The second seminar on Global Administrative Law was held on June 9-10, 2006, in Viterbo, at the Political Science Faculty of La Tuscia University.
It was dedicated to discuss case studies regarding the problem of accountability within the global context.
Program
Papers presented:
Dionysia-Theodora Avgerinopoulou
Autonomy Without Accountability: The Case of the International Seabed Authority and Enterprise
Dario Bevilacqua
The Codex Alimentarius Commission: Increasing Accountability Through Transparency
Bruno Carotti
ICANN and Global Administrative Law
Benjamin Dalle
The Global Aspirations of the Aarhus Convention and the Case of the World Bank
Phillip Dann
Accountability in Development Aid Law: The World Bank, UNDP and Emerging Structures of Transnational Oversight
Treasa Dunworth
The Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW): Is a Culture of Legality Possible?
Matthias Goldmann
Holding Governments Accountable through Information: Multilevel Education Assessments by Private and Public Institutions
David Livshiz
Holding Professionals Accountable: The Challenge of Privatized International Standard Setting in Accounting and Architecture Service Sectors
Marco Macchia
Public Administration and International Law: Should or Shall? The Review of Compliance in the Aarhus Convention
Joanna Mendes
Accountability in Rule-Making in the Area of Financial Services: The EU in the Context of Global Regulation
Didier Pacquée & Steven Dewulf
On Governance, Accountability and Human Rights: The United Nations Interim Administration in Kosovo
Eran Shamir-Borer
The Evolution of Administrative Law-Type Principles, Mechanisms and Practices in the International Organization for Standardization (ISO)
Ventsislav Velikof
Initiating of European and International Standards into National Regulatory Instruments: Can Global Administrative Law Penetrate Equally into National Legislation?
