05/30/2016

El Instituto Internacional de Sociología Jurídica de Oñati llega al ecuador del programa de workshops, con un nuevo seminario que se va a celebrar este jueves y viernes. José Atiles, profesor de la Universidad de Puerto Rico, y David Whyte, de la Universidad de Liverpool, serán los encargados de dirigir el encuentro titulado “State of Exception, Law and Economy: A socio-legal approach to the economic of exception in an era of crisis”.

Miola, Iagê Z.

Iagê Z. Miola is currently a law professor at the Federal University of São Paulo (UNIFESP) and a researcher of the Brazilian Center for Analysis and Planning (CEBRAP). He earned a PhD in Law & Society at the University of Milan (2014), a Master's in Sociology of Law at the Oñati International Institute for the Sociology of Law (2009), and a Bachelor of Laws at the Catholic University of Rio Grande do Sul (2008). In 2012, he was a Visiting Scholar at the New York University (NYU), Department of Sociology.

Monciardini, David

In July 2013, David Monciardini obtained the Int’l Ph.D “Renato Treves” in Law and Society, with a dissertation on the new EU regulation of corporate non-financial disclosure (i.e. social and environmental matters, human rights and corruption). David holds an MSc in Int’l Employment Relations at the London School of Economics (UK) and a Laurea in Sociology, from the University of Urbino, Italy. He has a wide range of international research and professional experiences, including working at the EU Commission (Belgium) and at Ferrara Business School (Italy).

Mather, Lynn

Lynn Mather is a Professor of Law and Political Science at SUNY Buffalo Law School. From 2002-2008, she was director of the Baldy Center for Law & Social Policy, an interdisciplinary research center on law and legal institutions. Before moving to Buffalo, Mather held the Nelson A. Rockefeller Chair in Government at Dartmouth College. Her scholarship has addressed the transformation of disputes and the role of lawyers in litigation in different areas of law.

Coordinators:

Our experience in Oñati

Walter, Maggie

Maggie Walter (PhD), a descendant of the trawlwoolway Aboriginal people of North Eastern Tasmania, is a Professor of Sociology  in the School of Social Sciences at the University of Tasmania, Australia, where she teaches and researches in the areas of social research methods, family, Indigeneity and race relations. Her books include the best selling Australian text; Social Research Methods (Ed. 2006:2010:2013) and Indigenous Statistics: A Quantitative Research Methodology (2013) (co-authored with C. Andersen 2008).

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