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BRITISH ASSOCIATION OF COMPARATIVE LAW (BACL) POSTGRADUATE WORKSHOP ON COMPARATIVE LAW 11th-12th June 2010
KENT CENTRE FOR EUROPEAN AND COMPARATIVE LAW KENT LAW SCHOOL UNIVERSITY OF KENT
PROGRAMME
Friday 11th June 2010
13.00-14.00 Check In & Sandwich Lunch Kent Law School, Eliot Extension, Rm EX8
14.00-14.15 Welcoming Address Kent Law School, Eliot Extension, Rm EX9 Prof. Geoffrey Samuel, President of BACL, Joint Director of the Kent Centre for European and Comparative Law, University of Kent, UK
14.15-16.15 Guest Lectures Kent Law School, Eliot Extension, Rm EX9 Prof. Pierre Legrand, Université de Paris I (Panthéon-Sorbonne), France, “The Poverty of Functionalism” Prof. Reza Banakar, University of Westminster, London, UK, “Power, Culture and Method in Comparative Law”
16.15-17.00 Coffee/Tea Break
17.00-19.00 Guest Lectures Kent Law School, Eliot Extension, Rm EX9 Prof. Franz Werro, University of Fribourg, Switzerland and Georgetown University Law Centre, Washington, DC, USA, Co-Director of the Centre for Transnational Legal Studies, London, UK, “Legal Comparison in Practice: A Question of Knowledge and Method” Dr Simone Glanert, Joint Director of the Kent Centre for European and Comparative Law, University of Kent, UK, “Translation Matters: When the Impossible Must Be Possible”
20.00 Dinner Venue and Directions To Be Communicated at the Workshop
Saturday 12th June 2010
9.00-12.00
Parallel Sessions
Working Group I Facilitator: Prof. Pierre Legrand Kent Law School, Eliot College Extension, Rm EX7 Eva Lahnsteiner, Freie Universität Berlin, Germany, “Defining Minorities: A Comparative Analysis of the Term ‘Minority’ From an International, European and National Legal Point of View” Irene Spigno, University of Siena, Italy, “Hate Speech Towards Freedom of Expression, Theories of Recognition and Human Dignity: A Comparative Perspective” Benedict Coxon, University of Oxford, UK, “The Effect of Interpretive Provisions in Human Rights Instruments on the Rules of Statutory Interpretation: A Comparative Analysis”
Coffee/Tea Break
Wei Wei Cao, Keele University, UK, “The Role of Law in Promoting Reproductive Autonomy: A Feminist Response to the Law and Policy of Abortion in the UK and China” Gianluca Gentili, University of Siena, Italy, “Multilevel Protection of Rights in the United States: The New Judicial Federalism and the Protection of Fundamental Rights in US State Constitutions” Matthias Vanhullebusch, School of Oriental and African Studies, London, UK, “On Identity, Power and Change: Reading International Humanitarian Law and Islamic Law of War”
Working Group II Facilitators: Prof. Franz Werro and Prof. Geoffrey Samuel Kent Law School, Eliot College Extension, Rm EX8 Eva Lohse, Friedrich-Alexander-University, Erlangen, Germany, “Typology of Harmonisation in the European Legal Order Examined by the Example of General Principles of Law” Thalia Prastitou, University of Bristol, UK, “Interpretation Asymmetries: An Obstacle to the Harmonised Application of European Contract Law?” Sophie Engelhardt, Freie Universität Berlin, Germany, “Comparative Law Aspects in Recent Developments of Cultural Property Law: Can Non-binding Agreements Have a Harmonizing Impact on National Legal Systems?”
Coffee/Tea Break
Valentina Rita Scotti, University of Siena, Italy, “The Constitutional Transitions and the Council of Europe: The Case of the Turkish Republic” Ingvill Helland, University of Bergen, Norway, “Rulings of the European Court of Human Rights As a Legal Argument in Norwegian Law Compared to German Law” Alix Willemez, University of Paris II (Panthéon-Assas), France, “The Overseas Countries and Territories: A Hesitant Future for the Political and Cultural Influence of the EU?”
Working Group III Facilitators: Prof. Reza Banakar and Dr Simone Glanert Kent Law School, Eliot College Extension, Rm EX9 Paolo Cavaliere, Bocconi University, Milan, Italy, “The New Shape of Citizenship in the Information Society: Participatory Democracy, Mediacracy and the Role of Pluralism” Riddhi Dasgupta, University of Cambridge, UK, “Nods to Sovereignty: ‘Attribution’ and ‘Exhaustion of Remedies’ in the International Expropriation Decisions of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) Panels, the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) and the Iran-US Claims Tribunal (IUCT)” Daniel R. Ruhweza, University of Kent, UK, “Re-thinking the Place of Indigenous Justice Mechanisms in International Criminal Law: The Case of the Lord’s Resistance Army of Northern Uganda”
Coffee/Tea Break
Younsik Kim, University of Edinburgh, UK, “Uncontrollable Gap in the Protection and Restriction of Property Between the Korean Constitution and the KORUS-FTA” Alessandro Chiarabolli, University of Siena, Italy, “Coexistence of Genetically Modified Crops With Conventional and Organic Agriculture. A Comparative Study: Denmark and Italy” Beatriz Martinez Romera, University of Copenhagen, Denmark, “The Inclusion of Aviation and Shipping Transport Emissions Into Global Greenhouse Gas Emissions Reduction Targets: Legal and Policy Barriers, Conflicts and Opportunities”
12.00-12.30 Concluding Remarks Kent Law School, Eliot College Extension, Rm EX9 Prof. Geoffrey Samuel, President of BACL, Joint Director of the Kent Centre for European and Comparative Law, University of Kent, UK
12.30 Sandwich Lunch Kent Law School, Eliot College Extension, KLS Committee Room
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