Call for Applications Belgrade Summer School in Law & Economics 2024

Call for Applications Belgrade Summer School in Law & Economics 2024

The annual Belgrade Summer School in Law & Economics features four-day lecture series held by renowned scholars. The School provides a seminar atmosphere with groups…

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ADDITIONAL COURSE -  Regulation of Digital Content through Online Service Providers

ADDITIONAL COURSE – Regulation of Digital Content through Online Service Providers

ADDITIONAL COURSE FOR MASTER IN EUROPEAN INTEGRATION, April 8th-12th – 16.00-19.00 Regulation of Digital Content through Online Service Providers – The new European Union Digital…

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Delegation of the University of Belgrade - Faculty of Law  on a study visit to Cuba

Delegation of the University of Belgrade – Faculty of Law on a study visit to Cuba

In the period from January 26 to February 7, 2024, a delegation from the Faculty of Law of the University of Belgrade participated in a…

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Seminar: Meaning and aims of  'E' pillar in ESG (environmental, social and governance)

Seminar: Meaning and aims of ‘E’ pillar in ESG (environmental, social and governance)

On 11-12 December 2023, the Jean Monnet Chair in European Environmental and Climate Change Law, supported by the OSCE Mission to Serbia, organised the seminar ‘Meaning and aims of ‘E’ pillar in ESG (environmental, social and governance)’. Students of the Master in Environmental Law and PhD program and Environmental Law Clinic Hub had an opportunity to hear more on regulatory changes and corporate sustainability due diligence in practice and to identify and analyse the relevant legal, social, business, ethical, and scientific issues involved. We would like to thank to our panelists who shared their valuable expertise.

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BLTG - Prof. Corrado Roversi  “Legal Positivism: A Socio-ontological Criticism”

BLTG – Prof. Corrado Roversi “Legal Positivism: A Socio-ontological Criticism”

Prof. Roversi started with his main thesis as a critique of legal positivism by pointing out that designating a legal institution does not depend solely on the practices and declarative speech acts of officials. Therefore, even if P1 and P2 have the same constitutive rules and there is a corresponding rule-following practice, P1 and P2 can be different institutions, because elements such as the so-called background and systematic fallouts influence the ontology of a legal institution. Prof. Roversi then outlined the meaning of the concept of background, saying that it is some sort of “grammar” that exists before the behavior-according-to-the-rules, or a deeper network of desires and beliefs that emerge as a response to basic social needs. On the other hand, systematic fallouts encompass rules, goals and phenomena that are not visible within the deontic powers of an institution.

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