Ideas. Change
Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies
Contacts Marie Ghalanos Secretary to the GGP Email: marie.ghalanos@eui.eu Phone: +39 055 4685 973 www.globalgovernanceprogramme.eu globalgovernance.programme@eui.eu globalgovernance.academy@eui.eu
Table of Contents Foreword by the GGP Director
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The Dimensions of the Global Governance Programme Research Policy Training
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Research Strands Modes of Global Governance Development Policies International Economic Law Climate Policies
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Externally Funded Projects The Globalisation Database Beyond Territoriality: Globalisation and Transnational Human Rights Obligations (GLOTHRO)
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Fellowships
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Academy of Global Governance
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Events Global Governance Debates Conferences Workshops Seminars and Lectures
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Communications and Outreach Global Governance Network Publications Newsletter
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GGP Team
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Foreword by GGP Director Global governance is a term difficult to define. In part, its success in academic and policy discourse results precisely from its capacity to embrace very different global phenomena and institutions. We can state that the starting point of global governance is a growing recognition that an increased number of issues can no longer be governed at the state level and require some form of transnational governance. In a variety of domains (such as environment, trade, energy, financial markets, terrorism, human rights), global governance increasingly appears as a necessity for both member states and the European Union. For Europe, to play an important role in shaping global governance, it is essential to strengthen and mobilise its existent critical mass on this subject at a research and policy level. This is the purpose of the Global Governance Programme (GGP), based at the Robert Shuman Centre for Advanced Studies (RSCAS) at the European University Institute (EUI). The GGP, launched in June 2010 by the President of the European Commission, JosĂŠ Manuel DurĂŁo Barroso, provides a European setting for the study of global issues and of how to address them through different institutional alternatives for governance, at the regional and global level. At the same time, the Programme puts research and policy-making in close contact in three different ways. It conducts policy oriented research coordinated by EUI Professors and worldwide top scholars; it brings policy-makers, at different levels, in contact with scholars and researchers to promote real exchanges and synergies between the world of politics and research; and it offers executive and policy oriented training . The GGP is structured by Research Strands and Projects focused on issues of global significance and facilitates research and analysis by academics with expertise in various global governance domains to provide policy-relevant recommendations. In 2012 the GGP concentrates on four research strands: Modes of Global Governance, Development Policies, International Economic Law, and Climate Policies. In 2010 and 2011, the Programme organised over fifty events, namely High-Level Policy Seminars, Executive Trainings, conferences and workshops. The High-Level Policy Seminars (HLPS) aim to establish a systematic dialogue between research and policy and produce guidelines and recommendations to 2
develop policy proposals with a global dimension. The 2010-2011 HLPS convened, at the European University Institute, leading academics from other internationally recognized institutions and policy-makers of the calibre of José Manuel Durão Barroso (President of the European Commission), Vitor Constâncio (Vice-President of the European Central Bank), Harold Hongju Koh (Legal Adviser of the US State Department), Stavros Lambrinidis (VicePresident of the European Parliament), Richard Barrett (Coordinator of the U.N. Al-Queda-Taliban Monitoring Team), Rufus H. Yerxa (WTO Deputy DirectorGeneral), and Gilles De Kerchove (EU Counter-Terrorism Coordinator), to mention but few. In the rapidly expanding interdisciplinary field of global governance, the Programme also offers executive training through the Academy of Global Governance. The Academy represents a setting where academics, diplomats, public officers and international organisations officials, from all over the world, exchange theoretical and practical experiences and enjoy an enriching networking opportunity in an exceptional learning environment. The 20102011 trainees were mainly Europeans, but some were also from Australia, Brasil, Japan, Taiwan, Liberia and South Africa. The goal in the coming years is to expand the Academy’s geographical scope even futher. The year 2012 will see another increase of activities of the GGP, namely: the expansion and consolidation of the Research Strands and Projects, fostered by the increase of the number of research assistants and scholars collaborating with the research strands coordinators; an increase in the level of research output in terms of Working Papers, Policy Papers and Policy Briefs; an intensification of the Global Governance Network activity, and the development of an EU/Asia fellowship programme. The following pages offer an overview of the achievements of the Programme and of the steps forward. Enjoy the reading,
Miguel Poiares Maduro Director Global Governance Programme 3
The Dimensions of the Global Governance Programme Research, Policy and Training are the three dimensions of the GGP. The Global Governance Programme’s goals are: develop new ideas on current global challenges, share knowledge, serve as a bridge between research and policy-making, and promote the European perspective in shaping global governance.
Research The GGP Research Strands and Projects are coordinated by leading academics working on global issues, both from the EUI and from other internationally recognized top institutions. In 2012 the Research Strands and Projects of the Global Governance Programme will be consolidated by reordering the Research Strands and by expanding the number of projects which are subsumed under them. The GGP Research Strands for this year are: 'Modes of Global Governance', 'Development Policies', 'International Economic Law' and 'Climate Policies’.
2010-2011 HLPS: o What Should the EU Agenda for Global Governance Be?, 18 June 2010 (coordinated by Miguel Poiares Maduro, EUI) o International Trade and the Doha Round, 4 February 2011 (coordinated by Petros C. Mavroidis, EUI and Columbia University, and Zdenek Drabek, WTO) o European and United States CounterTerrorism Policies, the Rule of Law and Human Rights, 15 March 2011 (coordinated by: Martin Scheinin, EUI/ UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights and Counter-Terrorism) o The Macroeconomic and the Financial Landscape in the Aftermath of the 2007 Crisis. New Challenges and Perspectives, 6 June 2011 (coordinated by Elena Carletti, EUI, Giancarlo Corsetti, EUI and Cambridge University, and Saverio Simonelli, EUI)
Policy The GGP organises High-Level Policy Seminars (HLPS) to generate and contribute to the academic and policy debate by convening key policy-makers and academics to discuss the current challenges of global governance. In preparation of the HLPS, academics draft brief memoranda, which identify the main issues on the agenda and put forward ideas and suggestions to address them. Policy-makers react on the memoranda, which constitute the basis for a free and lively debate under Chatham House rules. The final outcome of the academics’ memoranda and of the debate is a joint policy paper published within the Robert Schuman Centre's Policy Paper Series.
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European and United States Counter-Terrorism Policies the Rule of Law and Human Rights
2012 HLPS: o Courts, Social Change and Judicial Independence (coordinated by Antoine Vauchez, Centre Européen de Sociologie et Science Politique, Sorbonne; Adriana Dreyzin, National University of Córdoba, with Miguel Poiares Maduro, EUI) o The Democratic Governance of the Euro (coordinated by Mathias Kumm, New York University, and Miguel Poiares Maduro, EUI) o Development Policy (coordinated by Giorgia Giovannetti, EUI and University of Florence) o Trade Roundtable (coordinated by Petros C. Mavroidis, EUI and Columbia University)
Training Since the creation of the Academy of Global Governance ten Executive Seminars have been organised and more than one hundred and fifty people have been trained. In 2012, eight Executive Seminars have been scheduled, spanning several key issues such as: international tax coordination; political participation in a globalised world; climate governance; multilevel governance; public investment and long-term growth; regional integration; EU foreign policies; development policies; and global trade. The Academy equips trainees with the skills to pursue a career in EU institutions, national governments, international organizations and business, and offers a unique opportunity to develop synergies among academics, executives and policy makers.
Global Security Challenges for Europe - Executive Training Seminar
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Research Strands Modes of Global Governance
Coordinator: Miguel Poiares Maduro EUI People: Alessandra Arcuri, Jean Monnet/GGP fellow Eric Brousseau, EUI and Université Paris Dauphine Carlos Closa Montero, Institute for Public Goods and Policies (CSIC) Cristina Dallara, Jean Monnet/GGP fellow Adriana Dreyzin, National University of Córdoba Luc Fransen, Jean Monnet/GGP fellow Daniel Innerarity, University of Zaragoza Neil Komesar, University of Wisconsin Mathias Kumm, New York University Giovanni Sartor, EUI Alexander Trechsel, EUI Antoine Vauchez, Centre Européen de Sociologie et Science Politique, Sorbonne Activities in 2012: Executive Training Seminars: Political Participation in a Globalised World (coordinated by Miguel Poiares Maduro, EUI and Daniel Innenarity, University of Zaragoza) Regional Integration Beyond the European Experience: Latin America and Asia (coordinated by Carlos Closa Montero, Institute for Public Goods and Policies - CSIC) Regulation of the Information Society (coordinated by Eric Broussea, EUI and Université Paris Dauphine)
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High-Level Policy Seminars: Courts, Social Change and Judicial Independence (coordinated by Antoine Vauchez, Centre Européen de Sociologie et Science Politique, Sorbonne; Adriana Dreyzin, National University of Córdoba, with Miguel Poiares Maduro, EUI) The Democratic Governance of the Euro (coordinated by Mathias Kumm, New York University, and Miguel Poiares Maduro, EUI)
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Conferences and Workshops:
! A Comparative Institutional Framework for Global ! ! 6
Governance Analysis (Neil Komesar, University of Wisconsin, and Miguel Poiares Maduro, EUI). Internet Governance (Alexander Trechsel, EUI, and Giovanni Sartor, EUI) The Disputed Field of Global Justice - A Transnational Inquiry (Antoine Vauchez, Centre Européen de Sociologie et Science Politique, Sorbonne)
This research strand focuses on an analysis of different institutional modes of global governance. Particular attention is given to the study of new institutional modes of governance and to questions of democracy and accountability. In this light, the strand includes both projects of a methodological and horizontal character (designing and comparing different institutional models of global governance and discussing criteria for the institutional choices involved) and projects looking into more detail either at particular modes of governance (i.e. judicial networks or regional integration) or at the governance of particular areas of globalization (i.e. the internet). In this context, this research strand brings together the following existing or forthcoming projects:
! A Comparative Institutional Framework for
Global Governance Analysis (Neil Komesar, University of Wisconsin, and Miguel Poiares Maduro, EUI).
! Comparative Regional Integration (Carlos Closa Montero, Institute for Public Goods and Policies – CSIC)
! Institutional Alternatives to Internet
Governance (Alexander Trechsel, EUI and Giovanni Sartor, EUI)
! Heterarchy Systems of Governance and
Regulatory Bodies and Global Governance (Eric Brousseau, EUI and Paris Dauphine University)
! The Disputed Field of Global Justice – A
Transnational Inquiry (Antoine Vauchez, Centre Européen de Sociologie et Science Politique, Sorbonne)
Development Policies The strand first scrutinises development finance, broadly defined to include domestic resource mobilisation as well as foreign aid and other external capital flows. The research focuses on aid effectiveness, drawing on existing programmes, monitoring donor innovations, and designing and promoting fresh approaches to deliver aid. New sources of development finance, such as those related to environmental taxation, currency taxation and investments in natural resources, inflows from new donors and new philanthropy among others are examined. Research in the trade policy domain is another area of interest, which has many connections with global governance, considering especially how developed country trade policies could be more supportive of poverty reduction and economic growth in developing economies. Moreover, light will be shed on fragile states. Besides examining how developed countries can best assist fragile states (and their citizens) in the long run providing stable and reliable funds, the research aims at understanding how the transition from immediate post-conflict assistance to longerterm development assistance can be supported.
Coordinator: Giorgia Giovannetti EUI and University of Florence People: Ana Paula Dourado, University of Lisbon Pasquale Pistone, WU Vienna University of Economics and Business, and Salerno University Marco Sanfilippo, EUI Activities in 2012: Executive Training Seminars: From Tax Havens to International Tax Coordination: a Focus on Developing Countries (coordinated by Ana Paula Dourado, University of Lisbon, and Pasquale Pistone, WU Vienna University of Economics and Business and Salerno University)
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! Issues in Development Policies (coordinated by Giorgia Giovannetti, EUI and University of Florence)
High-Level Policy Seminar: Development Policy (coordinated by Giorgia Giovannetti, EUI and University of Florence)
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Research The Dimensions Strands of the Global Governance Programme International Economic Law
Coordinator: Petros C. Mavroidis EUI and Columbia University People: Carlo Cantore, EUI Rosa Julieta Castro, Jean Monnet/GGP fellow David Michael Kleimann, EUI Boris Rigod, EUI Activities in 2012: Executive Training Seminar: WTO Dispute Settlement System (coordinated by Petros C. Mavroidis, EUI and Columbia University)
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High-Level Policy Seminar:
! Trade Roundtable (coordinated by Petros C. Mavroidis, EUI and Columbia University)
Conferences and Workshops:
! Preferential Trade Agreements: Past Truths and !
Modern Realities (coordinated by David Michael Kleimann, EUI, and Boris Rigod, EUI) WTO Case Law of 2011, co-organised with the American Law Institute (ALI) (coordinated by Petros C. Mavroidis, EUI and Columbia University)
Debates: On the Law and Economics of Preferential Trade Agreements, and on the Need for One Workable Safeguard Clause in the WTO Legal System, debating Kamal Saggi (Vanderbilt Economics) and Petros C. Mavroidis, (EUI and Columbia University) The Effectiveness of the WTO Dispute Settlement System, debating AndrĂŠ Sapir, (ECARE, ULB) and Petros C. Mavroidis (EUI and Columbia University)
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The research analyses the dynamics at stake in the field of multilateral and regional trade integration, with a special insight into WTO. Firstly, it investigates WTO case-law by keeping a separate focus on the shaping of the EU trade policy and the EU participation in the WTO itself. Secondly, within this strand, a China Roundtable will be organised, with the purpose of sharing ideas among experts from the EU, US and China on: trade and macro-economic cooperation, Chinese internal market, and G-20 operation. A third focus is on Climate Change and Trade. Other potential areas of research are: service liberalisation at the EU and W TO level; enforcement of Trade-related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPs) and trade investments.
Climate Policies The goal of this research strand is to explore the unique governance problems that are presented by climate change and to provide a forum for discussion of those problems. Climate change presents a challenge of global governance since no single country can act alone to solve the problem. Being a leader, such as the European Union has shown itself to be, involves working patiently in a multi-national setting to create the institutions that will engage other nations in taking appropriate actions, not unlike what has been done in encouraging common action in other global problems, such as promoting free trade and observing human rights. Two aspects of the climate problem are especially important in o r g a n i z i n g s u i t a b l e g l o b a l g ove r n a n c e institutions: the cumulative nature of the underlying problem, which requires some action (and cost) now to avoid longer term damages, and sharing the burden of common action equitably among countries of widely differing economic capabilities.
Coordinator: Denny Ellerman EUI and MIT
People: Barbara Buchner, Climate Policy Initiative Activities in 2012: Executive Training Seminars: Climate Governance: Issues and Institutions (coordinated by Denny Ellerman, EUI and MIT, and Barbara Buchner, Climate Policy Initiative)
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Workshops: Durban Debrief: New Start or More of the Same? (Coordinated by Denny Ellerman, EUI and MIT) Rio+20 and Climate Change (coordinated by Denny Ellerman, EUI and MIT, Fabiano de Andrade Correa, EUI, and Jerneja Penca, EUI)
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The activities of this strand consist of a modest research effort involving Ph.D. students and postdoctoral fellows at the EUI, executive training seminars on global climate governance, and workshops, debates, and invited talks on climate governance issues featuring experts and policy leaders. Activities are coordinated with those of the Development Policies and International Economic Law strands because of the close interactions between climate, development, and trade.
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Externally Funded Projects The Dimensions of the Global Governance Programme The Globalisation Database
Project Director: Gaby Umbach EUI People: Laura Bartolini, EUI Laura Puccio, EUI Martiño Rubal Maseda, EUI www.ffms.pt
The GGP, financially supported by the Fundação Francisco Manuel dos Santos (FFMS, Lisbon), develops a Globalisation Database, which takes up the experiences and success of the FFMS’s PORDATA databases on contemporary Portugal and Europe. It also adds a global layer to the endeavours of the FFMS to inform the wider public on current trends in and facts of national, European and world-wide relevance. The Globalisation Database seeks to collect and unite the most important statistical resources on trends of globalisation. It takes a broad view on relevant elements of globalisation by focusing on the economic and political foundation of global human interaction, and incorporating its environmental and societal basis. The Database aims to provide knowledge and facts that further help a better understanding of today’s world. It aims to focus on fundamental political, economic, environmental and societal changes that affect the global interrelatedness of policies, politics and polities in core areas most strongly exposed to the effects of globalisation, such as: Agriculture, Conflicts, Demographic Development, Economic Development, Energy, Environment, Governance, Human Mobility, Living Conditions, Social/Societal Development, Sustainable Livelihood, Technological Development With this focus, the Globalisation Database will be sensitive to most relevant elements of global societal and sustainable development, which have repercussions on the overall performance of the i n t e r n a t i o n a l c o m m u n i t y, i n t e r n a t i o n a l organisations, and institutions, multilateral fora, networks, actors, and on the nation state. The Globalisation Database project (September 2011 - August 2013) is led by Gaby Umbach and involves a team of researchers of the GGP and of the Portuguese Fundação Francisco Manuel dos Santos.
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Beyond Territoriality: Globalisation and Transnational Human Rights Obligations (GLOTHRO) This research project has the status of a Research Networking Programme at the European Science Foundation. Besides the EUI, it involves thirteen other partners in 9 countries. The coordinator of the whole network is Wouter Vandenhole (University of Antwerp), while Martin Scheinin, coordinator of the GLOTHRO research project at the EUI, is the representative of the EUI on the GLOTHRO steering committee.
Coordinator: Martin Scheinin EUI and UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights and Counter-Terrorism
The disempowerment of the state and the increased power and impact of corporations and international organisations in the era of globalisation pose major practical and conceptual challenges to human rights law. In practice, human rights law faces a serious risk of marginalisation if it fails to adapt to this changing reality. Conceptually, the decentralisation of the territorial state necessitates a fundamental re-thinking of a basic tenet of human rights law, i.e. that human rights obligations are primarily, if not exclusively, incumbent on the territorial state. GLOTHRO intends to address a dual challenge, i.e. to deepen the understanding of human rights obligations of foreign states, and to bring together sub-fields of human rights study, i.e. on the human rights obligations of transnational corporations, international organisations and foreign states. GLOTHRO aims at creating a real research community on the issue, attracting new scholars to the field, as well as mainstreaming the topic in human rights scholarships.
GLOTHRO Group
2011 GLOTHRO Events:
! International Stock-Tacking Conference, 19-21 May 2011, Antwerp University ! Academy of Global Governance; Executive !
Training Seminar on Globalisation and Transnational Human Rights Obligations, 28 November-1 December, EUI 2-day Doctoral School for the presentation of papers by Ph.D. researchers, 1-2 December 2011, EUI
Activities in 2012: One-day workshop for EUI researchers of the 2011 Doctoral School
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Fellowships The GGP aims to enlarge the current pool of academic expertise, by recruiting professors, fellows and researchers with strong and specialised knowledge in global governance issues. Within the fellowship schemes of the European University Institute (EUI) and of the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies (RSCAS), the GGP offers fellowships to young and senior academics, namely Marie Curie, Robert Schuman Senior Fellowships, Jean Monnet Postdoctoral Fellowships and EU-Asia Fellowships. Established post-doctoral scholars who work in one of the core research areas of the RSCAS can apply to spend a research period at the Centre. The duration of the stay is between two and eleven months. For more information on the fellowships visit the GGP website.
EU-Asia fellows The EU-Asia Fellowship Programme aims at encouraging postdoctoral research on EU/Asia relations or global issues of importance for both Europe and Asia. Intellectually distinguished fellows have the opportunity to conduct two years of research articulated as follows: one year at the EUI and one year at one of the Asian participant institutions (Chinese Academy of Social Sciences; Keio University; IEEM/University of Macau).
2010-2011 Jean Monnet/GGP Fellows
! Melanie Antoniou, University of Leeds, Multilateralism between ‘Legal Power Europe’ and US’s Grand Strategy
! Turku Isiksel, Yale University, Citizens of a New Agora: International Economic Institutions and the Untold Story of Post-national Citizenship
! Girish Kumar, Indian Law Institute, WTO, TRIPS and South Asia: Internalisation of TRIPS and the Problem of Access to Medicines
! Anne Thies, University of Reading, Loyalty and its Limits: EU Member States’ Cooperation Duties and their Limits within the Context of European External Relations
! Gaby Umbach, University of Cologne, Global Policy Crises and Institutional Responses of the Early 21st Century
! Stepan Wood, York University, ISO 26000 and the Legitimation of Transnational Governance Authority in the Field of Corporate Social Responsibility
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2011-2012 Jean Monnet/GGP Fellows Alessandra Arcuri, Erasmus University The Public Dimensions of Private Regulatory Regimes in the Area of Social Regulation Alessandra Arcuri is Associate Professor of Law and Economics and International Economic Law at the Erasmus School of Law, Rotterdam. She holds a law degree from La Sapienza University, Rome, an LL.M. from Utrecht University and a Ph.D. from the Erasmus School of Law. Previous positions and awards include: Global Fellow at NYU Law School; Marie Curie Fellow at Hamburg University; EUR Fellowship at Erasmus University. Next to her regularly teaching at the Erasmus School of Law, Arcuri has taught at Lund University, African Universities in Lomè, LUISS Management University, and University of Siena. Her research interests include: risk regulation, international economic law, WTO law, Law and economics, transnational private regulation.
Rosa Julieta Castro, EUI Governing Global Health: Access to Biomedical Patents and Materials Rosa J. Castro Bernieri obtained her Ph.D. at Erasmus Rotterdam University and at University of Bologna in 2010. She holds a Law degree from the Universidad Católica Andres Bello (Venezuela) and a Master in Law and Economics from the University of Bologna and Hamburg University. She has lectured on Intellectual Property at the University of Bologna and New York University in Tirana (LL.M.) and has published several articles and working papers. Her Ph.D. thesis was published by Intersentia in the Series “European Studies in Law and Economics”, Volume 2, 2010. Her research project at the EUI deals with Global Health Governance and access to biomedical patents and materials. Her research interests include economic analysis of law, international intellectual property and patent law with a focus on biotechnology, health and development. 13
Fellowships Cristina Dallara, University of Bologna Transnational Judicial Networks (TransJudNets): New Actors for a Global Governance of Justice? A Focus on the Venice Commission Cristina Dallara is full-time researcher at the Research Institute on Judicial Systems of the National Research Council (IRSIG-CNR) in Bologna. She was trained as a political scientist at the University of Bologna. She holds a Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of Florence, with a thesis on the effects of EU policies in promoting judicial and anti-corruption reforms in Romania, Serbia and Ukraine. She was employed in several international research projects on the role of the EU, the Council of Europe and other international organisations by promoting judicial reforms in the post-communist area. She was also involved as expert by Cepej-CoE and OSCE in studies and programmes on quality of justice and judicial independence in transitional countries. Her research interests include: EU judicial networks and their role in promoting a global model of justice, judicial and anticorruption reforms in democratizing countries, EU enlargement.
Marc Devore, University of St. Gallen Arms Production in a Global World: Multinational Corporations, International Organisations and the New Face of Security Governance Marc Devore holds a Ph.D. in Political Science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), an MA specialising in European Integration from Strasbourg’s Institut d’Etudes Politiques and a BA in International Relations/Economics from Claremont McKenna College. Previously Devore was a Lecturer/Senior Research Fellow at the University of St. Gallen, Switzerland, served as National Security Advisor to the President of the Central African Republic; he has been a visiting research fellow at King’s College London’s Department of War Studies and Sciences Po, Paris. He has received Fulbright, Truman and Chateaubriand Scholarships, as well as grants from Harvard’s Center of European Studies and MIT’s Department of Political Science. His research interests span globalisation and defense industries, European armaments cooperation, the political economy of the arms industry, the European Union’s Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP), insurgency and counterinsurgency. 14
Luc Fransen, University of Amsterdam Coordination Programs in Transnational Private Governance Fields: a Solution to Private Regulatory Competition? Luc Fransen obtained his Ph.D. from the Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research. He has also been a visiting scholar at Yale University and at the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies (EUI), and a PostDoctoral Fellow at the Amsterdam Institute for International Development. His work has been published in Review of International Political Economy, Governance, European Journal of Industrial Relations and Organization. Among his research interests: global governance; transnational private regulation; global labour standards, corporate social responsibility; sustainable development; trade politics and the EU; global organization of production. GrĂŠgoire Mallard, Northwestern University Observing Treaty Negotiations in Practice: The Creation of a Regional Nuclear Fuel Cycle in the Middle East GrĂŠgoire Mallard is Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology at Northwestern University and obtained his Ph.D. at Princeton University in 2008. At the EUI, he is completing his book "Fallout: How the United States and Europe Clashed When They Made the Nuclear World Order" and he is starting a new project on reparation treaties and the politics of sovereign debt cancellation. He co-edited "Global Science and National Sovereignty: Studies in Historical Sociology of Science" (Routledge, 2009), and published articles mostly on the hermeneutics of treaties and other legal and literary texts. His interests include: Hermeneutics, International Law, Global Security and Global Justice, Relations between Global and European Treaties.
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Fellowships
Andrea Renda, Centre for European Policy Studies (CEPS) The Interface between Private Regulation and Ex Ante Policy Appraisal Andrea Renda is Adjunct Professor of Law and Economics at LUISS Guido Carli University in Rome. He is also a Senior Research Fellow at the Centre for European Policy Studies in Brussels, where he manages the Regulatory Affairs Unit. He is also the Coordinator of the European Network for Better Regulation and the Manager of the CEPS Digital Forum. He provides expert assistance to several institutions, including the European Commission, the European Parliament, the OECD, the World Bank and several national governments. He is a member of the Scientific Board of the International Telecommunications Society and of the EuroCPR. He also sits in the editorial board of important journals such as Telecommunications Policy (Elsevier) and the European Journal of Risk Regulation (Lexxion). Originally trained as an economist, he developed his theoretical background as a mix of economics, law and political science. Among his research interests: better regulation and regulatory reform; regulatory impact assessment; transnational private regulation, law and economics; behavioral economics and neuroeconomics; telecommunications policy; economics of cyberspace; intellectual property; antitrust; innovation policy; critical infrastructure protection.
2012-2013 and 2013-2014 Jean Monnet/GGP Fellows For the next academic year the Jean Monnet/GGP fellows community will be enriched by ten news fellows, who will start their fellowship in September 2012, focusing on topics embedded in one of the four Global Governance Research Strands. The application deadline for the academic year 2013/2014 is 25 October 2012.
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Academy of Global Governance
Comparing Models of Regional Integration Experiences from the Latin America Region - Executive Training Seminar
The Academy of Global Governance (AGG) offers three and a half days of intensive and interactive training to the “leaders of the future” – executives, policy makers, diplomats, international organizations and public sector officials, private sector professionals, and academics. At the AGG Executive Training Seminars participants have the opportunity to exchange theory and “real world” experience on issues at the top of the international agenda. In the rapidly expanding interdisciplinary field of global governance, the Programme aims to create synergies between research and practice and offers executive training. In 2011 the Academy has trained over one hundred-fifty participants on issues such as, the fight against terrorism, the aftermaths of the 2007 economic crisis, legal and economic implications of tax havens, climate governance, regional integration issues and global security challenges. The AGG trainees are global themselves: with diverse backgrounds and operating in a wide range of contexts, they come from the different corners of the world, to share views and debate in the vibrant academic environment of the European University Institute.
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Training
2011 Participants by Nationality 3% 20%
25%
1%
5% 2% 3%
Italy Germany UK Poland Spain The Netherlands Brasil Australia Belgium Canada Others US
13% 5% 9%
5%
9%
Others: Sweden, Finland, Greece, Portugal, Romania, Latvia, Ukraina, Kosovo, Czech Rep., Puerto Rico, Mexico, Argentina, Liberia, Congo, Philippines, Japan, South Africa
2011 Participants by Background
professionals academics
2010-2011 Executive Training Seminars ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! 18
Global Regulation and New Social Risks, 18-22 October 2010 Power, Conflict and Conflict Resolution, 15-19 November 2010 Fighting Terrorism, 16-18 March 2011 The Macroeconomic and the Financial Landscape in the Aftermath of the 2007 Crisis: New Challenges and Perspectives, 6-9 June 2011 Tax Havens. Selected Theoretical and Practical Key Issues: A Legal and Economic Perspective, 8-10 June 2011 Climate Governance, 13-15 June 2011 Comparing Models of Regional Integration: Experiences from the Latin America Region, 5-7 October 2011 Global Security Challenges for Europe, 19-21 October 2011 Economics of Multilevel Governance in an International Context, 16-19 November 2011 Global Governance and Transnational Human Rights Obligations (GLOTHRO), 28 November - 1 December 2011 (externally funded).
2012 Executive Training Seminars The topics of the eight Executive Training Seminars planned for this year are closely aligned to the Research Strands of the GGP. The Academy of Global Governance trainees will further benefit from the network of academics and international top-level officials, and from an extremely stimulating discussion on topical issues relating to governance.
! From Tax Havens to International Tax Coordination: a Focus on Developing Countries (2-5 May) ! Climate Governance: Issues and Institutions (30 May-1 June) ! Political Participation in a Globalised World (19-22 June) ! Regional Integration Beyond the European Experience: Latin America and Asia (3-5 October) ! The Anatomy of EU Foreign Policy (10-13 October) ! Issues in Development Policies (5-7 November) ! WTO Dispute Settlement System (21-24 November) ! Regulation of the Information Society (December)
Global Security Challenges for Europe - Executive Training Seminar
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Training What participants say… “By providing a platform for academics and practitioners to exchange views on key contemporary issues, this Executive Seminar was a high level interesting opportunity to debate and bridge the gap between practice and sound theory.” Avila Osorio Eileen Vanessa, United Nations Interregional Crime and Justice Research Institute "Innovative and updated, a truly International pioneer think tank on interdisciplinary European issues. An essential global epistemic community." Arthur Capella, Universidade de São Paulo
Academy of Global Governance Trainees
“It was a privilege to participate in this seminar, which successfully combines presentations from a distinguished and multidisciplinary group of speakers with lively and fruitful debates among the participants. I am pleased to stress that the seminar provided me with outstanding insight on the background and outlook for Latin American integration, which, on top of its valuable intellectual input, will help me on the performance of my professional duties.” Pedro Valente Da Silva, European Parliament “A Global Governance Academy effectively committed to global order structural demand: an astonishing course.“ Kumiko Haba,Visiting Professor at Harvard University “There has perhaps never been a more important moment than today to bring together academics and practitioners, to think through Europe´s responses to the growing range of global security challenges.“ Gerrard Quille, European Parliament “This seminar was an eye opener, it was a privilege to be part of this excellent group from all over the world: impressive speakers, stimulating discussions among the trainees.“ Charles Majinge, London School of Economics and Political Science "An excellent chance to engage with top class thinkers, and the rich experience of other participants met my expectations." Guy Banim, Conflict Prevention Expert "The Academy represents an enriching microcosm of complementary actors’ profiles dynamically and passionately exchanging views on future history in the making. In this way, interconnected participants contributions truly lay the foundations for a fruitful feedback between research and policy - making and, thus, for socially thoughtful global change." Cristina Blanco Sio-Lopez, CVCE Centre de recherche et de documentation sur l'Europe au Luxembourg 20
Events In addition to the events linked directly to the Research Strands, the GGP organises a range of other conferences, lectures and debates. Such events contribute to the goal of studying global issues and of bringing policy-makers in contact with scholars and researchers, to promote real exchanges and synergies between the world of policy and research. A number of events are organised in collaboration with international organizations, global think-tanks and networks, as well as universities and academic institutes.
Networking at the Executive Training Seminars
In 2012 the GGP plans to organise seminars, conferences, workshops, GG debates and lectures with prominent speakers, academics and policy-makers. The Programme also aims to strengthen collaborations with institutions such as, the Inter-American Development Bank, the University of South Carolina, the Finnish Centre of Excellence in the Foundations of European Law and Polity Research and the Minerva Center for Human Rights, and develop new ones with other centers of excellence. ! Comparative Constitutional Cultures, Hugo Cyr (Université du Québec à Montréal) and Paul Khan (Yale Law School), 19-20 January, EUI ! Durban Debrief: New Start or More of the Same?, Barbara Buchner (Climate Policy Initiative) and Denny Ellerman (EUI and MIT), 23 January, EUI ! Global Administrative Law: An Italian Perspective, Sabino Cassese (Italian Constitutional Court), and Miguel Poiares Maduro (EUI), 24 February, EUI ! Fostering Regional Regulative Integration: Lessons Accross Regions, 24-25 February, IADB (Washington) ! Historical Reconciliation and Transitional Justice in Israel/Palestine, Carlos Closa Montero (Institute for Public Goods and Policies– CSIC) and Ruth Rubio Marin (EUI), 21-22 March, EUI ! A Comparative Institutional Framework for Global Governance Analysis, Neil Komesar (University of Wisconsin), 3 May, EUI ! Globalisation of Higher Education, Miguel Poiares Maduro (EUI), November, EUI 21
Events Global Governance Debates The Debates bring together two experts to present an issue of global relevance from diverging viewpoints. Each speaker prepares a brief paper, which is circulated to the participants in advance and constitutes the basis of the debate. The debate gives the speakers the opportunity to react to each other's papers. Papers and reaction papers are published. The first GG Debate on “Multilevel Governance and Democratic Legitimacy of Law” took place on 28 November 2011 at the EUI with Thomas Cottier (World Trade Institute, University of Bern) and Markus Krajewksi (University of Erlangen). Anne Thies is the Scientific Coordinator of Global Governance Debates series. Debates in 2012 ! Cosmopolitanism and International Law, Mathias Kumm (New York University) and Dennis Patterson (EUI), March ! Tension Between Public and Private Governance in the Emerging Transnational Legal Order, Peer Zumbansen (York University) and Larry Cáta Backer (Pennsylvania State University), April ! Global Governance and Development, Dave Trubek (University of Wisconsin) and David Kennedy (Harvard Law School), May ! The Effectiveness of the WTO Dispute Settlement System, André Sapir (ECARC, ULB) and Petros C. Mavroidis (EUI and Columbia University), June ! On the Law and Economics of Preferential Trade Agreements, and the Need for One Workable Safeguard Clause in the WTO Legal System, Kamal Saggi (Vanderbilt University) and Petros C. Mavroidis (EUI and Columbia University), June
Multilevel Governance and Democratic Legitimacy of Law – GG Debate
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2010-2011 Conferences
World Order After The Financial Crisis
! International Trade and Investment, by Petros C. Mavroidis (EUI and Columbia University) and Zdenek Drabek (WTO), 4-5 July 2011, EUI ! Tax Havens. Selected Theoretical and Practical Key Issues: A Legal and Economic Perspective , by Ana Paula Dourado (University of Lisbon), Pasquale Pistone (WU Vienna University of Economics and Business, Salerno University), 11 June 2011, EUI ! Life in the Eurozone with or without Sovereign Default? by Giancarlo Corsetti (EUI and University of Cambridge), Elena Carletti (EUI) and Franklin Allen (University of Pennsylvania), 14 April 2011, EUI ! Legal, Institutional and Political Conditions for Providing ‘Overlapping Global Public Goods’, by Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann (EUI), 18-19 February 2011, EUI ! Globalization and De-Globalization. Trans-national Perspectives of Europe in World History, by Harold James (Princeton University) and Bartolomé Yun-Casalilla (EUI), 2-3 November 2010, EUI ! Global Litigation and Judicial Cooperation, by Fabrizio Cafaggi (EUI), 15-16 October 2010, EUI ! 5th GREIT Conference: Human Rights, Global Economic Policy, and Taxation, organised in cooperation with the WU Vienna, 16-17 September 2010, EUI ! Legal Reasoning and European Laws: The Perspective of Neil MacCormick, coorganized by the Law Department and the Max Weber Programme, 21 May 2010, EUI 23
Events 2010-2011 Workshops
A Transnational Inquiry into the Disputed Field of Global Justice: A Renewed Research Agenda - Workshop
! Multi-mode Governance, Shaping and Being Shaped by Globalization, coordinated by Eric Brosseau (EUI and Université Paris Dauphine) and Adrienne Héritier (EUI), 16-17 December 2011, EUI ! World Order after the Financial Crisis, coordinated by Harold James (EUI and Princeton University), 2 November 2011, EUI ! Legal Order, the State, and Economic Development , coordinated by Eric Brousseau (EUI and Université Paris Dauphine) and Jérôme Sgard (CERI, Sciences-Po and CNRS), 29 September-1 October 2011, Villa Finaly, Florence, Italy ! Transnational Business Governance Interactions: Theoretical Approaches, Empirical Contexts and Practitioners’ Perspectives, by Fabrizio Cafaggi (EUI) and Stepan Wood (EUI), 23-24 May 2011, EUI ! A Transnational Inquiry into the Disputed Field of Global Justice: A Renewed Research Agenda, by Antoine Vauchez (Centre Européen de Sociologie et Science Politique, Sorbonne), 13-14 May 2011, EUI ! Global Governance and Institutional Choice, by Miguel Poiares Maduro (EUI) and Neil Komesar (University of Wisconsin), 9 May 2011, EUI ! Changing Subjects: Individuals’ Rights, Remedies and Responsibilities Under Global Legal Pluralism, by Anne Thies (EUI) and Turkuler Isiksel (EUI), 7 May 2011, EUI ! Transnational Integration Regimes and Domestic Institutional Change in Emerging Market Economies, 14-17 April 2011, EUI. In collaboration with the Inter-American Development Bank and the University of South Carolina. ! Institutional Independence in an Inter-Regional Perspective: A Multidisciplinary and Comparative Workshop, by Fabrizio Gilardi (University of Zurich), Allan Tatham (Péter Pázmány Catholic University), and Mario Telò (Université Libre de Bruxelles), 6 April 2011, EUI ! Transnational Law - Rethinking Law and Legal Thinking, 10-11 March 2011, EUI. In collaboration with the Finnish Centre of Excellence in the Foundations of European Law and Polity Research. ! (Re)Designing Global Governance for Gender Justice, by Louise Chappell (University of New South Wales), 21 February 2011, EUI 24
2010-2011 Seminars and Lectures ! Lecture: The US, Europe, China and the World Economy: The Challenge of Restoring Balance to International Trade and Finance, Richard N. Gardner (Columbia Law School), 16 June 2011, EUI ! Lecture: The Macroeconomic and the Financial Landscape in the Aftermath of the 2007 Crisis: New Challenges and Perspectives, Vitor Manuel Ribeiro Const창ncio (European Central Bank), 6 June 2011, EUI ! Lecture: Inventing Democratic Courts, by Judith Resnik and Dennis Curtis (Yale Law School), 2 May 2011, EUI ! Lecture: The Obama Administration and International Law, by Harold Hongju Koh (U.S. Department of State), 15 March 2011, EUI ! Seminar: Free Trade and Free Speech: Why the WTO is not the Forum for Governing Global Internet Freedom, Tomer Broude (The Minerva Center for Human Rights/Hebrew University of Jerusalem), 1 February 2011, EUI ! Seminar: The New EU Diplomacy: Learning and Training Challenges, by Miguel Angel Moratinos (Spanish Parliament), Ferdinando Nelli Feroci (Permanent Representation of Italy to the EU), Poul Skytte Christoffersen (European External Action Service), and Jozef Batora (Comenius University), 6 December 2010, EUI ! Lecture: New Developmentalism: National Developmental Strategies in the Era of Globalization, by Luiz Carlos Bresser-Pereira (Getulio Vargas Foundation), 7 October 2010, EUI ! Lecture: Globalizing Administrative Law: Good Governance at the Supranational Scale, by Dan Esty (Yale Center for Environmental Law & Policy), 29 September 2010, EUI ! Seminar: Recent Development of Bilateral Investment Treaties (BITs) and EU Law, Nikos Lavranos (Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs). Discussants: Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann (EUI), Marise Cremona (EUI), and Miguel Poiares Maduro (EUI), 17 June 2010, EUI ! Panel Discussion: The Future of the Eurozone, 7 June 2010, EUI ! Lecture: Cultural Agoraphobia: Cognitive Bias, Intellectual Property and Network Policy, James Boyle (Duke University School of Law), 20 May 2010, EUI ! Lecture: Global Governance: Dialogue Between Courts, Ricardo Lorenzetti (Argentinian Supreme Court), 13 May 2010, EUI
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Communications and Outreach Global Governance Network On 21 March 2011 the GGP launched the first Global Governance Network, a dynamic virtual knowledge community and a platform to share and debate on ideas, experiences and research. The Network aims to disseminate research outcomes, policy analysis and commentary to a broad audience of academics, policy makers, international organizations, private sector executives, and media, and to increase the understanding of global issues. Over one hundred individuals and five institutions are already members of the Network and the number of subscribers, with various backgrounds, is increasing. To subscribe: network.globalgovernanceprogramme.eu/
Publications Working Papers Original research based papers, fully complying to international academic standards, peer reviewed working papers submitted to the Global Governance Programme are published in the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies Working Papers Series. 2010-2011:
! ! ! ! ! !
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! Climate Justice, Between Global International Justice and Insights from Justification Theory, Olivier Godard (RSCAS 2011/56) ! What Is Systemic Risk and What Can Be Done About It? A Legal Perspective, Joanna Gray (RSCAS 2011/55) ! An Argument for Leverage-Based Business Responsibility for Human Rights, Stepan Wood (RSCAS 2011/48) ! Judicial Powers, Due Process and Evidence in the Security Council 1267 Terrorist Sanctions Regime: The Kadi II Conundrum, Lisa Ginsborg, Martin Scheinin (RSCAS 2011/44) ! Terrorist Listings and the Rule of Law:The Role of the EU Courts, Allan Rosas (RSCAS 2011/31) From Global to Polycentric Climate Governance, Dan H. Cole (RSCAS 2011/30) Sovereignty without Borders: On Individual Rights, the Delegation to Rule, and Globalization, J茅r么me Sgard, Eric Brousseau, Yves Schemeil (RSCAS 2011/28) Internet Law in the Era of Transnational Law, Oreste Pollicino, Marco Bassini (RSCAS 2011/24) Global Tax Governance: Work In Progress?, Jan Wouters, Katrien Meuwissen (RSCAS 2011/12) The New EU Diplomacy: Learning to Add Value, Josep M. Lloveras Soler (RSCAS 2011/05) Building Efficient Models of Global Governance, Sarah Helen McLaughlin (RSCAS 2010/81)
Policy Papers Primarily oriented towards policy discussions and proposals, policy papers discuss current policy issues and put forward new policy proposals and ideas. The issue addressed is a legitimate contemporary policy issue within which the current policy is clearly discernible. Policy papers submitted to the Global Governance Programme are published in the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies Policy Papers Series. 2010-2011: ! The Macroeconomic and Financial Landscape in the Aftermath of the 2007 Crisis: New Challenges and Perspectives, Franklin Allen, Elena Carletti, Thomas Cooley, Giancarlo Corsetti, Joanna Gray, Luigi Guiso, Harold James, Massimiliano Marcellino, Patrick O'Callaghan, Saverio Simonelli (RSCAS PP 2011/04) ! European and United States Counter-Terrorism Policies, the Rule of Law and Human Rights, Richard Barrett, Cian C. Murphy, Kent Roach, Olivier Roy, Martin Scheinin, Kim Lane Scheppele (RSCAS PP 2011/03) ! The Doha Round and Beyond, Henrik Horn, Petros C. Mavroidis, Patrick Messerlin, ErnstUlrich Petersmann, André Sapir (RSCAS PP 2011/02) ! An EU Agenda For Global Governance, José Manuel Durão Barroso, Thomas Biersteker, Pepper D. Culpepper, Philippe Fargues, Adrienne Héritier, Yannis Karagiannis, Christopher Hill, Nadia Klein, Wolfgang Wessels, Harold James, Andrew Moravcsik, Kalypso Nicolaïdis, Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann, Dusan Sidjanski, David Vines (RSCAS PP 2011/01) ! Global Governance: Dialogue between Courts, Ricardo Lorenzetti (RSCAS PP 2010/03) Policy Briefs The Global Governance Policy Briefs are published following the High-Level Policy Seminars to succinctly present policy options regarding the issues addressed by academics and policy makers on the occasion of the debate. 2011: ! European and United States Counter-Terrorism Policies, the Rule of Law and Human Rights, Lisa Ginsborg, Martin Scheinin, Mathias Vermeulen (2011/2) ! The Doha Round: An Obituary, David Kleimann, Joe Guinan (2011/1) Newsletter The GGP produces twice a year (June and December), an electronic newsletter to inform its network of over six thousand individuals and institutions on the activities, publications and forthcoming events of the Programme.
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The GGP Team Luís Miguel Poiares Maduro, Former Advocate General at the European Court of Justice in Luxembourg (2003-2009), is the Director of the GGP and, since October 2009, he holds the Joint Chair in European Law with the Robert Schuman Centre Luís Miguel Poiares Maduro for Advanced Studies and the Department of Law at the Director European University Institute (EUI). He is also the Co-director of the Academy of International Trade and Investment Law of Macau. He has taught and teaches regularly at many institutions, including the College of Europe, Yale Law School, Universidade Católica de Lisboa, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, London School of Economics, Chicago Law School, Centro de Estudios Políticos y Constitucionales (Madrid) and Instituto Ortega y Gasset (Madrid). He was a Fulbright Visiting Research Scholar at Harvard Law School. He is a Doctor of Laws by the EUI and was the first winner of the “Rowe and Maw Prize”, and winner of the “Prize Obiettivo Europa” for the best Ph.D. thesis at the EUI. In 2010 he was awarded the prestigious Gulkbenkian Science Prize for his outstanding work in the field of law. He has also been honoured by the President of the Portuguese Republic with the Order of Sant’Iago da Espada for literary, scientific and artistic merit (2006). He is the author of “We the Court -The European Court of Justice and the European Economic Constitution” (Oxford Hart Publishing, 1998). Recent publications include “The past and Future of EU Law” (co-edited with Loic Azoulai, Oxford Hart Publishing, 2009) and “A Constituição Plural – Constitucionalismo e União Europeia” (Principia, Lisbon, 2006).
Outreach Coordinator Eleonora Carcascio holds a Master Degree in Public Management from Bocconi University and is specialised in marketing and communications in the public sector. After an experience as public and media relations in the private sector, she worked for over five years as PR and media officer in the UN system (UNICRI and IFAD). She joined the GGP in 2010 as Outreach Coordinator.
Research Strands Coordinator Silvia Dell’Acqua holds a MSc in European Politics and Governance from the London School of Economics. She worked over six years in research and communications at the LLP Agency of the Italian Ministry of Education. Before joining the GGP in 2011, as Coordinator of the Academy, she worked as Outreaching and Networking Coordinator for the CARIM Project of the RSCAS.
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Secretary to the Global Governance Programme Marie Ghalanos, holds a MSc in European Politics and Governance from the London School of Economics and studied European Studies and Modern Languages at the University of Essex. Before joining the Global Governance Programme in January 2011 as an Administrative Assistant, she worked at the European Parliament in Brussels at the Directorate General of Communication, at the European Commission as the Personal Assistant of the European Commissioner for Health and later at the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) in Parma.
Secretary to the Director of the Global Governance Programme Angelika Lanfranchi-Conzelmann studied German Literature and Civilisation at the University of Montpellier where she obtained a Master's Degree and the French National teaching Certificate (CAPES). She later worked at the EUI as research assistant for the Academy of European Law (1988-95) before taking a teaching position in a secondary school in England. She returned to the EUI in 1999 working at the Academic Service before joining the Robert Schuman Centre in 2001 as secretary and later personal assistant of the director.
Executive Programme Manager Ingo Linsenmann, MA, studied Political Sciences at the Universities of Cologne and Newcastle upon Tyne and has worked for the International Young European Federalists (JEF) in Brussels and Bonn for several years. Between 1999 and 2004 he was research fellow and Project Manager at the Jean Monnet Chair for Political Science, University of Cologne, where he was involved in several projects on European economic governance. He joined the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies in summer 2004. Since then he works as advisor for project applications to the European Institutions and as Project Manager/Director for numerous projects, among others the NEWGOV Project (2004-2008), the PIREDEU Design Study (20082011), the ERD-Project (2008-2010), EUDO and related projects (2009-2012), the EUCITAC/ACIT Projects (2009-2010/2011-2013), and the Global Governance Programme (since 2010).
Webmaster Francesca Scotto holds a Bachelor's degree from the University of Pisa in Humanities Computing and she is about to graduate in this subject with a thesis on ‘Graphics, Interactive and Virtual Environments’. Before joining the Global Governance Programmes as Webmaster in May 2011, she has developed the website of the Computing Unit of the University of Dresden.
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