We use cookies in order to improve the quality and usability of the HSE website. More information about the use of cookies is available here, and the regulations on processing personal data can be found here. By continuing to use the site, you hereby confirm that you have been informed of the use of cookies by the HSE website and agree with our rules for processing personal data. You may disable cookies in your browser settings.
Moscow, 3 Bolshoy Trekhsvyatitelsky Pereulok, rooms 227, 228b
E-mail: svetlana.smirnova@hse.ru
Located at a crossroads of global, regional, and national interests, contemporary international law affects almost all spheres of society. The School of International Law keeps pace with significant international events and legal adjudication in order to provide hands-on education that prepares future lawyers and legal scholars for the demands of the current legal landscape. The School is at once a ‘think tank’ that provides expert analysis and a producer of top legal experts and lawyers in international law.
Aliyev A., Babkina E., Dmitrikova E. et al.
Brill, Nijhoff, 2022.
JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL DISPUTE SETTLEMENT. 2024. Vol. 15. No. 1. P. 106-123.
In bk.: The Oxford Handbook of International Law in Europe. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2024. Ch. 22. P. 1-21.
Rusinova V., Sergei K.
Law. LAW. Высшая школа экономики, 2021
‘REWARDING IN INTERNATIONAL LAW’
Professor Anne van Aaken (University of Hamburg)
April, 20 at 4:10 p.m. (Moscow time)
Zoom: https://us04web.zoom.us/j/71114537745?pwd=Nlg3YWhUakh2UUVDZ0VtalZ3UmQyUT09
Meeting ID: 711 1453 7745
Passcode: 107276
Abstract:
The question of why states comply with international law has long been at the forefront of international law and international relations scholarship. The compliance discussion has largely focused on negative incentives for states to comply. We argue that there is another, undertheorized mechanism: rewarding. We provide a typology as well as illustrations of how rewards can be applied. Furthermore, we explore the rationale, the potential, and the limitations of rewarding, drawing on rationalist as well as psychological approaches. Both give ample arguments to make more use of rewarding in international law.
About the speaker:
Anne van Aaken (Dr. iur. and MA Economics) is Alexander von Humboldt Professor for Law and Economics, Legal Theory, Public International Law and European Law, University of Hamburg. She was Professor at the University of St. Gallen, Switzerland from 2006-2018. She was Vice-President of the European Society of International Law and of the European Association of Law and Economics, and is the Chair of the European University Institute Research Council. She is co-editor of the Journal of International Dispute Settlement (OUP) and a member of the editorial boards i.a. of the American Journal of International Law (CUP), European Journal of International Law (OUP), and International Theory (OUP). She has been consultant for the IBRD, OECD, UNCTAD, GIZ. She is currently working on behavioural economics/psychology of International Law and International Legal Theory (a book forthcoming with OUP) and has published widely in most renowned journals.
For any questions related to the event, please, contact Ms. Yulia Kozlova: yvkozlova@hse.ru.