Friday, November 14, 2008 at 9:00 AM - Saturday, November 15, 2008 at 1:00 PM (GMT)
About the Conference
This event will explore the impacts on constitutional arrangements of the development over the last thirty years or so of a ‘regulatory state’ in the UK and other Western countries, and in EU law. Processes of privatisation and regulation which have given rise to this state raise important issues to do with public, political, legal and other forms of accountability (e.g. audit) of industries and regulators, and issues of governance and good governance. The speakers will consider the constitutional implications of these arrangements generally and in particular countries, and will make comparisons between jurisdictions.
Importance of the subject
The subject is of practical relevance in many countries, and in the EU. There has been constitutional litigation about regulation on some of the key issues, notably in France and the USA. Democratic accountability and judicial review of regulators are of particular concern in many countries. We anticipate that insights will emerge in the course of the sessions as to the control and accountability of regulators and of privatised bodies. In some countries the latter may be considered to perform ‘public functions’ and thus to attract public law controls: this in turn raises issues to do with the public law / private law divide. The independent regulatory agency is becoming the central model in EU policy for the liberalised sectors, for instance in the recent review of telecommunications liberalisation: accountability arrangements here are weak. And finally we expect common concerns to emerge as to how the regulatory state and regulatory techniques might be reformed. This will depend to a great extent on local political and legal cultures.
The Speakers:
The delegates
The conference will attract lawyers, both academic and practising, and practising regulators, economists, accountants, civil servants and others involved in regulation in the UK and elsewhere. We expect between 75 and 150 delegates.
This conference is accredited with 14.5 CPD hours.
To view the full programme see our website:
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/laws/constitution-group/docs/nov08_conf_brochure.pdf
To view more information for conference participants, such as travel and hotel details, see our website:
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/laws/constitution-group/docs/nov08_conf_info.pdf
Friday, November 14, 2008 at 9:00 AM
- to -
Saturday, November 15, 2008 at 1:00 PM (GMT)
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Professor Dawn Oliver of the Faculty of Laws, UCL, is convenor of the UK Constitutional Law Group
The Group
The CLG is the United Kingdom section of the International Association of Constitutional Law. The Group was formed in 2003. It is an independent association, run from the Faculty of Laws, UCL.
The Group is self-financing and relies on subscriptions, conference fees and, recently, sponsorship of events from Clifford Chance, solicitors, to fund its activities and its annual subscription to the IACL. Members include academics, practitioners and judges.
Our Honorary President is Sir Stephen Sedley
Activities
The Group’s main activities are its late afternoon seminars, normally held in the UCL Faculty of Laws, and an occasional conference. These events are open to group members, legal academics, post graduate students, practitioners and judges.
See the groups' website at:
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/laws/constitution-group
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