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DynamInt: Postdoctoral Fellowships at Humboldt-University Berlin
- The new Doctoral Training Group DynamInt at the Faculty of Law at Humboldt-University encourages young researchers with a doctoral / PhD degree in law to apply for fully paid research stay for up to 6 months.
- Tasks and Research Topic
- The PostDoc is supposed to pursue her/his research project in the field of European Law. She/he is also expected to interact with the group of young researchers, who all work on their dissertation projects within the thematic framework of harmonization and plurality tendencies in the EU.
- Duration
- The research stay should last between 3 and 6 months.
- Working condition
- The PostDoc receives a salary of full-time position (salary grade 13) and will be provided with a fully equipped working place.
- Research-Teaching ratio
- There is no teaching assignment to the PostDoc. However, if she/he wishes to teach classes, this is of course possible.
- Residence
- The Post Doc is expected to spend most or at least 2/3 of her/his time at DynamInt in Berlin or its surroundings.
- Requirements
- Beside a doctoral/PhD degree, applicants should at least have a solid listening comprehension in German as it serves as the lingua franca of the Training Group.
- Deadline
- There is no specific deadline. Applications can be submitted at any time.
- Submission
- Please direct your applications to dynamint@rewi.hu-berlin.de.
Call for Papers – ‘Digitalization and Mobility: How Technology Affects Flows of People, Services and Goods’, University of Milan, 19-21 March 2020
The University of Milan will host the third edition of its Doctoral Seminar in Public, International and European Law from 19 to 21 March 2020.
The Seminar tackles ‘Digitalization and Mobility: How Technology Affects Flows of People, Services and Goods’ and it will be structured in four panels, focusing on the following subjects:
- Digitalization and international law: How the use of digital technologies impact international relations, international trade and cross-border transactions.
- Tax and digitalisation: The reconfiguration of value chain and the impact on direct and indirect taxation.
- Digitalization and people’s mobility: Protecting fundamental rights.
- Urban mobility and public services: How new technologies can impact urban mobility and the provision of public services.
The call for papers is open to PhD students or to those who have completed their PhD in the three years prior to the deadline for submission. To participate, candidates must submit their CV and an abstract of their paper in English (max 800 words) by 15 December 2019 via email to: rosalba.dambrosio@unimi.it. The abstract must be in .docx format and indicate the author’s name, the title of the paper, and the panel to which it would belong amongst the four mentioned above. The CV must be sent in PDF format.
The deadline for the submission of the final papers is the end of February 2020.
Only original and unpublished papers may be submitted. All the selected papers will be published either in a scientific Law Review or in a book collecting the Seminar’s proceedings.
More information is available at: Call4Papers_3rdPhd_Seminar_UNIMI
Some Brexit news (part III): The UK ratification of the HCCH Child Support Convention and the UK accession to the HCCH Choice of Court Convention remain suspended until 1 February 2020
This week the Depositary of the HCCH Conventions informed all Contracting Parties that the UK ratification of the HCCH Child Support Convention and the UK accession to the HCCH Choice of Court Convention, including the UK extension to Gibraltar under both Conventions, remain suspended until 1 February 2020.
The above is pursuant to the declaration made by the United Kingdom on 30 October 2019, which informed the Depositary that “the European Council has agreed a further extension of the period for the withdrawal of the United Kingdom from the European Union under Article 50(3) of the Treaty on the European Union (the “Extension Period”) which would last until 31 January 2020, or any of the earlier specified dates on which the Withdrawal Agreement enters into force.”
This of course comes as no surprise to many of us. Nevertheless, it is important to bear in mind the new date specified by the Depositary, which seems to cope with a no-deal Brexit scenario and can have important practical consequences (e.g. applicable declarations, temporal scope of application). Importantly, and as indicated in the relevant notifications, in the event that a Withdrawal Agreement is signed, ratified and approved by the United Kingdom and the European Union and enters into force prior to or on 1 February 2020, the United Kingdom will withdraw the Instrument of Ratification and the Instrument of Accession (including the extension to Gibraltar) to the above-mentioned Conventions.
Our previous posts on this matter are available here (part I) and here (part II).
The notifications of the Depositary are available here (Child Support Convention) and here (Choice of Court Convention).
The European Union, as a Regional Economic Integration Organisation, approved both the Child Support Convention and the Choice of Court Convention on 9 April 2014 and 11 June 2015, respectively.