• Emma Lees and Tiina Palonnitty - Science and Courts
    Jul 2 2024

    Professors Emma Lees from the European University Institute and Tiina Palonnittty from the University of Helsinki are our guests for this episode.

    The episode is hosted by Dr André Nunes Chaib, Maastricht University and Prof. Mariolina Elianntonio. In this episode, with our guests, we discuss how courts tackle complex global environmental problems and the role of science and expertise in such decision-making. They explore the challenges, difficulties, and opportunities courts face when using science to decide on matters of importance in times of climate and social crises.

    Enjoy the episode!

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    36 mins
  • Ulf Linderfalk - Theory of Discretion in International Law
    Jun 19 2024

    Our guest for this episode is Professor Ulf Linderfalk from Lund University, Sweden.

    The episode is hosted by Dr Henrique Marcos, Foundations of Law Department, Maastricht University. Professor Linderfalk and Dr Marcos discuss various topics in international law and legal theory. They explore different philosophical approaches to legal interpretation, decision-making, and the exercise of discretion in international law by stakeholders and international courts.

    Enjoy the episode!

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    46 mins
  • Cecilia Malmström - EU, Trade and Geopolitics
    May 28 2024

    Our guest for this new episode is former EU Commissioner for Trade and Home Affairs, Cecilia Malmström.

    The episode is hosted by Belén Gracia, a PhD candidate at the Faculty of Law at Maastricht University. She is joined by Andrea Ott, a Professor of EU External Relations Law at the same Faculty. They discuss various topics with Cecilia Malmström, ranging from the EU's trade position and policies to the forthcoming elections for the EU Parliament.

    Enjoy the episode!

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    51 mins
  • Sacha Garben - On a Social Europe
    Mar 22 2024

    Our guest today is Professor Sacha Garben, from the Collège d'Europe, and she talks about the challenges of constructing a more social Europe.

    Professor Garben is a renowned expert in European Law and has written extensively about over-constitutionalization of EU economic freedoms, and has published widely on the intersection of constitutional law, European law, and Labour law. She is also currently the editor of the Oxford University Press Online Encyclopedia of EU Law.

    The episode was hosted by Eline Couperus, a PhD candidate at the Faculty of Law, Maastricht University, and Professor Merijn Chamon, from the Vrije Universiteit Brussel. The episode was edited by André Nunes Chaib.

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    54 mins
  • Anthony Pagden - The Pursuit of Europe: A History
    Mar 17 2023

    Anthony Pagden is the Distinguished Professor of Political Science and History at UCLA, and has in the past been affiliated with Oxford, Cambridge, the EUI (Florence), and Johns Hopkins University.

    Easily one of the most important intellectual historians alive, Anthony Pagden has written extensively on European, and in particular Spanish history, with a special focus on the relationship between the peoples of Europe and its overseas settlements and those of the non-European world from the Atlantic to the Pacific.

    In this episode, Anthony joins us to discuss his latest book, The Pursuit of Europe: A History (OUP 2022), which traces the history of the idea of European Unification, starting from the end of the Napoleonic Wars right through to Brexit. The book details the various attempts to deal with the question of how to create a united Europe after centuries of internecine conflict, while at the same time preserving the political, legal, and cultural integrity of the individual nations, many of which had had extensive imperial holdings until the end of the WWII. The resulting entity, Anthony argues in the book, is to be regarded neither as a ‘super-state’ nor an empire, but a new post-national order united in a political life based, not upon the old shibboleths of nationalism and patriotism, but upon a body of common values and aspirations.

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    1 hr and 9 mins
  • Antoine Duval - Sports Law, the World Cup, and Human Rights
    Dec 8 2022

    Antoine is a Senior Researcher at the TMC Asser Instituut, where he coordinates the research strand on 'Advancing Public Interests in International and European Law'. He obtained his PhD from the European University Institute in 2015 after defending a thesis on the interaction between the lex sportiva (the private regulations governing international sports) and EU Law.

    He is the founder and editor-in-chief of the ASSER International Sports Law Blog, founder and editor of the Yearbook of International Sports Arbitration, and a member of the editorial board of the International Sports Law Journal and International Sports Law book Series of Asser Press. His research focuses on the role of private actors in transnational law, using the lex sportiva as his main case study.

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    1 hr and 10 mins
  • Signe Rehling Larsen - The Constitutional Theory of the Federation and the European Union
    Dec 6 2022

    Signe Rehling Larsen is the author of The Constitutional Theory of the Federation and the European Union (OUP 2021), as well as European Public Law after Empires, European Law Open (2022). In these strikingly original works, she argues, contrary to settled assumptions, that the European Union is neither a unique nor an unprecedented political structure, but one that has a venerable ideal in the form of the 'federation', as well as an uncomfortable relationship with the imperial heritage of its Member States.

    Signe is currently an Examination Fellow in Law at Magdalen College, Oxford University. She obtained her doctorate in 2018 from the London School of Economics, after which she held a Max Weber postdoctoral fellowship at the European University Institute. She has also spent time at the New School for Social Research in New York, Bard College Berlin, and the University of Copenhagen.

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    42 mins
  • Helmut Aust & Janne Nijman - International Law and Cities
    Oct 13 2022

    Janne Nijman and Helmut Aust join us to talk about their recently published Research Handbook on International Law and Cities (Edward Elgar 2021), co-edited with the assistance of Miha Marchenko. The book, which was awarded the ESIL (European Society of International Law) Collaborative Book Prize in 2022, is the result of a long process of collaboration and numerous conferences, involving several experts in the field of international law and cities.

    Leading the podcast today is Carlo Colombo, Assistant Professor of Administrative Law and Governance at the Faculty of Law, Maastricht University. Carlo is a contributor to the Research Handbook mentioned above. Also appearing on the podcast is the regular host, Aravind Ganesh.

    Janne Nijman is Professor of History and Theory of International Law at the Faculty of Law of the University of Amsterdam and Professor of International Law at the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies in Geneva. Helmut Aust is Professor of Law at Free University Berlin where he teaches public and international law.

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    59 mins