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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20251209T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20251209T170000
DTSTAMP:20260428T075349
CREATED:20251009T122355Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251201T161406Z
UID:12433-1765296000-1765299600@oxgs.org
SUMMARY:Book Colloquium: The EU Constitution in Time of War
DESCRIPTION:Registration link: \nhttps://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_7ayi9uEUQcaIDXr8emh99A \nParticipants (see below for more detailed bios): \nFederico Fabbrini: Author of the book\, Professor of European Law at the School of Law & Government of Dublin City University (DCU)\, the Founding Director of the Brexit Institute and of the Dublin European Law Institute (DELI)\n\nCatherine Barnard: FBA\, FLSW\, FRSA\, Professor of EU law and Employment Law and senior tutor and fellow of Trinity College\, Cambridge University \nPaul Craig: FBA\, Emeritus Professor of English Law\, Fellow of St John’s College\, Oxford University \nSionaidh Douglas-Scott (moderator): Anniversary Chair in Law at Queen Mary University of London. Previously she was Professor of European and Human Rights law at Oxford University \nDescription of the book: \nRussia’s illegal aggression against Ukraine has been a watershed moment for the European Union (EU). Embracing a comparative analytical framework\, this book examines how the EU constitution has functioned in response to Russia’s aggression. It scrutinizes the EU’s legal reactions across five key policy areas: foreign\, security\, and defence policy; economic and fiscal policy; justice and home affairs; energy and industrial policy; and enlargement and reform. In doing so\, it investigates whether the EU constitution has enabled the EU to respond effectively to the war\, how EU treaties have been interpreted to authorize war-related actions\, and whether these responses have adhered to constitutional limits. It is the first systematic analysis of how the EU constitution has fared in wartime. Access here for more detailed information about the book. \nParticipants bios: \nFederico Fabbrini: Full Professor of European Law at the School of Law & Government of Dublin City University (DCU)\, the Founding Director of the Brexit Institute and of the Dublin European Law Institute (DELI). He holds a PhD in Law from the European University Institute and previously held academic positions in the Netherlands and Denmark. He has been a Fellow in Law & Public Affairs at Princeton University and a Fernand Braudel Fellow at the European University Institute. He is the author of 5 monographs in English (all published by Oxford University Press)\, and the editor or co-editor of a dozen books. He has also authored several studies and reports for the European Parliament and the Department of Finance of Ireland. He has won over €3 millions of external funding. \nCatherine Barnard: FBA\, FLSW\, FRSA\, Professor of EU law and Employment Law and senior tutor and fellow of Trinity College\, Cambridge University.  She is the author of EU Employment Law (OUP\, 2012\, 5th ed)\, European Union Law (OUP\, 2020\, 3rd ed) and others. She is a member of the European Commission funded European Labour Law Network (ELLN) and a Senior Fellow and deputy director of the UK in a Changing Europe project (UKCE). She has appeared on the main media channels – BBC\, ITV and Sky – as well as many more specialist programmes. She has also written for the Guardian and the Telegraph. She has given evidence to numerous select committees on the legal issues connected with Brexit\, immigration and the European Union (Withdrawal) Act. She sits on the advisory board of Oxford Global Society. \n \nPaul Craig: FBA\, Emeritus Professor of English Law\, Fellow of St John’s College\, Oxford University. He specializes in constitutional law\, administrative law\, EU law and comparative public law\, and has published extensively in all areas. He held the position of Professor of English Law at Oxford University since 1998 to 2019. He is the author of a number of legal textbooks\, the most well-known of which (EU Law: Text\, Cases and Materials) was published in its 5th edition by Oxford University Press in September 2011. He was appointed an honorary Queen’s Counsel in 2000. \nSionaidh Douglas-Scott: Anniversary Chair in Law at Queen Mary University of London. Previously she was Professor of European and Human Rights law at Oxford University and before that Professor of Law at King’s College London. She retains a link with Oxford as honorary research fellow at Lady Margaret Hall\, Oxford. She was LAPA fellow at Princeton 2020-2021\, and special advisor to Scottish Parliament European and External Affairs Brexit enquiries 2015-2018. Her book ‘Brexit and British Constitutional unsettlement’ (the product of her Leverhulme fellowship) is published by Cambridge UP in 2022. She is also a Fellow at Oxford Global Society. \n  \n 
URL:https://oxgs.org/event/book-colloquium-the-eu-constitution-in-time-of-war/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Book Colloquium,Governance & Law
ORGANIZER;CN="Oxford%20Global%20Society":MAILTO:info@oxgs.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20220309T120000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20220309T133000
DTSTAMP:20260428T075349
CREATED:20220222T122110Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230411T200953Z
UID:8206-1646827200-1646832600@oxgs.org
SUMMARY:Book Colloquium: Measuring Peace and Related Matters
DESCRIPTION:The colloquium\, organised by Oxford Global Society\, will focus on Richard Caplan’s recent book: Measuring Peace: Principles\, Practices\, and Politics (Oxford University Press\, 2019; ppbk 2021) and then touch on other issues around peace. Richard’s book opens with the question: How can we know if the peace that has been established following a civil war is a stable peace? The answer: more rigorous assessments of the robustness of peace are needed. Richard goes on to show how that can be done. The debate will touch on other matters relating to peace\, including how to get to peace and the process after peace. \nRead the excerpt from Richard Caplan’s book here. \n \nRichard Caplan: Professor of International Relations at the University of Oxford. Fellow of Oxford Global Society. His research is concerned principally with international organizations and conflict management. \nCommentators:\nChristine Bell: Professor of Constitutional Law at Edinburgh University\, Co-Director of the Global Justice Academy\, and a Fellow of the British Academy. She is the author of: Peace Agreements and Human Rights (Oxford University Press\, 2000) and On the Law of Peace: Peace Agreements and the Lex Pacificatoria (Oxford University Press\, 2008) \nAlan Doss: former Director and President of the Kofi Annan Foundation. Prior to joining the Foundation in 2011 he worked for the UN on peacekeeping\, development and humanitarian assignments around the world. These assignments included UN peacekeeping appointments as the Special Representative of the UN Secretary General in Liberia and then in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Alan’s most recent book is A Peacekeeper in Africa: Learning from UN Interventions in Other People’s Wars (Lynne Rienner\, 2020) \nModerator:\nDenis Galligan\, Director Oxford Global Society\, Professor of Socio-Legal Studies Emeritus Oxford University\, Professorial Fellow Emeritus Wolfson College Oxford. \nRegister for the event: \nhttps://zoom.us/meeting/register/tJwucu2vpj4qGd2d3K-w8KCC-9UzzFggwBKJ
URL:https://oxgs.org/event/book-colloquium-measuring-peace-and-related-matters/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Book Colloquium,Global Politics
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://oxgs.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/measuring-peace.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Oxford%20Global%20Society":MAILTO:info@oxgs.org
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20220114T160000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20220114T170000
DTSTAMP:20260428T075349
CREATED:20211216T174002Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211230T110120Z
UID:6904-1642176000-1642179600@oxgs.org
SUMMARY:The New Cold War? Online book colloquium: Comity by Frank Vibert
DESCRIPTION:In this online event\, Frank Vibert\, OXGS Fellow\, will present his new book: Comity: Multilateralism in the New Cold War. The book depicts a new Cold War between democracies and authoritarian countries. The fundamentally different values they embed in the way they approach government and policymaking means that the task of making fully international rules of behaviour has become almost impossible. The meagre results from COP26 and the indefinite postponement of the 2021 WTO Ministerial meeting illustrate this problem. As the main way out of deadlock\, the book explores the role of like-minded democratic countries in taking the lead in making international rules. Will it lead to further conflict? Is it a legitimate approach? \nParticipants:\nFrank Vibert  \nAuthor. OXGS Fellow and an associate of the Centre for the Analysis of Risk and Regulation (CARR) at the London School of Economics where he was a Senior Visiting Fellow between 2008-2020. \nRichard Caplan\nCommentator. Richard Caplan is Professor of International Relations at the University of Oxford. His research is concerned principally with international organizations and conflict management. He is the author\, most recently\, of Measuring Peace: Principles\, Practices and Politics (Oxford University Press). \nPaul Craig\nCommentator. Paul Craig is Emeritus Professor of English Law\, St John’s College\, Oxford University. He has written extensively on constitutional law\, administrative law\, EU law and comparative administrative law. \nDenis Galligan\nModerator. OXGS Director. Emeritus Professor of Socio-Legal Studies\, Oxford University.     \nEvent registration:\nhttps://zoom.us/meeting/register/tJAkdu6trDspHddJG-Nb3Zh1xjIzo-vdtIs8
URL:https://oxgs.org/event/the-new-cold-war-online-book-colloquium-comity/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Book Colloquium,Global Politics
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://oxgs.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/Comity.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Oxford%20Global%20Society":MAILTO:info@oxgs.org
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