I’m pleased to be able to chair a panel at the
2016 Conference on Comparative Administrative Law, supported by the Oscar M. Ruebhausen Fund at Yale Law School and UConn Law School, and convened at the Yale Law School on April 29-30.
Administrative Law is becoming a lively field for comparative research, and the Comparative Administrative Law Initiative at Yale Law School is partly responsible for that development. In the interest of contributing to the growth of the field, the Oscar M. Ruebhausen Fund at Yale Law School and the University of Connecticut Law School will host a conference on April 29-30, 2016 for the second edition of Comparative Administrative Law, edited by Susan Rose-Ackerman and Peter Lindseth. The new edition will include many new chapters by emerging scholars and will give broader regional coverage than the first edition. Most of the contributors to the previous edition have either revised their chapters in light of current developments or asked that their chapters be reprinted. The website includes the program for the conference and a list of participants. As draft chapters arrive, they will be posted on the website with links on the conference program. Anyone interested in attending the conference should contact Cathy Orcutt.
The whole schedule is
here. The papers in my panel, entitled "Historical Perspectives," are
Révolution, Rechtsstaat and the Rule of Law: Historical Reflections on the Emergence of Administrative Law in Europe
Bernardo Sordi
Public Trust, Public Property, and Administrative Law: France, the UK and the US in Historical Perspective
Thomas Perroud
The Historical Impact of Administrative Law Models: Italy between the French and Anglo-American Traditions
Marco D’Alberti