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The ASIL Anti-Corruption Law Interest Group, Sciences Po Law School, and the Zicklin Center for Business Ethics Research of the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania are organizing an international symposium on the "Transnationalization of Anti-Corruption Law."
The conference will take place at Sciences Po Law School in Paris, France, on Thursday and Friday, December 6-7. Proposals are being accepted until July 23.
The call for papers and contact details are available here and below
“THE TRANSNATIONALIZATION OF ANTI-CORRUPTION LAW”
Paris, France, 6-7 December 2018
The Anti-Corruption Law Interest Group of the American Society of International
Law (ASIL), Sciences Po Law School, and the Zicklin Center for Business Ethics Research
of the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania are organizing an international
symposium on the “Transnationalization of Anti-Corruption Law.” The conference will take
place at Sciences Po Law School in Paris, France, on Thursday and Friday 6-7 December
2018. The organizers are accepting paper proposals until 23 July 2018.
The purpose of the conference will be to look back at the evolution of anti-corruption
law as it affects cross-border business, trade, and regulation, but without taking the standpoint
of a particular jurisdiction. This retrospective review will seek to explore the mechanisms that
have led to the development of modern “transnational” anti-corruption law and standards.
The conference will also discuss current challenges and possible ways forward. It will
undertake to achieve these goals through an interdisciplinary approach considering public
international law and private international law methods, as well as comparative law, among
other fields, while looking at the role and influence of a variety of actors. The conference will
also explore the contribution of other disciplines such as economics, political science,
psychology and anthropology to understand their impact on the development of anti-
corruption standards and their implementation in the transnational context.
With this in mind, the conference will consider whether and how anti-corruption laws
and standards should synergistically lean towards transnational harmonization, unification, or
remain a multitude of overlapping and possibly at times conflicting regulatory and procedural
regimes. Discussing possible adjustments in transnational anti-corruption norms would imply
looking at the following issues, among others:
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- What prompted the process of transnationalization in the area of anti-corruption?
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- What does transnationalization mean in the anti-corruption context?
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- Is there a normative hierarchy in anti-corruption standards?
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- How are anti-corruption law, concepts, and practices transplanted?
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- What is the role of international organizations, regulators, national courts, NGOs, civil
society, private actors, and international tribunals in defining anti-corruption norms
and standards?
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- How should anti-corruption regulators cooperate?
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- What is the effectiveness and legitimacy of transnational anti-corruption law?
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- Can transnational anti-corruption law find a coercive authority?
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- Should there be a world anti-corruption court?
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- Has the transnationalization of anti-corruption law gone too far?
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- What can be learnt from other disciplines when it comes to devising or implementing
anti-corruption laws and policies?
Symposium Topics
The symposium will consider a broad range of topics, including the following non- exhaustive list.
The symposium will consider a broad range of topics, including the following non- exhaustive list.
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The Role of International Law in the Anti-Corruption Context
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The role of international law in shaping anti-corruption norms. Issues touching
on the OECD, the UN, GRECO conventions, and other regional instruments
will be considered.
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International institutions (OECD, UN, IMF, Multilateral development banks,
etc.). Is there a global administrative law approach to anti-corruption?
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Trade agreements and bilateral investment treaties. The symposium will
consider how anti-corruption considerations are taken into account in the
negotiation of multilateral and bilateral trade agreements.
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The role of international law in shaping anti-corruption norms. Issues touching
on the OECD, the UN, GRECO conventions, and other regional instruments
will be considered.
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Jurisdictional Issues
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The symposium will discuss different bases, theories, and practices for
exercising jurisdiction in the field of anti-corruption. This will range from
civil, administrative and criminal law questions to issues in international
dispute settlement.
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In particular, under this topic the conference will seek to understand the
concept of extraterritoriality, as defined and applied in anti-corruption law. It
will seek to identify differences between countries and how jurisdiction is
asserted in the anti-corruption context more generally.
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The symposium will discuss different bases, theories, and practices for
exercising jurisdiction in the field of anti-corruption. This will range from
civil, administrative and criminal law questions to issues in international
dispute settlement.
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Domestication and Acculturation of Enforcement Instruments and Compliance
Methods
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Introduction of instruments akin to the U.S. deferred prosecution agreement
into other municipal laws (e,g., U.K., French, possibly Canadian and
Australian legislation, as well as examples from other jurisdictions)
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National non-binding guidelines; other soft law regimes
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Introduction of instruments akin to the U.S. deferred prosecution agreement
into other municipal laws (e,g., U.K., French, possibly Canadian and
Australian legislation, as well as examples from other jurisdictions)
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Standardization, Certification and Corporate Benchmarking
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International Organization for Standardization Guidance
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Certification organizations and their regulation
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Relevant corporate governance transplants
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International Organization for Standardization Guidance
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Transnational Enforcement & Global Litigation
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Enforcement cooperation and policy coordination between authorities
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Corporate monitorships
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Anti-corruption considerations in international litigation and arbitration
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Enforcement cooperation and policy coordination between authorities
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Multidisciplinary Approaches (economics, politics, psychology, anthropology, and
more broadly behavioral sciences, etc.)
Call for Papers
The organizers are soliciting abstracts from academics, practitioners, NGO
representatives, policy makers and regulators, private sector representatives, as well as others
who are engaged in activities related to the study or control of corruption. Abstracts should
indicate which of the above-suggested topics they fall within, or if not within the above
topics, how the proposed presentation relates to the overall theme of the conference.
Presentation Proposals Guidelines
Abstracts are due by Monday 23 July 2018. Please submit your abstract in PDF
format (400-500 words at most), along with a short biography (no longer than 250 words
containing name, affiliation, email and phone contact details and an overview of relevant
activities/publications). Please send your proposal and biography to the conference email:
conference.anticorruption@gmail.com.
Conference Timeline
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- The deadline for submission of abstracts is 23 July 2018
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- Successful applicants will be informed no later than 3 September 2018
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- The deadline for submission of full papers is 16 November 2018
Symposium Book
All authors who present their work at the conference will be invited to submit their paper for publication. The Organizing Committee is envisioning a collective book based on conference papers and published by an international publisher recognized in the field.
Organizing Committee Professor Régis Bismuth, Sciences Po Law School
Professor Philip M. Nichols, Zicklin Center for Business Ethics Research of the Wharton School (University of Pennsylvania) and Chair of the ASIL Anti-Corruption Law Interest Group
Jan Dunin-Wasowicz, Associate at Hughes Hubbard & Reed LLP and Vice Chair of the ASIL Anti-Corruption Law Interest Group
Please submit your proposals and any question to: conference.anticorruption@gmail.com
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