How to Stop Feeding what Bites the Hand: The New EU Framework for Cutting Funds to Rogue Member States

Date
Oct 13, 2021, 12:15 pm12:15 pm

Speakers

Details

Event Description

Register in advance for this meeting:
https://princeton.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJwqd-ytrjkvG9SHLs0Haz2QFIEzYr9xL_qR  
After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.

You can read the European Parliament report on which the talk will be based here: https://danielfreund.eu/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/220707_RoLCR_Report_digital.pdf

Kim Lane Scheppele is the Laurance S. Rockefeller Professor of Sociology and International Affairs at Princeton University. Scheppele is an elected member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the International Academy of Comparative Law and a recipient of the Law and Society Association's Kalven Prize for influential scholarship. She began her career in the political science department at the University of Michigan, became a professor in the law school at the University of Pennsylvania, was the founding director of the gender program at Central European University Budapest and has held visiting faculty positions in the law schools at Michigan, Yale, Harvard, Erasmus/Rotterdam, and Humboldt/Berlin. She is a former president of the Law and Society Association and is presently on the executive committee of the International Association for Constitutional Law as a "global jurist".

R. Daniel Kelemen is Professor of Political Science and Law and Chair of the Department of Political Science at Rutgers University. An internationally renowned expert on European Union politics and law, he is author or editor of six books including Euro-legalism: The Transformation of Law and Regulation in the European Union (Harvard University Press), which won the Best Book Award from the European Union Studies Association, and author of over one hundred articles and book chapters. Kelemen is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and a regular commentator on EU affairs in US and European media. Prior to Rutgers, Kelemen was Fellow in Politics, Lincoln College, University of Oxford. He has been a Member of the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton, visiting fellow in the Program in Law and Public Affairs (LAPA) at Princeton University, and a Fulbright Fellow at the Centre for European Policy Studies in Brussels.

John Morijn is an NGIZ endowed professor of law and politics in international relations and an assistant professor of European human rights law at the University of Groningen Faculty of Law. Between 2009 and 2019 he worked on EU rule of law related files in The Hague and Brussels as a Dutch civil servant and diplomat. He holds an LLM degree in EU law from the College of Europe and a PhD in international law from the European University Institute. 

Sponsor
Organized by the EU Program, co-sponsored by the Seeger Center for Hellenic Studies, with the support of The Paul S. Sarbanes ’54 Fund for Hellenism and Public Service