Call for Papers: ASIL/Denver Law conference ‘Reassessing International Law and Development: New Challenges for Law and Policy’; proposals due May 16

The American Society of International Law International Economic Law Interest Group (IEcLIG), in partnership with the University of Denver Sturm College of Law Sutton Colloquium, will hold their 2014 Biennial Research Conference, “Reassessing International Law and Development: New Challenges for Law and Policy,” at the University of Denver Sturm College of Law in Denver, CO, USA, from November 13-15, 2014.

Via Elizabeth Trujillo of Suffolk Law, who is Co-Chair of the IEcLIG, comes this call for papers:

Amartya Sen’s call for understanding development not only in terms of gross national product but also “in terms of the substantive freedoms of people” marked an important reframing of the legal and policy discourse around economic development. Goals focused much academic research in this area towards a more comprehensive understanding of development, one that would recognize economic growth as intrinsically tied to such areas as: environmental sustainability; food security; the reduction of extreme poverty, hunger, and child mortality; access to health; and the promotion of education and gender equality. International economic institutions like the World Trade Organization, the World Bank, and the International Monetary Fund have traditionally been at the center of promoting and managing economic growth; yet, these institutions also face challenges caused by recent financial crises, the need for food security and high energy demand, while preserving natural resources and the environment.

With the approach of the fifteenth anniversary of the Millennium goals and given these new and ongoing challenges, it is time to reassess the role that international economic law (IEL) has played and continues to play in development. How effective is IEL at promoting development, broadly construed? Under what conditions is it effective? In what ways should IEL norms and institutions be adjusted to accommodate growing concerns around climate change, energy demand, food security and high energy demand, while preserving natural resources and the environment?

We encourage IEL scholars, practitioners, and advanced graduate students to submit proposals for paper presentations or panels. For guaranteed consideration, proposals must be received no later than May 16, 2014.

More information is available here (Word doc).

 

One thought on “Call for Papers: ASIL/Denver Law conference ‘Reassessing International Law and Development: New Challenges for Law and Policy’; proposals due May 16

  1. Hi, I am interested in presenting a paper at the conference. Obviously, I missed the deadlines–just came to know of the conference. I presented paper at the inaugural conference of SIEL in 2008 in Geneva. I am not a lawyer, I work on WTO-related issues, especially in the context of liberalization of agriculture, textiles and clothing, and global labor-mobility under GATS. In case it is still possible to register for a presentation, my topics will be on GATS-Mode 4–it has legal implications around the world. Thanks for dropping me a note.

    –Caf Dowlah, Ph.D.
    Professor of Economics
    CUNY-Queensborough College
    Bayside, NY 11364

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