Abstracts
Abstracts will be added as they are received.
Introductory Panel
Rule of Law Radicalism: The Pluralist Potential of Republican Legal Theory
– Mary Liston, Law, University of British Columbia
Fractal Responsiveness: Making Deals and Living with Constraints in Multi-Layered Regulatory Systems
– Carol Heimer, Sociology, Northwestern University
A Systems Theory Approach to Responsive Regulation
– Susan Sturm, Law School, Columbia University
Environmental Regulations Panel
Why Study Large Projects? Environmental Regulation’s Neglected Frontier
– Natasha Affolder, Faculty of Law, University of British Columbia
Responsive Regulation and the Limits of Regulatory Intervention
– Oren Perez, Faculty of Law, Bar Ilan University, Israel
Environmental Governance through Fiduciary Finance
– Benjamin Richardson, Osgoode Hall Law School, York University
Taxation Panel
Americans don’t hate taxes, they hate paying taxes
– Dennis Ventry, School of Law, University of California, Davis
Responsive Regulation, Risk and Rules: Applying the Theory to Tax Practice
– Judith Freedman, Faculty of Law, Oxford University
Responsive Regulation, Tax Compliance, and Tax Avoidance
– David Duff, Faculty of Law, University of British Columbia
Financial Regulation Panel
A Harder Nut to Crack? Responsive Regulation in the Financial Services Sector
– Dimity Kingsford-Smith, Faculty of Law, University of New South Wales
Macro and Micro Level Effects on Responsive Financial Regulation
– Cristie Ford, Faculty of Law, University of British Columbia
Regulatory Failures and the Global Financial Crisis: Some Historical Puzzles
– Edward Balleisen, History, Duke University
Closing Panel
Madison on Federalism as Responsive Regulation
– Arthur Stinchcombe, Sociology, Northwestern University