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IUC Independent Policy Report: At the End of the End of History - Global Legal Standards: Part of the Solution or Part of the Problem?

Ugo Mattei, Edoardo Reviglio, Guido Calabresi, Antoine Garapon, Tibor Varady, Franco Bassanini, Giuseppe Mastruzzo, Eugenio Barcellona, Mauro Bassani, Giuliano Castellano, Moussa Djire', Liu Guanghua, Golnoosh Hakimdavar, Joseph Halevi, John D. Haskell, Andrea Lolli, Alberto Lucarelli, Boris Mamlyuk, Alberto Monti, Sergio Ariel Muro, Domenico Nicolo', Nicola Sartori and Jedidiah Kroncke
Additional contact information
Ugo Mattei: UC Hastings, University of Turin & IUC Turin
Edoardo Reviglio: International University College of Turin
Guido Calabresi: Yale Law School
Antoine Garapon: Institut des Hautes Etudes sur la Justice, Paris
Tibor Varady: Central European University, Budapest
Franco Bassanini: Sapienza University of Rome
Giuseppe Mastruzzo: International University College of Turin
Eugenio Barcellona: Eastern Piedmont University, Italy
Mauro Bassani: University of Trieste
Giuliano Castellano: Ecole Polytechnique (Preg/CRG), Paris
Moussa Djire': Bamako University
Liu Guanghua: Lanzhou University
Golnoosh Hakimdavar: University of Turin, CLEI Centre
Joseph Halevi: Sidney University
John D. Haskell: SOAS
Andrea Lolli: University of Bologna
Alberto Lucarelli: Federico II University, Naples
Boris Mamlyuk: University of Turin, CLEI Centre
Alberto Monti: Bocconi University
Sergio Ariel Muro: Torquato di Tella University
Domenico Nicolo': Mediterranean University of Reggio Calabria, Italy
Nicola Sartori: University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Jedidiah Kroncke: Yale Law School

No 1-09, IUC Research Commons from International University College of Turin

Abstract: The IUC Independent Policy Report was drafted by the IUC Legal Standards Research Group, organized by a Steering Committee chaired by Ugo Mattei (International University College of Turin), coordinated by Edoardo Reviglio (International University College of Turin) and Giuseppe Mastruzzo (International University College of Turin), and composed by Franco Bassanini (University of Rome 'La Sapienza'), Guido Calabresi (Yale University), Antoine Garapon (Institut des Hautes Etudes sur la Justice, Paris), and Tibor Varady (Central European University, Budapest). Contributors include Eugenio Barcellona (Eastern Piedmont University), Mauro Bussani (University of Trieste), Giuliano G. Castellano (Ecole Polytechnique Preg/CRG), Moussa Djire' (Bamako University), Liu Guanghua (Lanzhou University), Golnoosh Hakimdavar (University of Turin), John D. Haskell (SOAS), Jedidiah J. Kroncke (Yale Law School), Andrea Lollini (Bologna University), Alberto Lucarelli (Federico II University), Boris N. Mamlyuk, (University of Turin), Alberto Monti (Bocconi University), Sergio Ariel Muro (Torquato di Tella University), Domenico Nicolo' (Mediterranean University of Reggio Calabria), and Nicola Sartori (University of Michigan). The IUC Independent Policy Report argues for a radical change of perspective, capable of restoring the supremacy of the law over the economic system. It is not only about finance, nor is it only about economics or policy. In this sense a transnational set of normative principles is needed in order to establish a global legal system capable of controlling economic processes, rather than being controlled by them. Within this framework a series of policy proposals are presented in order to effectively implement a new system of global standards. The current Western standard of living is unsustainable. Should the rest share the model of development of the West, our planet will simply not be capable of resisting the growth in consumption and pollution. Within this fundamental setting of scarcity in resources, using the rhetoric of the end of history as the polar star for growth, development and ultimately happiness of the whole world is simply a cynical lie. We argue here for the beginning of a necessary process aimed at the development of a legal system that is much less about creating an efficient backbone for an exploitive economy and much more about a vision of civilization, justice and respect where the laws of nature and those of humans converge in a sustainable long-term philosophy. Principles of justice, responsibility and long term environmental protection, rather than short term economic contingency and strong interests must set the legal agenda. A new governance and bottom-up inclusive integration of knowledge-based economies (wherever located), which is crucial to the very survival of humankind, cannot happen without defning new terms of a widely accepted standard of long term justice in the transnational context, hence the urgency to conceive legitimate transnational legal structures and possibly some apparatus of 'superlegality'. The report is composed of five sections. After having presented the pitfalls of the prevailing theoretical apparatus, an alternative cultural grid upon which policy actions should be shaped is presented. In this sense several normative proposals - revisiting the key characteristics of the current system - are offered aiming at acquiring a wider perspective over the actual global crisis.

Keywords: global legal standards; economic crisis; capitalism; global economic policy; legal theory; finance; financial regulation (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: G18 G28 K2 P16 P48 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 113 pages
Date: 2009-06
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Published in Global Jurist, 2009, vol. 9(3):[article 2]

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