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9:00 – 10:30 am: Plenary Session
Venue: Room W 101 / video transmission to Room W 201, Faculty of Law – Professor-Huber-Platz 2, 80539 Munich
Chairperson: Prof. Paul Beaumont
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9:00 Regulation, Global Governance and Private International Law: Squaring the Triangle
Prof. Matthias Lehmann
University of Bonn
Germany
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9:15 Is Private International Law International?
Prof. Ralf Michaels / Dr. Veronica Ruiz Abou-Nigm
Max Planck Institute Hamburg and Queen Mary University London / University of Edinburgh
Germany / United Kingdom
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9:30 ‘Habitual Residence’ in Private International Law: Core Elements and Contextual Variability
Dr. Máire Ní Shúilleabháin
University College Dublin
Ireland
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9:45 An Empirical Review of China’s New Choice-of-Law Regime: In Search of Clear Guidelines?
Dr. King Fung Tsang
Chinese University of Hong Kong
Hong Kong
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10:00 Discussion
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10:30 – 11:00 am: Coffee break
Cafeteria / Conference Office
Ground Floor, Faculty of Law – Professor-Huber-Platz 2, 80539 Munich
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11:00 am – 12:30 pm: Plenary Session
Venue: Room W 101 / video transmission to Room W 201, Faculty of Law – Professor-Huber-Platz 2, 80539 Munich
Chairperson: Prof. Jonathan Harris
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Prof. Toni Deskoski / Dr. Vangel Dokovski
Cyril and Methodius University, Skopje
North Macedonia
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11:15 To Recognize or Not to Recognize – Is that the Right Question for Family Relationships?
Prof. Samuel Fulli-Lemaire
University of Strasbourg
France
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11:30 Weaponizing the internet: From “fake news” to “libel tourism” in international civil litigation
Prof. Nikitas Hatzimihail / Prof. Arnaud Nuyts
University of Cyprus / Université Libre de Bruxelles
Cyprus / Belgium
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11:45 Discussion
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12:30 – 2:00 pm: Lunch
Cafeteria / Conference Office
Ground Floor, Faculty of Law – Professor-Huber-Platz 2, 80539 Munich
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2:00 – 3:30 pm: Plenary Session: “Women and PIL”
Venue: Room W 101 / video transmission to Room W 201, Faculty of Law – Professor-Huber-Platz 2, 80539 Munich
Chairperson: Prof. Mary Keyes
Gender issues have given rise to very little interest, or critique, within private international law as compared to other legal disciplines. It is a matter of speculation whether or not the lack of feminist private international legal approaches is symptomatic of predominantly masculine scholarship, or a male bias in jurisprudence, or in the purported neutrality or distance that the field claims, traditionally, in respect of substantive law or real-world problems. This panel proposes a rich array of perspectives – historical, cultural, distributional, theoretical and philosophical – that are designed to spark further exploration of private international law’s relationship to gender.
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2:00 A History of Gender and Methodological Reshuffling in Private International Law
Prof. Roxana Banu
University of Western Ontario
Canada
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2:15 Women in Private International Law
Prof. Mary Keyes
Griffith University, Queensland
Australia
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2:30 What Gender does to Private International Law (and Vice Versa)
Prof. Horatia Muir Watt
Ecole de droit Sciences-po, Membre de l’IUF, Paris
France
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2:45 Multiculturalism and Women in Conflict of Laws
Prof. Yuko Nishitani
Kyoto University
Japan
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3:00 Reminiscences of a traditional approach to women in recent European codifications
Prof. Marta Pertegás Sender
University of Antwerp / University of Maastricht
Belgium / The Netherlands
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3:15 Discussion
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3:30 – 4:00 pm: Coffee break
Cafeteria / Conference Office
Ground Floor, Faculty of Law – Professor-Huber-Platz 2, 80539 Munich
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4:00 – 5:30 pm: Plenary Session
Venue: Room W 101 / video transmission to Room W 201, Faculty of Law – Professor-Huber-Platz 2, 80539 Munich
Chairperson: Prof. Anatol Dutta
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4:00 Harmonisation of the recognition and enforcement of foreign judgment rules in Asia
Dr. Adeline Chong
Singapore Management University
Singapore
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Prof. Nadia de Araujo / Prof. Marcelo De Nardi
PUC-Rio / UNISINOS
Brazil
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4:30 Control of foreign direct investments and private international law
Prof. Peter Mankowski
University of Hamburg
Germany
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4:45 The Applicable Law to a Decentralised Autonomous Organisation (DAO)
Prof. Gerald Mäsch
University of Münster
Germany
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5:00 Discussion
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7:30 pm: Conference Dinner (optional – registration required)
The Conference Dinner takes place at the Georgenhof, a restaurant and beer garden close to the university with a long tradition in this part of the city called Schwabing where artists like Wassily Kandinsky and Gabriele Münter used to dine. We will enjoy a combination of Bavarian specialties and modern cuisine, urban life and Bavarian Gemütlichkeit.
Address: Friedrichstraße 1, 80801 Munich (⇒ Google Maps)