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Understanding the EU as a Good Global Governance Actor

Conference

Workshop

The EU has as its legal mission to be a good global governance actor yet is continuously challenged in the world. As a global actor, the EU is both a weak and strong actor in a divergent range of global governance areas. It is not comparable to study the EU as a global trade actor for example to its efforts in human rights, data, cyber or the environment. EU international relations constitutes arguably a booming field of law where the EU appears often to be a victim of its own success.

And yet it is stated to be a non-entity in non-trade areas globally. The range of the subjects and objects of EU law continues to expand and the EU is arguably increasingly a victim of its own success, increasingly taking decisions with impacts on third countries or parties, subjecting more entities to sanctions regimes, being bound to consult more entities and have more third countries, parties and entities such as lobbyists interested in the directions of EU law.  

The development of the EU as a global actor continues to have multiple facets to it across disciplines. From a legal perspective, the EU has a legal mission to be a good legal actor in its treaties. Yet how does this manifest itself? The assessment of the EU as a global actor includes broad checks on normative action ex ante and ex post facto- yet it is no less harsh. Ex ante metrics of EU global action include court-centred ones such as an opinion from the CJEU on legality of an international agreement, precluded in many constitutional systems on account of its conflict with pacta sunt servanda. The contours of the principle of the autonomy of EU law have the capacity to put more stringent parameters on EU institutionalised evolutions as to international engagement. The book explores the metrics of actorness from a legal perspective. This book explores the nexus between trade and big data, trade and economics and trade and human rights as a future research agenda with input from a variety of scholars in the new era of deeper enforcement of EU trade law, EU digital sovereignty and EU defensive multilateralism. Which nexus is most apt as the EU evolves? Which nexus is the hardest to prove, to show or to engage with from a legal perspective?

The programme can be downloaded via this link [PDF].

 

Please note this event will take online via Zoom. Attendees will need to have a Zoom account to access the webinar, a free Zoom account can be set up at registration.

The event is jointly organised by the City Law School Institute for the Study of European Law & the EUTIP network.

 

Participants


Elaine Fahey, City Law School, City, University of London (co-organiser)
Isabelle Mancini, Brunel Law School/ City Law School, City, University of London  (co-organiser)

Ignacio Garcia-Bercero, European Commission  
Kalypso Nicolaïdis, University of Oxford
Ramses Wessel, University of Groningen  
Jean-Baptiste Velut, Université Paris III - Sorbonne Nouvelle  
Martin Trybus, University of Birmingham  
Tonia Novitz, University of Bristol  
Eva Pander Maat, City, University of London  
Clair Gammage, University of Bristol  
Xuechen Chen, New College of the Humanities  
Xinchuchu Gao, Kings College London  
Jorg Polakiewicz, Council of Europe  
Thomas Streinz, New York University  
Svetlana Yakovleva, University of Amsterdam  
Maria Garcia, University of Bath  
Wolfgang Weiss, University of Speyer  
Ewa Zelazna, University of Leicester  
Eva Kassoti, TMC Asser Institute  
Graham Butler, University of Aarhus
Gesa Kubek, University of Leuphana  
Elaine Fahey, City, University of London  
Isabella Mancini, City, University of London

Attendance at City events is subject to our terms and conditions.

1 Jul 2021 Online