Monday, November 26, 2012

Workshop: Varieties of Subsidiarity: Deference and Defiance in the Construction of Global Public Authority

Today, the Hertie School of Governance will host a workshop on "Varieties of Subsidiarity: Deference and Defiance in the Construction of Global Public Authority." I noted the call for papers here. Here's the program:

INTRODUCTION

Markus Jachtenfuchs and Nico Krisch (Hertie School of Governance)

SUBSIDIARITY IN GLOBAL HEALTH GOVERNANCE

Comments: Michael Zürn (Social Science Research Center Berlin)

Anna Holzscheiter (FU Berlin): Contested Subsidiarity in Global Health Governance: Fragmented spheres of authority and their effects on health systems in developing countries

Sharifah Sekalala and Monica Kirya (University of Warwick): Subsidiarity in Global Health Governance: “Two publics” and Defiance in the Global Fund’s operations in Uganda

SUBSIDIARITY AND INTERVENTION

Comments: Nico Krisch (Hertie School of Governance)

Anja Jetschke and Bernd Schlipphak (Göttingen University): Between UN- and Un-Mandated Interventions: Regional Organizations and Military Intervention

THE CHALLENGE OF HORIZONTAL AUTHORITY

Comments: Antje Wiener (University of Hamburg)

Tonya Putnam (Columbia University): Extraterritoriality and Subsidiarity: An American Mode of Global Governance Through Domestic Courts?

IMPLICATIONS OF GEOPOLITICAL CHANGE

Comments: Markus Jachtenfuchs (Hertie School of Governance)

Jacob Katz Cogan (University of Cincinnati): The BRICS and the Scope of International Law

SUBSIDIARITY IN INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS REGIMES

Comments: Joseph Weiler (NYU Law School)

Michael Freitas Mohallem (UC London): The redundancy of subsidiarity? The rise of constitutional courts as the locus for international law decision-making: the case of South America

Ruti Teitel (NYU Law School): Changing Understandings of Subsidiarity in Contemporary Regional Human Rights Systems

COURTS AS AGENTS OF SUBSIDIARITY

Comments: Nico Krisch (Hertie School of Governance)

Robert Howse (NYU Law School): Subsidiarity and the Judicialization of Global Economic Governance

Steven Wheatley (University of Lancaster): Prisoner Voting after Hirst (No.2): Subsidiarity, the margin of appreciation, and the normative authority of international human rights courts and tribunals

THE PROMISE AND PITFALLS OF SUBSIDIARITY

Roundtable with two interventions

Joseph Weiler (NYU Law School)

Michael Zürn (Social Science Research Center Berlin)