL.M. with a concentration in international law from Cardozo School of Law, Yeshiva University. She has been a law professor at Universidad del Rosario since 2005, where she teaches Obligations (Obligaciones), Sources of Obligations (Fuentes de las Obligaciones), and Legal Theory, and where she has been a member of the University’s Democracy and Justice Research Group since 2011. She is currently part of the Colombian Observatory of Rural Real Property Restitution and Regulation (Observatorio de Restitución y Regulación de Derechos de Propiedad Agraria), an academic initiative among Colombian universities and scholars to monitor and conduct research about the implementation of land restitution measures approved by the Colombian government in 2011 to redress harms to victims of Colombia’s internal armed conflict.
Lina’s research explores the impact the theoretical body of radical feminist scholarship has had on the identification, understanding and management of harms women face in the Colombian armed conflict and in transitional justice initiatives in Colombia and other post-conflict settings. She is interested in how radical feminism has narrowed the scope for understanding what constitutes gender-based violence in conflict. Her work explores how radical feminism has limited this understanding to sexual violence and related offenses, and how the overarching employment of the sexual domination matrix is used to explain the full range of harm women experience in this setting. In particular, Lina’s project focuses on how the radical feminist narrative has been deployed in the context of women’s land deprivation and massive displacement in the Colombian conflict, and advances alternative explanations to comprehend this phenomenon through the exploration of the intersection between feminism, theories of property and transitional justice.
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Julia Dehm (Australia) Melbourne Law School
Climate Justice or Carbon Governmentality: Law, Life, Limits and Growth in Crisis
Julia Dehm is a Ph.D. Candidate at Melbourne Law School, and was a 2014 IGLP Workshop Participant. Among others, she works in the areas of environmental law, law and development, and legal theory. She has worked for the Melbourne Sustainable Society Institute and was a member of the Steering Committee of the Activist Legal Rights Website project at the Fitzroy Legal Service. Julia’s most recent publication is “‘REDD faces all around’: Implementing reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation in Indonesia” (Local-Global Journal, 2012).
Julia’s research engages with dominant international legal and policy responses to the climate crisis and presents the climate crisis as a critical challenge for the global community. Where collective failure to respond to climate change with effective and equitable policy will accentuate already existing structural inequalities the ecological crisis simultaneously presents an opportunity for rethinking and reimagining global planetary co-habitation. The climate crisis is not simply a scientific or a technical challenge but ultimately a political and ethical social problem in which law and legal responses have the capacity to play a critical role. Julia’s research examines legal responses to the climate crisis through the United Nations Framework on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and other transnational forums in order to ask pertinent questions about the adequacy and equity of these approaches. A fundamental concern of her research is the increased marketization of transnational environmental governance and the centrality of carbon emission trading schemes to international mitigation and adaptation measures and how such responses may foreclose possibilities for ‘environmental justice.’ Her doctoral thesis examines the social implications of a specific carbon offset scheme under the UNFCCC umbrella called Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation (REDD+) in order to investigate contemporary reconfigurations of imperial control by the global North over forested land and biological resources in the global South.
Tomaso Ferrando (Italy) Sciences Po Law School
The Financialization of Global Agricultural Production: How Private Equity Funds, Private Development Funds and Pension Funds are changing the Global Food Chain
Tomaso Ferrando is a Ph.D. Candidate at Sciences Po Law School and has been an Italian barrister since 2011. He was also a 2012 IGLP Workshop Participant. During the last two years he has been a visiting researcher at Universidade de São Paulo (Commerce Law Department) and the University of Cape Town (Public Law Department). Tomaso holds a Master of Science in Comparative Law, Economics and Finance from the International University College of Turin,
and has been a visiting researcher at both the law and anthropology departments of UC Berkeley. In 2010 he worked as a pro bono lawyer for Racimos de Ungurahui, a Peruvian NGO specialized in providing legal support to local communities affected by development projects and resources extraction. Since that time he has cooperated with local and international NGOs dealing with resource-related large-scale investments, including Greenpeace and Action Aid. When he wears the academic hat, Tomaso takes advantage of his multidisciplinary background to refuse the rigid separation between legal areas, in particular the public-private distinction that occupies Western legal thought and teaching. Tomaso’s doctoral research project starts from the assumption that any critical analysis of global value chains must reckon with the “increasing role of financial motives, financial markets, financial actors and financial institutions in the operation of the domestic and international economies.” As such, legal scholars should analyze the interplay of neo-liberalism, legal globalization and financialization both in terms of their interconnection and in terms of the use of law as a privileged proxy through which the expansion of finance, the internationalization of capital, and the globalization of markets are achieved. During his time as an IGLP Fellow, Tomaso plans to study the increasing financialization of the food regime as an ongoing process with multiple socio-economic implications. In particular, his research aims to determine the role of law in both favoring and constraining the consolidation and worldwide reach of finance within the food Global Production Network. He will focus on three different manifestations of the financialization of the food regime, each characterized by peculiar legal aspects, and relatively underestimated by the general debate: the financialization of agricultural development; the direct involvement of private funds in the food production system; and the role of institutional investors in the global food regime.
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T IGLP fellows2014-15 Residential Fellows (Continued)
Maja Savevska (Macedonia) University of Warwick and Université Libre de Bruxelles
A Polanyian Critique of the Political Economy of the European Union
Maja Savevska is a Ph.D. Candidate at the GEM PhD School, Erasmus Mundus Joint Doctorate on Globalization, EU and Multilateralism, where she was awarded a full scholarship by the European Commission. She was also a 2014 IGLP Workshop Participant. Her mobility program includes holding simultaneous registrations at the University of Warwick and the Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB). She received
her undergraduate training in political science from Ss. Cyril and Methodius University, Skopje. Maja received a full scholarship from the Open Society Institute to participate in an exchange program at the University of Washington Seattle, where she completed a minor in International Relations. She completed an M.Sc. in Global Governance and Diplomacy at the University of Oxford, where she was awarded the Open Society Institute/Foreign and Commonwealth Office Chevening scholarship. Her experience includes TA work at the Univerité Libre de Bruxelles and Humboldt University and extensive NGO work in Macedonia. Maja’s research interests fall within the remit of critical and heterodox political economy. Her project offers an interdisciplinary intervention that draws on the canonical texts of Karl Polanyi and the burgeoning Polanyian literature. Maja’s main object of inquiry is the morphology of the contradictions that underpin the socio-economic transformation of the European Union. She seeks to juxtapose the disembedding and embedding tendencies of this transformation. First, she is concerned with excavating the self-regulating market logic inscribed in the EU edifice by looking at historical development across three policy fields: competition, financial integration and education, and also by appraising the post-crisis macroeconomic reforms instigated by the Six-Pack, the Two-Pack, the Fiscal Treaty and the Euro-Plus Pact. She argues that the latter represent a missed opportunity for a U-turn in the course of competitive austerity, i.e. a lost kairos. This part of her research aims to problematize the policy solutions implemented in the aftermath of the Great Recession, which are predicated on a crisis narrative that entrenches the monetary orthodoxy. Second, Maja endeavors to examine emerging socio-environmental legislation that, despite its protective invocation, falls short of embedding the economy because it is predicated on deepened commodification. In doing so, she recuperates a critical Polanyian reading that highlights the unresolved ambiguities within these supposedly protective dynamics.
2014-15 Non-Residential Fellows
Zinaida Miller (United States) Tufts University
Zinaida is a doctoral Candidate in International Relations at The Fletcher School, Tufts University. She joins the IGLP again this year, after serving as a Residential Doctoral Fellow from 2012-14. Her work examines the law and policy of post-conflict reconstruction, focusing on the interplay between ideas and institutions in the fields of transitional justice, state- and peacebuilding, human rights, and humanitarian aid. Using Palestine and Rwanda as case studies, her dissertation maps the allocation of
power and authority among national and international actors in the aftermath of conflict, the ways in which ideas about how to reconstruct states both influence and are altered by institutionalization on the ground, and the effects of post-conflict discourses on resistance and political struggle. This work builds upon her previous studies of transitional justice, which examined the field’s systematic occlusion of economic inequality
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and structural violence. Her publications include: “Perils of Parity: Palestine’s Permanent Transition” (Cornell International Law Journal, forthcoming 2014), and “Effects of Invisibility: In Search of the ‘Economic’ in Transitional Justice” (International Journal of Transitional Justice, 2008). She holds a B.A. from Brown University, a Masters in Law and Diplomacy from The Fletcher School, and a J.D. from Harvard Law School.
Arnulf Becker (Chile/United States) Brown University
Arnulf is currently a Visiting Faculty member at the Watson Institute for International Relations at Brown University. Arnulf received his S.J.D. from Harvard Law School. His areas of expertise include public international law, laws of war, the history of international law, comparative law and international legal theory. He has been a lecturer in public international law at King’s College London and a Pembroke Center Post-doctoral Fellow at Brown University. His research traces the global intellectual history of international law focusing on the role non-Western international lawyers have played in the construction of the international legal order between the second half of the nineteenth century and the first half of the twentieth century. His forthcoming book,
“Mestizo International Law: A Global Intellectual History, 1842–1933,” will be published by Cambridge University Press.
Outgoing Fellows
The IGLP is also saying farewell to its outgoing Fellows. The IGLP is grateful for their hard work, creativity and dedication in assisting with the planning of the Institute’s academic programs and initiatives, and wishes them the best of luck in their next endeavors! Outgoing Fellows include Heidi Matthews (Canada) and Yun-Ru Chen (Taiwan).
Heidi Matthews (Canada) Harvard Law School
Heidi served as a 2013-14 Residential Doctoral Fellow, and recently received her S.J.D. from Harvard Law School. During her time at Harvard, Heidi was a Byse Fellow at Harvard Law School, a Fellow at the Film Study Center, the Edmund J. Safra Center for Ethics and the Project on Justice, Welfare and Economics at the Weatherhead Center for International Affairs at Harvard University. She was also a Doctoral Fellow of the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada and a John Peters Humphrey Fellow of the Canadian Council on International Law. Heidi holds a B.A. from Mount Allison University and an LL.B.-B.C.L. from McGill University, Faculty of Law. She has worked at the Appeals Chamber of the Special Court for Sierra Leone, and the Office of
the Prosecutor at the Special Tribunal for Lebanon. Her doctoral dissertation, “From Aggression to Atrocity: Interrogating the Jus in Bello Turn in International Criminal Law,” critically evaluates the role of the jus ad bellum/jus in bello distinction in the development of international criminal law, and offers a political theory of ICL’s contemporary manifestations. Her post-doctoral research project studies the relationship of the Cold War to international criminal law.
Yun-Ru Chen (Taiwan) State University of New York
After serving as a 2013-14 Residential Post-Doctoral Fellow, Yun-Ru will take up a post-doctoral fellowship at the Baldy Center for Law & Social Policy at the State University of New York in Buffalo. Yun-Ru earned her S.J.D. from Harvard Law School in 2013. Taking colonial Taiwan (1895-1945), a former territory of imperial China and the first colony of Japan, as the vantage point, her dissertation suggests that ideas about nations and families were far from homogenous in the colonial encounter. She argues that it is not necessary that family law should play a reactionary role in developing nationalism in non-western societies. During her stay at the Baldy Center,
Yun-Ru will turn her dissertation into a book manuscript tentatively titled, “Paradoxes of the National Family Law in (Post-) Colonial East Asia: Taiwan as the Nexus.” In addition, she will examine the modernization of Chinese family law and its relation to Chinese nationalism in the long twentieth century.
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The IGLP accommodates a small number of Visiting Researchers and Visiting Scholars each academic year, who apply to do research at Harvard Law School for a minimum of three months. In making selections, the Committee at the Institute considers the applicant’s background, field of interest, scholarly achievements, completion of basic legal studies with high academic standing, availability of Harvard Law School faculty for consultation in the proposed research area, and English language proficiency.
Mustapha El Karouni (Belgium) University of GhentMustapha El Karouni’s research focuses on Legal Theory and Comparative Law. During his time at the IGLP he focused on the development of a new theory of law which includes a global epistemological approach and the setting of a new postmodern cognitive paradigm. Mr. El Karouni is a member of the Brussels Bar, where he has been a legal advisor to governments in public law. Previously, he was an elected member of the Brussels Parliament. In 2013-2014 he was also a Visiting Fellow at Harvard Law School and a Research Fellow at Ghent University in Belgium.
His most recent publication is “Legal Science Challenged by Cultural Paradigms: ‘Subjective Objectivity’ in Legal Scholarship.”
Julio V. González García (Spain) Universidad Complutense de MadridJulio V. González García research focuses on public goods, public procurement, economic globalization, administrative intervention in public services, education, university Law and European Law. He is a Full Professor of Administrative Law at the Department of Administrative Law of the Universidad Complutense de Madrid (UCM), where he also served as General Secretary from 2003-2011. He is the author of numerous law articles and books.
Helen Hartnell (United States) Golden Gate University School of LawHelen Hartnell is Professor of Law (Emerita) at Golden Gate University School of Law, where she teaches European Union Law, International Business Transactions, International Commercial Arbitration, International Trade Regulation, and Transnational Litigation. During her time at the IGLP she continued wok on her ongoing research project on “Legal Elites in Transnational Settings: Building the EU’s Civil Justice Field.” Professor Hartnell is the author of several publications, and writes and lectures extensively on international and comparative law. She has been
a visiting professor at several universities including the Free University of Berlin, the University of Cologne in Germany and at ELTE University in Hungary. In 2012 she was a Fulbright Scholar at the University Of Helsinki.
Zachary D. Kaufman (United States) Yale Law SchoolZachary D. Kaufman is a Visiting Fellow at Yale Law School, the Yale School of Management’s Program on Social Enterprise, and Yale’s Genocide Studies Program as well as a Lecturer in Yale’s Department of Political Science. Previously, Dr. Kaufman practiced law at O’Melveny & Myers LLP. His primary research interests lie at the intersection of criminal law, international law, international relations, international criminal law, international organizations (including international courts and tribunals), human rights law, and transitional justice. As a Visitor at the
IGLP he continued work on his most recent book project “From Nuremberg to The Hague: United States Policy on Transitional Justice.” Mr. Kaufman, who received his JD from Yale Law School, has held appointment at the U.S. Departments of State and Justice, the UN International Criminal Tribunals for Rwanda and for the Former Yugoslavia, and the International Criminal Court.
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Marcelo D. Torelly (Brazil) Brasilia University Law SchoolMarcelo D. Torelly is currently a Ph.D. candidate at Brasilia University Law School. During his time at the IGLP his research centered on how institutional interactions between the Inter-American System of Human Rights and domestic legal regimes are reshaping constitutional law throughout Latin America and creating new global governance standards. Mr. Torelly holds a J.D. from Catholic University-Porto Alegre (PUCRS) and a M.Sc. from Brasilia University Law School. He has served as advisor for the Brazilian Ministry of Justice on Transitional Justice issues, as the head of Brazil’s Historical Memory Department from Amnesty, and as manager of the Transitional Justice
Exchange and Development Program which is jointly sponsored by Brazil’s Federal Government and the United Nations.
travel grantsThe Institute for Global Law and Policy provides modest travel support to scholars conducting research in areas closely related to the IGLP’s ongoing work who have been invited to present their scholarly work at academic conferences. In 2013-2014 we awarded the following seven Travel Grants:
Mara Caden (United States) Yale University: Ms. Caden received a grant to travel to Harvard Law School to present her work at Professor Christine Desan’s Economist Workshop on October 28, 2013.
Rajshree Chandra (India) University of Delhi: Ms. Chandra received a grant to travel to present her paper on the “Laws of Nature” at the Melbourne Doctoral Forum on Legal Theory, December 9-10, 2013.
Yun-Ru Chen (Taiwan) Harvard Law School: Ms Chen was awarded a grant to travel to present her paper, “The Making of Market - Family Legal Distinction in Oriental Empire: The Case of Japan-Colonized Taiwan (1895-1945)” at the Center for History and Economics, Magdalene, College, Cambridge, UK on June, 10, 2014.
Deval Desai (United Kingdom) Harvard Law School: Mr. Desai received a grant to support his travel to University of Warwick where he presented a paper in September 2013 at the Workshop on International Law, Natural Resources, and Sustainable Development.
Ching-Fu Lin (Taiwan) Harvard Law School: Mr. Lin was awarded a grant to present his paper, “Toward a Rule-Based Framework for Public-Private Regulatory Cooperation: The Case of Food Safety” at the 8th Annual International Graduate Legal Research Conference which was held in London on April 14 & 15, 2014.
Heidi Matthews (Canada) Harvard Law School: Ms. Matthews received a grant to travel to London to present her work at the IGLP Critical Approaches to International Criminal Law (CAICL) Workshop at City University, London, on October 18-19, 2013.
Malcolm Rogge (United States) Harvard University: Mr. Rogge was awarded a grant to support his travel to the 2nd Annual UN Forum on Business and Human Rights which was held in Geneva, Switzerland from November 30- December, 5, 2013.
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June 2014 Doha-Santander Collaborative Travel Grant Teams
In June 2014 we were pleased to welcome recipients of Doha-Santander Collaborative Travel Grants. These grants were made available to groups of our IGLP Workshop alumni who applied to come to the IGLP in June to deepen the discussions they began together at the IGLP Workshop in the hope that it may lead to a Collaborative Research Project. The 2014 Doha-Santander Collaborative Travel Grants were made by possible with the generous support of Santander Universities. We welcomed the following Doha-Santander Collaborative Travel Grant Teams to join us at Harvard in June 2014:
Revolution, Constitutionalism and International Law
Team leader: Vidya Kumar (Canada) University of Birmingham Law School. Team members: Philip Kaisary (United Kingdom) University of Warwick School of Law; and Sanale Sibanda (South Africa) University of Witwatersrand Law School. Commentator: Nathaniel Berman (United States) Brown University.
This project aims to explore the relationships among revolution, constitutionalism and international law, in both historical and contemporary contexts. By focusing on revolutions outside the global North, the team hopes to contribute to an alternative, critical and heterodox genealogy of constitutionalism.
Law’s Hegemony
Team Leader: Honor Brabazon (Canada), University of Oxford. Team Members: Gleider Hernandez (Canada) University of Durham Law School; Tor Krever (Canada) London School of Economics and Political Science; and Mai Taha (Egypt) University of Toronto.
This group aims to explore the authority law commands over alternative systems through which to view, judge, and order our world. The group considered the extent to which law can be understood as hegemonic; that is, how its supremacy over other systems of authority, morality, and social organization is considered to be common sense, beneficial, and universal and to what ends law has obtained such significance.
(Dis)solving Informal Labor Vulnerability through Labor Laws: Examining the Failures, Frames & Assumptions
Team Leader: Yugank Goyal (India) University of Hamburg. Team Members: Jorge Esquirol (United States) Florida International University College of Law; Vivek Kanwar (United States) Jindal Global Law School; Kerry Rittich (Canada) University of Toronto; and Alvaro Santos (Mexico) Georgetown Law.
This group is brainstorming together about the difficulty labor law traditions have had responding to increasing informality and labor vulnerability in developing nations, asking whether these difficulties are symptomatic of problems in labor law architecture or are simply a problem of their implementation.
Multinational Behavior in Africa: Human Rights Perspectives
Team Leader: Qingxiu Bu (People’s Republic of China) University of Sussex. Team Members: Luwam Dirar (Eritrea) Cornell Law School; and Kibrom Teweldebirhan (Eritrea) Harvard Law School.
This team is exploring the tensions in the human rights practices of Africa promoted and followed by multinational companies, the international human rights community, and China’s approach to ensuring human rights in Africa. The group will explore whether a comprehensive framework of hard law and soft law initiatives, along with other incentives, may be more promising than any of these in isolation.
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Varieties of State Capitalism and International Economic Order: China, Russia, Brazil and Beyond
Team Leader: Ming Du (People’s Republic of China) Lancaster University School of Law. Team Members: Swethaa Ballakrishnen (India) Stanford University; Y-Vonne Hutchison (United States) La Isla Foundation; Yaraslau Kryvoi (Belarus) London School of Economics and Political Science; and Nicolás Perrone (Italy) London School of Economics and Political Science.
This research team hopes to shed fresh light on how to better integrate state capitalist countries, such as China, Russia and Brazil into the rule-based global economic system.
Reviving Comparative Law as a Heterodox Discipline
Team Leader: Amaya Alvez Marin (Chile) Universidad de Concepción Department of History and Philosophy of Law. Team Members: Tatsuhiko Inatani (Japan) Kyoto University; and Marta Infantino (Italy) University of Trieste.
The group is exploring the critical potential of the comparative law field in the 21st century. Praised at the beginning of the 20th century for its potential to explore the globe’s legal diversity, the sense now is that comparative law struggles to maintain that role in a much more interconnected and globalized world. Group members are exploring the ways globalization has made comparative work and an understanding of legal pluralism more important.
Critical Global Economic Governance
Team Leaders: Camila Villard Duran (Brazil) University of São Paulo; Gaye Gungor (Turkey) Gediz University. Team members: Miguel Adame Martinez (Spain) Universidad de Sevilla; Siobhan Airey (Ireland) University of Ottawa; Rifat Azam (Israel) Radzyner School of Law; Rui Guo (People’s Republic of China) Harvard Law School; Y-Vonne Hutchison (United States) La Isla Foundation; Enrique Prieto Rios (Colombia) Birkbeck School of Law, University of London; Seyed Mohamad Hassan Razavi (Iran) McGill University; and Maja Savevska (Macedonia), Université Libre de Bruxelles and University of Warwick.
This group aims to develop new thinking about global macroeconomic coordination and to explore governance models that might produce macroeconomic reforms that benefit citizens in a time of global economic transition. Group members aim to explore the emerging economic order in ways that may promote the human face of capital and improve understanding of the root causes of the on-going crisis and its spillover effects throughout the developing world.
Operation CIA: Critical Interdisciplinary Approaches
Team Members: Swethaa Ballakrishnen (India) Stanford University; and Y-Vonne Hutchison (United States) La Isla Foundation.
This group aims to explore interdisciplinary methods and encourage innovative forms of scholarly expression and how they might practically equip themselves so that their research will speak to their disciplines as well as beyond them.
History, Anthropology, and the Archive in International Law
Team Leader: Rose Parfitt (United Kingdom) Melbourne University Law School. Team Members: Madelaine Chiam (Australia) Melbourne Law School; Luis Eslava (Australia) Melbourne University Law School; Genevieve Painter (Ireland) University of California, Berkeley Law; and Charlotte Peevers (United Kingdom) University of Technology Sydney.
This group is developing a conversation about historical and anthropological methods, the archive, and the temporality of international law. While this relationship is already being analyzed in the domestic or national context, this groups aims to transpose this conversation to the international plane.
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Workshop Faculty
Ghada Ahmed (United States)Duke University
Talal Abdulla Al Emadi (Qatar)Qatar University College of Law
Kamran Ali (United States)University of Texas-Austin
Elizabeth Bartholet (United States)Harvard Law School
Nathaniel Berman (United States)Brown University
Adelle Blackett (Canada)McGill University
Dan Brinks (United States)University of Texas School of Law
Stuart Brotman (United States)Harvard Law School
Matthew Craven (United Kingdom)SOAS, University of London
Dan Danielsen (United States)Northeastern University School of Law
Dennis Davis (South Africa)High Court of Cape Town, South Africa
Karen Engle (United States)University of Texas School of Law
Jorge Esquirol (United States)Florida International University College of Law
Günter Frankenberg (Germany)The Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main
Gary Gereffi (United States)Duke University
Sheila Jasanoff (United States)Harvard Kennedy School
Baber Johansen (United States)Harvard Divinity School
Ratna Kapur (India)Jindal Global Law School
Gudrun Krämer (Germany)Free University of Berlin
David Kennedy (United States)Harvard Law School
Fritz Kratochwil (Germany)Central European University
Andrew Lang (United Kingdom)London School of Economics and Political Science
Horatia Muir Watt (France)Sciences Po Law School
Vasuki Nesiah (United States)The Gallatin School, New York University
Scott Newton (United States)SOAS, University of London
John Ohnesorge (United States)University of Wisconsin Law School
Sundhya Pahuja (Australia)Melbourne Law School
Jeremy Perelman (France)Sciences Po Law School
Intisar Rabb (United States)Harvard Law School
Kerry Rittich (Canada)University of Toronto
Alvaro Santos (Mexico)Georgetown Law
Robert Wai (Canada)Osgoode Hall Law School
Lucie White (United States)Harvard Law School
Mikhail Xifaras (France)Sciences Po Law School
Workshop Docents
Noha Aboueldahab (Egypt)Durham University
Alejandra Azuero-Quijano (Colombia)Harvard Law School
Grietje Baars (The Netherlands)The City Law School, City University, London
Sadeq Bigdeli (Iran)University of Waikato School of Law
Qingxiu Bu (People’s Republic of China)University of Sussex Law School
Cyra Choudhury (United States)Florida International University College of Law
Madelaine Chiam (Australia)Melbourne Law School
Paul Clark (United Kingdom)Garden Court Chambers
Luis Eslava (Australia)Melbourne Law School
Yugank Goyal (India)University of Hamburg
John Haskell (United States)Mississippi College School of Law
Vanja Hamzić (Bosnia and Herzegovina)SOAS, University of London
Ben Hurlbut (United States)Arizona State University, School of Life Sciences
Onur Ince (Turkey)Koç University
Vivek Kanwar (United States)Jindal Global Law School
Tor Krever (Canada)London School of Economics and Political Science
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Vidya Kumar (Canada)University of Birmingham
Richard Lehun (Canada)McGill University
Boris Mamlyuk (United States)University of Memphis, School of Law
Heidi Matthews (Canada)Harvard Law School
Usha Natarajan (Australia)The American University in Cairo
Zoran Oklopcic (Croatia and Italy)Carleton University
Muhammad Osama Siddique (Pakistan)Lahore University of Management Sciences
Rose Parfitt (United Kingdom)Melbourne Law School
Vesco Paskalev (Bulgaria)European University Institute
Nicolás Perrone (Argentina and Italy)Universidad Externado de Colombia
Jothie Rajah (Singapore)American Bar Foundation
Nikolas Rajkovic (Canada)University of Kent Law School
Karen Rhone (United States)University of Chicago
Mohammad Shahabuddin (Bangladesh)Jahangrinagar University
Rene Urueña (Colombia)Universidad de Los Andes
Workshop Participants
Mohamed Abdelaal (Egypt)Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law
Paola Acosta (Colombia)Universidad Externado de Colombia
Miguel Ángel Adame Martínez (Spain)Universidad de Sevilla
Dawood Ahmed (United Kingdom)University of Chicago
Siobhan Airey (Ireland)University of Ottawa, Faculty of Law
Ramzan Alnoaimi (Bahrain)University of Bahrain
Olabisi Akinkugbe (Nigeria)University of Ottawa
Jerusa Ali (Canada)Carleton University
Tawfique Al-Mubarak (Malaysia)International Institute of Advanced Islamic Studies
Amaya Alvez Marin (Chile)Osgoode Hall Law School
Mekonnen Ayano (Ethiopia)Harvard Law School
Rifat Azam (Israel)Radzyner School of Law
Swethaa Ballakrishnen (United States)Stanford University
Diane Bernard (Belgium)Université Saint-Louis (Brussels)
Laura Betancur (Colombia)Universidad de Los Andes
Honor Brabazon (Canada)University of Oxford
Pascale Cornut St-Pierre (Canada)Sciences Po Law School
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Participants (Continued)
Melissa Crouch (Australia)National University of Singapore
Julia Dehm (Australia)Melbourne Law School
Debolina Dutta (India)Melbourne Law School
Ahmed Eldakak (Egypt)Alexandria University
Yassin El Shazly (Egypt)Qatar University College of Law
Cynthia Farid (Bangladesh)University of Wisconsin Law School
George Forji Amin (Finland)University of Helsinki
Bianca Gardella Tedeschi (Italy)Università del Primeonte Orientale
Afroditi Giovanopoulou (Greece)Harvard Law School
Ahmad Ghouri (Pakistan)University of Sussex Law School
Karim Ginena (Canada and Egypt)Hamad Bin Khalifa University
Toby Goldbach (United States)Cornell Law School
Sinja Graf (Germany)Cornell University
Jean Grosdidier (France)Sciences Po Law School
Lukasz Gruszczynski (Poland)Institute of Law Studies, Polish Academy of Sciences
Xavier Guignard (France)Paris Pantheon Sorbonne University
Marie Guimezanes (France)Toulouse 1 Capitole University
Rui Guo (People’s Republic of China)Renmin University of China
Gaye Gungor (Turkey)Gediz University
Susan Harris Rimmer (Australia)Australian National University
Adil Hasan Khan (India)Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies
Seyed Mohamad Hassan Razavi (Iran)McGill University Faculty of Law
Gleider Hernandez (Canada)University of Durham Law School
Tomás Hoffman (Hungary)Corvinus University of Budapest
Heather Hughes (United States)American University, Washington College of Law
John Hursh (United States)McGill University, Centre for Human Rights and Legal Pluralism
Y-Vonne Hutchinson (United States)La Isla Foundation
Tatsuhiko Inatani (Japan)Kyoto University
Marta Infantino (Italy)University of Trieste
Chiha Islam (Egypt)Qatar University College of Law
Bogdan Ivanel (Romania)Sciences Po Law School
Aleksandra Ivlieva (Russia)Moscow State University
Razak Jaha (Ghana)University of Cape Coast
Philip Kaisary (United Kingdom)University of Warwick School of Law
Ioannis Kalpouzos (Greece)The City Law School, City University London
Richa Kumar (India)University of Kent Law School
Maryam Khan (United States)Lahore University of Management Sciences
Jennifer Langlais (Canada)Université de Montréal
Darryl Li (United States)Columbia University
Roopanand Mahadew (Mauritius)University of Mauritius
Bashar Malkawi (Jordan)University of Sharjah, College of Law
Itamar Mann (United States)Georgetown Law
Mark Massoud (United States)University of California, Santa Cruz
Hélène Mayrand (Canada)University of Sherbrooke
Lena-Maria Möller (Germany)Max Planck Institute for Comparative and International Private Law
Jacqueline Mowbray (Australia)University of Sydney
Roseline Njogu (Kenya)Riara University Law School
Ticiana Nogueira da Cruz Lima (Brazil)University of São Paulo
Yahaya Nurfadzilah (United States)Washington University in St. Louis
Gearóid Ó Cuinn (Ireland)Lancaster University School of Law
Genevieve Painter (Ireland)University of California-Berkeley, School of Law
James Parker (United Kingdom)Melbourne Law School
Enrique Prieto Rios (Colombia)Birkbeck, University of London
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Mikko Rajavuori (Finland)University of Turku
Michael Riegner (Germany)New York University School of Law
Jamie Rowen (United States)University of Toronto
Sayres Rudy (United States)Bryn Mawr College
Hengameh Saberi (Iran)Osgoode Hall Law School
Rafael Sakr (Brazil)Independent Researcher
Jaakko Salminen (Finland)University of Turku
Maja Savevska (Macedonia)Universite Libre de Bruxelles
Oishik Sircar (India)Melbourne Law School
Kalana Senaratne (Sri Lanka)University of Hong Kong
Shanthi Senthe (Canada)Osgoode Hall Law School
Sanele Sibanda (South Africa)University of Witwatersrand
Ximena Sierra (Colombia)Rosario University
Ermin Sinanovic (Bosnia and Herzegovina)United States Naval Academy
Sahib Singh (United Kingdom)University of Cambridge
Azadehsadat Taheri (Iran)University of Semnan
Salma Taman (Egypt)Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law
Rustamjon Urinboyev (Uzbekistan)Lund University,
Areli Valencia Vargas (Peru)University of Ottawa
Daniel Vargas (Brazil)Harvard Law School
Latika Vashist (India)Jindal Global Law School
Tara Van Ho (United States)University of Essex, School of Law
Nneamaka Vanni (Nigeria)University of Warwick School of Law
Grigory Vaypan (Russia)Moscow State University
Mika Viljanen (Finland)University of Turku
Camila Villard Duran (Brazil)University of São Paulo
Natalia Volosin (Argentina)Yale Law School
Yan Xu (Hong Kong)The Chinese University of Hong Kong
Mimi Zou (Australia)Oxford University
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Conference Conveners
Grietje Baars (The Netherlands)The City Law School, City University London
Dan Danielsen (United States)Northeastern University School of Law
Dennis Davis (South Africa)High Court of Cape Town
Andre Spicer (New Zealand)Cass Business School, City University of London
Imagining Corporate Power
Panelists:Joshua Barkan (United States) University of GeorgiaLaw, Genealogy, and Literature in the Political Analysis of Corporate Power
Jennifer Bair (United States) University of ColoradoMapping Corporate Power: GVCs, Governance and the New Corporate Imaginary
Gwen Gordon (United States)Wharton School, University of PennsylvaniaNarrative, Image, and the Making of the Corporate Self
Elana Shever (United States)Colgate UniversityThe Feminized Face of Oil: Shifting Corporate Image and Corporate Power
Corporate Power & the Other
Panelists:Swethaa Ballakrishnen (India)Stanford UniversityPower & Privilege: The (Possible) Advantage of New Organizations in the Global World
Amy Cohen (United States) Ohio State University Moritz College of Law
Moral Technologies of Market Construction: The Politics of Multinational Firm Entry into Indian Retail Food Supply Chains
Jason Jackson (The Bahamas)Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania Moral Technologies of Market Construction: The Politics of Multinational Firm Entry into Indian Retail Food Supply Chains
Sundhya Pahuja (Australia)Melbourne University Law SchoolJurisdictional Rivalries between Company and State in the Early Modern Period
Richa Kumar (India)Brussels School of International Studies, University of KentThe Security Bazaar: Mapping Actors, Markets and Technologies in Migration and Border Control
Corporate Power, State and Capital
Panelists:Tomaso Ferrando (Italy)Sciences Po Law SchoolWhen Westphalia Encounters Transnationality: Sovereignty, Territory and the Creation of the Foreigner in Kiobel and Co.
Sandy Hager (Canada)London School of Economics and Political SciencePublic Debt as Corporate Power: Mapping the New Aristocracy of Finance
Dean Snyder (United States)Syracuse UniversityGlobal Value Chains and the Corporate Power of Commercial Capital: A Marxian Analysis
Megan Bowman (Australia)University of New South WalesCorporate Regulatory Power and Green Governance: An Illustrative Case
Corporate Power and Corporate Subjectivity
Panelists:Heather Hughes (United States) American University, Washington College of LawCorporate Subjectivity, Corporate Social Responsibility and the Equator Principles in Project Finance
Outi Korhonen (Finland)University of TurkuStandardising Industries, Normalising Subjectivities: Corporations in European Order
Jongchul Kim (South Korea)Columbia Law SchoolPlaying with Two Legal Categories, Property and Contract: An Explanation of the Rise of Financial Corporate Power from a Legal Perspective
Subverting or Harnessing Corporate Power
Panelists:Chris Jochnick (United States)Oxfam AmericaAddressing and Harnessing Corporate Power for Pro-Poor Ends
Meetali Jain (United States)University of Witwatersrand Law SchoolExploring Home Grown Regional and Local Strategies to Resists Corporate Power in Africa
Michelle Le Roux (South Africa)University of Witwatersrand Law SchoolPolanyi’s Double Move: Lessons from Marikana
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Corporate Power vs. State Power
Panelists:Neil Robinson (United Kingdom) University of Limerick State Capture and Business Capture: Political and Corporate Power under Neo-Patrimonialism
Nathanael Ali (Ethiopia)Erasmus University Law SchoolUnited in Vigilance: Corporation & State in Counterterrorism
Liam Campling (United Kingdom)Queen Mary University of London, School of Business and ManagementBeyond Fisheries ‘Management’? Competition, Market Power and Sustainable Resource Extraction
Elizabeth Havice (United States)University of North CarolinaBeyond Fisheries ‘Management’? Competition, Market Power and Sustainable Resource Extraction
Katherine Fallah (Australia and Lebanon)University of Technology, SydneyMaking War and Making Law: The Corporation in the Global Regulation of Military Violence
Participants
Pieter Van Malleghem (Belgium)Harvard Law School
Lukman Jayeola Agunbiade (Nigeria)Royal-Equity Chambers
Nathanael Ali (Ethiopia)Erasmus University Law School
Rifat Azam (Israel)Interdisciplinary Center
Grietje Baars (The Netherlands)The City Law School, City University London
Jennifer Bair (United States) University of Colorado
Swethaa Ballakrishnen (United States)Stanford University
Philip Balsiger (Switzerland)European University Institute
Joshua Barkan (United States)University of Georgia
Jason Beckett (United Kingdom)The American University in Cairo
Kate Benak (United States)The Evergreen State College
Laura Betancur (Colombia) Universidad de Los Andes
Megan Bowman (Australia)University of New South Wales
Camille Brou (Côte d’Ivoire)Urban Agriculture International Program
Priscilla Browne (Ghana)University of Birmingham
Qingxiu Bu (United Kingdom)University of Sussex
Rafael Burgos-Mirabal (United States) University of Massachusetts-Amherst
Liam Campling (United Kingdom)Queen Mary University of London
Marc Camprubi Artal (Spain)University of Barcelona
Rebecca Chan (United States)The Tobin Project
Anna Chung (South Korea) Université Libre de Bruxelles
David Ciepley (United States)University of Denver
Amy Cohen (United States) Ohio State University Moritz College of Law
Alessia Contu (Italy)University of Massachusetts-Boston
Dan Danielsen (United States)Northeastern University School of Law
Dennis Davis (South Africa)High Court of Cape Town, South Africa
Katherine Fallah (Australia and Lebanon)University of Technology, Sydney
Tomaso Ferrando (Italy)Sciences Po Law School
Mike Godbe (United States)Northeastern University School of Law
Gwen Gordon (United States)Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania
Paul Gutierrez (United States)Brown University
Sandy Hager (Canada)London School of Economics and Political Science
Elizabeth Havice (United States)University of North Carolina
Hedayat Heikal (Egypt)Harvard Law School
Hozami Helwani (Saudi Arabia)University of Massachusetts-Boston
Heather Hughes (United States)American University, Washington College of Law
Philip Ireland (United Kingdom)University of Bristol Law School
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Participants (Continued)
Jason Jackson (United States)Wharton School, University of PA
Meetali Jain (United States)University of Witwatersrand Law School
Chris Jochnick (United States)Oxfam America
Fleur Johns (Australia)University of New South Wales,
Jinyoung Kang (South Korea)University of Massachusetts-Boston
Jongchul Kim (South Korea)Columbia Law School
Brenda Kombo (United States)Northeastern University School of Law
Outi Korhonen (Finland)University of Turku
Damjan Kukovec (Slovenia)Harvard Law School
Richa Kumar (India), University of Kent
Michelle Le Roux (South Africa)University of Witwatersrand Law School
David Levy (United States)University of Massachusetts
Alexandra Manea (Romania)Titu Maiorescu University of Bucharest
Ayako Matsuura (Japan)Yale
Dirk Matten (Germany)York University, Schulich School of Business
Farida Mortada (Egypt)Harvard Law School
Claire Mumme (Canada)University of Windsor
Gearóid Ó Cuinn (Ireland)Lancaster University Law School
Guillermo Otalora Lozano (Colombia)Harvard Law School
Miguel Padro (United States)The Aspen Institute
Sundhya Pahuja (Australia)Melbourne Law School
Nikolas Rajkovic (Canada)University of Kent Law School
Michael Riegner (Germany)NYU Law School
Neil Robinson (United Kingdom)University of Limerick
Malcolm Rogge (Canada)Harvard Law School
Maja Savevska (Macedonia)University of Warwick/Université Libre de Bruxelles
Elana Shever (United States)Colgate University
Ximena Sierra-Camargo (Colombia)Universidad del Rosario
Dean Snyder (United States)Syracuse University
Andre Spicer (New Zealand)Cass Business School, City University of London
Santosh Stephen (India)Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Federico Suárez (Colombia)Universidad Externado de Colombia
Jeroen Veldman (Netherlands)Cardiff Business School
Camila Villard Duran (Brazil)University of São Paulo
Ying Xia (People’s Republic of China)Harvard Law School
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event participantsBandung and the Global South (Harvard Law School), June 2, 2014
Participants
Antony Anghie (United States)S.J. Quinney College of Law, University of Utah
Rajagopal Balakrishnan (India)Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Arnulf Becker (Chile)Brown University
Cyra Choudhury (United States)Florida International University College of Law
Matthew Craven (United Kingdom)SOAS, University of London
Luwam Dirar (Eritrea)Cornell Law School
Luis Eslava (Australia)Melbourne Law School
Vivek Kanwar (United States)Jindal Global Law School
Vidya Kumar (Canada)University of Birmingham
Tayyab Mahmud (Pakistan)Seattle University School of Law
Boris Mamlyuk (United States)University of Memphis, School of Law
Usha Natarajan (Australia)The American University in Cairo
Vasuki Nesiah (United States)The Gallatin School, New York University
Liliana Obregón Tarazona (Colombia)Universidad de los Andes
Zoran Oklopcic (Croatia and Italy)Carleton University
Sundhya Pahuja (Australia)Melbourne Law School
Rose Parfitt (United Kingdom)Melbourne Law School
Charlotte Peevers (United Kingdom)University of Technology Sydney
Akbar Rasulov (Uzbekistan)University of Glasgow
John Reynolds (Ireland)National University of Ireland, Galway
Hani Sayed (Syria)The American University in Cairo
Mohammad Shahabuddin (Bangladesh)Jahangrinagar University
Mai Taha (Egypt)University of Toronto
Fabia Veçoso (Brazil)Faculdade de Direito do Sul de Minas
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Conference Conveners
Cyra Akila Choudhury (United States)Florida International University College of Law
Vanja Hamzić (Bosnia and Herzegovina)SOAS, University of London
Heterodoxy and Critique in Islamic Legal Thought
PanelistsRobert Gleave (United Kingdom)University of Exeter Legal Norms and Normal Laws: Why Studying ‘Heterodox’ Islamic Law Matters
Kecia Ali (United States) Boston UniversityRead it Slant: Feminist Critical Perspectives on Islamic Law and Legal Theory
Haider Ala Hamoudi (United States)University of Pittsburgh Law SchoolIslamic Legal Realism
Islamic Legal History and Jurisprudence
Panelists:Nahed Samour (Germany) Humboldt UniversityA Critique of Adjudication: Formative Moments in Islamic Legal History
Gianluca Parolin (Italy)The American University in Cairo Department of LawA Tale of Personhoods: “Ulamā and Fuqahā”
Samy Ayoub (Egypt)University of Arizona Legal Authority and State Power: Critical Notes on Early Modern Ḥanaf Jurisprudence
Islamic Family Law I
Panelists:Samia Bano (United Kingdom) SOAS, University of London
Critical Inquiries: Muslim Feminist Scholarship and the Practice of Muslim Family Law in the United Kingdom
Dipika Jain (India)Jindal Global Law SchoolInheritance Rights of the Hijras in the Indian Colonial Courts: The Pluralistic Dual Hindu-Islamic Religious Identity of Hijras and the Colonial, Post-Colonial and Modern Understandings
Lena-Marie Möller (Germany)Max Planck Institute for Comparative and International Private LawThe Use and Misuse of a Comparative Approach to Family Law Reform
Politics of Law and Justice
Panelists:Mohamed Badar (Egypt and United Kingdom)Northumbria Law SchoolThe International Criminal Court and the Nigerian Crisis: An Inquiry into the Boko Haram
George Forji Amin (Finland)University of HelsinkiThe Gulf States, Kafala System and the Crisis of International Law
Islamic Finance and Political Economy
PanelistsKaren Rhone (United States)University of Chicago,Law and the Reconstitution of Economic Justice
Jonathan Ercanbrack (United States)SOAS, University of LondonThe Transformation of Islamic Law in Global Financial Markets
Bashar Malkawi (Jordan)University of Sharjah, College of LawCritical Issues of Governance in Islamic Financial Institutions: A Reformed Framework
Karim Ginena (Canada and Egypt) Hamad Bin Khalifa University Contemporary Approaches to Governing the Islamic Banking Industry
Islamic Family Law II
Panelists:Anicée Van England (United Kingdom)SOAS, University of LondonMeeting the Challenge of Developing a Gender-Inclusive Methodology in Islamic Law
Tawfique Al-Mubarak (Malaysia)International Institute of Advanced Islamic StudiesSurrogacy in Islamic Law: A Maqasidic Analysis
John Hursh (United States)McGill UniversityCasting a Long Shadow: How the Politics of Independence Shape Women’s Rights in Contemporary Tunisia and Morocco
Islamic Law, Arts and Revolution
Moderators:Chantal Thomas (United States)Cornell University Law School
Amr Shalakany (Egypt)American University in Cairo
Panelists:Huda Lutfi (Egypt) Contemporary Artist, Cairo)
Sherief Gaber (Egypt) Mosireen Media Collective, Cairo
Marc Michael (United Arab Emirates) New York University
Ania Zremski (Egypt) Townhouse Gallery, Cairo
Natalie Bell (United States) New Museum, New York City
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Participants
Haider Ala Hamoudi (United States)University of Pittsburgh
Kecia Ali (United States)Boston University
Tawfique Al-Mubarak (Malaysia)International Institute of Advanced Islamic Studies
Majed Alsulais (Saudi Arabia)Taif University, KSA
Samy Ayoub (Egypt)University of Arizona
Mohamed Badar (Egypt / United Kingdom)Northumbria Law School
Samia Bano (United Kingdom)SOAS, University of London
Natalie Ann Bell (United States)New Museum
Laura Betancur (Colombia)Universidad de Los Andes
Marc Camprubi Artal (Spain)University of Barcelona
Cyra Choudhury (United States)Florida International University College of Law
Mustapha El Karouni (Belgium)Ghent Univeristy; Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales
Halim El-Deeb (Egypt)Police Academy in Egypt
Jonathan Ercanbrack (United States)SOAS, University of London
George Forji Amin (Finland)University of Helsinki
Sherief Gaber (Egypt)Mosireen Media Collective, Cairo
Karim Ginena (Canada / Egypt)HBKU / Darden School of Business
Robert Gleave (United Kingdom)University of Exeter
Fatumetul Zehra Guldas (United States)Boston University
Vanja Hamzić (Bosnia and Herzegovina)SOAS, University of London
Hedayat Heikal (Egypt)Harvard Law School
Hozami Helwani (Saudi Arabia)University of Massachusetts-Boston
Clinton Hermes (United States)Qatar Foundation
John Hursh (United States)McGill University
Huda Lutfi (Egypt)The American University in Cairo
Tayyab Mahmud (Pakistan)Seattle University
Bashar Malkawi (Jordan)University of Sharjah, College of Law
Marc Michael (Abu Dhabi)NYU Law School
Lena-Maria Möller (Germany)Max Planck Institute for Comparative and International Private Law
Farida Mortada (Egypt)Harvard Law School
Gianluca Paolo Parolin (Japan)The American University in Cairo
Andrea Quinn (United States)Berkeley School of Law
Rayees Ra mon (India)Post Graduate Fellow
Rachel Rebouché (United States)Temple University
Karen Rhone (United States)University of Chicago
Michael Riegner (Germany)NYU Law School
Nahed Samour (Germany)Humboldt University
Amr Shalakany (Egypt)The American University in Cairo
Leopold Specht (Austria)Specht Böhm
Ania Szremski (Egypt)Townhouse Gallery for Contemporary Art
Chantal Thomas (United States)Cornell Law School
Anicée Van Engeland (United Kingdom)SOAS, University of London
Miyase Yavuz (Turkey)SOAS, University of London
Maliheh Zare (Iran) NYU Law School
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Conference Conveners
David Kennedy (United States) Harvard Law School
Mikhail Xifaras (France) Sciences Po Law School
Roundtable I: Global Patterns of Heterodoxy: One Narrative or Many?
Conveners:David Kennedy (United States) Harvard Law School
Mikhail Xifaras (France) Sciences Po Law School
Theme A: The Globalization of Legal Thought
Discussants:Arnulf Becker (Chile) Brown University
Daniela Caruso (United States) Boston University School of Law
Theme B: History and Periodization
Discussants:Hani Sayed (Syria)The American University in Cairo
Antony Anghie (United States) University of Utah
Roundtable II: The Politics of Legal Thought
Convener:Duncan Kennedy (United States) Harvard Law School
Theme A: Heterodoxy, the Critical and the Left
Discussants:Horatia Muir Watt (France)Sciences Po Law School
Akbar Rusalov (Uzbekistan) University of Glasgow
Theme B: Gender and Legal Thought
Discussants:Janet Halley (United States) Harvard Law School
Vasuki Nesiah (United States) The Gallatin School, New York University
Roundtable III: Methods of Critique as Engines of Heterodoxy
Convener:Mikhail Xifaras (France) Sciences Po Law School
Theme A: Critical “Tools” and the Practice of Critique
Discussants:Pierre Schlag (United States) University of Colorado Law School
Martti Koskenneimi (Finland) University of Helsinki
Theme B: Heterdoxy in Legal Thought: The Use of Economics, Cost Benefit Analysis and Various “Pragmatisms”
Discussants:Dina Waked (Egypt) Sciences Po Law School
Dan Danielsen (United States) Northeastern University School of Law
Participants
María Luisa Gómez Moreno (Spain)Universidad de Málaga
Paola Acosta (Colombia)Universidad Externado de Colombia
Libby Adler (United States)Northeastern University School of Law
Aziza Ahmed (United States)Northeastern University School of Law
Amaya Alvez Marin (Chile)Universidad de Concepcion
Helena Alviar (Colombia)Universidad de Los Andes
Antony Anghie (United States)S.J. Quinney College of Law
Rajagopal Balakrishnan (India)Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Paulo Barrozo (United States, Brazil)Boston College Law School
Arnulf Becker (Chile)Brown University
Jason Beckett (United Kingdom)The American University in Cairo
Kate Benak (United States)The Evergreen State College
Nathaniel Berman (United States)Brown University
Laura Betancur (Colombia)Universidad de Los Andes
Fabiana Bettini (Italy)Università di Macerata
Sadeq Bigdeli (Iran)University of Waikato School of Law
Yishai Blank (Israel)Tel Aviv University
Karima Bouaifel (Algeria)Sonatrach
Rafael Burgos-Mirabal (United States)University of Massachusetts-Amherst
Marc Camprubi Artal (Spain)University of Barcelona
Daniela Caruso (United States)Boston University School of Law
Yun-Ru Chen (Taiwan)Harvard Law School
Madelaine Chiam (Australia)Melbourne Law School
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Amy Cohen (United States)Ohio State University Moritz College of Law
Matt Craven (United Kingdom)SOAS, University of London
Dan Danielsen (United States)Northeastern University School of Law
Christine Desan (United States)Harvard Law School
Justin Desautels-Stein (United States)University of Colorado Law School
Anna di Robilant (Italy)Boston University School of Law
Jorge Esquirol (United States)Florida International University College of Law
Jorge Fabra (Colombia)McMaster University (Canada)
George Forji Amin (Cameroon / Finland)University of Helsinki
Motoaki Funakoshi (Japan)Kyoto University
Jorge Gonzalez-Jacome (Colombia)Universidad Javeriana – Colombia
Gaye Gungor (Turkey)Gediz University
Janet Halley (United States)Harvard Law School
Mohammad Hamdy (Egypt)Harvard Law School
Vanja Hamzić (Bosnia and Herzegovina)SOAS, University of London
Hedayat Heikal (Egypt)Harvard Law School
Gleider Hernandez (Canada)Durham University
Tatsuhiko Inatani (Japan)Kyoto University
Marta Infantino (Italy)University of Trieste
Sheila Jasanoff (United States)Harvard Kennedy School
Fleur Johns (Australia)University of New South Wales
David Kennedy (United States)Harvard Law School
Duncan Kennedy (United States)Harvard Law School
Martti Koskenniemi (Finland)University of Helsinki
Damjan Kukovec (Slovenia)Harvard Law School
Regina Larrea (Mexico)Harvard Law School
Mitch Lasser (United States)Cornell Law School
Richard Lehun (Canada)McGill University
Carl Lisberger (United States)Harvard Law School
Tayyab Mahmud (Pakistan)Seattle University
Itamar Mann (United States)Georgetown Law
Maria Rosaria Marella (Italy)University of Perugia
Giovanni Marini (Italy)University of Perugia
Ayako Matsuura (Japan)Yale
Heidi Matthews (Canada)Harvard Law School
Zinaida Miller (United States)The Fletcher School, Tufts University
Farida Mortada (Egypt)Harvard Law School
Horatia Muir Watt (France)Sciences Po Law School
Claire Mumme (Canada)University of Windsor
El Karouni Mustapha (Belgium)Ghent Univeristy; Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales
Vasuki Nesiah (United States)The Gallatin School, New York University
Fernanda Nicola (Italy)American University Washington
Gearóid Ó Cuinn (Ireland)Lancaster University Law School
Liliana Obregón Tarazona (Colombia)Universidad de los Andes
Anne Orford (Australia)Melbourne Law School
Guillermo Otalora Lozano (Colombia)Harvard Law School
Lisa Lucile Owens (United States)Columbia University
Genevieve Painter (United States / Ireland)University of California-Berkeley
Rose Parfitt (United Kingdom)Melbourne Law School
James Parker (United Kingdom /Australia)Melbourne Law School
Nicolás Perrone (Argentina)Universidad Externado de Colombia
Ileana Porras (United States)University of Miami School of Law
Akbar Rasulov (Uzbekistan)University of Glasgow
Rachel Rebouché (United States)Temple University Beasley School of Law
Gonçalo Almeida Ribeiro (Portugal)Católica Global School of Law
Michael Riegner (Germany)New York University School of Law
Kerry Rittich (Canada)University of Toronto
Brishen Rogers (United States)Temple University Beasley School of Law
Malcolm Rogge (Canada)Harvard Law School
Maria Rosaria Marella (Italy)University of Perugia
Alvaro Santos (Mexico)Georgetown Law
Hani Sayed (Syria)The American University in Cairo
Pierre Schlag (United States)University of Colorado Law School
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Participants (Continued)
Amr Shalakany (Egypt)The American University in Cairo
Hila Shamir (Israel)Faculty of Law, Tel Aviv University
Carolina Silva-Portero (Ecuador)Harvard Law School
Leopold Specht (Austria)Specht Böhm
Matthew Spurlock (United States)Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
Jeannie Suk (United States)Harvard Law School
Nimer Sultany (Palestinian)SOAS, University of London
Mai Taha (Egypt)University of Toronto
Chantal Thomas (United States)Cornell Law School
Chris Tomlins (United States)University of California Irvine
Philomila Tsoukala (Greece)Georgetown Law
Pieter Van Malleghem (Belgium)Harvard Law School
Camila Villard Duran (Brazil)University of São Paulo
Robert Wai (Canada)Osgoode Hall Law School
Dina Waked (Egypt)Sciences Po Law School
Lucie White (United States)Harvard Law School
Mikhail Xifaras (France)Sciences Po Law Schoolpe
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event participantsIGLP Pro-Seminar: The Role of Law in Structures of Global Production (Harvard Law School), June 4-6, 2014 Organizers
Grietje Baars (The Netherlands) The City Law School, City University London
Dan Danielsen (United States) Northeastern University School of Law
Dennis Davis (South Africa) High Court of Cape Town
Jason Jackson (The Bahamas) Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania
Brishen Rogers (United States) Temple University Beasley School of Law
Participants
Grietje Baars (The Netherlands)The City Law School, City University London
Jennifer Bair (United States)University of Colorado
Liam Campling (United Kingdom)Queen Mary University of London
Amy Cohen (United States)Ohio State University Moritz College of Law
Dan Danielsen (United States)Northeastern University School of Law
Dennis Davis (South Africa)High Court of Cape Town, South Africa
Klaas Eller (Germany)University of Cologne
Dezso Farkas (Canada)Osgoode Hall Law School
Tomaso Ferrando (Italy)Sciences Po Law School
David Hansen-Miller (United States)International Transport Workers’ Federation
Elizabeth Havice (United States)University of North Carolina
Jason Jackson (United States)Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania
Nisha Mistry (United States)Brookings Institution
Claire Mumme (Canada)University of Windsor
Vesco Paskalev (Bulgaria)European University Institute
David Quentin (United Kingdom)Stone King LLP, Cambridge University
Brishen Rogers (United States)Temple University Beasley School of Law
Jaakko Salminen (Finland)University of Turku
Alvaro Santos (Mexico)Georgetown Law
Lucie White (United States)Harvard Law School
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Genealogy of Heterodoxy in International Law
Panelist:Martti Koskenniemi (Finland) University of Helsinki
The Postcolonial Turn as Heterodox Intervention
Panelists:Samera Esmeir (Israel/Palestine) University of California-Berkeley
Saba Mahmood (Pakistan/United States) University of California-Berkeley Comparative Heterodoxies: Science and Technology Studies/ Critical Legal Studies / Third World Approaches to International Law
Panelists:Arnulf Becker (Chile) Brown University
Duncan Kennedy (United States) Harvard Law School
Sheila Jasanoff (United States) Harvard Kennedy School
Academia in the Public Realm: The Problem of Boycotts
Moderator: Zinaida Miller (United States) Tufts University
Panelists:Dennis Davis (South Africa) High Court of Cape Town
Janet Halley (United States) Harvard Law School
Rose Parfitt (United Kingdom) Melbourne University Law School
Heterodoxy in International Finance and Banking
Panelists:Tamara Lothian (United States) Columbia Law School
Leopold Specht (Austria) Specht Böhm Rechtsanwalt GmbH, Vienna
Critical Approaches to International Criminal Law
Panelists:Heidi Matthews (Canada) Harvard Law School
Tor Krever (Canada) London School of Economics and Political Science
Paul Clark (United Kingdom) Garden Court Chambers
Grietje Baars (The Netherlands) The City Law School, City University London
Michelle Burgis-Kasthala (Australia) University of Edinburgh
Bringing Heterodoxy to Bear: New Approaches to Syria
Moderator:David Kennedy (United States) Harvard Law School
Panelists:Hani Sayed (Syria) The American University in Cairo
Zoran Oklopcic (Croatia and Italy) Carleton University
Anne Orford (Australia) Melbourne University Law School
Usha Natarajan (Australia) The American University in Cairo
Genealogy of Heterodoxy in Economics
Alfredo Saad Filho (United Kingdom) SOAS, University of London
Genealogy of Heterodoxy in International Relations
Helen Kinsella (United States) University of Wisconsin-Madison Department of Political Science
Circulations of Modernity in East Asia: New Approaches to Comparative Law
Moderator:Mikhail Xifaras (France) Sciences Po Law School
Panelists:Dongsheng Zang (China) University of Washington School of Law
Hajime Yamamoto (Japan) Keio University Law School
Yun Ru Chen (Taiwan) Harvard Law School
Mika Yokoyama (Japan) Kyoto University Graduate School of Law
World Making and Norm-Making: Heterodoxy in Science and Technology Studies
Panelists:Ben Hurlbut (United States) Arizona State University, School of Life Sciences
Shelia Jasanoff (United States) Harvard Kennedy School
Genealogy of Heterodoxy in History
Panelist:Judith Surkis (United States) Rutgers University
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Participants
Libby Adler (United States)Northeastern University School of Law
Aziza Ahmed (United States)Northeastern University School of Law
Talal Abdulla Al-Emadi (Qatar)Qatar University College of Law
Helena Alviar (Colombia)Universidad de Los Andes
Antony Anghie (United States)S.J. Quinney College of Law, University of Utah
Alejandra Azuero-Quijano (Colombia)Harvard Law School
Grietje Baars (The Netherlands)The City Law School, City University London
Elizabeth Bartholet (United States)Harvard Law School
Arnulf Becker (Chile)Watson Institute for International Studies, Brown University
Nathaniel Berman (United States)Brown University
Sadeq Bigdeli (Iran)University of Waikato School of Law
Stuart Brotman (United States)Harvard Law School
Qingxiu Bu (People’s Republic of China)University of Sussex
Michelle Burgis-Kasthala (Australia)University of Edinburgh
Yun-Ru Chen (Taiwan)Harvard Law School
Madelaine Chiam (Australia)Melbourne Law School
Cyra Choudhury (United States)Florida International University College of Law
Paul Clark (United Kingdom)Garden Court Chambers
Matt Craven (United Kingdom)SOAS, University of London
Dan Danielsen (United States)Northeastern University School of Law
Dennis Davis (South Africa)High Court of Cape Town
Christine Desan (United States)Harvard Law School
Luis Eslava (Australia)Melbourne Law School
Samera Esmeir (Palestinian)University of California-Berkeley
Jorge Esquirol (United States)Florida International University College of Law
Günter Frankenberg (Germany)The Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main
Gerald Frug (United States)Harvard Law School
Motoaki Funakoshi (Japan)Kyoto University
Yugank Goyal (India)University of Hamburg
Janet Halley (United States)Harvard Law School
Vanja Hamzić (Bosnia and Herzegovina)SOAS, University of London
John Haskell (United States)Mississippi College School of Law
Ben Hurlbut (United States)Arizona State University, School of Life Sciences
Sheila Jasanoff (United States)Harvard Kennedy School
Vivek Kanwar (United States)Jindal Global Law School
Ratna Kapur (India)Jindal Global Law School
David Kennedy (United States)Harvard Law School
Duncan Kennedy (United States)Harvard Law School
Helen Kinsella (United States)University of Wisconsin-Madison
Martti Koskenniemi (Finland)University of Helsinki,
Tor Krever (Canada)London School of Economics and Political Science
Vidya Kumar (Canada)University of Birmingham
Richard Lehun (Canada)McGill University
Tamara Lothian (United States)Columbia Law School
Saba Mahmood (Pakistan and United States)University of California-Berkeley
Boris Mamlyuk (United States)University of Memphis, School of Law
Heidi Matthews (Canada)Harvard Law School
Zinaida Miller (United States)The Fletcher School, Tufts University
Pier Giuseppe Monateri (Italy)University of Turin
Horatia Muir Watt (France)Sciences Po Law School
Usha Natarajan (Australia)The American University in Cairo
Vasuki Nesiah (United States)The Gallatin School, New York University
Zoran Oklopcic (Croatia / Italy)Carleton University
Anne Orford (Australia)Melbourne Law School
Sundhya Pahuja (Australia)Melbourne Law School
Rose Parfitt (United Kingdom)Melbourne Law School
Vesco Paskalev (Bulgaria)European University Institute
Nicolás Perrone (Argentina / Italy)Universidad Externado de Colombia
Nikolas Rajkovic (Canada)University of Kent Law School
Rachel Rebouché (United States)Temple University Beasley School of Law
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Participants (Continued)
Karen Rhone (United States)University of Chicago
Kerry Rittich (Canada)University of Toronto
Alfredo Saad Filho (United Kingdom)SOAS, University of London
Alvaro Santos (Mexico)Georgetown Law
Hani Sayed (Syria)The American University in Cairo
Mohammad Shahabuddin(Bangladesh)Jahangrinagar University
Amr Shalakany (Egypt)The American University in Cairo
Leo Specht (Austria)Specht Böhm
Judith Surkis (United States)Rutgers University
Chantal Thomas (United States)Cornell Law School
René Urena (Colombia)Universidad de Los Andes
Robert Wai (Canada)Osgoode Hall Law School
Lucie White (United States)Harvard Law School
Mikhail Xifaras (France)Sciences Po Law School
Hajime Yamamoto (Japan)Keio University Law School
Mika Yokoyama (Japan)Kyoto University
Dongsheng Zang (Japan)University of Washington School of Law
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IGLP 2013
core curriculum
plenary lectures
discussion sections
writing workshops
social program
enrichment curriculum
santander/iglp doha grants
iglp alumni collaborativeresearch grants
iglp travel grants
iglp ongoing research projects
the conference
the colloquium
the pro-seminars
the workshopan intensive residential program for scholars developing innovative ideas and alternative approaches to issues of global law, economicpolicy, and social justice.
workshop for faculty and docents
doha in january
alumni opportunities
cambridge in june
iglp: the workshop JANUARY 2-11, 2015 | DOHA, QATARthe workshop is an intensive residential program designed to strengthen the next generation of doctoral & post-doctoral scholars by placing them in collaboration with their global peers as they develop innovative ideas and approaches to issues of global law, economic policy, social justice and governance.
iglp: the conference JUNE 1-3, 2015 | CAMBRIDGE, MAa biannual international conference on new directions in global thought for new and returning members of the iglp network to present and discuss innovative research in the institute’s core areas.
iglp: the colloquium JUNE 4-5, 2015 | CAMBRIDGE, MAan annual colloquium for core faculty, invited guests and iglp docents.
iglp: the pro-seminars JUNE 4-5, 2015 | CAMBRIDGE, MApro-seminars bring together 10-15 scholars who are working on a common topic to brainstorm their scholarly writing and advance their work toward publication.
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IGLP 2013
core curriculum
plenary lectures
discussion sections
writing workshops
social program
enrichment curriculum
santander/iglp doha grants
iglp alumni collaborativeresearch grants
iglp travel grants
iglp ongoing research projects
the conference
the colloquium
the pro-seminars
the workshopan intensive residential program for scholars developing innovative ideas and alternative approaches to issues of global law, economicpolicy, and social justice.
workshop for faculty and docents
doha in january
alumni opportunities
cambridge in june
IGLP 2015
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The Workshop 2014
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economic development
rethinking global finance
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INSTITUTE FOR GLOBAL LAW & POLICYHarvard Law School, Cambridge, MA 02138
+1-617-495-3145 www.iglp.law.harvard.edu