provisional programme - pompeu fabra...
TRANSCRIPT
REGULATORY GOVERNANCE STANDING GROUP
Regulation in the Age of Crisis Provisional Programme
Third Biennial Conference, June 17-19 2010, Dublin
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The ECPR Standing Group on Regulatory Governance The study of regulation and regulatory governance is attracting an increasing attention in all disciplines of the social sciences and beyond. The ECPR Standing Group on Regulatory Governance was founded in March 2005 by David Levi-Faur, the Hebrew University and Jacint Jordana, Pompeu Fabra University.
The aim of our group is to provide a platform and infrastructure for encouraging studies in this area and the creation of an institutional arena for mutual interaction and debate. We aim to bring together a broad range of scholars working on (various aspects) of ‘regulatory governance’ in all parts of the world, including scholars from fields such as law, economics, sociology, criminology, (social) psychology and history for a fruitful exchange of ideas and knowledge on regulatory governance. We believe in openness and pluralism and intend to open the group not only for different disciplines but to different theoretical perspective and to variety of methodological approaches.
The types of activities likely to stem from the Standing Group include conferences, sections and panels at conferences and research sessions, to ensure productive and sustained engagement among scholars from different disciplinary backgrounds, methodological persuasions, and approaches to the study of regulatory governance. We also aim to encourage collaboration among scholars and with policy makers on specific projects, facilitate scholarly outputs in the form of book reviews, journal articles, as well as contributions to edited volumes, and the production of high-quality research monographs in the context of the group’s own book series (to be created), and providing a framework for mentoring younger scholars and graduate students.
See more about our activities at the group's website: http://regulation.upf.edu/
There is already established a system to facilitate communication among scholars in the field of regulatory governance via an electronic list server. We have over 1400 scholars all over the world subscribed to the “regulation” list.
To subscribe visit: http://list.haifa.ac.il/mailman/admin/regulation
To send notes to the email list use the following address:[email protected]
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Welcome from the Local Organisers Welcome to the Third Biennial Conference of the ECPR Standing Group on Regulatory Governance and a particularly warm welcome to those visiting Dublin and UCD.
The contemporary crises relating to financial markets, the sustainability of the environment and other matters have a clear regulatory dimension both in terms of problems and potential solutions. Whilst the international community of scholars who, from a variety of disciplines, engage with regulatory governance,
have shown strong capacity to address these urgent and important issues, there is also a recognition that the kind of richer understanding which may better inform policy debates comes also from investigating the more routine and stable issues, rather than merely focusing on the pathological. The rich and varied conference programme reflects these varied commitments.
Dublin, as the capital city of Ireland, has suffered greater economic reversals than many in the current financial crisis. Those in government, business and academic communities continue to engage both with issues of responsibility for and resolution of some of these problems. In other areas, such as food and environmental regulation, Ireland has been something of a pioneer with the first national ban on smoking in places of employment, a highly successful levy on the supply of plastic bags and early adoption of the independent agency model for food safety regulation which influenced the development of the European Food Safety Authority. As an open market within the European Union, Ireland’s economic and social fortunes are strongly influenced by international activities. There is a strong recognition within government and the universities that this openness extends also to the worlds of research, ideas and innovation. Accordingly it is particularly appropriate and valuable that we are able to welcome you to Dublin to discuss papers which address directly and indirectly ‘Regulation in the Age of Crisis.’
UCD traces its origins back to the foundation of the Catholic University of Ireland in 1854. The first Rector, John Henry Newman, left a substantial intellectual legacy including the often-cited tract The Idea of a University, based on a series of lectures he gave in the early days of the University. He was at pains to emphasise that the teaching of subjects such as political economy and law should involve broad knowledge by the professors of their particular field and its relationship to other fields of knowledge within the University. He might today have approved of the striving both for interdisciplinary and international engagement with ideas about regulation and governance which we seek to advance in this conference. We are particularly grateful to the UCD School of Law, the UCD School of Business and Global Finance Academy, the Government of Ireland, the Department of An Taoiseach and to the other conference sponsors for the financial and other supports without which the event would not have been possible.
I wish you an enjoyable and successful conference and hope that you will have opportunities to see something of our charming and historic city.
Colin Scott
On Behalf of the Local Organising Committee
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Contents The ECPR Standing Group on Regulatory Governance ........................................................................... 2
Welcome from the Local Organisers....................................................................................................... 3
Organising Groups................................................................................................................................... 5
Conference Information.......................................................................................................................... 6
Conference Programme .......................................................................................................................... 8
Panels and Streams ............................................................................................................................... 10
Travel & Local Facilities ......................................................................................................................... 33
General Information ............................................................................................................................. 37
Conference Sponsors ............................................................................................................................ 38
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Organising Groups
Local Organising Committee
Administrative Support Ciara Brown UCD School of Law Dan Hayden UCD School of Law
International Academic Steering Committee Jørgen Grønnegaard Christensen’s University of Aarhus, Denmark David Coen University College London, Britain Matthias Finger Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne, Switzerland Tetty Havinga Radboud University Nijmegen, Netherlands Fabrizio Gilardi University of Zurich, Switzerland Per Lægreid University of Bergen, Norway David Levi-Faur Hebrew University, Israel Jacint Jordana Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona Susanne Luetz Freie Universität Berlin, Germany Martin Lodge London School of Economics, Britain Michael Moran University of Manchester, Britain Bronwen Morgan University of Bristol, Britain Jürgen Neyer Ludwig-Maximilians-University of Munich, Germany Vibeke Nielson Aarhus University, Denmark Claudio Radaelli University of Exeter, Britain Karsten Ronit University of Copenhagan, Denmark M. Ramesh University of Hong Kong Colin Scott University College Dublin, Ireland Frans van Waarden University of Utrecht, Netherlands John W. Cioffi University of California Riverside, US Christine Parker University of Melbourne, Australia Xavier Fernández i Marín
Institut Barcelona d'Estudis Internacionals, Barcelona
Colin Scott UCD School of Law Niamh Hardiman UCD School of Politics and International Relations Muiris MacCarthaigh Institute of Public Administration Will Phelan Department of Politics, Trinity College Dublin Sebastian Dellepiane Avellaneda
UCD School of Politics and International Relations
Fiona de Londras UCD School of Law Blanaid Clarke UCD School of Law Imelda Maher UCD School of Law Niamh Brennan UCD School of Business Roland Erne UCD School of Business Donal Casey UCD School of Law Suzanne Kingston UCD School of Law
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Conference Information
Welcome to Dublin Dublin is one of the top city break destinations in Europe and for atmosphere, night life, visitor attractions, activities and shopping, it has very few rivals. Steeped in history and buzzing with youthful energy, the Irish capital is at the very heart of Irish culture
Dublin is one of Europe’s oldest cities and as well as retaining its historical and cultural charms, the city also offers trendy bars, elegant restaurants and stylish, cosmopolitan shops and hotels. There’s never been a better time to visit Dublin, a city that is rivalling Europe’s elite for hip appeal. Conference participants who arrive early could enjoy “Bloomsday” - one of Ireland’s greatest cultural celebrations, which takes place on 16th June each year. More details can be found at http://www.jamesjoyce.ie/listing.asp?id=29
Enjoy a literary pub crawl around the city, experience a Dublin Bay sea thrill, a boat trip on the River Liffey or enjoy a traditional Irish music session in one of our famous Irish pubs. The options are endless and the welcome is always warm.
About University College Dublin
University College Dublin (UCD) is a dynamic, modern university where cutting-edge research and scholarship provide a stimulating intellectual environment - the ideal surroundings for learning and discovery.
For over 150 years, UCD has produced graduates of remarkable distinction including famous surgeons, architects, entrepreneurs and five of Ireland’s Taoisigh (Prime Ministers). Perhaps the best known of all its graduates is the writer James Joyce, who completed his Bachelor of Arts at the university in 1902.
Established in 1854, the university played a key role in the history of the modern Irish State and today it plays a leading part in shaping Ireland’s future. As Ireland forges a new identity through relationships with international partners, the university will adopt an increasingly international outlook.
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Contacting the Conference Organisers
Location The conference is being held in the Quinn School of Business, University College Dublin (Building 44 on Campus Map). The conference programme starts at 1300 hours on Thursday 17 June. There is a special pre-conference roundtable on ‘The Future of Transnational Private Regulation’ being held in the Quinn School from 1100 to 1200 hours on Thursday 17 June followed by a light sandwich lunch for early arrivals.
Pre-conference booking of registration must be made online through a secure website at https://www.eventznet.com/295/ac/ecpr10/ecpr10/. The cost is €90 for students, €120 for other paper-givers and €150 for others. Registration will take place in the entrance of the Quinn School from 1000 hours on Thursday 17 June until 1700 hours, and from 0900 to 1700 hours on Friday 18th June.
The evening events on 17th and 18th June are the only events to be held outside the Quinn School. The conference opening and keynote lecture on Thursday 17th June will be held in Dublin Castle, Castle Street, Dublin 2, starting at 1815 hours sharp. Coaches will take participants from the Quinn School at 1715 hours. This will be followed by a reception. Participants are free to make their own choices for dinner or drinks after this event, which will finish at 2100 hours. Some suggestions for restaurants and pubs in the vicinity of Dublin Castle appear below. Participants will need to make their own way back to their accommodation after this event. See details of buses and taxis below. The conference dinner will be held at 1815 hours on Friday 18th June in the Astra Hall, UCD Student Centre (Building 67 on campus map) a ten minute walk from the Quinn School.
The Campus Accommodation, for those who have booked it, is located in Roebuck Hall (Building 57 on the campus map, and a five minute walk from the Quinn School. Continental Breakfast for those staying on campus is provided in the UCD Restaurant (Building 68 on campus map, next to the Quinn School) – vouchers will be supplied with the keys. Keys and vouchers should be collected at the Accommodation Reception, Roebuck Hall, which is open 24/7. There is also a small convenience store (Centra Shop) located on-campus (Building 32).
Email: [email protected]
Mobile Phone: Available: 16-18 June 0900-2100 hours; 19 June 0900-1400 hours-
+353 852114981 (085 2114981 if calling within Ireland).
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Conference Programme Registration and all panel sessions will be held in the Quinn School of Business at University College Dublin. This is Building No 44 on the campus map enclosed in conference packs (to be handed out at registration) and available here - http://www.ucd.ie/maps/ucdmap_eng.html.
Pre- Conference Round Table All participants in the conference are invited to a special pre-conference event on the morning on Thursday the 17th of June, sponsored by The Hague Institute for Internationalization of Law. This is part of the programme of events coordinated by the Hiil-sponsored project Private Transnational Regulation: Constitutional Foundations and Governance Design – www.privateregulation.e u
11:00- 12:00 Round Table Discussion: ‘The Future of Transnational Private Regulation’. Participants: Sol Picciotto (Onati), Julia Black (LSE), David Levi-Faur (Hebrew University, Jerusalem), Frans van Waarden (Utrecht), Errol Meidinger (SUNY Buffalo)
12:00- 13:00 Light sandwich lunch for early arrivals
Thursday 17th June
10:00- 17:00 Registration
13:00- 14:45 Simultaneous panel sessions
14:45- 15:15 Coffee Break
15:15- 17:00 Simultaneous panel sessions
17:15 Coaches depart for Dublin Castle
18:15- 21:00 Official Conference Opening and Keynote Lecture, State Apartments, Dublin Castle
o Introduction – Dr Hugh Brady, President of UCD (St. Patrick’s Hall)
o Conference Opening and Address by Mr Conor Lenihan TD, Minister for
Science, Technology, Innovation and Natural Resources
o Keynote Lecture – Professor Adrienne Héritier (EUI)"Self-regulation by Industry
in the Shadow of Hierarchy: Emergence, Effectiveness and Legitimacy"
o Opening Reception (Portrait Room & Throne Room)
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Friday 18th June
09:00- 10:45 Simultaneous panel sessions
10:45- 11:15 Coffee Break
11:15- 13:00 Simultaneous panel sessions
13:00- 14:00 Sandwich Lunch
14:00- 15:45 Simultaneous panel sessions
15:45- 16:15 Coffee Break
16:15- 18:00 Simultaneous panel sessions
18:00- 21:30 Dinner and Keynote Lecture - Astra Hall
o 18:15 Buffet Dinner
o 19.30 Presentation of the Majone Prize and Keynote Lecture from Michael
Moran (University of Manchester) -"Regulation, Self-Regulation and the
Financial Crisis".
o Bar
Saturday 19th June
08:00-08:50 Standing Group on Regulatory Governance Business Meeting (with light breakfast for participants
09:00- 10:45 Simultaneous panel sessions
10:45- 11:15 Coffee Break
11:15- 13:00 Simultaneous panel sessions
13:00- 14:00 Conference Close
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Panels and Streams Panel Title Panel
Number Date/ Time
Regulation and the Financial Crisis Global Financial Regulation 1A Thurs 13:00-14:45 Implementation of Neoliberal Policies 2A Thurs 15:15- 17:00 Dealing with Stakeholders 3A Fri 09:00-10:45 Corporate Governance & Enforcement 4A Fri 11:15- 13:00 Governing Irish Companies 5A Fri 14:00- 15:45 EU Regulatory Responses to Crises 6A Fri 16:15- 18:00 Effective Banking Regulation 7A Sat 09:00- 10:45 Case Studies in Banking and Securities Regulation 8A Sat 11:15-13:00
The Governance of Risk and Technology Regulation Risk, Regulation & Governance: Exploring Emerging Regulatory Trends in the oversight of New Technologies
2B Thurs 15:15- 17:00
Regulating Converging Technologies: Developing a Normative Framework
3B Fri 09:00-10:45
Governing nanotechnologies: from risk regulation to the governance of innovation I
4B Fri 11:15- 13:00
Governing nanotechnologies: from risk regulation to the governance of innovation II
5B Fri 14:00- 15:45
Multilevel Environmental Governance and Nanotechnology 6B Fri 16:15- 18:00 Regulating the New Media 7B Sat 09:00- 10:45
Regulating for Sustainability Re-inventing Climate Change Regulation and the Challenge of Climate Justice
3C Fri 09:00-10:45
Designing Sustainable Regulation 4C Fri 11:15- 13:00 Regulating for Sustainability 5C Fri 14:00- 15:45
Regulation, Law and Society Regulation, Rights, and Review 6C Fri 16:15- 18:00 Regulating Law 7C Sat 09:00- 10:45 Regulatory Solutions to Privatised State Security 8C Sat 11:15-13:00
Politics of Regulation New Directions in the Study of Regulatory Administration: Regulatory Networks and Autonomy I: autonomy of regulators and insitututional dynamics
1D Thurs 13:00-14:45
New directions in the study of regulatory administration: regulatory networks and autonomy II: autonomy of regulators in networks
2D Thurs 15:15- 17:00
New Directions in the study of regulatory administration: 3D Fri 09:00-10:45
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Regulatory Networks and Autonomy III: European Networks and Regulatory Actors Regulation and Diffusion 4D Fri 11:15- 13:00 State structures and public sector organization I: Constitutional Pressures and Constraints
5D Fri 14:00- 15:45
State structures and public sector organization II: National diversity
6D Fri 16:15- 18:00
Regulatory Institutions, Processes and Accountability 7D Sat 09:00- 10:45 Special Session- Author Meets Reader Panel 8D Sat 11:15-13:00
Regulatory Networks Regulatory Networks in the EU 2E Thurs 15:15- 17:00 Horizontal Regulatory Cooperation: When states agree on how to regulate
4E Fri 11:15- 13:00
Social Regulation Regulatory Responsibilisation 5E Fri 14:00- 15:45 Context and Regulatory Design 6E Fri 16:15- 18:00 Regulating Healthcare 7E Sat 09:00- 10:45
Regulating Food Safety and Quality Reorienting Food Governance: Response to Crises 1F Thurs 13:00-14:45 Changing Patterns of Food Safety Regulation in the EU and China: Comparative Perspectives on Multi- Level Governance
2F Thurs 15:15- 17:00
Private Food Governance: Problems of Legitimacy, Accountability and Effectiveness
3F Fri 09:00-10:45
Global Food Safety and Quality Governance: The Impact of Global Food Governance in Developing Countries
4F Fri 11:15- 13:00
Investigating Private Food Standards and Quality Governance: Case Studies
5F Fri 14:00- 15:45
The Role of Scientific Evidence in Food Safety Policy: Challenges and Limits
7F Sat 09:00- 10:45
Complex Patterns of Interaction: Public and Private Actors in Food Regulation
8F Sat 11:15-13:00
Regulation and the Global South Reconceptualising Regulation and the Global South 1G Thurs 13:00-14:45 The Politics of Regulatory Institutions in the Global South 2G Thurs 15:15- 17:00 The Politics of Financial Regulation in Emerging Markets 5G Fri 14:00- 15:45 Regulation and the Global South 6G Fri 16:15- 18:00
Non- State Regulation and Meta- Regulation The Public and the Private in Regulation 1H Thurs 13:00-14:45 The Rise and Fall of Private Regulation of Financial Markets 2H Thurs 15:15- 17:00 Certification and Regulation 3H Fri 09:00-10:45 Steering Non-State and Hybrid Regulatory Regimes 4H Fri 11:15- 13:00 Agency in Non- State Regulation 5H Fri 14:00- 15:45
Regulation and the Limits of Competition
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Balancing Regulation and Competition Policy 7H Sat 09:00- 10:45 Reconciling State Activity and Competitive Markets 8H Sat 11:15-13:00
Regulatory Capacity and Instruments Reconceptualising Regulatory Capacity 1I Thurs 13:00-14:45 Reconceptualising Regulatory Capacity II 2I Thurs 15:15- 17:00 Promoting Regulatory Compliance 3I Fri 09:00-10:45 Harnessing Non- State Capacity 4I Fri 11:15- 13:00 Accounting for New Regulatory Approaches and Regulatory Performance
5I Fri 14:00- 15:45
Quality of Regulation 6I Fri 16:15- 18:00
Theories of Regulation Revisiting Theories of Regulation 1J Thurs 13:00-14:45 Conceptual and theoretical analysis of regulation 2J Thurs 15:15- 17:00
Regulating Network Industries Regulatory Governance in Network Industries I 4J Fri 11:15- 13:00 Regulatory Governance in Network Industries II 6J Fri 16:15- 18:00 Regulating Water 7J Sat 09:00- 10:45 Regulating Energy 8J Sat 11:15-13:00
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Panels & Papers
Session 1
Thursday 17th 13:00-14:45
Global Financial Regulation 1A Stream: Regulation and the Financial Crisis Chair: Caroline Bradley 1 The Emerging Dynamics of Global Financial Regulation Jonathan Koppell Yale School of Management 2 Systemic Risk and Global Financial Regulation after the Crisis Mary Condon Osgoode Hall Law School
3 Legitimating Transnational Private Standard-Setting: the International Accounting Standards Board
Burkard Eberlein, Alan Richardson York University
New Directions in the Study of Regulatory Administration: regulatory networks and autonomy I: autonomy of regulators and institutional dynamics’
1D
Stream: Politics of Regulation Chair: Kutsal Yesilkagit & Koen Verhoest
1 Political saliency and bureaucratic autonomy Kutsal Yesilkagit Utrecht University
2 Political governance and NPM principles in the making: Institutional dynamics of Hungarian central government administration 2002-2008
Gyorgy Hajnal Institute for Strategic Research on Economy and Society
3 Organising Regulation in a multi-actor setting: the case of the Flemish Labor Inspectorate Jan Rommel Instituut voor de overheid
Reorienting Food Governance: Response to Crises 1F Stream: Regulating Food Safety and Quality Chair: Gabriele Abels 1 New Faces of Crisis: A Need for Reorientation of the European Food Regulation in Face of
New Challenges Karolina Zurek European University Institute
2 Europeanization and Changing Meanings of Food Safety Katharina T. Paul Erasmus University Rotterdam 3 Buying Bio-Security – Compensation for Animal Diseases.
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Robert Lee Cardiff University
4 Authority in governing global food Peter Oosterveer Wageningen University
Reconceptualising Regulation and the Global South 1G Stream: Regulation and the Global South Chair: Navroz Dubash
& Bronwen Morgan 1 A Regulatory State of the South? Navroz Dubash, Bronwen Morgan Centre for Policy Research, University of Bristol 2 Towards a Geography of Regulation: Bringing the ‘Global South’ into Regulatory Theory Michael Dowdle National University of Singapore 3 Steering the Regulatory State: The Rationale behind the Creation of Independent
Regulatory Agencies in Liberalized Utility Sectors in the Developing Countries Ahmed Badran University of Exeter 4 Resistance and Regulation Nai Rui Chng European University Institute
The Public and the Private in Regulation 1H Stream: Non- State Regulation and Meta- Regulation
Chair:Fabrizio Cafaggi
1 Two Visions of Regulation Tony Prosser University of Bristol 2 Self- regulation in the global value chain- A Trade barrier or an opportunity for public-
private co-operation? Kaisa Sorsa National Institute of Legal Policy, Helsinki 3 Varieties and Vicissitudes of Private Market Regulation in the 19th and 20th century
Netherland Frans van Waarden Utrecht University
Reconceptualising Regulatory Capacity 1I Stream: Regulatory Capacity and Instruments Chair: Sharon Gilad 1 Re-Stocking The Regulatory Toolkit Arie Freiburg Monash University 2 Regulatory Capacity and Networked Governance Colin Scott, Ciara Brown University College Dublin 3 Collaborative Regulation Julia Black, Robert Baldwin London School of Economics 4 Regulatory Mechanisms for Forcing Change Past Power Cristie Ford University of British Columbia
Revisiting Theories of Regulation 1J Stream: Theories of Regulation Chair: Basak Kus 1 Public interest regulation reconsidered: from capture to credible commitment
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Jorgen Gronnegaard Christensen Aarhus University
2 Back to the Future: Will the U.S. Return to the Social Model of Regulation? Sidney Shapiro Wake Forest University 3 Theories of Regulation after the Great Financial Crisis David Levi- Faur The Hebrew University 4 Lessons from the American Single Market for Europe: Contestation, Legitimacy and Crisis
in US Michelle Egan American University Washington DC
Session 2
Thursday 17th 15:15- 17:00
Implementation of Neoliberal Policies 2A Stream: Regulation and the Financial Crisis Chair: Colin Provost 1 Dangerous Life and Biopolitical Regulation; The Stakes of Neoliberal Financial Crises Nicholas J. Kiersey Ohio University
2 The Domestic Origins of Fiscal Crisis Niamh Hardiman, Sebastien Dellepiane University College Dublin 3 Rethinking neoliberalism and regulation before and after the financial crisis Damien Cahill University of Sydney 4 Together ‘We Can’: How Canada Solved the ABCP Crisis Ian Roberge Université York
Risk, Regulation & Governance: Exploring Emerging Regulatory Trends in the oversight of New Technologies
2B
Stream: The Governance of Risk and Technology Regulation
Chair: Steven Vaughan
1 Mapping the Defining Features of the EU Regulatory Approach to New Health Technologies
Tamara Hervey, Mark Flear 2 Risk Regulation and Industry Behaviour -An analysis of (theoretical) factors influencing
manufacturers decisions to comply with quality and safety regulations for products. Marie-Jeanne Schiffelers Utrecht University 3 As Good as It Gets | On Risk, legality and the precautionary principle Bald de Vries, Lyana Francot Utrecht University
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New directions in the study of regulatory administration: regulatory networks and autonomy II: autonomy of regulators in networks
2D
Stream: Politics of Regulation Chair: Kutsal Yesilkagit & Koen Verhoest
1 Does Formal Independence Matter for Regulatory Outcomes? Measuring Regulatory Interdependence in Networks: The Case of Telecoms Sector in Egypt
Ahmed Badran, Oliver James University of Exeter 2 Regulatory Independence and Regulatory Networks in the U.S. Experience Janice Beecher Michigan State University 3 Reasserting the centre in a multi-level governance architecture: potential implications of
shifts in domestic reform environments on the dynamics of regulatory governance in the European Union.
Ole Danielsen University of Bergen
Regulatory Networks in the EU 2E Stream: Regulatory Networks Chair: Martino Maggetti
& Fabrizio Gilardi 1 Regulatory Networks and policy diffusion Martino Maggetti, Fabrizio Gilardi University of Zurich 2 Networked governance: the European Competition Network - operation, implications and
impact' Kathryn Wright, Hussein Kassim University of East Anglia
3 Learning in transnational networks about regulatory impact assessment: Benchmarking or extrapolation?
Claudio Radaelli University of Exeter
Changing Patterns of Food Safety Regulation in the EU and China: Comparative Perspectives on Multi- Level Governance
2F
Stream: Regulating Food Safety and Quality Chair: Bob Lee 1 Regulating without autonomy: Food safety regimes in China Neil Collins, Joern Gottwald University College Cork 2 Food Safety Policy Coordination in Three Chinese Cities: Beijing, Hong Kong, and Taipei John P. Burns, Guy Peters, Wang Xiaoqi University of Hong Kong, University of Pittsburgh 3 Regulation of Food Safety in the EU: Changing patterns of multi-level governance Gabriele Abels, Alexander Kobusch University of Tuebingen
4 Shortcomings in enforcing EU food law. What does EU Food Law stand for? Daniele Pisanello Lex Alimentaria
The Politics of Regulatory Institutions in the Global South 2G Stream: Regulation and the Global South Chair: Jacint Jordana 1 Intellectual Property Rights, Innovation, and Economic Growth in Sub – Saharan Africa
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Samuel Adams Ghana Institute of Management and Public Administration
2 Regulation, Uncertainty and Financial Crisis Ebru Kayaalp Istanbul Sehir University
The Rise and Fall of Private Regulation of Financial Markets 2H Stream: Non- State Regulation and Meta- Regulation
Chair: Frans Van Waarden
1 Developments in Regulation at the Amsterdam Stock Market Over Time. Six Stages of Regulation with regard to Unfair Practices at the Amsterdam Stock Market from 1602 onwards.
Francois Kristen Utrecht University 2 The Paris Financial Market in the 19th Century: an Efficient Multi-Polar Organization ? Pierre- Cyrille Hartcoeur, Angelo Rivo EHESSS, European Business School
Reconceptualising Regulatory Capacity II 2I Stream: Regulatory Capacity and Instruments Chair: Julia Black 1 Control Regime (Or why State Comptrollers are liable to err?) David Peled University of Haifa 2 Perceptions Matter: The use of Branding, marketing and PR activities by public and
private regulatory regimes. Dan Hayden University College Dublin 3 From New Public Management to Public Value. An examination of how programs of
voluntary self-regulation build public value and contribute to regulatory growth. Christopher Walker New South Wales University
Conceptual and theoretical analysis of regulation 2J Stream: Theories of Regulation Chair: Jørgen Grønnegård Christensen 1 Predominant Cultural Views and Regulatory Responses to Oil Spill Disasters in United
States, France and Spain Salvador Parrado Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia 2 Expanding Public Norms to Private Contractors: Comparative Analysis Avishai Benish, David Levi-Faur Hebrew University of Jerusalem 3 Risk, Regulation And Financial Crisis: Comparing National Responses In Financial
Regulation Martin Lodge, Kai Wegrich Ohio State University
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Session 3
Friday 18th 9:00- 10:45
Dealing with Stakeholders 3A Stream: Regulation and the Financial Crisis Chair: Mary Condon 1 Corporate Governance and Regulatory Failure. Irene Lynch Fannon University College Cork
2 Inquiring for Truth and the Re-engineering of the Corporate Contract Justin O' Brien University of New South Wales 3 Directors Duties in a Changing World Blanaid Carke University College Dublin
4 Consultation and Legitimacy in Transnational Standard-Setting Caroline Bradley University of Miami
Regulating Converging Technologies: Developing a Normative Framework
3B
Stream: The Governance of Risk and Technology Regulation
Chair: Bärbel Dorbeck-Jung
1 Singularity, Plurality, and Precaution: The Range of Regulatory Responsibility Roger Brownsword King's College London 2 Converging technologies, diverging contexts: challenges for legal protection Bert-Jaap Koops Tilburg Institute for Law, Technology and Society 3 The Politics of Precaution: Examining EU Regulation of Human Material Anne-Maree Farrell University of Manchester 4 Is techno-regulation morally illegitimate? Karen Yeung King's College London
Re-inventing Climate Change Regulation and the Challenge of Climate Justice
3C
Stream: Regulating for Sustainability Chair: Nicola Cantore 1 Rescaling climate justice: sub-national issues and innovations for low carbon futures Anna Davies Trinity College Dublin
2 Regulating Climate Change: Power, Politics and Climate Justice after Copenhagen Suzanne Kingston University College Dublin 3 Negotiating the environment: ‘Offsetting’ mitigation and justice Jane Holder University College London
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New Directions in the Study of Regulatory Administration: Regulatory Networks and Autonomy III: European Networks and Regulatory Actors
3D
Stream: Politics of Regulation Chair: Kutsal Yesilkagit & Koen Verhoest
1 Linking the levels: independence and influence in the European twotiered network of food safety agencies
Alex Kobusch University of Tuebingen
2 National agencification and Europeanization of regulatory practice – the case of maritime safety
Christer Gulbrandsen University of Oslo
3 Europeanization of the Competition Agency. A study of the Competition Agency’s participartion in transnational networks
Per Lægreid and Olle C. Stenby, University of Bergen, Norway
Private Food Governance: Problems of Legitimacy, Accountability and Effectiveness
3F
Stream: Regulating Food Safety and Quality Chair: Federica Casarosa 1 The legitimacy of private transnational regulation, The Case of Private Food Governance Jan Wouters, Nicolas Hachez Universiteit Leuven
2 The Effectiveness of Food Retail Governance for Sustainability Agni Kalfaggiani University of Stuttgart 3 Actors and regulatory roles in private and mixed forms of food regulation Tetty Havinga Radboud University Nijmegen
Certification and Regulation 3H Stream: Non- State Regulation and Meta- Regulation
Chair: Errol Meidinger
1 The Potential and Limits of Forest Certification as a Global Environmental Governance Tool. The case of the Forest Stewardship Council.
Axel Marx, Dieter Cuypers University of Antwerp Management School, Flanders Institute of Technology
2 Compliance in transnational regulation Ellinoora Peltonen European University Institute 3 Legitimacy and effectiveness of codes, certification and accreditation as instruments of
regulatory governance Meike Bokhurst Netherlands Court of Audit and Tilburg University
Promoting Regulatory Compliance 3I Stream: Regulatory Capacity and Instruments Chair: Cristie Ford 1 Taking advice – the role of advice, guidance and persuasion in compliance John Brady Anglia Ruskin University
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2 Accounting for Implementation: A Multi- level Analysis of International Standard- Setting in Accounting
Burkard Eberlein, Alan Richardson York University 3 The impact of regulatory policy on individual behaviour: a goal framing theory approach Julien Etienne London School of Economics 4 The Efficacy of Regulation : An Analysis using Self-Determination Theory Deborah E. Rupp, Ruth V. Aguilera, Cynthia A. Williams
The University of Illinois at Urbana/Champaign
Session 4
Friday 18th 11:15- 13:00
Corporate Governance & Enforcement 4A Stream: Regulation and the Financial Crisis Chair: Justin O’ Brien 1 Corporate Governance Regulation in the Aftermath of the Crisis: The role of Enforcement Stelios Andreadakis Oxford Brookes University 2 When does flexible regulation work? The comply-or-explain principle in UK and German
corporate governance Paul Sanderson, David Seidl, Bernhard Krieger, John Roberts
University of Cambridge, University of Zurich, Ludwig- Maximilians- Universitat, University of Sydney
3 Vicious Spirals in Corporate Governance: Mandatory Rules for Systemic (Re) Balancing? Michael Galanis University of Leeds
Governing nanotechnologies: from risk regulation to the governance of innovation I
4B
Stream: The Governance of Risk and Technology Regulation
Chair: Anne- Maree Farrell
1 The role of industrial dynamics and innovation policies in nanomaterials governance Ismael Rafols Unviersity of Sussex 2 Innovative governance of nanotechnologies: a legal perspective Gregory Mandel Temple University 3 The Limits of International Harmonization in Nanotechnology Risk Regulation Ronit Justo Hanani, David Levi- Faur, Tamar Dayan
Tel Aviv University, The Hebrew University
4 ‘May contain nano': the rhetoric and reality of consumer labelling Elen Stokes Cardiff University
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Designing Sustainable Regulation 4C Stream: Regulating for Sustainability Chair: Jane Holder 1 When Soft law hits Hard. On the effectiveness of new regulatory approaches in Pollution
Prevention and Control in the EU Charalampos Koutalakis, Aron Buzongany German Research Institute for Public
Administration Speyer, University of Athens 2 From Regulation to Implementation: Responsive Assessment of Environmental
Compliance and Enforcement Orr Karassin, Oren Perez Sapir Academic College, Bar Ilan University 3 Business as Usual or Apocalypse Now? Regulating the Car Industry’s Carbon Emissions John Mikler University of Sydney 4 Europe in a Climate of Risk: Three Paradigms at Play Veerle Heyvaert London School of Economics
Regulation and Diffusion 4D Stream: Politics of Regulation Chair: Per Laegried 1 Regionalization and globalization in regulatory capitalism: the Regional dimension in the
diffusion of regulatory agencies Xavier Fernandez-i-Marín, Jacint Jordana, David Levi- Faur
Barcelona d’Estudis Interncionals, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Hebrew University
2 The Administrative Burden Reduction Policy Boom in Europe. Comparing mechanisms of policy diffusion
Kai Wegrich Hertie School of Governance 3 A comparative analysis of regulatory governance innovations Fabrizio De Francesco University of Zurich
Horizontal Regulatory Cooperation: When states agree on how to regulate
4E
Stream: Regulatory Networks Chair: Alberto Alemanno & Anne Meuwese
1 Jumping the Pond: Transnational Law and the Future of Chemical Regulation Noah Sachs University of Richmond 2 The ‘peer’ phenomenon in 'Better Regulation' Anne Meuwese Tilburg University
3 The regulatory effect of the integrity watchdog networks Ramon-Jordi Moles Plaza, Endrius Eliseo Cocciolo
Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
Global Food Safety and Quality Governance: The Impact of Global Food Governance in Developing Countries
4F
Stream: Regulating Food Safety and Quality Chair: Agni Kalfaggiani 1 Non-governmental food safety standards: (mis) matching global norms with local needs? Jaap Van der Kloet Radboud University Nijmegen
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2 GLOBALGAP and the Management of Legitimacy Donal Casey University College Dublin
3 Between the requirements of “regulations” and “standards” in food safety: challenges and opportunities for developing countries’ exports of tropical fruits to the European Union.
Vanessa Constant Laforce University of Abertay Dundee
Steering Non-State and Hybrid Regulatory Regimes 4H Stream: Non- State Regulation and Meta- Regulation
Chair: Tony Prosser
1 Property Rights and Regulation, Private and Public Sol Picciotto Lancaster University 2 Competition Law and Transnational Private Regulatory Regimes: Marking the Cartel
Boundary Imelda Maher University College Dublin 3 Assessing the Impact of the Global Financial Crisis on Regulatory Governance: The Case
of Public-Private Hybrid Regulatory Institutions. Edward Cohen Westminister College 4 Competition (But Not Too Much?) Among Non-Governmental Regulatory Programs Errol Meidinger SUNY Buffalo
Harnessing Non-State Capacity 4I Stream: Regulatory Capacity and Instruments Chair: Niamh Hardiman 1 Will the economic crisis induce the use of social pacting as a strategic mode of
adjustment across the EU Aidan Regan University College Dublin 2 Articulated vs Disjointed Corporatism:The Impact and Implications of Trade Union
Strategies Oscar Molina , Roland Erne Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
University College Dublin
Regulatory Governance in Network Industries I 4J Stream: Regulating Network Industries Chair: Wolter Lemstra 1 On the design and implementation of utility regulation Alessandro Marra, Vittorio Carlei Università degli Studi "G. D'Annunzio" di Chieti-
Pescara 2 New Foundations for EU Energy Policy Adrien de Hauteclocque, Jean- Michel Glachant, Nicole Ahner
European University Institute
3 Comparing regulatory decision-making in the energy sector Giusseppe Bellantuono University of Trento
Session 5
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Friday 18th 14:00- 15:45
Governing Irish Companies 5A Stream: Regulation and the Financial Crisis Chair: Niamh Brennan 1 State Responses to the Irish Banking Crisis: A Grand Experiment in Corporate Governance Theo Lynn, Ruchira Sharma, Blanaid Clarke Dublin City University Business School 2 The Influence Of The News Media On The Corporate Governance Practices of Irish And UK
Listed PLCs Louise Gorman, Theo Lynn, Mark Mulgrew Dublin City University Business School 3 Replacing 'Comply or Explain' with Legally Binding Corporate Governance Codes: An
Appropriate Regulatory Response? Deirdre Ahern Trinity College Dublin
Governing nanotechnologies: from risk regulation to the governance of innovation II
5B
Stream: The Governance of Risk and Technology Regulation
Chair: Elen Stokes
1 Regulating nanotechnology: preliminary results of a transnational comparison of stakeholders’ opinions
Simone Arnaldi University of Padua 2 Regulatory lessons from nanomedical regulation Bärbel Dorbeck-Jung, Nupur Chowdhury University of Twente 3 REACHing Down: European Nanotechnology Regulation in the Chemicals Arena Robert Lee, Steven Vaughan Cardiff University
Regulating for Sustainability 5C Stream: Regulating for Sustainability Chair: Veerle Heyvaert 1 The Common Transport Policy – a sustainable policy? Helene Dyrhauge University of Leeds
2 Integrated Marine Governance: rethinking accountability and legitimacy Jan van Tatenhove Environmental Policy Group (WUR) 3 The Receptive Capacity of Firms and the Regulation of Ecological Modernisation Gary Lynch- Wood, David Williamson University of Manchester
State structures and public sector organization I: constitutional pressures and constraints
5D
Stream: Politics of Regulation Chair: Niamh Hardiman & Muiris McCarthaigh
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1 The Politics of Institutional Design in Parliamentary Democracies Kutsal Yesilkagit Utrecht University
2 States Under Pressure: Institutional Adaptation to New Policy Challenges Niamh Hardiman, Per Lægreid, Muiris MacCarthaigh, Paul Roness, Tom Christensen, Mary Shayne
University College Dublin
3 Separation of Powers and Administrative Red Tape Colin Provost, Victor Lapuente Gine University College London, Goteborg University
4 Rhetoric of Regulation: How US Public Service Commissions Define Their Mission Janice Beecher Michigan State University
Regulatory Responsibilisation 5E Stream: Social Regulation Chair: Fiona de Londras 1 Lifestyle regulation Stavros Zouridis, Meike Bokhorst, Rik Peeters Tilburg University 2 Cui Bono? A Critical Analysis of the development of the Irish National Quality Standards
for Residential Care Settings for Older People in Ireland Ciara O' Dwyer Trinity College Dublin
3 Permission after Respect: Informal youth work and the impact of assessment through regulatory success
Deirdre Duffy University of Nottingham 4 Regulating-for-welfare: A Comparative Study of "Regulatory Welfare Regimes" in the
Israeli, British and Swedish Electricity Sectors Hanan Haber Hebrew University
Investigating Private Food Standards and Quality Governance: Case Studies
5F
Stream: Regulating Food Safety and Quality Chair: Donal Casey 1 The Globalisation of Standard Setting Activities in Agri-Food Sectors: a governance
perspective Armelle Maze AgroParisTech 2 Food quality through networks: data from a European research on wine Federica Casarosa, Marco Gobbato European University Institute, Universita di
Trento 3 The Market for Halal Certificates Frans van Waarden, Robin van Dalen Utrecht University 4 Power and the Food Supply Chain: Proprietary and Hybrid Governance in Australia and
Europe Carol Richards, Hilde Bjorkhaug, Geoff Lawrence
University of Queensland, Centre for Rural Research Trondheim
The Politics of Financial Regulation in Emerging Markets 5G Stream: Regulation and the Global South Chair: Andrew Walter 1 Global Ideas, Local Uncertainty: Financial Supervisory Independence from London & Basel
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to the Emerging World? Christopher Gandrud London School of Economics
2 The politics of banking regulation in emerging markets: the pivotal case of China Andrew Walter London School of Economics
3 Russia and the Global Credit Crunch: Financial Regulation between the Two Crises Anastasia Nesvetailova, Kiryl Haiduk University of London, University of Trento 4 Nigerian Insurance Companies in an Age of Regulation
Hakeem Yusuf, Tajudeen Yusuf Queen’s University Belfast
Agency in Non-State Regulation 5H Stream: Non- State Regulation and Meta- Regulation
Chair: TJ McIntyre
1 Private Actors in Meta-Regulation: the Role of Management Consultants Sharon Gilad London School of Economics 2 Why Do Firms Fail To Comply With Csr Requirements? An Examination Of Un Global
Compact Delistings Jesse Steen Knudsen Copenhagen Business School 3 NGOs and litigation: a way to influence public policy in an age of crisis? Environmental
and data protection policy compared Hartmut Aden Berlin School of Economics
Accounting for New Regulatory Approaches and Regulatory Performance
5I
Stream: Regulatory Capacity and Instruments Chair: Graeme Hodge 1 Public Accountability and PPP’s -How does public accountability work in complex
settings? Tom Willems University of Antwerp 2 Accountability And Governance In Local Public Services Nuno Ferreira da Cruz, Rui Cunha Marques Instituto Superior Técnico – Technical University
of Lisbon 3 Regulatory Regimes and Foreign Mining Investment in the Asia-Pacific Region:
Comparative Evaluation and Policy Recommendations Vlado Vivoda University of South Australia
Session 6
Friday 18th 16:15- 18:00
EU Regulatory Responses to the Crisis 6A Stream: Regulation and the Financial Crisis Chair: Sol Picciotto 1 Surpassing network governance? Factors affecting proposals for supranational
governance in the European System of Financial Supervisors and the European Systemic
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Risk Council. Shawn Donnelly University of Twente
2 Overcoming Systemic Financial Risks in Europe: Contested Policy Responses and the Shortcomings of Ordoliberal Responses
Dieter Pesendorfer Queens University Belfast
Multilevel Environmental Governance and Nanotechnology 6B Stream: The Governance of Risk and Technology Regulation
Chair: Bob Lee
1 Big Government for Small Technology – European Regulation for Nanotechnology Kirsten Rodine Hardy Northeastern University 2 Local Government and Conditions of Uncertainty: Cambridge, MA and the Regulation of
Nanomaterials Christopher Bosso, Caitlin McAllister Northeastern University 3 Governance and Uncertainty: A Meta-Analysis with applications to health and
environmental impacts of nano-technology Rob A. DeLeo Northeastern University 4 Regulation of manufactured nanomaterials and -devices in the Netherlands Johannes Eijmberts Northeastern University
Regulation, Rights, and Review 6C Stream: Regulation, Law and Society Chair: Margit Cohn 1 “Manifestly Unreasonable?” A Critique of Merits-based Review in Irish Regulatory
Appeals Gerard Sadlier Law Reform Commission
2 Excluding judicial review from the decisions of non-state actors Daniel Stewart The Australian National University 3 Discretion and Judicial Review in EU Competition Policy: The Case of Merger Control
J.C. Hernandez University of Navarra
State structures and public sector organization II: National diversity
6D
Stream: Politics of Regulation Chair: Niamh Hardiman & Muiris McCarthaigh
1 Reorganizing by Mergers. Analyzing the choices for new structures of the French Territorial State in the 2000s.
Philippe Bezes, Patrick le Lidec University Paris 2
2 Europeanization of regulatory agencies in Estonia Külli Sarapuu Tallinn University of Technology 3 Institutional Change and Policy Capacity in Anglophone Countries John Halligan University of Canberra
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Context and Regulatory Design
6E Stream: Social Regulation Chair: Colin Scott
1 Regulatory Reform in Georgian Broadcasting: Citizen Rights and Roadblocks to Co-Regulation
Giorgi Kipiani Javakhishvili State University
2 Identifying Context of Controlling Risks in Prison Service Management:Comparative analysis of Prison Management between English and Japanese Prisons
Ayako Nakamura, Oliver James University of Exeter
3 Global and Local Dynamics: The Regulation of Medical Technologies in the European Union, Japan and the United States.
Christa Altenstetter
Regulation and the Global South 6G Stream: Regulation and the Global South Chair: John Mikler 1 Regulating for sustainable development: an evaluation of electricity regulators in India Gopal Krishna Sarangi TERI University 2 How can low-income countries gain from a climate negotiation Framework Agreement? Nicola Cantore, Leo Peskett, Dirk Willem te Velde
International Development Institute
Quality of Regulation 6I Stream: Regulatory Capacity and Instruments Chair: Anne Meuwese 1 What’s an impact assessment to do? Ideas, instruments and the capabilities-expectations
gap Claire A. Dunlop, Claudio M. Radaelli, Duncan Russel
University of Exeter
2 The Evolution of Taxi Regulation in Ireland Stephen Weir Institute of Public Administration
3 Regulatory Quality: A Cross-country and Cross-sectoral Analysis Isik Ozel Sabanci University
Regulatory Governance in Network Industries II 6J Stream: Regulating Network Industries Chair: Alberto Asquer 1 Flaw in the Governance of the Telecommunications Sector? Wolster Lemstra Delft University of Technology
2 Postal markets and electronic substitution: What is the impact of convergence on regulatory practices and institutions
Martin Maegli, Christian Jaag EPFL 3 Mixing and Matching: Complementing more Traditional Research Methods with Social
Network Analysis- Case Studies in Multilevel Regulatory Arrangements: energy and
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telecommunications in Belgium Joery Matthys, Koen Verhoest, David Aubin, Emmanuelle Mathieu, Karin Ingold
Ghent University, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, ETH Zurich
Session 7
Saturday 19th 9:00- 10:45
Effective Banking Regulation 7A Stream: Regulation and the Financial Crisis Chair: Andrew Walter 1 The relationship between capital requirements and bank behavior: A revision in the light
of Basel II José Filipe Abreu, Mohamed Azzim
Gulamhussen
Bank of Portugal
2 Financial Stability and the Institutional Setup of Banking Regulatory Agencies: Is Autonomy Consequential?
Jacint Jordana, Guillermo Rosas Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Washington
University, St. Louis 3 Another Race to the Bottom? Venue Shopping for Regulators in the American Financial
System Colin Provost University College London
Regulating the New Media 7B Stream: The Governance of Risk and Technology Regulation
Chair: Tony Prosser
1 Journeyman to five-tool player: co-regulation and audiovisual media in the UK Daithí Mac Síthigh University of East Anglia 2 Internet Law and Governance: Co-Regulation as a Constitutional Solution? Chris Marsden University of Essex 3 Balancing regulatory effectiveness and legitimacy? An examination of internet filtering in
the United Kingdom TJ McIntyre University College Dublin
Regulating Law 7C Stream: Regulation, Law and Society Chair: Fiona de Londras 1 Regulation of Privatized Prison Facilities: On the Force of Ideational, Constitutional and
Functional Limits of Regulation Margit Cohn Hebrew University of Jerusalaem
2 The Constitutionality of Privatized Prisons Guy Seidman, Sommer Hillel Interdisciplinary Center, Herzliya 3 The Concept of Regulation in Administrative and Economic Law in Continental Europe,
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the UK and the USA and the Emergence of the Course «Regulatory Law» - a comparative overview
Tatjana Jovanic University of Belgrade
Regulatory Institutions, Processes and Accountability 7D Stream: Politics of Regulation Chair: Muiris McCarthaigh 1 Regulatory Autonomy in the European Postal Sector Sandra Eckert University Osnabrück 2 Coordination, coordination, coordination…and its regulation. How the Lisbon Strategy
affects EU law. Stijn Smismans Cardiff Law School
3 Delegation to Independent Competition Authorities: Explaining Variation in Formal Political Accountability
Christina Koop European University Institute
Regulating Healthcare 7E Stream: Social Regulation Chair: Ciara O’ Dwyer 1 Effects of performance measurement in Dutch hospital care Emiel Kerpershoek Delft University of Technology 2 Measuring the effects of regulatory interventions on the quality of health services Eric Koornneef Trinity College Dublin 3 Independent regulatory agency: Inadequate institutional design/configuration or
ineffective external control? Maria Antonieta, Almeida Pimenta Universidade Federal do Rio de
The Role of Scientific Evidence in Food Safety Policy: Challenges and Limits
7F
Stream: Regulating Food Safety and Quality Chair: Tetty Havinga 1 EU GM Food Regulation: Lessons from a severe case of the Emperor's new clothes Shane H. Morris, Ewen Mullins, Charles Spillane University College Cork, Teagasc Crops Research
Centre, National University of Ireland
2 Reflexive Governance and the Regulation of Beef Imports to the EU James Lawless University College Dublin 3 A Standard of Review in Food Safety Related International Trade Disputes. Some New
Developments Lukasz Gruszczynski Polish Academy of Science 4 The European Food Safety Authority at the judicial gate. Some reflections upon the
judicial review of EFSA scientific opinions by European Courts Alberto Alemanno HEC Paris
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Balancing regulation and competition policy 7H Stream: Regulation and the Limits of Competition Chair: Imelda Maher 1 Competition Policy and Regulation in Turkey: Friends or Foes Fuat Oğuz Başkent University
2 Rights and Competition Policy: Theorising the practice of the Australian regulator Vijaya Nagarajan Macquarie University 3 The Prominence of Takeovers in the Evolution of the Electricity Sector in England: the
Weight of State Activism and of Institutions Michel Goyer, Rocio Valdivielso de Real Warwick Business School; Centre for
Globalisation and Regionalisation, Warwick University
4 Joined-Up Regulatory and Competition Policy using the Case of the Bundling of Communications Services
Pat Kenny Commission for Communications 5 EU Fiscal State Aid and Tax Policy Nicolas Miguel Paris Descartes University
Regulating Water 7J Stream: Regulating Network Industries Chair: Janice Beecher 1 The value of water: is the concept useful for policy making? Vania Paccagnia Environment Agency 2 Implementing privatisation and liberalisation reforms through mutual adjustments
between levels of government: the case of the implementation of the water reform in Italy (1994-2006)
Alberto Asquer University of Cagliari
3 Decisional rounds and local modes of governance in Italian water management reform Chiara Carrozza University of Turin
4 Regulatory Governance in the water industry: The effects of the financial crisis on the political economy of the water sector in Germany, Italy and Russia
Alberto Asquer, Johann Wackerbauer University of Cagliari, Ifo Institute, Munich
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Session 8
Saturday 19th 11:15- 13:00
Case Studies in Banking and Securities Regulation 8A Stream: Regulation and the Financial Crisis Chair: Dieter Pesendorfer 1 Beyond Legal Origins? A Case Study of Consumer Over-indebtedness Regulation in the UK
and France Iain Ramsay University of Kent
2 When Life Hands you a Lemon... Shifting Paradigms in Consumer Credit Regulation and the Accelerated Rise of the Principle of Responsible Lending after the Financial Crisis
Joseph Spooner Law Reform Commission 3 “All in all, I Think We Hit the Jackpot”: Garn-St. Germain and the Reagan Administration’s
Faith in Deregulation Dustin Walker University of California, Santa Barbara
Regulatory Solutions to Privatised State Security 8C Stream: Regulation, Law and Society Chair: Peer Zumbansen 1 The social construction of a multi-level regulation around private security companies : the
control of an inherently governmental function without the government ? Cyril Magnon- Pujo Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne 2 Business or Monopoly: Regulatory Models in the Security Sector Adam White University of Sheffield
3 Corporate Torture in the ‘War on Terrorism’: Regulating in the ‘Gap’ between Security and Rights
Fiona De Londras University College Dublin
Special Session- Author Meets Reader Panel 8D Stream: Politics of Regulation Chair: Colin Scott
Three readers will discuss their views of a new book by Jonathan Koppell, Yale School of Management, entitled World Rule: Accountability, Legitimacy and the Design of Global Governance (University of Chicago Press, 2010, forthcoming) and the author will respond.
Readers: Fabrizio Cafaggi European University Institute
Jacint Jordana Pompeu Fabra Nancy Reichman University of Denver
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Complex Patterns of Interaction: Public and Private Actors in Food Regulation
8F
Stream: Regulating Food Safety and Quality Chair: Frans Van Waarden 1 Waiting for the State? The Success and Failure of Traffic Light Food Labelling in Germany
and Great Britain Frank Janning University of Hamburg
2 Differential Empowerment for Regulatory Change – How transnational forces shape private and public forms of food safety regulation in Eastern Europe
Laszlo Bruszt, Julia Langbein European University Institute 3 Meta-governance of quality systems. A case study on safeguarding the quality of Dutch
eggs Haiko van der Voort TU Delft
Regulating Energy 8J Stream: Regulating Network Industries Chair: Graeme Hodge 1 The Role of Private Governance in the Internal Energy Market Burkard Eberlein, Sandra Eckert University Osnabrück 2 The Legal, the Physical, and the Mathematical Capacity of a Gas Pipeline Network Martin Grötschel, Zuse Institute Berlin Thorsten Koch, Klaus Spreckelsen, Peter Stratmann
Zuse Institute Berlin, E.ON Gas Transport GmbH, Bundesnetzagentur
3 A Systemic Approach to Establishing Regulatory Oversight Anshuman Saxena, Alain Wegmann Ecole Polytechnique de Lausanne
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Travel & Local Facilities
Getting to University College Dublin From Dublin Airport
Dublin Airport is located to the North of the City Centre. UCD is 4km to the South of the City Centre. A taxi from the Airport to UCD costs in the region of €35 and takes between half an hour and 45 minutes depending on time of day. Aircoach operates a frequent service from Dublin Airport to Leopardstown / Sandyford / Stillorgan which passes UCD (and is also convenient for city centre hotels and the Radisson SAS and Stilorgan Park hotels). Aircoach costs €8 for a single fare and €14 for a return fare to UCD. The Aircoach service leaves from outside the arrivals hall on the left hand side. There is no train connection from Dublin Airport to UCD.
From the City Centre
Dublin Bus numbers 3, 10, 11B, and the 17 all provide direct services to the UCD campus. The numbers 3, 10 and 11B can be boarded at O'Connell Street. 10 is very frequent and also stops outside Trinity College Dublin on Nassau Street. For timetable information please visit http://www.dublinbus.ie/. Buses require payment of exact fare in coins or advance purchase tickets available from newsagents and other suppliers. The fare from UCD to the city centre is around €1.80. A taxi from the City Centre to UCD costs in the region of €15.
Taxi companies: National Radio Cabs +353 1 6772222 (citywide); 1st Call Taxis +353 1 2889911 (local to UCD),Southside Cabs +353 1 2836622 (local to UCD)
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Facilities near UCD Restaurants/ Cafés Radisson St Helens Hotel (Talavera Restaurant - Italian)
Michael’s Food and Wine, Deerpark Road, Mount Merrion (a café/ wine bar, lunches only, also a good deli) (278 0377
The Golden Olive (Clonskeagh Mosque), Roebuck Road
Indian Summer, Rear of 2, Lower Kilmacud Road, Stillorgan, (210 8440)
Gotham Café South, Lower Kilmacud Road, Stillorgan
UCD Restaurant (Building 68) is open until 6pm Emergency Services/ Hospital
Emergency Services Number: 112 St Vincent’s Hospital, Elm Park, Dublin 4 Tel: 01 269 4533, A&E Department: 01 209 4358
Places of Worship Roman Catholic: Our Lady, Seat of Wisdom on UCD campus; Church of St Therese, The Rise Mount Merrion
The nearest synagogue is at the South Circular Road, Dublin 8
Church of Ireland (Anglican): St Thomas’s , Foster Avenue, Mount Merrion, St Philip & St James, Cross Avenue, Blackrock
Clonskeagh Mosque (Sunni), Clonskeagh Road, Dublin 14
Ahlul Bayt Mosque (Shia), Milltown Bridge, Dublin 14
Sport & Fitness
UCD Running Track available to all visitors, close to the main front entrance of the campus (at N11). Gym and climbing wall available in Sports Centre
Pubs and Bars Kielys Pub, Deerpark Road, Mount Merrion (the bar is more interesting than the main lounge)( 01 283 2209)
RadissonSAS Hotel, Stillorgan Road (N11) – good for cocktails
Ashtons Pub, 11 Vergemount,Clonskeagh, Dublin 14 (also good steaks & seafood) (01 283 0045)
City Centre Facilities near Dublin Castle Restaurants Pichet (French), 13-14 Trinity Street, Dublin 2, 01 (677 1060)
Il Vicoletto (Italian), 5 Crow Street, Temple Bar, Dublin 2 (01 670 8633)
Ciao Bella Roma (pizzas), 24-25 Parliament Street, Dublin 2 (01 6776004)
Le Gueuleton, 2, Fade Street, Dublin 2 (01 675 3708)
Jaipur (Indian), 41-46, South Great George’s Street (01 677 0999)
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La Maison, 15 Castlemarket Street, Dublin 2 (01 672 7258)
Chez Max (French bistro), 1 Palace Street, Dublin 2 (01 633 7215)
Mermaid Café (international) 69/70 Dame Street, Dublin 2 (01 670 8236)
Saba (Thai), 26-28 Clarendon Street, Dublin 2, (01 679 2000)
Fallon & Byrne (main restaurant is international, also has a wine bar in basement serving platters of cheese, pates etc and has a deli/foodhall on the premises), 11, Exchequer Street, Wicklow Street (01 472 1000) Dublin is famous for its pubs and many also serve food.
Pubs Davy Byrnes (favoured by James Joyce and Leopold Bloom) 21 Duke Street, Dublin 2 (01 6775217)
McDaids ,3 Harry Street,Dublin 2 (01 6794395)
Stags Head, 1 Dame Court, Dublin 2, Co. Dublin City, (01 6793701)
The International Bar, 23 Wicklow Street, Dublin 2, Co. Dublin City (01 6779250)
The Brazen Head (established 1198 – claims to be Dublin’s oldest pub) (live traditional music sessions and food), 20 Lower Bridge Street, Dublin 8 (01-6779549)
The Porterhouse (brews a wide selection of own beers), 16-18 Parliament Street Dublin 2, (01 679 8495)
The Foggy Dew (also has traditional Irish music sessions), 1 Upper Fownes Street, Dublin 2 (01 677 9328)
The Market Bar (famous for tapas) 14A Fade Street Dublin 2 (01 613 9094)
Kehoe’s 9 South Anne Street, Dublin 2, (01 677 8312)
Shopping Most of Dublin’s best stores and boutiques are located on Grafton Street and the surrounding streets (Wicklow Street, Drury Street, Exchequer Street, Clarendon Street, Powerscourt Townhouse Centre, George’s Street Arcade, Duke Street, South Anne Street etc )
Kilkenny Design Centre (clothes, homewares, Irish design) – Nassau Street, Dublin 2 (beside Trinity College)
Avoca (clothes, foodstuffs, also has a good café), Suffolk Street, Dublin 2
House of Ireland (good for upmarket souvenirs, Waterford glass, Aran sweaters, Irish linen), Nassua Street, Dublin 2
Hodges Figgis Bookstore, Dawson Street, Dublin 2
Brown Thomas (leading department store), Grafton Street, Dublin 2
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Recreational Activities Dublin is one of Europe’s oldest cities and retains much of its historical and cultural charm. It is also a top city break destination, known for its bars, nightlife and visitor attractions. Enjoy a pub crawl around the city ( [email protected] +353 862137818) or a specialist literary pub crawl (dublinpubcrawl.ie, tel 01 670 5602), experience a Dublin Bay Sea Thrill (www.seasafari.ie, 01 668 9802 or www.discoverdublin.ie) or a take a Viking Splash tour of the city (www.vikingsplash.ie and 01 707 6000) Most tours and attractions are also
bookable at the Dublin Tourism Centre on Suffolk Street (01 605 7700, www.visitdublin.com).Don’t miss Trinity College, where students conduct walking tours of this ancient university in the heart of the city centre. Visit the Guinness Brewery and Hopstore, St James’s Gate (tel: 01 408 4800) or take a tour of the Jameson Whiskey Distillery (7, Bow Street, Dublin7, 01 807 2003). Both of these tours include the opportunity to sample the famed products! Christ Church Cathedral, the Chester Beatty Library, right by Dublin Castle (which has a world-class collection of Asian manuscripts and art, as well as a good Middle Eastern café, The Silk Road), the National Gallery of Ireland (another good café/lunch spot) at Merrion Square West in the heart of Georgian Dublin and Clare Street, or the Dublinia and Viking World Museum and Heritage Centre (St Michael’s Hill, Christ Church, Dublin 8 – tel: 01 679 4611) are all worthwhile seeing. You could see a play at the Abbey Theatre, Ireland’s national theatre, founded by Yeats and Lady Gregory (26 Abbey Street, Dublin 1, 01 872 7222) or at the Gate Theatre, Parnell Square Dublin 1 (box office 01 874 4045), or take in a concert at the National Concert Hall, Earlsfort Terrace (tel 01 417 0000). Many of the main tourist attractions are marked on this map - http://maps.dublinbynumbers.com/.
A traditional pastime for Dubliners recommended for any visitor staying the weekend in Dublin is to take the 46A bus on N11 in front of UCD to the picturesque seaside suburb and yachting centre Dun Laoghaire, walk the pier or swim at the famous forty Foot bathing establishment
For anyone arriving before the Conference commences, you should know that 16th June is Bloomsday, one of Ireland’s greatest cultural celebrations. More details can be found at http://www.jamesjoyce.ie/listing.asp?id=29.
Cycling tours of Dublin are also available – see www.dublinbybike.ie (and Dublin offers a rental bike scheme throughout most of the city centre, www.dublinbicycles.ie)
For anyone making a longer stay – try visiting County Wicklow to the south of Dublin – Glendalough, the beaches at Brittas Bay, hiking in the Dublin mountains, walking the Wicklow Way. Or, visit Newgrange’s neolithic monuments in County Meath an hour to the north of Dublin. Several high-quality golf courses are in Dublin and its vicinity and sailing is available on Dublin Bay. The main tourism websites are: www.visitdublin.com, www.failteireland.ie and www.discoverireland.ie
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General Information Dublin Tourism Information and Reservation Centres can be found at Dublin Airport, Dún Laoghaire Ferry Port, and at Suffolk Street and O’Connell Street in the city centre. Call into one of our offices and let the experts guide you around Dublin. For more information see visitdublin.com.
Climate Dublin’s climate is mild and very changeable. It is influenced by the Gulf Stream. Winter temperatures average 4°C-7°C (39°-44°F) and in summer between 16°C-20°C (60°F-67°F). There are about eighteen hours of daylight daily during July and August, only getting truly dark after 23.00.
Population The population of Dublin City and County is almost 1.4 million. English is the spoken language throughout Ireland. Irish (or Gaelic) is the original native language of Ireland. Place names and signage are usually in both languages.
Currency The Euro is the only currency that is officially recognised as legal tender in the Republic of Ireland. Each Euro has 100 cent.
Electrical Current 220 / 240 volts (50 cycles) is the standard electrical current throughout Ireland. Plugs are 3-pin flat. Adapters are therefore required for 2-pin appliances.
Tipping In restaurants a customary service charge may be added to a bill. If a service charge is included, tipping is not necessary, unless the service received is exemplary. If a service charge was not included, a normal tip is between 10%-15%. With other services from hairdressers to taxi drivers, it is generally not necessary to tip although staff will always appreciate acknowledgment of service.
Smoking Dublin was Europe’s first smoke free capital city! Since 29th March 2004 smoking is banned in all enclosed places of work in Ireland. This includes banks, office blocks, public buildings, pubs, nightclubs, restaurants and cafés. The primary purpose of the prohibition is to give protection to workers and the public who are exposed to harmful environmental tobacco smoke. Exceptions include hotel, guesthouse and B&B bedrooms and private accommodation. Most pubs and some restaurants have installed or extended existing beer-gardens or patios to cater for those who smoke.
Telephone The international code for Ireland is 00 353. The local area code for Dublin is 01. In an emergency, call 999 or 112. These numbers will alert the appropriate service – fire, police(Gardaí), lifeboat, coastal, mountain and cave rescue services. The numbers for local and national directory enquiries are 11811 or 11850 and for international enquiries 11818 or 11860. The Irish
Tourist Assistance Service is on Harcourt Street, Dublin 2 and can be contacted on +353 1 478 5295, www.itas.ie. WiFi access is available in many locations throughout Dublin.
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Conference Sponsors We are very grateful to the following for generous sponsorship of the conference: UCD School of Law
Institute of Public Administration Governance Forum
UCD School of Business Hague Institute for the Internationalisation of Law
UCD Global Finance Academy Department of the Taoiseach
The Hague Institute for the Internationalisation of Law (HiiL) fosters innovative and multidisciplinary research on globalisation and internationalisation of law.
HiiL envisions a world in which national legal systems function well and are based on a clear understanding of
the challenges of internationalisation. HiiL develops a strategic research agenda on the effects of globalisation and internationalisation on national legal systems. The central object of research for HiiL is how globalisation is affecting legal systems and how international and national dimensions can be combined into a stable multi-level legal system.
HiiL initiates, facilitates and funds top-level research and delivers practical solutions to real problems.
www.hiil.org
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