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TEGL (Transformative Effects of Globalisation in Law) has partnered with the Arts of the Working Class, a multi-lingual street journal, to showcase some of the research happening in the project and as an introduction to some of the themes that will be discussed at the TEGL conference, 22-23 June 2023.

Contributions include essays by Johanna Lorenzo (UvA), Phillip Paiement (Tilburg), Anna Beckers (Maastricht), Klaas Eller (UvA) & Vladimir Bogoeski (UvA), Ingo Venzke (UvA), Ece Temelkuran, Margaretha Wewerinke-Singh (UvA) and a conversation on international law, sustainability and solidarity with Ingo Venzke & Ivana Isailović (UvA).

Arts of the Working Class

A multi-lingual street journal on poverty and wealth, art and society: Arts of the Working Class is published every two months and contains contributions by artists and thinkers from different fields and in different languages. Its terms are based upon the working class, meaning everyone, and it reports everything that belongs to everyone. 

 

TEGL

Transformative effects of globalisation in law is a cooperation of legal scholars from the University of Amsterdam, Maastricht University, Tilburg University and the Open University aiming to provide an inspiring forum to tackle the vital challenges that affect law in the era of globalisation. 

Grassroots activism works in or against legal systems, not rarely in transnational contexts. In the face of complex state relationships, international law can be a progressive tool, and Ingo Venzke, Ivana Isailovic, and their peers at the Transformative Effects of Globalization in Law Project prove it. Arts of the Working Class, issue 26