IXth World Congress of the IACL
CONSTITUTIONAL CHALLENGES:
GLOBAL AND LOCAL
Oslo, Norway, 16-20 June 2014
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MONDAY
16 JUNE 2014
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Morning
Registration
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Meeting
of the outgoing Executive Committee of the IACL
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09:00
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Opening ceremony
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13:00
– 14:00
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Tea break with snack
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14:00
– 14:30
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Afternoon session
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Plenary
session 1
The
Quest for Constitutional Harmony: From the Enlightenment Constitution to a
Legally Pluralistic World
In
the traditional Westphalian era, based on the Enlightenment ideals,
nation-states were endowed with constitutions that provided both hierarchical
order and unity. In the last generation, there has been a massive shift as a
consequence of globalization, the proliferation of transnational legal orders,
such as the European Union, and of worldwide and regional segmented legal
regimes such as the WTO, the ECHR, American Convention of Human Rights,
Mercosur etc. Consequently, every legal person is currently subjected to a
plurality of competing and at times contradictory legal orders. This presents
numerous new hurdles involving many of the key processes and institutions
that relate to constitutional ordering, including constitution-making,
constitutional adjudication and constitutional harmonization of fundamental
vertical and horizontal apportionments of power. This plenary session will
address fundamental philosophical and theoretical issues, concerning the new
challenges posed to key concepts such as sovereignty, legitimacy,
constitutionalism, democracy, pouvoir constituant and pouvoir
constitué’ in relation to the quest to weave competing aspirations to
unity, diversity and plurality .
Chair
• Susanna Mancini
University
of Bologna, Italy
Speakers:
• Seyla Benhabib
Yale
University, USA
• Wojciech Sadurski
University
of Sydney, Australia
• Martti Koskenniemi
University of Helsinki, Finland
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14:30
– 17:00
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Reception
at the Parliament of Norway
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18:00
– 20:00
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TUESDAY 17 JUNE 2014
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Morning session
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09:30
– 13:00
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Tea break
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11:00
– 11:30
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Workshops
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1. Constitutional responses to terrorism
• David Cole (USA)
•
Lech Garlicki (Poland)
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2. Sub-national constitutions in federal and
quasi-federal constitutional states
•
Bob Williams (USA)
•
Giacomo Delledonne (Italy)
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3. Constitutional studies of free trade and
political economy
•
Gonzalo Villalta-Puig (Australia)
•
Armand de Mestral (Canada)
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4. Social rights group
• George Katrougalas (Greece)
•
Marcelo Figuieredo (Brazil)
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5.
Constitutional dialogues
•
Tania Groppi (Italy)
•
Marie-Claire Ponthereau (France)
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6. The constitutional challenges of immigration
• Cesar Landa (Peru)
•
Andrew Le Sueur (UK)
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Lunch
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13:00
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Afternoon session
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14:00
– 17:00
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Plenary
session 2
Embedding
the Constitution in Society (Challenges from Below)
From
a formal standpoint, constitutions tend to resemble one another, but their
actual operation, scope and legitimacy depend on the prevailing culture of
the polity in which they are instituted. Consistent with this,
multiculturalism, whether autochthonous or promoted through migration, poses
a series of conflicts and quandaries. This plenary will address the
challenges confronting those who strive to combine constitutional unity and
cultural, ethnic, and ideological diversity. Among the subjects to be
addressed is the contrast between homogeneous and heterogeneous polities, and
conflicts and tensions between majority and minority cultures as well as
other major bases for contestation. Emphasis will be placed on gender and
sexual orientation issues, as well as on ethnic, linguistic and ideological
differences.
Chair
• Vicki Jackson
Harvard
University, USA
Speakers:
• Etienne Le Roy
Université
de Paris I (Sorbonne), France
• Tariq Modood
University
of Bristol, United Kingdom
• Daniel Weinstock
McGill
University, Canada
• Catherine McKinnon
University of Michigan, USA
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WEDNESDAY 18 JUNE 2014
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Morning session
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13:00
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Tea break
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14:00
– 17:00
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Workshops
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7. Sexual and reproductive rights : liberty, dignity
and equality
• Vicki Jackson (USA)
• Eva Brems (Belgium)
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8. The internet and the Constitution
• Adrienne Stone (Australia)
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Djedjro Meledje (Côte d’Ivoire)
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9. Constitutional identity and constitutionalism
beyond the nation state
•
Susanna Mancini (Italy)
•
Manuel Cepeda (Colombia)
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10. The constitution and illiberal democracies
• Javier Couso (Chile)
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Christina Murray (South Africa)
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11. The new spring of constitution-making
•
Nadia Bernoussi (Morocco)
•
Mo Jihong (China)
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12. Constitutions and financial crisis
• Cheryl Saunders (Australia)
•
Elena-Simina Tanesescu (Romania)
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Lunch
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13:00
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Afternoon session
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14:00
– 17:00
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Meetings
of research groups and regional associations
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Meeting
of the Council of the IACL
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16:00
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Reception
at Oslo City Hall
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18:00
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THURSDAY 19 JUNE 2014
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Morning session
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09:30
– 13:00
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Tea break
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11:00
– 11:30
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Workshops
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13. Constitutional dimensions of political parties
and elections
• Charles Fombad (Cameroon)
• Claude Klein (Israel)
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14. New challenges to the freedom of the media
•
Giuseppe de Vergottini (Italy)
•
Yasuo Hasebe (Japan)
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15. The mutations and transformation of division of
powers: the constitutional organisation
•
Bertrand Mathieu (France)
•
Javier García Roca (Spain)
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16. Direct democracy
• Enyinna Nwauche (Nigeria)
•
Kostas Mavrias (Greece)
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17. Federalism, community identity and distributive
justice
•
Miguel Maduro (Portugal)
•
Jean-Francois Des-Biens (Canada)
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Lunch
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13:00
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Afternoon session
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14:00
– 17:00
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Plenary
session 3
Religion
and the Constitution
Present
day religion squarely poses new and in many respects unique challenges to
constitutionalism and its Enlightenment based underpinnings. This phenomenon stems
from intense and extensive questioning of the continued viability of
traditional notions of secularism both in theory and in practice. In some
settings, the accommodation between religion and secularism becomes unsettled
due to the implantation of new religions through large-scale immigration. In
other settings, constitutional ordering or transformation is squarely
confronted with a political revival or reinforcement of religion. Some of the
principal questions that these often rapidly evolving developments raise and
that will be addressed in this plenary include: can constitutionalism and
secularism encompass and manage religious pluralism? Can religious pluralism
be harmonized at the national or transnational level? Would such pluralism be
more amenable to management from below (e.g., religious courts)? Entirely
novel questions arise primarily but not exclusively in non-Western polities
(one instance being the wake of the “Arab spring”): what is the proper or
optimal place of religion in emerging forms of constitutionalism? Can
constitutionalism survive or thrive in a post-secular age?
Chair
• Eivind Smith
University
of Oslo, Norway
Speakers:
•
Gustavo Zagrebelsky
Università di Torino,
Italie
• Raul Pangalangan
University
of the Philippines
•
Awn Shakat Al-Alkasawneh
Ancien juge de la CIJ
•
Léna Gannagé
Université de Paris II
(Panthéon-Assas)
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Meeting
of the incoming Executive Committee of the IACL
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18:00
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FRIDAY
20 JUNE 2014
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Morning session
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09:30
– 13:00
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Tea break
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11:00
– 11:30
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Plenary
session 4
Judges’
Panel: Proportionality in Constitutional Adjudication
Some
constitutional scholars argue that modern constitutional review ultimately
boils down to proportionality analysis. This raises several key questions. Is
all constitutional review ultimately submitted to the same standard, which
means that proportionality should be viewed as a judicial common currency
susceptible of being set from above?
Does
proportionality inevitably differ from one cultural setting to another, which
would suggest that proportionality is necessarily constrained from below? Is
there congruence or analogy between proportionality as used by transnational
courts and national constitutional courts? A panel of judges from different
parts of the world who engage in constitutional review at both national and a
transnational level will tackle these issues from the standpoint of judicial
theory as well as from that of judicial practice in constitutional
adjudication.
Chair
• Lech Garlicki
Judge
of the European Court of Human Rights (Retired)
Speakers:
• Susanne Baer
Judge
of the Constitutional Court of Germany
• Francoise Tulkens
Former
Judge and Vice-President of the European Court of Human Rights
• Diego Garcia-Sayan
Judge
of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights
• Frank Iacobucci
Judge
of the Supreme Court of Canada (Retired)
• Mohamed Achargui
President
of the Constitutional Court of Morocco
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Closing ceremony
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For
full information on
the World Congress of the IACL,
please
visit the official
website of the Congress
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