Towards a Sustainable Global Economic Law? Shifts, Ruptures and Social Justice
31 October 2021
The goal of the workshop is to interrogate the role of global economic law--the myriad of intertwining international, EU, public, private, domestic, transnational, ‘soft’ rules, codes of conduct--in enabling and reproducing accelerating environmental and social crises in the present global neoliberal context, and to reflect on what a ‘sustainable’ global economic law may look like within current global unequal contexts.
Some of the broad questions that we are interested in are the following:
We invite contributions from scholars (PhD researchers, early career, as well as more senior colleagues) working on these and other issues broadly related to the above questions, and in particular those that use insights from postcolonial, gender, critical race theories and adopt a cross-disciplinary approach. If you are interested in participating, please send your 15-page draft by Dec. 4th to i.isailovic@uva.nl and 500-word text about you and your work.
About the format of the workshop: participants will have 5 minutes to present their main argument(s) and the questions that they are struggling with. We will then have 25-30 min for feedback and quick responses from the author. All the participants in the workshop will be expected to read and comment on selected drafts.
The hybrid in person/online conference is hosted by Ivana Isailović (UvA) & Phillip Paiement (Tilburg).
For more information, you can reach out to Ivana (i.isailovic@uva.nl) or Phillip (P.M.Paiement@tilburguniversity.edu).