Introduction
Program
Participants
Useful Links
Activities of the Jean Monnet Center
 
 

 

Altneuland: The Constitution of Europe in an American Perspective

 

 
       

A Joint Conference Organized by
the Hauser Global Law School Program and the Jean Monnet Center for International and Regional Economic Law & Justice,
New York University School of Law
Jointly With
Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University

April 28 – 30, 2004


 
 

Participants

 
   

 
   


Karen J. Alter
Associate Professor of Political Science, Northwestern University

Karen Alter is Associate Professor of Political Science at Northwestern University, where she specializes in the international politics of international organizations and international law. Alter is author of: Establishing the Supremacy of European Law: The Making of an International Rule of Law in Europe (Oxford University Press, 2001), and numerous articles and book chapters on the European Union's legal system including: "Who are the Masters of the Treaty? European Governments and the European Court of Justice" (International Organization, 1998); "The European Legal System and Domestic Policy: Spillover or Backlash" (International Organization, 2000); "Judicial Politics in the European Community: European Integration and the Pathbreaking Cassis de Dijon Decision" (co-authored with Sophie Meunier, Comparative Political Studies, 1994), and "Explaining Variation in the Use of European Litigation Strategies: EC Law and UK Gender Quality Policy" (co-authored with Jeannette Vargas, Comparative Political Studies, 2000). Her most recent publications include "Resolving or Exacerbating Disputes? The WTO's New Dispute Resolution System." (International Affairs, 2003) and "Do International Courts Enhance Compliance with International Law? (Review of Asian and Pacific Studies, 2003). Alter was a German Marshall Fund research fellow, and a visiting scholar at the European Union Center, Harvard University, and a Emile Noel Fellow at Harvard Law School in 2000-2001. She is a Howard Foundation Fellow and a visiting scholar at the American Bar Foundation in 2004. Alter is on the editorial board of European Union Politics, and the executive committee of the European Union Studies Association (EUSA).


George A. Bermann
Jean Monnet Professor of European Union Law , Walter Gellhorn Professor of Law and Director, European Legal Studies Center, Columbia Law School

George Bermann is Jean Monnet Professor of European Union Law and Walter Gellhorn Professor of Law at Columbia Law School in New York, and Director of the Law School's European Legal Studies Center . He teaches and writes in the areas of Comparative law, European Law, Transnational Litigation and Arbitration, and International Trade. He is co-author of, among other books, Cases & Materials on European Union Law (2d ed. West Pub. 2002); Transatlantic Regulatory Co-operation (Oxford Univ. Press 2000); Transnational Litigation (West 2003) and French Business Law (Juris 2004) and the forthcoming Law and Governance in an Enlarged European Union (Hart. Pub.).

Prof. Bermann is past President of the American Society of Comparative law, titular member of the Academie Internationale de Droit Compare, Editor-in-Chief of the American Journal of Comparative Law, as of 2004, and founder and executive editorial board chair of the Columbia Journal of European Law. He has taught at various European law faculties, including the Universities of Paris I, II and V, Bordeaux, and Freiburg, and holds from the latter university the degree of doctor honoris causa. He has frequently served as foreign law expert to US courts and to the US and foreign bars, and acted as an international commercial arbitrator.


Kieran Bradley
Acting Head, Legislation Divison of the Legal Service of the European Parliament

Kieran Bradley is acting Head of the Legislation Division of the Legal Service of the European Parliament. He has previously served as a référendaire at the European Court of Justice, and as an administrator on the secretariat of the European Parliament's Committee on Legal Affairs. In Spring 2000, he was the first Distinguished Lecturer on European Law at Harvard Law School, and he has lectured on EC law at numerous universities and specialized institutions, including the Autonomous University of Barcelona, the Academy of European Law, Fiesole, and the College of Europe, Natolin. He has also published extensively in a number of areas of EC law, particularly institutional law.

From February to July 2003, he was a member of the group of experts from the Legal Services of the Community institutions which advised the Praesidium of the European Convention on the policy provisions of the draft Constitution for Europe. In September 2003 he was appointed to a second group of legal experts charged with revising the text of the draft Constitution, as well as the existing protocols to the EC Treaties and the Acts of Accession, for the Intergovernmental conference.


Damian Chalmers
Reader in European Law, London School of Economics

Damian Chalmers is a Reader in European Union Law at the London School of Economics and Political Science and Professor of Law at the College of Europe. Prior to coming to the LSE, he worked as a research officer for the British Institute of International and Comparative Law and as a lecturer at the University of Liverpool. He is currently editor of the European Law Review.


Paul Craig
Professor of English Law, St. John’s College, Oxford

Paul Craig is Professor of English Law at St. John's College, Oxford. His research time is divided roughly equally between European Union law and constitutional and administrative law in the United Kingdom. He also has comparative law interests in the public law field, both as between UK and American law, and UK and French law. His research work in EU law and in public law has ranged widely, and has included theory as well as doctrine. He has held visiting appointments in the USA at Cornell, Virginia and Indiana, and has given papers at many universities around the world.


José M. de Areilza
Professor of European Law and Associate Dean of Legal Studies, Instituto de Empresa, Madrid

José M. de Areilza is Professor of European Union Law and Associate Dean of Legal Studies at the Instituto de Empresa, Madrid. He is also a Lecturer at the College of Europe, Natolin, Poland. He holds LL.M. and S.J.D. degrees from Harvard Law School, and an M.A. from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy. Between 1996 and 2000 he was Advisor on European and North American Affairs at the Spanish Prime Minister's Office. During 2002 he has worked as an Advisor to Ms. Ana Palacio, Member of the Praesidium of the European Convention. His research focuses on European institutions and governance, models of flexibility and EU-Member States powers.


Gráinne de Búrca
Professor of European Law, European University Institute, Florence, NYU Global Law School

B.C.L, University College Dublin, 1986; LLM (Michigan) 1987; B.L, admitted to the Irish Bar 1989. University Lecturer in law at Oxford University and Fellow of Somerville College 1990-1998. In 1998 appointed Professor of European Union law at the European University Institute in Florence. Has been a visiting professor at the University of Toronto, the University of Michigan and Columbia Law School. Appointed to the Global Law faculty at NYU. Review editor of the Yearbook of European Law and the Oxford Journal of Legal Studies, co-editor of the OUP Oxford Studies in European Law series, and of OUP's Collected Courses of the Academy of European Law. Also co-Director of the EUI Academy of European Law.

Has published mainly in the area of EU law, concentrating primarily on constitutional issues of European integration. Recent research has included projects on the changing modes of governance in Europe, and law and civil society in the context of global economic governance the EU in the WTO, and the human rights policy of the European Union.

Books published include: EU Law (three editions, co-authored), The Evolution of EU Law (1999, co-edited), Constitutional Change in the EU (2000, co-edited), The EU and the WTO (2001, co-edited) and The European Court Of Justice (2001, co-edited)


Renaud Dehousse
Jean Monnet Chair at the Institut d’Études Politiques de Paris (Sciences Po), Research Fellow, Notre Europe

Renaud Dehousse holds a law degree from the University of Liège (Belgium) and a PhD from the European University Institute in Florence. Before joining Sciences Po, he has held regular appointments in the Law Department of the European University Institute and at the Faculty of Political Science of the University of Pisa, Italy. He has acted as adviser for various units of the European Commission and for the French government; he was inter alia a member of the Groupe des Sages set up by the Commission before the 1996 intergovernmental conference. He currently holds a Jean Monnet Chair at the Institut d'études politiques de Paris (Sciences Po), and is Research Fellow at " Notre Europe ", a Paris-based think-tank founded and directed by Jacques Delors.

His main work has been on law and politics in the European Union. His recent work has focused in particular on transformation of European governance, with specific reference to the growing importance of transnational bureaucratic structures (comitology, European agencies), as well as on the influence of the European Court of Justice on European policies and on the EU policy process.


Florence Deloche-Gaudez
Associate Researcher, Institute d'Etudes Politiques de Paris (SCIENCES PO)

Florence Deloche-Gaudez holds a PhD in political science and she is an associate researcher at Sciences Po (Institut d'Etudes Politiques de Paris) where she has lectured on EU institutions and EU decision making since 2001.

She has followed the European Convention's work very closely in Brussels and has contributed to the setting-up of a network involving 20 European universities interested in the Convention process (the 'Convention of European Students'). Recently, she has published articles on the role of the Secretariat of the Convention (Politique européenne) and on the differences between the European Convention and the process that took place in Philadelphia (Critique internationale). She has also studied the method of the Convention which drafted the Charter of Fundamental Rights for Jacques Delors' Association "Notre Europe" and has contributed to the book "Une Constitution pour l'Europe?" edited by Renaud Dehousse.

She has worked on different occasions with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs: inter alia, she has taken part in a working group on the Convention and a French-German study on a 30-member European Union. Florence Deloche-Gaudez has also collaborated in a Commission chaired by Pr Quermonne, which issued a report on the future of European institutions for the French government. She has published a number of articles on France's stance with regard to the enlargement of the Union and the institutional reforms this requires, in particular within the framework of the Trans-European Policy Studies Association (TEPSA).


Luis María Díez-Picazo
Visiting Professor, University Paris II (Panthéon-Assas)

Luis Maria Diez-Picazo studied law at the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid and took his PhD at the Università di Bologna. After working at the Spanish Ministry of Justice for two years, he taught at the Universidad de Málaga. He was appointed Professor of Comparative Public Law at the European University Institute (Florence) in 1989, where he satyed for eight years. Later he taught at the Spanish national school for the judiciary (Barcelona) and at the Instituto de Empresa (Madrid). At present, he is Visiting Professor at Université Paris II (Panthéon-Assas). Among his latest publications, is a volume entitled Constitucionalismo de la Unión Europea (Civitas, Madrid, 2002).


Norman Dorsen
Professor of Law, New York University School of Law

Norman Dorsen is Counselor to the president of New York University and Stokes Professor of Law, NYU School of Law, where he has taught since 1961. He is co-director of the Arthur Garfield Hays Civil Liberties Program and was the founding director of NYU's Hauser Global Law School Program. After graduating from Harvard Law School, he performed his military service in the office of the Secretary of the Army, where he assisted in fighting McCarthyism during the 1954 Army-McCarthy Hearings. He served as law clerk to Chief Judge Calvert Magruder of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit and to Supreme Court Justice John Marshall Harlan. He is the author or editor of many articles and 13 books (sometimes with others), including Frontiers of Civil Liberties (1968), Political and Civil Rights in the U.S. (1967 and 1976/1979 editions), The Evolving Constitution (1987), Democracy and The Rule of Law (2000) and Comparative Constitutionalism (2003). He is the founder and editorial director of the International Journal of Constitutional Law (I•CON).

Dorsen served as president of the American Civil Liberties Union 1976-1991. Earlier, while general counsel to the ACLU, he participated in many Supreme Court cases, arguing among others those that won for juveniles the right to due process, upheld constitutional rights of nonmarital children, and advanced abortion rights. He also helped write petitioner's brief in Roe v. Wade and appeared amicus curiae in the Gideon case, the Pentagon Papers case and the Nixon Tapes case. Dorsen was the founding president of the Society of American Law Teachers and the founding president of the U.S. Association of Constitutional Law, an affiliate of the International Association of Constitutional Law. He was chairman for four years of the Lawyers Committee for Human Rights. He has chaired two U.S. Government commissions and has received many awards and honorary degrees, including the Presidential Eleanor Roosevelt Award for Human Rights. He is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations.


Michael W. Doyle
Harold Brown Professor, Columbia University, School of International and Public Affairs and Columbia Law School

Michael Doyle is the Harold Brown Professor at Columbia University in the School of International and Public Affairs and Columbia Law School. He also serves on a part-time basis as Special Adviser to United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan with the rank of Assistant Secretary-General. His area of responsibility is special projects.

His publications include Ways of War and Peace (W.W. Norton); Empires (Cornell University Press); UN Peacekeeping in Cambodia: UNTAC's Civil Mandate (Lynne Rienner Publishers); Keeping the Peace (Cambridge University Press) which he edited with Ian Johnstone and Robert Orr; Peacemaking and Peacekeeping for the New Century (Rowman and Littlefield) edited with Olara Otunnu; New Thinking in International Relations Theory (Westview) edited with John Ikenberry; Escalation and Intervention: Multilateral Security and Its Alternatives (Westview Press/United Nations Association) edited with Arthur Day; and Alternatives to Monetary Disorder (Council on Foreign Relations/McGraw Hill) which he wrote with Fred Hirsch and Edward Morse. He is chairman of the Editorial Board and the Committee of Editors of World Politics.

He is the former Director of the Center of International Studies of Princeton University and chairman of the Editorial Board and the Committee of Editors of World Politics. He was the vice-president and senior fellow of the International Peace Academy and is now a member of its board of directors. He has also served as a member of the External Research Advisory Committee of the UNHCR, the Advisory Committee of the Lessons-Learned Unit of the Department of Peace-Keeping Operations (UN), and is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, New York. In 2001, he was elected a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

Michael Doyle is married, has a daughter and lives in Princeton, New Jersey.


Christopher L. Eisgruber
Director Program in Law and Public Affairs, Princeton University

Christopher Eisgruber is Director of the Program in Law and Public Affairs at Princeton University, where he is the Laurence S. Rockefeller Professor of Public Affairs in the Woodrow Wilson School and the University Center for Human Values. In July 2004, he will begin an appointment as Provost of Princeton University. His research focuses upon constitutional theory, religious liberty, legal philosophy, and adjudicative institutions. He is the author of Constitutional Self-Government (Harvard University Press, 2001) and of articles in a broad range of academic journals. He and his co-author, Lawrence G. Sager, are currently working on a book about religious freedom in the United States. Before joining the Princeton faculty, he clerked for Judge Patrick Higginbotham of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit and for Justice John Paul Stevens of the United States Supreme Court, and then served for eleven years on the faculty of the New York University School of Law. Eisgruber received an A.B. magna cum laude in Physics from Princeton, an M. Litt. in Politics from Oxford University, and a J.D. from the University of Chicago Law School.


Victor Ferreres Comella
Professor of Constitutional Law, Pompeu Fabra University, Barcelona, NYU Global Law School

Victor Ferreres Comella is professor of Constitutional Law in Pompeu Fabra University (Barcelona, Spain). He is currently teaching Constitutional Law and European Community Law at the Spanish "Escuela Judicial" (Judiciary School), where young judges are trained. He has also taught at the New York University School of Law as a visiting professor, in 2001 and 2003. He obtained his JSD at Yale Law School, with a thesis on "Judicial Review and Democracy" (1996). His work has focused on constitutional review of legislation, and on fundamental rights. Apart from several articles, he has written two books in Spanish: "Justicia constitucional y democracia" (1997) and "El principio de taxatividad en materia penal y el valor normativo de la jurisprudencia" (2002). He is currently working on the role of Constitutional Courts in Europe.


Martin Flaherty
Visiting Professor Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton, Professor of Law and Co-director, Joseph R. Crowley Program in International Human Rights, Fordham Law School, New York

Martin Flaherty (J.D., Columbia Law School; M.A., M.Phil., Yale, B.A., Princeton) is currently a visiting Fellow in the Program in Law and Public Affairs in the Woodrow Wilson School at Princeton, and is ordinarily Professor of Law and Co-Director of the Joseph P. Crowley Program in International Human Rights at Fordham Law School in New York. Professor Flaherty clerked for the Hon. John J. Gibbons of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit and for Justice Bryon White of the United States Supreme Court. He has also taught at China University of Political Science and Law and the National Judges College, both in Beijing, as well at the Queen?s University, Belfast, and studied at Trinity College, Dublin on an ITT/Fulbright Fellowship. He is also currently chair of the Committee on International Human Rights of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York.

Professor Flaherty's research focuses on Human Rights, Constitutional Law, and Legal History. Recent publications include: 'Executive Essentialism and Foreign Affairs', 102 Michigan Law Review (forthcoming 2004) [with Curtis A. Bradley]; 'History Right': Historical Scholarship, Original Understanding, and Treaties as the 'Supreme Law of the Land', 99 Columbia Law Review 2095 (1999); and 'The Most Dangerous Branch', 105 Yale Law Journal 1725 (1996). He has also participated in human rights fact-finding missions in Northern Ireland, Turkey, Hong Kong, Mexico, and Malaysia for which he has co-authored and edited several studies, including: Unjust Order: Malaysia's Internal Security Act (2003), Presumed Guilty?: Criminal Justice and Human Rights in Mexico (2001), At the Crossroads: Human Rights and the Northern Ireland Peace Process (1996); Obstacles to Justice: Human Rights in Turkey (1999); 'Human Rights Violations Against Defense Lawyers', 7 Harvard Human Rights Journal 87 (1994).


Charles Fried
Beneficial Professor of Law, Harvard University

From September, 1995 until June, 1999 Charles Fried was an Associate Justice of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, while teaching constitutional law at Harvard Law School. On July 1, 1999 he returned to Harvard Law School as a full time member of the faculty and Beneficial Professor of Law. He has served on the Harvard Law School faculty since 1961. From 1985-1989 he was Solicitor General of the United States.

He is the author of seven books, most recently of Saying What the Law Is: The Constitution in the Supreme Court (2004) and also of Making Tort Law: What Should Be Done and Who Should Do It (with David Rosenberg) (2003), Order and Law: Arguing the Reagan Revolution (1991), Contract as Promise: A Theory of Contrac-tual Obligation (1981); Right and Wrong (1978); Medical Experimentation: Personal Integrity and Social Policy (1974, 1987); and An Anatomy of Values (1970).

Born in Prague, Czechoslovakia in 1935, Mr. Fried became a United States citizen in 1948. After receiving the bachelor of arts degree from Princeton in 1956, he attended Oxford University, where he earned a bachelor's in 1958, and received the J.D. degree from Columbia University School of Law in 1960. He served as law clerk to Associate Justice John Marshall Harlan during the 1960 October Term.


Dieter Grimm
Former Judge of the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany, currently Professor of Law, Humboldt University Berlin, New York University School of Law and Yale Law School, NYU Global Law School

Dieter Grimm received his law degree and a doctoral degree from the University of Frankfurt and an LL.M. degree from Harvard Law School. He was a Judge of the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany from 1987 to 1999. He now teaches law at Humboldt University Berlin and is the Director of the "Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin", Institute for Advanced Study. He teaches regularly at NYU Law School as a member of the Global Law Faculty as well as at Yale Law School. He is also a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Among his publications are: Deutsche Verfassungsgeschichte (German Constitutional History), 3rd ed. 1995; Die Zukunft der Verfassung (The Future of Constitutionalism), 3rd edition 2002; Die Verfassung und die Politik (Constitution and Politics), 2001, and the essay "Braucht Europa eine Verfassung?" (Does Europe need a Constitution?), which was translated into various languages.


Daniel Halberstam
Assistant Professor of Law, University of Michigan Law School

Daniel Halberstam is Assistant Professor of Law at the University of Michigan Law School, specializing in US constitutional law, institutional issues of European Union law, and comparative federalism. He was the founding Director of the European Union Center at the University of Michigan. Halberstam earned his undergraduate degree from Columbia University and his law degree from Yale, clerked for Justice David H. Souter of the US Supreme Court and Judge Patricia M. Wald of the Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit, and served as judicial fellow to Judge Peter Jann of the European Court of Justice. He also served as Attorney Advisor to the Chairman of the US Federal Trade Commission and as Attorney Advisor in the Office of Legal Counsel at the US Department of Justice. His publications include: The Foreign Affairs of Federal Systems: A National Perspective on the Benefits of State Participation, 46 Villanova Law Rev. 1016 (Symposium Issue, 2001), State Autonomy in Germany and the United States, 574 The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 158 (March 2001) (with Roderick M. Hills, Jr.), Comparative Federalism and the Issue of Commandeering, in Kalypso Nicolaidis & Robert Howse (eds.), The Federal Vision Legitimacy and Levels of Governance in the US and the EU (Oxford University Press, 2001), and Of Power and Responsibility: The Political Morality of Federal Systems, 90 Virginia Law Rev (forthcoming 2004). He is co-editor and contributing author of The Constitutional Challenge in Europe and America: People, Power, and Politics (Cambridge University Press, forthcoming 2004) (with Miguel Maduro).


Ulrich Haltern
Chair for International Law, International Commercial Law and European Law, University of St. Gallen, Professor at Hannover University

Ulrich Haltern, teaches EU law, international law, comparative law and constitutional theory at St. Gallen University (Switzerland), Humboldt University Berlin, and the European Center for Comparative Government and Public Policy Berlin (Germany). Studied law at Bochum, Geneva, Yale, and Harvard law schools; LL.M. Yale 1995; Dr. iur. (Bochum University) 1998; Habilitation (Humboldt University Berlin) 2003. Visiting Assistant Professor, University of Michigan Law School 1999; Visiting Lecturer and Senior Orville Schell Fellow, Yale Law School 1999; Assistant Professor (Wiss. Ass.) Humboldt University Berlin 2000-2003; Associate Professor (Lehrstuhlvertreter) St. Gallen University, since 2003.

Relevant publications: Europarecht und das Politische, to appear 2004 (Mohr Tübingen); Pathos and Patina - The Failure and Promise of Constitutionalism in the European Imagination, in: 9 European Law Journal 14 (2003); Integration Through Law, in: Antje Wiener/Thomas Diez (eds.), Theorising European Integration: Past, Present, and Future, Oxford (Oxford UP), 2003; Internationales Verfassungsrecht?, in: 128 Archiv des öffentlichen Rechts 511 (2003); Gestalt und Finalität, in: Armin von Bogdandy (ed.), Europäisches Verfassungsrecht. Theoretische und dogmatische Grundzüge, Heidelberg/Berlin (Springer), 2002, 803; Europäische Verfassung und europäische Identität, in: Ralf Elm (ed.), Europäische Identität: Paradigmen und Methodenfragen, Baden-Baden: Nomos 2002, 239; Europäischer Kulturkampf, in: 37 Der Staat 591 (1998).


Ran Hirschl
Associate Professor of Political Science and Law, University of Toronto

Ran Hirschl is an Associate Professor of Political Science and Law at the University of Toronto. He studied law and political science at Tel-Aviv University and at Yale University, where he received his Ph.D. in 1999. His research and teaching interests include comparative public law, constitutional and judicial politics. While at Yale and the University of Toronto he received several prestigious fellowships and awards, including a Fulbright Scholar nomination, Visiting Fellowship at Princeton University's Program in Law and Public Affairs, a Connaught Research Fellowship in the Social Sciences, and a three-year Canada Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council Grant. He has published extensively on comparative constitutional law and politics in journals such as Comparative Politics, Law & Social Inquiry, Human Rights Quarterly, American Journal of Comparative Law, Israel Studies, Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies, University of Richmond Law Review, Texas Law Review, Stanford Journal of International Law, and the Canadian Journal of Law and Jurisprudence, as well as in several edited volumes including The New Israel: Peacemaking and Liberalization (Westview, 2001), Marbury v. Madison: Documents and Commentary (Congressional Quarterly, 2002), the Democracy Sourcebook (MIT, 2003), Constitutional Politics in Canada and the United States (SUNY, 2004), and Constituting Women: The Gender of Constitutional Jurisprudence (Cambridge, 2004). He is the author of Towards Juristocracy: The Origins and Consequences of the New Constitutionalism (Harvard University Press, 2004).


Mattias Kumm
Associate Professor of Law, New York University School of Law

Professor Kumm studied Law, Philosophy and Political Sciences in Kiel, Paris and Cambridge MA before assuming a Professorship at NYU School of Law. He was a Fellow at the Program of Ethics and the Professions at the Kennedy School of Government and an Emile Noel Fellow at Harvard Law School. His teaching and research interests concern the Law of the European Union, Comparative Constitutional Law, International Law and Jurisprudence. He focuses on how democratic constitutionalism responds to and guides the establishment of transnational forms of governance. He is the Director of the J.S.D. Program as well as and LL.M. - J.S.D. Program in International Law at NYU School of Law.

Publications include: Who is the final arbiter of constitutionality in Europe? (CMLRev.1999), Constitutionalizing Subsidiarity in Integrated Markets, in Halberstam/Maduro: The Constitutional Challenge in Europe and America: People, Power, and Politics (Cambridge University Press, forthcoming 2004), Reconceiving Constitutional Conflict: The case of the EU and its Member States (forthcoming ICON 2004), Constitutional Rights as Principles: On the Structure and Domain of Constitutional Justice (forthcoming I•CON 2004) International Law in National Courts: The International Rule of Law and the Limits of the Internationalist Model , 44 Va.J. Int'l L. 19 (2003).


Miguel Poiares Maduro
Advocate General, Court of Justice of the European Communities

Born 1967; degree in law (University of Lisbon, 1990); assistant lecturer (European University Institute, 1991); Doctor in Laws (European University Institute, Florence, 1996); visiting professor (College of Europe, Natolin; Ortega y Gasset Institute, Madrid; Catholic University, Portugal; Institute of European Studies, Macao); Professor (Autonomous University, Lisbon, 1997); Fulbright Visiting Research Scholar (Harvard University, 1998); co-director of the Academy of International Trade Law; co-editor (Hart Series on European Law and Integration, European Law Journal) and member of the editorial board of several law journals; Advocate General at the Court of Justice since 7 October 2003.


Franz Mayer
Researcher, Walter Hallstein-Institute for European Constitutional law, Humboldt University, Berlin

Franz C. Mayer is a researcher/assistant professor (Wiss. Ass.) at the Law Faculty of Humboldt-University, Berlin (Walter Hallstein-Institute for European Constitutional Law). He studied Law, Political Science and History at the Universities of Bonn and Munich and at the Institut d'Etudes Politiques de Paris (Sciences-Po). LL.M. (Yale Law School) 1995; Dr. iur. (University of Munich) 1999. Visiting researcher Harvard Law School 2000. Visiting lecturer University of Warsaw since 2000. His teaching and research interests focus on comparative and European constitutional law, on the relationship between European law and politics and more generally on international law and public law.

He is author of Kompetenzüberschreitung und Letztentscheidung (The ultimate decision on ultra vires-acts), Beck (Munich) 2000. Recent publications include: European Identities and the EU - The Ties that Bind Europe (with Jan Palmowski), Journal of Common Market Studies, forthcoming 2004; The Delimitation of Powers - Lessons from the United States for the European Union? in: Daniel Halberstam/Miguel Maduro (eds.), The Constitutional Challenge in Europe and America: People, Power, and Politics (CUP, forthcoming 2004); Angriffskrieg und europäisches Verfassungsrecht (Iraq, war of aggression and European constitutional law), 41 Archiv des Völkerrechts 394 (2003); La Charte européenne des droits fondamentaux et la Constitution européenne, Revue trimestrielle de droit européen 2003, 175; The European Constitution and the Courts. Adjudicating constitutional law in a multilevel system, Jean Monnet Working Paper 9/03 (2003) and forthcoming in: Armin v. Bogdandy (ed.), European Constitutional Law; La Costituzione integrata dell'Europa (with Ingolf Pernice) in: Gustavo Zagrebelsky (ed.), Diritti e Costituzione nell'Unione Europea, Laterza (Rome) 2003; Der Bundesstaat in der postregionalen Konstellation (The Federal State in the Postregional age), Jahrbuch des Föderalismus 2003, 444; Die Warenverkehrsfreiheit im Europarecht. Eine Rekonstruktion (Reconstructing free movement of goods), Europarecht 2003, 793; The language of the European Constitution - beyond Babel? in: Adam Bodnar et al. (eds.), The Emerging Constitutional Law of the European Union - German and Polish Perspectives, Springer (Heidelberg) 2003.


Andrew Moravcsik
Professor of Government and Director of the European Union Program, Harvard University

Andrew Moravcsik, is Professor of Government and Director of the European Union Program at Harvard University, where he has taught international relations since 1992. During the academic year 2003-2004 he is also Visiting Senior Research Fellow at the Program on Law and Public Affairs at Princeton University.

Professor Moravcsik is the author or co-author of more than one hundred papers, articles, chapters and reviews in scholarly journals and journals of civic opinion. These examine European integration, global human rights, transatlantic relations, West European and US foreign policy, negotiation analysis, international organization, international relations theory, and defense-industrial globalization--also the subjects he teaches. His book The Choice for Europe: Social Purpose and State Power from Messina to Maastricht (1998), which analyzes the decisive decisions in the history of European integration, has been called "the most compelling and significant analysis yet of the European Union" (Peter Katzenstein). As co-director of a Council on Foreign Relations project on "The Future of Europe and Transatlantic Relations," he edited Centralization or Fragmentation? Europe Facing the Challenges of Deepening, Diversity, and Democracy (1998). He is currently conducting research on the emergence and evolution of international human rights regimes, the democratic legitimacy of global governance, constitutional politics in the European Union, "American exceptionalism" in international politics, and transatlantic relations. Two edited books and a volume of essays are forthcoming. His commentary on world affairs can be found regularly in Newsweek and has also appeared in Foreign Affairs, Foreign Policy, Survival, and over a dozen leading newspapers around the world.

Before coming to Harvard, Professor Moravcsik served as trade negotiator at the U.S. Department of Commerce, editor-in-chief of a foreign policy journal in Washington DC, speechwriter and editor of a national economic bulletin for the Deputy Prime Minister of South Korea in Seoul, and in other public- and private-sector positions. He has held research or teaching positions at the University of Chicago, Columbia University, New York University, as well as universities and research institutes in France, Germany, Great Britain, Italy, and Belgium. He was educated at Stanford University (BA, History), the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies (MA, International Relations), and Harvard University (PhD, Political Science, 1992), and various German and French universities. He also writes occasionally about opera performance and history. He is married to Anne-Marie Slaughter, with whom he has two sons, Edward (7) and Alexander (4), and lives in Princeton, New Jersey, and Cambridge, Massachusetts (USA).


Gianluigi Palombella
Professor University of Parma, Law Faculty

Gianluigi Palombella studied Law at the Law Faculty in Pisa, Legal and Political Philosophy at the Scuola Superiore S. Anna (Pisa). He taught in Pisa for a decade, and since 1997, he has been a professor in the Law Faculty at the University of Parma, where he also serves in the Academic Senate and in the directive Committee in the "Master for Diplomatic Careers" (Political Science Faculty); Head of Legal and Social Studies Department.; Editorial Board of scientific journals in Italy and of "Law and Philosophy" (USA). He was a visiting scholar at Yale Law School (1996) and at Northwestern University Law School (2000).

His main interests are Sovereignty and Democracy; Law and Interpretation; and Fundamental Rights. He has written about Traditions and Innovation in the European Order; Governance, Rights and Parliaments in the E.U. His main articles include: The cognitive attitude. About a structural character in Law Interpretation, in "Archiv fuer Rechts- und Sozialphilosophie", 1999/2; Derechos fundamentales. Argumentos para una teoria, in "Doxa. Cuadernos de filosofia del derecho", 22, 1999; Arguments in favour of a functional theory of fundamental rights, in "International Journal for the Semiotics of Law", 14:, 2001. His books: include - Ragione e immaginazione: Herbert Marcuse 1928-1955, Bari 1982; - Diritto e artificio in David Hume, Milano 1984; - Soggetti, azioni, norme. Saggio su diritto e ragion pratica, Milano 1988; - Stato dei partiti e complessità sociale, Napoli 1992; - Filosofia del diritto, Padova 1996 (Filosofía del Derecho, Madrid 1999); - Costituzione e sovranità. Il senso della democrazia costituzionale, Bari 1997 ( Constitución y soberanía. El sentido de la democracia constitucional, Granada 1999) ; - L'autorità dei diritti. I diritti fondamentali tra istituzioni e norme, Roma-Bari, 2002 (The Authority of Rights. Fundamental Rights between Institutions and Norms, forthcoming 2004, Kluwer Publisher).


Ingolf Pernice
Professor and Managing Director, Walter Hallstein-Institut for European Constitutional Law , Humboldt-University, Berlin

Ingolf Pernice was born July 6, 1950 in Marburg/Lahn. Afer studies in Marburg, Geneva, Bruges and Friburg he served as research assistant at the University of Augsburg, where he finished his doctorate. He was appointed and worked as administrator at the European Commission at the DG Competition (1980-83) and later as a Member of the Legal Service (1983-1992). He got his PhD at Bayreuth University in 1987, following special leave for research 1985-87. He was appointed as Professor for Public, European and International Law at the Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität, Frankfurt in 1993. Since 1995 he has been the editor of Schriftenreihe Europäisches Verfassungsrecht (NOMOS, Baden-Baden), and a member of the Advisory Board des Columbia Journal of European Law. In 1996 he was appointed as Professor at Humboldt-Universität of Berlin, where he got the chair for public law, international and European law. From 1997 to 2001 he served as a member of the "European Forum for Environment and Sustainable Development". He founded the Walter Hallstein-Institut for European Constitutional Law of the Humboldt-University Berlin (www.whi-berlin.de in 1997 and has been the Managing Director of this Institute since its foundation. Since 1998 he has been responsible for external relations of the Humboldt-University Law Faculty. He was guest professor at Paris II (Panthéon-Assas), Institut des Hautes Etudes Internationales in 1998. In 1999 he became a Member of the Europa-Kommission of the Bertelsmann-Foundation, and a member of the Scientific Directorate of the Institut für Internationale Politik, Berlin. He has published a great number of articles dealing with European competition law, European environmental law and, above all, with the constitutional process of the European Union, including on fundamental rights, competencies, institutions, based on his concept of "multilevel constitutionalism".


Philip Pettit
William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Politics, Princeton University

Philip Pettit teaches political theory and philosophy in Princeton University, where he is William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Politics. Among his recent books are Republicanism: A Theory of Freedom and Government (1997), A Theory of Freedom: From the Psychology to the Politics of Agency (2001), a selection of his papers, Rules, Reasons and Norms (2002) and a selection of papers co-authored with two philosophers, Frank Jackson and Michael Smith: Mind, Morality and Explanation (2004). Forthcoming in mid 2004 is a book with an economist, Geoffrey Brennan, entitled The Economy of Esteem: An Essay on Civil and Political Society. Pettit came to Princeton from the Australian National University, where he had spent nearly twenty years. He is Irish by background and retains close connections with Europe. His book Republicanism has been translated into a number of European languages, including most recently French; this translation was marked by a conference at the Sorbonne in March 2004. A collection of his papers on social theory is to be published in French in September 2004 under the title Penser en Societe.


Otto Pfersmann
Professor of Public Law and Legal Theory, University of Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne

Otto Pfersmann, PhD. (Vienna) LLD. (Vienna), Professor of Public Law and Legal Theory, University of Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne. Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Vienna (1984-1991), then Research Fellow at the National Centre for Scientific Research, France (1991-1994), Full Professor at the University of Lyon (1994-1998), and, since 1998, at the Sorbonne, where he is Director of the Centre of Comparative Public Law. From 2000 to 2002, Deputy Director of the Institute for European and Comparative Law, Oxford University. He is, with L. Favoreu and al., author, of Droit Constitutionnel Dalloz Paris 2003 (6th ed.) and Droit des Libertés Fondamentales Dalloz Paris 2003 (4th ed.) as well as over 100 articles in scientific journals.


Michel Rosenfeld
Professor of Human Rights, Co-Director Floersheimer Center for Constitutional Democracy, Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law

Michel Rosenfeld is Justice Sydney L. Robins Professor of Human Rights and Co-Director of the Floersheimer Center For Constitutional Democracy at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law in New York City. He is the Editor-in-Chief of the International Journal of Constitutional Law (ICON) and President of The International Association of Constitutional Law (1999-2004). He has lectured widely in many foreign counties and written extensively in the fields of constitutional law, comparative constitutional law and legal philosophy. He has published many books, including: "Comparative Constitutionalism: Cases and Materials (West 2003) (coauthor); "The Longest Night: Polemics and Perspectives on Election 2000" (California 2002) (coeditor); "Just Interpretations: Law Between Ethics and Politics" (California 1998); "Constitutionalism, Identity, Difference and Legitimacy: Theoretical Perspectives" (Duke 1994)(editor); and "Afirmative Action and Justice: A Philosophical and Constitutional Inquiry" (Yale 1991). Several of his works have been translated into many foreign languages.


Andras Sajo
University Professor, Central European University and NYU Global Law School

Andras Sajo is University Professor at CEU and Global Faculty, New York University Law School. Professor Sajo was the founding dean of Legal Studies at CEU. In addition to his stature as a prominent constitutionalist, he also is distinguished in market economy fields, including media regulation. Professor Sajo has been deeply involved in legal drafting throughout Eastern Europe. In addition, he has participated or advised in drafting the Ukrainian, Georgian, and South African constitution. He has been working with the Hungarian government. He has served as Counsel to the President of the Republic of Hungary and he chaired the Media Codification Committee of the Hungarian Government. He also was the principal draftsman of the Environment Code for the Hungarian Parliament, as well as the founder and speaker of the Hungarian League for the Abolition of the Death Penalty. He also has served as Deputy Chair of the National Deregulation Board of Hungary. He is the member of the American Law Institute and the Hungarian Academy of Sciences.


Alberta Sbragia
Director, Center for West European Studies and the European Union Center, UCIS Research Professor of Political Science, University of Pittsburgh

Alberta Sbragia, PhD (University of Wisconsin-Madison). Director of the Center for West European Studies and the European Union Center, UCIS Research Professor of Political Science at the University of Pittsburgh. Her scholarship has focused on European integration, the EU in global environmental politics, comparative American-West European public policy and public finance, and American urban politics and urban economic development. She has published extensively in those fields, serves on the editorial board of numerous journals in the United States, Canada, and Europe and has lectured widely throughout Europe as well as to US governmental agencies.

Her current work examines the emergence of "regionalism" in North America, the Southern Cone, and Asia with particular attention to the role of the European Union in international commercial diplomacy.. She received her Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1974, wrote her dissertation as a Fulbright Scholar on Italian politics, and taught "Business, Government, and the International Economy" at the Harvard Business School as a Visiting Associate Professor in 1983-84. She then directed the Brookings Institutions project on European integration which led to the publication of Euro-Politics: Institutions and Policymaking in the "New" European Community (1992). Chair of the European Community Studies Association, (1993-95), President, Conference Group on Italian Politics and Society, (1995-97), co-chair of the 1999 American Political Science Association (APSA) conference, she has served on both the Selection and Evaluation Committees for Centers for German and European Studies for the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD). At Pittsburgh, she has taught courses on the European Union, West European politics, Italian politics, American and European political economy, and American and European public policy. She has also taught at the School for International Affairs at the University of Trento, Italy.


Ayelet Shachar
Professor, University of Toronto

Ayelet Shachar holds an LL.B in Law and B.A. in Political Science, summa cum laude ('93), from Tel Aviv University; LL.M. ('95) and J.S.D ('97), both from Yale Law School. Before arriving at Yale, she served as law clerk to Deputy Chief Justice (now Chief Justice) Aharon Barak of the Supreme Court of Israel. She joined the Faculty of Law, University of Toronto in 1999. Her research addresses issues of citizenship theory, immigration law, multiculturalism, multi-level governance regimes, and the rights of women within minority cultures. She has been nominated Member of the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, for 2000-2001, and appointed Distinguished Visiting Scholar at Princeton's Law and Public Affairs Program & Emile Noël Senior Fellow at NYU School of Law for Spring 2003. Her most recent articles have been published in NOMOS, Journal of Political Philosophy, Political Theory, Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review, McGill Law Journal, Georgetown Immigration Law Journal, Cardozo Law Review, as well as in several edited volumes, including Multicultural Questions (Oxford, 1999), Citizenship in Diverse Societies (Oxford, 2000), From Migrants to Citizens: Membership in a Changing World (Brookings, 2000), and Breaking the Cycle of Hatred: Memory, Law, and Repair (Princeton, 2002). She is the author of Multicultural Jurisdictions: Cultural Differences and Women's Rights (Cambridge University Press, 2001), which was awarded the 2002 Best First Book Award by the American Political Science Association. She is currently writing a new book, tentatively entitled Citizenship as Property: The New World of Bounded Communities (Harvard University Press, forthcoming) which critically assesses the philosophical foundations and global distributive functions of birthright citizenship.


Anne-Marie Slaughter
Dean, Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs

Anne-Marie Slaughter is dean of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University. She is also president of the American Society of International Law. Prior to becoming dean, she was the J. Sinclair Armstrong Professor of International, Foreign and Comparative Law and director of Graduate and International Legal Studies at Harvard Law School. She is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR). Dean Slaughter writes and lectures widely on international law and foreign policy issues. She has written over 50 articles and edited or written four books, on subjects such as the effectiveness of international courts and tribunals, the legal dimensions of the war on terrorism, building global democracy, international law and international relations theory, and compliance with international rules. Her article "The Real New World Order," originally published in the 75th anniversary issue of Foreign Affairs, is now widely taught in colleges and universities. Her book on that same subject -global governance through networks of national government officials - is forthcoming from Princeton University Press. Dean Slaughter was one of 17 panel experts on the CFR-sponsored Hart-Rudman 2002 Homeland Security report. Dean Slaughter has been a frequent media commentator and op-ed contributor on international tribunals, terrorism, and international law. Recent publications include: "An International Constitutional Moment" (with William Burke- White), 43 Harvard International Law Journal 1 (2002); "Legalization and World Politics," with Judith Goldstein, Miles Kahler, and Robert O. Keohane, co-editors (2001); "Building Global Democracy," 1 Chicago Journal of International Law 223 (2000); "Judicial Globalization," 40 Virginia Journal of International Law 1103 (2000); "Plaintiff's Diplomacy" (with David Bosco), 79 Foreign Affairs 102 (2000); and "Governing the Global Economy Through Government Networks" in The Role of Law in International Politics 177 (Michael Byers, ed., 2000).


Mark Tushnet
Carmack Waterhouse Professor of Constitutional Law, Georgetown University Law Center

Mark Tushnet is Carmack Waterhouse Professor of Constitutional Law at the Georgetown University Law Center. He received his undergraduate degree magna cum laude from Harvard College in 1967. He received a J.D. and M.A. in history from Yale University in 1971. He clerked for Judge George Edwards and Justice Thurgood Marshall before beginning to teach at the University of Wisconsin Law School in 1973. In 1981 he moved to the Georgetown University Law Center. He has been a visiting professor at the University of Texas, University of Southern California, University of Chicago, and Columbia University law schools.

Professor Tushnet is the co-author of four casebooks, including the most widely used casebook on constitutional law, Constitutional Law (with Stone, Seidman, and Sunstein). He has written twelve books, including a two-volume work on the life of Justice Thurgood Marshall, and edited four others. He has received fellowships from the Rockefeller Humanities Program, the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, and the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, and has written numerous articles on constitutional law and legal history. He is currently serving on the Executive Committee of the Association of American Law Schools, and is President of the Association. In 2002 he was elected a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.


Armin von Bogdandy
Director, Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law, Hiedelberg

Professor Dr. Armin von Bogdandy, M.A., has been the Director at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law, Heidelberg, since October 2002. He is also Professor of Public Law and Philosophy of Law at the Goethe-Universität, Frankfurt/Main, and the Ruprecht-Karls-Universität, Heidelberg. He has been a research fellow at the Institute of International, European and Foreign Public Law at the Freie Universität Berlin; a scholar of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (National Trust for Advanced Studies); Jean Monnet Fellow at the European University Institute, Florence; invited professor at the Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Chair for Philosophy of Law; and since February 2001 he has been a Judge at the OECD Nuclear Energy Tribunal, Paris.


Neil Walker
Professor of European Law at the European University Institute , Florence

Previously held positions in the Universities of Edinburgh and Aberdeen. He has been Professor of European Law at the EUI since 2000, and in 2003 became the first Dean of Studies of the EUI. He has written extensively on questions of the relationship between national constitutional law and the European legal order, on the development of a constitutional philosophy and doctrine for the European Union, and on the dynamics of legal integration in questions of internal security and criminal justice. His most recent book is an edited collection, Sovereignty in Transition (Hart, 2003). Another edited collection, "The Area of Freedom, Security and Justice" will be published by Oxford University Press in the Spring of 2004 and, he is presently completing a manuscript - again for Oxford University Press -entitled "The First Post-State Polity; Constitutionalism in a European Key.


Joseph Weiler
University Professor and European Union Jean Monnet Chair, New York University School of Law

J.H.H. Weiler is University Professor and European Union Jean Monnet Chair at NYU School of Law. He is Director of the Global Law School Program as well as the Jean Monnet Center for International and Regional Economic Law & Justice. He is also Professor at the College of Europe in Bruges, Belgium, and Honorary Professor at University College London and in the Department of Political Science at the University of Copenhagen. He has previously been Professor of Law at the European University in Florence, Italy, at the Michigan Law School and a Chaired Professor at Harvard Law School. He is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He received a doctorate Honoris Causa from London University and from the University of Sussex. He served as a member of the Committee of Jurists of the Institutional Affairs Committee of the European Parliament and was a member of the Groupe des Sages advising the Commission of the European Union on the 1996/97 Amsterdam Treaty and the Commission White Paper on Governance. He is a WTO Panel Member. His recent publications include The European Court of Justice (OUP 2001 with G. de Burca), The EU, the WTO and the NAFTA (OUP, 2000), The Constitution of Europe - Do the New Clothes have an Emperor? (CUP, 1998).


Wolfgang Wessels
Jean Monnet Chair, Department for Political Science and European Affairs, University of Cologne

Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Wessels was born on January 19, 1948 in Cologne. 1973 he finished his studies at the University of Cologne with a Master’s Degree in Economic and Political Science. In 1979 he earned his doctorate in political science also at the University of Cologne. In 1990 he received the Venia legendi in Political Science of the University of Bonn. Since summer 1994 he is chairman of the Jean Monnet Chair for Political Science at the University of Cologne. His priorities in teaching and research include the political system of the European Union, the role of the EU in the international system, the deepening and widening of the EU, the transformation of political systems in Europe and theories about international relations and European integration. Prof. Wessels is co-editor of the "Jahrbuch der Europäischen Union" and the "Europa von A-Z. Taschenbuch der europäsichen Integration". Furthermore he is engaged in several institutions: he occupies the position as member of the executive board at the Institut für Europäische Politik (IEP, Berlin), as Chairman of the Trans European Political Studies Association (TEPSA, Brussels), as original member of the Jean Monnet Centre of Excellence (NRW) and as Visiting Professor at the College of Europe, Brugge and Natolin.


Antje Wiener
Professor of International Relations and Jean Monnet Chair, Director of the Jean Monnet Centre of Excellence, School of Politics and International Studies, Queen's University Belfast

Antje Wiener (PhD, Poli Sci, Carleton University; MA Poli Sci, Free University of Berlin) holds a Chair in International Relations and a Jean Monnet Chair at the School of Politics and International Studies, she is the Director of the Jean Monnet Centre of Excellence at the Queen's University of Belfast. Her research and teaching interests are in theories of international relations and European integration, especially in the area of constitutionalism and rights politics beyond the state. Previous posts include a Readership at the Institute of European Studies at the Queen's University of Belfast and an Assistant Professorship at the Institute of Political Science at the University of Hanover, Germany.

Major publications include European Integration Theory, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003 (with T. Diez); The Evolving Norms of Constitutionalism, European Law Journal 9(1) 2003 (with J. Shaw); The Social Construction of Europe, London: Sage, 2001 (with Th. Christiansen and K.E. Jørgensen); 'European' Citizenship Practice - Building Institutions of a Non-State, Westview 1998; Contested Compliance: Interventions on the Normative Structure of World Politics, European Journal of International Relations 10(2), 2004 (in press); Constructivism: The Limits of Bridging Gaps, Journal of International Relations and Development 6(2) 2003: 253-276; On Constitutional Politics beyond the State - The Mediation of Meaning of Union Citizenship (in German), Zeitschrift für Internationale Beziehungen 8(1) 2001: 73-104; Constructing Institutional Interests: EU and NATO Enlargement, Journal of European Public Policy 6(5) 1999: 721-42 (with K.M. Fierke).

   
 
    

 
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