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2nd YSI FLE Summer Academy – Law and Money: From Past to Future

2nd Summer academy ‘Law and Money, from Past to Future’

Start time:

July 10, 2019 - July 11, 2019

project Series Event Series (See All)

EDT

Location:

University of Manchester Law School, Manchester, England

Type:

Other

project Series Event Series (See All)

Speakers

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Jay Cullen

Reade

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Jamee Moudud

Professo

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Gerald Epstein

Professor of Economic

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Martha McCluskey

Professo

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Rohan Grey

JSD Candidat

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Corinne Blalock

PhD candidat

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Pamela Foohey

Associate Professor of La

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Lua Kamal Yuille

Associate Professor of La

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Andrew Johnston

Professor of Company Law and Corporate Governanc

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Andrew Baker

Professor of Political Econom

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Adam Leaver

Chair in Accounting and Societ

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Marc Moore

Reader in Corporate La

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Trevor Pugh

Visiting Schola

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Sandy Hager

Senior Lecturer in International Political Econom

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Akbar Rasulov

Senior Lecturer in Public International Law

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John Haskell

Senior Lecture

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David Singh Grewal

Professor of La

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Eric George

Managing Editor at Journal of Law and Political Economy

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Jean Grosdidier

Doctoral Candidat

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Maria C. Schweinberger

Associat

Description

A particular set of ideas about law, money, and society dominated the last half century of global governance – in a nutshell, that the world was far too complex for coordinated democratic decision-making and should best be left to ‘the market’. This carried far reaching theoretical assumptions and policy implications: for instance, money is apolitical, democratic values are procedural not substantive, law is largely instrumentalist, and society reflects an infinitely complex range of consumer interests. These ideas permeated expert thinking across the political spectrum – what we might call, the post-Cold War ‘mainstream’ which effectively kept fundamental issues of monetary and fiscal policy largely absent in public discussion.

The global crisis and its aftermath in the last decade have disrupted the mainstream and led to new thinking and insights into the dynamics of law, money, and society: how they function, how they relate to one another, the possibilities of future policy options, and even how we might reimagine our understanding of core democratic values such as freedom and security. (On) July 2019, the second edition of the FLE Summer Academy aims to bring together graduate students, young professionals, senior academics, and policy makers to collaboratively 1) develop a deeper understanding of the intersection of law and money, and rethink the democratic possibilities of future policy making; and 2) nurture a diverse community of friends, colleagues, and mentors for future learning and support in their professional trajectories.

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