Dr. Tomas Karasek, Associate Professor at Charles University in Prague, Faculty of Social Sciences, Institute of Political Studies, Prague, Czech Republic
Dr. Paolo Davide Farah, Senior Lecturer at Edge Hill University, Department of Law & Criminology (United Kingdom) & LIBEAC Research Team Coordinator at University Institute of European Studies (IUSE) in Turin
Liberalism, Globalisation and its Tensions: Integrating Non-Commercial Values such as Climate Change, Environmental (…)
Liberalism in between Europe and China
Most recent articles
-
Panel Chair
26 May 2014 -
Short description
26 May 2014Public opinion and policy makers fear that international trade, in particular a further liberalization thereof, may undermine or jeopardize policies and measures on a wide variety of issues, for example, climate change, the protection the environment and the sustainable development, good governance, cultural rights, labour rights, public health, social welfare, national security, food safety, access to knowledge, consumer interests and animal welfare. There is a general consensus that these (…)
-
Contact
26 May 2014General contact
For any information about the LIBEAC, contact Network Vice-Coordinator Dr. Jean-Yves Heurtebise at CEPERC, Aix-Marseille University
Email : jy.heurtebise@gmail.com
Contact for this session
This Lecture/Workshop Series entitled “How Globalization and Liberalism are Changing the World?” is coordinated by University Institute of European Studies (IUSE) in Turin, Italy in the framework of the LIBEAC project:
Email: paolofarah@yahoo.com blog: (…) -
Short summary
26 May 2014Liberalism has, since earlier than the Enlightenment, implied at least the following two components: a component of economics and one of politics. Economic liberalism (at least in some of its most representative brands) assumes that the less the economy is controlled by the state, the more efficient auto-regulated free markets can be in terms of production and distribution of goods. Political liberalism, again at least most generally, assumes that the more citizens are free from control by (…)
-
Consortium
26 May 2014Aix-Marseille University (AMU), France University Institute of European Studies (IUSE), Turin, Italy Charles University, Prague, Czech Republic Resurgences, Marseille, France Peking University, Beijing, China Tsinghua University, Beijing, China Hokkaido University, Hokudai, Japan
-
Presentation
26 May 2014The LIBEAC project is among the few elite projects selected by the Research Executive Agency (REA) of the European Commission inside the Seventh Framework Programme for Research and Technological Development (FP7-‐PCRD). Inside the 2007-‐2013 50 billion euros FP7-‐PCRD, LIBEAC belongs to the category PEOPLE-‐IRSES project. This 588,000.00 IRSES project officially started the 1st January 2013 and finished the 31th December 2016. It aimed at improving international mobility of researchers (…)
-
Schedule
26 May 20148:00 - 8:30 Registration 9:00 – 9:30 Introduction Jean-Yves HEURTEBISE, LIBEAC Global Vice-Coordinator at AixMarseille University (CEPERC- UMR 7304), France Paolo FARAH, LIBEAC Research Team Coordinator at University Institute of European Studies (IUSE) in Turin, Italy PANEL 9:30 – 10:00 Jean-Yves HEURTEBISE, LIBEAC Vice-Coordinator at Aix-Marseille University (CEPERC-UMR 7304), Affiliate Scholar, Kotzmetski Global Collaboratory, Stanford University, & Visiting Assistant (…)
-
Details on the authors
29 October 2013Gilles Campagnolo, the Network Global Coordinator of the Project A full research Professor at the French National Center for Scientific Research (‘Directeur de recherches’), and a Senior Member of Aix-Marseilles School of Economics (Aix-MarseillesUniversity, EHESS, CNRS). A background both in philosophy and economics (ENS Paris, Harvard U., Tokyo University). Fluent in Japanese and some knowledge of Chinese. More on greqam.
Xu Bo is an Early Stage Researcher of the project Ph.D. Candidate (…) -
The meaning of liberalism in between Europe and China
29 October 2013The position newly taken by China at international level implies to assess a renewed understanding of liberalism in its economic, political and social dimensions. It involves a comparative analysis of the cultural differences in its interpretation and of the political discrepancies in the enforcement of new rules of law in business, trade and economic matters, in particular with respect to the economy, the society and the environment in China that distinguishes it from imported notions from (…)
-
Liberalism In Between China and Europe
11 October 2013