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Read more at: CELS/USC Virtual Antitrust Workshop: 'The Decline of Coordinated Effects Enforcement and How to Reverse It'

CELS/USC Virtual Antitrust Workshop: 'The Decline of Coordinated Effects Enforcement and How to Reverse It'

Title : 'The Decline of Coordinated Effects Enforcement and How to Reverse It' Speaker : Professor Sean P. Sullivan (Michigan) To register your interest for this event please contact Professor Oke Odudu ( oo201@cam.ac.uk )


Read more at: Selwyn Law Society webinar: 'A Criminal Justice System In Crisis with Chris Daw KC and Professor John Spencer'

Selwyn Law Society webinar: 'A Criminal Justice System In Crisis with Chris Daw KC and Professor John Spencer'

Selwyn Law Society will be hosting an online webinar with Chris Daw KC and Professor John Spencer. We will discuss whether and why the criminal justice system is in crisis and what can be done to alleviate some of the problems currently faced. Chris Daw KC has spent 30-years at the criminal bar and is now at Millennium...


Read more at: CELS/USC Virtual Antitrust Workshop: 'The Market-Displacement Standard: Toward Real Consumer Welfare'

CELS/USC Virtual Antitrust Workshop: 'The Market-Displacement Standard: Toward Real Consumer Welfare'

Title: 'The Market-Displacement Standard: Toward Real Consumer Welfare' Speaker: Professor Salil Mehra (Temple) To register your interest for this event please contact Professor Oke Odudu ( oo201@cam.ac.uk )


Read more at: Cambridge Legal Theory Discussion Group (CLTDG): 'Private Law Theory from an Empirical Perspective'

Cambridge Legal Theory Discussion Group (CLTDG): 'Private Law Theory from an Empirical Perspective'

Speaker: Kevin Tobia (Georgetown) One of private law theory’s longstanding projects is the analysis of (private law’s) concepts. The new private law has renewed interest in that project, which includes the careful comparison of legal concepts to similar ordinary ones. Insofar as legal theorists may not know from the...


Read more at: Cambridge Legal Theory Discussion Group (CLTDG): 'Practical Reasoning as Interpretation'

Cambridge Legal Theory Discussion Group (CLTDG): 'Practical Reasoning as Interpretation'

Speaker: Daniel Murata (Surrey) Abstract: Ronald Dworkin claims that moral reasoning is interpretive reasoning, which can be understood (as I will try to elucidate) as a mode of theoretical reasoning. Dworkin seems to deny the distinction between theoretical reasoning (reasoning concerned with what is the truth about a...


Read more at: Cambridge Legal Theory Discussion Group (CLTDG): 'How Reasons Make Law'

Cambridge Legal Theory Discussion Group (CLTDG): 'How Reasons Make Law'

Speaker: Angelo Ryu (Oxford) Abstract: According to legal anti-positivism, legal duties are just a subset of our moral duties. Not every moral duty, though, is legal. So what else is needed? Here I offer a new theory which explains how moral duties come to be law. Among our moral reasons are distinctively legal reasons...


Read more at: Cambridge Legal Theory Discussion Group (CLTDG): 'Law as Normative Political Communities'

Cambridge Legal Theory Discussion Group (CLTDG): 'Law as Normative Political Communities'

Speaker: Jorge Fabra-Zamora (University at Buffalo) Response to be given by Anna Lukina (Cambridge). The Paper: https://bit.ly/cltdg-fabra-zamora-draft The Zoom link: https://bit.ly/cltdg-lent2023-1 Everyone is welcome to attend! You can follow us on Twitter: https://bit.ly/cambridgeltdg or check out our web-page: https://...


Read more at: CUArb/LCIL Lecture: 'The Intersection between IP rights and the Protection Afforded by Investment Treaties' - Alejandro Garcia (Stewarts)

CUArb/LCIL Lecture: 'The Intersection between IP rights and the Protection Afforded by Investment Treaties' - Alejandro Garcia (Stewarts)

Register online Speaker: Alejandro Garcia (Stewarts) Chair: Gonzalo Vial-Fourcade For further information please email: arbitration@cambridgesu.co.uk


Read more at: CUArb/LCIL Lecture: 'Irreconcilable Differences? The Approaches of the English and French Courts to the Law Governing the Arbitration Agreement' - Gisele Stephens-Chu (Stephens-Chu Dispute Resolution)

CUArb/LCIL Lecture: 'Irreconcilable Differences? The Approaches of the English and French Courts to the Law Governing the Arbitration Agreement' - Gisele Stephens-Chu (Stephens-Chu Dispute Resolution)

Register online All welcome to attend this in-person event. Speaker: Gisele Stephens-Chu (Stephens-Chu Dispute Resolution) Chair: Maxence Rivoire For further information please email: arbitration@cambridgesu.co.uk


Read more at: CPL Lunchtime seminar: 'Popular Politics and Informal Constitutional Change'

CPL Lunchtime seminar: 'Popular Politics and Informal Constitutional Change'

The Centre for Public Law will host a series of ‘current developments’ and ‘research in progress’ seminars in Lent term. This event is online only. Speaker: Matthew Psycharis For regular updates, you can join the CPL Moodle page .