Friday April 21th
Workshop: "International Institutions and Global Justice: How can international courts and other institutions in a multi-level legal and political order interact in the pursuit of global just
Organizers
Andreas Føllesdal and Antoinette Scherz
Venue
Normative Orders Building Room 5.01, Goethe University Frankfurt
Schedule
9:30-10.00 – Registration and breakfast
Session 1: Transnational Justice
Chair: Rainer Forst (Justitia Amplificata)
10.00-11.15 Juri Viehoff (University of Zurich): “Eurozone Justice“
Dimitris Efthymiou (Justitia Amplificata):"Three Worlds of Social Justice in the EU"
11.15-11.45 Coffee break
Session 2: The Role of Rights for Global Justice
Chair: Tamara Jugov (Justitia Amplificata)
11.45-13.00 Stefan Gosepath (Justitia Amplificata): “The Role of Human-Rights for Global Justice”
Alain Zysset (PluriCourts): “Human Rights Law and International Criminal Law: Searching for a Common Normative Core”
13:00-14:30 Lunch
Keynote
Chair: Andreas Føllesdal(PluriCourts)
14.30-15.30 Armin von Bogdandy (Max Planck Institute, for Comp. Public Law and Intl. Law): “In Whose Name?
The Question of Democratic Legitimacy as a Key to Global Justice”
15.30-15.45 Coffee break
Session 3: Global Justice and International Courts
Chair: Nate Adams (Justitia Amplificata)
15.45 – 17.00 Antoinette Scherz (Justitia Amplificata): “The Standards of Multilevel Legitimacy of International Courts”
Juan Pablo Pérez-León-Acevedo (PluriCourts): “Towards Global Restorative Justice? The International Criminal Court
as a Key Component of an International Judiciary With the Mandate to Order Reparations“
17.00-17.30 Coffee break
Session 4: Sovereignty and the Scope of Justice
Chair: Stefan Gosepath (Justitia Amplificata)
17:30-18.45 Andreas Føllesdal (PluriCourts): “Towards a more just WTO: Which justice, whose interpretation?“
Elisa Piras (University of Bologna): “Frontiers of Global Justice: Migration Management in Multilevel Political Orders“
Eva Erman (Stockholm University)
“Global Political Legitimacy beyond Justice and Democracy?”
Comment: Thomas Christiano (University of Arizona)