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This panel will explore what a ‘sustainable global economic law’ might look like by asking how global economic law could be (re)conceptualized to simultaneously foster redistributive justice, address various forms of inequalities, and confront the ecological catastrophe.
Event details of SGEL Panel at the 2022 Law and Society Association Global Meeting
Date
16 July 2022
Time
10:00 -11:00

It will tackle some of the following questions: What are the limits of the current global economic legal responses to both environmental harms and economic dispossession? How should economic private ordering be regulated? How can nature’s agency be conceptualized through law? How can global economic law be responsive to voices and interests of indigenous and tribal communities over their ancestral lands?  What are the alternative ways of (re) imagining global economic law that addresses current unequal power dynamics?
 

Chair: Ivana Isailović (UVA)

Panelists:
Andrea Leiter (UvA), A token for ‘nature’?

Chantal Mak (UvA), Social contracts, Balancing law-making power in wild zones of globalization

Giacomo Tagiuri (UvA), A Sustainable Economic Law for Small Businesses

Lys Kulamadayil (UvA-IHEID), The Pain of Plenty

Claire Debucquois (Belgian Academy in Rome) The European Green Deal Taxonomy and Externalities: Mapping Distributive Outcomes in Climate Law and Policy