This is the fourth European conference on e-public procurement organized by the Portuguese Observatory of Technology Foresight (OPET), focusing on the European public procurement directives and their implementation in the European member states through e-procurement. The conference scientific committee is headed by Professor Luis Valaderes Tavares, and the conference program is here.
Category: Conferences
New Perspectives on International Trade in Procurement — 20 March 2019 — 6 to 7 pm — GWU Law School
A conversation with
Zornitsa Kutlina-Dimitrova
Senior Economist, Chief Trade Economist Unit, European Commission
Most debates over protectionism look only at the direct effects of “Buy National” laws — how do those laws help specific domestic producers, and how do they raise costs and reduce choice?
The European Commission is taking a new approach. Building on other transnational studies, the Commission has undertaken a multi-year effort to assess the economy-wide impact of domestic preferences in procurement. Through this effort, the European Commission will be able to predict the costs, direct and indirect, of new “Buy National” laws around the world.
Please join Zornitsa Kutlina-Dimitrova, a senior trade economist at the European Commission, in an interactive discussion of this important development in international trade.
Wednesday, March 20, 2019, 6-7 pm
GWU Law Learning Center Room LLC006
Entrance: 2028 G Street NW (next to Tonic Restaurant)
Info: ccrawford@law.gwu.edu, tel. 202 994 8689
Nearest Metro stations: Foggy Bottom and Farragut West
Light refreshments will be served
U.S. – EU Environmental Colloquium – Rome – 30 May 2019
On May 30, 2019, there will be a conference on U.S. – EU environmental issues in Rome; the program for the colloquium, which will cover issues from climate change to sustainability in procurement, may be downloaded below.
The conference was launched by Dr. Giovanni Antonelli, of the “Sapienza” University of Rome, with the support of Prof. F. Giglioni and Prof. M.V. Ferroni of the University’s Department of Political Science, and the Center for American Studies. Dr. Antonelli writes:
For over the last year we have been thinking how to engage some of the most eminent international experts for empowering our common interest and work towards potential models of sustainable development.
Built upon the shared belief that the current political divide felt over our continents is polarizing and alienating not only our cultures but often it is even estranging groups and movements that have similar values and goals, the “U.S.–E.U. Environmental Law Colloquium” aims to encourage participation and collaboration between American and European Scholars on a regular basis, to share the progress of our researches and to launch new initiatives and projects for the implementation of the environmental policies.
For the organization of this first edition we do want to acknowledge the important role played by the Sapienza University Department of Political Science and by the Center for American Studies of Rome, without whose fundamental support this international project would not have been carried out.
We would like to thank all the speakers who have decided to join our project, with a specific regard to Prof. J. Freeman (Harvard Law School), Prof. M. Gerrard (Columbia Law School), Prof. M. Scanlan (Vermont Law School), Prof. C. Yukins (GWU School of Law) and Prof. J. Dernbach (Widener University).
The all-day colloquium will begin at 9:30 a.m. on May 30, 2019, at the Center for American Studies, Via M. CAETANI, 32, Rome.
For information and reservations: giovanni.antonelli@uniroma1.it
Transatlantic Roundtable on Sustainable Public Procurement: 5 April 2019, Pace University, New York City
On April 5, 2019, scholars from Pace University, the University of Copenhagen and George Washington University hosted an all-day roundtable on emerging issues in sustainable public procurement, through Pace University’s Elisabeth Haub School of Law.
The First Annual Transatlantic Roundtable on Sustainable Public Procurement was hosted by:
- Pace Environmental Law and the Elisabeth Haub School of Law,
- The Centre of Enterprise Liability, Faculty of Law, University of Copenhagen, and
- The George Washington University Law School’s Government Procurement Law Program.
Researchers and renowned specialists from around the globe discussed recent developments in the field of sustainable public procurement. The global value of public procurement spending is enormous. OECD countries alone spend a total of a trillion U.S. dollars per year, and each year their governments spend around 14-19% of GDP on the purchase of services, works and supplies. In many sectors such as energy, transport, waste management, social welfare, education and health services, public authorities are the principal buyers. The sheer scale of public procurement spending can literally create and shape markets, impact lives of citizens across the country, and foster greater sustainability in terms of environmental protection, public health, and economic equality.
Speakers included:
- Professor Jason J. Czarnezki, Kerlin Distinguished Professor of Environmental Law and Associate Dean, Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University,
- Marta Andhov, Assistant Professor, Faculty of Law, University of Copenhagen, Denmark,
- Professors Steven Schooner and Christopher Yukins, George Washington University Law School, Washington, D.C., and
- Nicole Darnall, Associate Dean and Professor, School of Sustainability Arizona State University
This event was held at Pace University’s Downtown Campus – 1 Pace Plaza, on the 18th floor in the North and South Boardrooms.
Click here for detailed program information.
Introductions
Jason J. Czarnezki –Kerlin Distinguished Professor and Associate Dean, The Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University, New York
Marta Andhov – Assistant Professor, Faculty of Law,
University of Copenhagen, Denmark;
Haub Visiting Scholar at Pace University’s Elisabeth Haub School of Law
Session 1 : Does the United States need a sustainable
public procurement legal framework?
U.S. Federal Public Procurement –
A lack of interest in sustainable purchasing? – Steven Schooner,
Nash & Cibinic Professor of Government Procurement Law,
The George Washington University Law School
Do state level and local contracting authorities drive the sustainable procurement agenda in the United States? – Jason J. Czarnezki, Kerlin Distinguished Professor and Associate Dean, The Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University, New York City
Sustainable Procurement in Local Governments – Nicole Darnall
Associate Dean and Professor, School of Sustainability,
Arizona State University
Session 2: European Union – A leader in sustainable purchasing?
How we got to the Strategic Public Procurement Agenda-Understanding the EU legal framework – Roberto Caranta, Professor of Administrative Law, University of Turin, Italy
All that glitters is not gold – Paradoxes of EU Public Procurement Law –
Marta Andhov, Assistant Professor, Faculty of Law, University of Copenhagen, Denmark; Haub Visiting Scholar at the Pace University’s Elisabeth Haub School of Law
The Evolution of Sustainable Procurement in the United Kingdom: From Thatcherism to the Social Value Act and a widening and deepening policy agenda. Where next post-Brexit? – Michael Bowsher QC – Director of the Distance Learning Diploma and Masters in Public Procurement Law at King’s College London; Visiting Professor, Dickson Poon School of Law, King’s College London; Barrister (Monckton Chambers), England & Wales, Northern Ireland, Republic of Ireland
Session 3: WTO & UNCITRAL
SPP: International perspectives, including under the UNCITRAL Model Law and the WTO Government Procurement Agreement – Christopher R. Yukins – Professor of Public Procurement Law and Co-Director, Government Procurement Law Program, George Washington University Law School
Sustainable public procurement under the OECD and the multilateral development banks- Carol Cravero, PhD student at the University of Turin, Italy and University of Paris Nanterre (CRDP), France
Sustainable procurement at UNOPS –Benedetta Audia, Corporate Legal Advisor, Head of the Commercial and Institutional Law Practice, Legal Group, United Nations Office for Project Services, New York
Session 4: Selected Countries and Their Experiences
Canadian experience with Sustainable Public Procurement –Paul Emanuelli,General Counsel and Managing Director, Procurement Office, Toronto
Challenges and the future of sustainable public procurement in Poland – Michal Kania, Professor, Silesian University, Poland; Fulbright Visiting Scholar The George Washington University Law School
Brazilian experience with SPP – Luciana Stocco Betiol, Professor – Department of Social and Legal Sciences, São Paulo School of Business Administration – FGV/EAESP
King’s College, London – GWU Law School Annual Symposium: Exclusion and Debarment – 18 March 2019
Effective international trade in government procurement depends on predictable legal structures, including those that address corruption and misconduct in tender processes. But at this point, the purchaser’s primary tools to maintain integrity — debarment or exclusion — remain wildly out of sync on both sides of the Atlantic. This annual free symposium on transatlantic issues in procurement, hosted by King’s College London and George Washington University Law School, focused this year on debarment and exclusion. In a highly successful day of frank and collegial discussions, judges, officials, attorneys and professors from the multilateral development banks, the European Union and the United States joined to discuss the best ways forward to harmonize a common approach to debarment in international trade.
Please note (see below) that because of the strong interest in this program, it was moved to a larger room at Gray’s Inn.
Change of Venue: The Pensions Room, Grays Inn, 8 South Square, London, WC1R 5ET (map) (map of access to Grays Inn during construction)
Reservation page here
Program materials
Introductions (10-10:15)
Panel I: Establishing an Exclusion System (10:15-11:15)
Panel II: Sanctions and Exclusions at the Multilateral Development Banks (11:30-12:30)
- World Bank: Fillable Survey: A Global View of Debarment
- Collin Swan & Belita Manka, Risky Business: Does Debarring Poor Performers Mitigate Future Performance Risk? (working paper submitted to the Third International Conference on Public Procurement Law in Africa, organized by the African Procurement Law Unit at Stellenbosch University (1-2 November 2018))
Lunch(12:30-13:30)
Panel III: View from the Private Bar(13:30-14:30)
- John Pachter, Christopher Yukins & Jessica Tillipman, U.S. Debarment: An Introduction (discussion draft 24 February 2019), forthcoming in Cambridge Handbook of Compliance (Cambridge University Press, Daniel Sokol & Benjamin van Rooij eds.).
- Pascal Friton, Debarment in EU Public Procurement Law – Tentative progress or treading water? (presented at Thomson Reuters Government Contracts Year in Review (Feb. 2019))
- UK Cabinet Office, Procurement Policy Note – Applying Exclusions in Public Procurement, Managing Conflicts of Interest and Whistleblowing Information Note PPN 01/19, 22 February 2019
Panel IV: Interactions Between Public Procurement and Civil and Criminal Claims (14:30-15:30)
Robert D. Anderson, Alison Jones & William E. Kovacic, Preventing Corruption, Supplier Collusion and the Corrosion of Civic Trust: A Procompetitive Program to Improve the Effectiveness and Legitimacy of Public Procurement (George Mason Law Review, forthcoming 2019).
Tea (15:30-16:00)
Panel V: Judges Panel (16:00-17:oo)
- Elisabeth Lang & Marc Steiner, Public Procurement Regulation: Fostering Market Access and Simultaneously Preventing Corruption — A Swiss Perspective, British Journal of White Collar Crime, Vol. III, No. 1, 14 (Winter 2017/2018).
Reception (17:00)
Supplemental Materials
- Emmanuelle Auriol & Tina Søreide, An Economic Analysis of Debarment, 50 Int’l Rev. L. & Econ. 36 (2017) (arguing that debarment needs to be rethought in light of its competitive impacts)
- Presentation by Prof Michal Kania at the University of Florida, January 2019, on U.S. and European approaches to debarment and corporate compliance
- Christopher R. Yukins & Michal Kania, Suspension and Debarment in the U.S. Government: Comparative Lessons for the EU’s Next Steps in Procurement, 19-2 UrT 47 (2019), available at https://ssrn.com/abstract=3422499
Background materials by panelists (from a fall 2018 seminar at GWU):
International Conference on Public Procurement Law – Africa – Nov. 24-25, 2016
2ND INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON PUBLIC PROCUREMENT LAW AFRICA ANNOUNCED
The African Public Procurement Regulation Research Unit (APPRRU), Faculty of Law, Stellenbosch University, is pleased to announce the second International Conference on Public Procurement Law Africa. The Conference will be held from 24 – 25 November, 2016 at the Century City Conference Centre & Hotel, Cape Town, South Africa. The Conference theme is Public Procurement Regulation suited for 21st Century Africa: Reform, Governance and Innovation. The theme will address a range of critically important issues and themes relating to the intersection between procurement regulation, governance, reform, and innovation. Plenary speakers include some of the leading thinkers in public procurement in Africa and internationally, and the conference will feature numerous papers, and workshop presentations. More detail on the conference, including the call for papers, can be found at www.africanprocurementlaw.org/projects/conference2016.
UNCITRAL Call for Papers – July 4-6, 2017 Conference in Vienna
Modernizing International Trade Law to Support Innovation and Sustainable Development
A three day Congress hosted by the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law to celebrate its 50th anniversary and explore new directions in cross-border commerce
4-6 July 2017, Vienna International Centre, Vienna
Join us to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Commission and to engage with leaders in the field of international trade law, including practitioners, judges, academics, international officials and other experts to explore the opportunities that UNCITRAL should seize in the coming years.
Participants will examine ways in which UNCITRAL can contribute to managing new development issues and fostering innovation through the modernization of international trade law. The Congress will be open to anyone with an interest in international trade and business, the work of UNCITRAL and the potential of trade law reform and innovation to translate the United Nations sustainable development goals into action to advance business and trade at country level.
Attendance at the Congress is free of charge. More information will be available on this site when it becomes available.