International and Public Law, Ethics and Economics for Sustainable Development - Lees

Dottorati
Doctoral programme (PhD)
A.Y. 2023/2024
Study area
Humanities, Social Sciences and Law
Doctoral programme (PhD)
3
Years
Dipartimento di Diritto pubblico italiano e sovranazionale - Via Festa del Perdono 7 - 20122 Milano
English
PhD Coordinator
Despite the urgency of the Sustainable Development Goals integrated into the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, some of the most influential global actors continue to disclaim their responsibility to contribute to them. The magnitude of the problem justifies a multidisciplinary research program on the institutions for sustainability based on putting to work together law, ethics and economics - and to which the LEES doctorate is dedicated.

The legal system defines the rule of law limits to the political balance between fundamental rights and economic stability, and indicates the intolerability of phenomena of marginalization and inequality.
However, new ideas of justice are needed: after redefining the concept social well-being, these ideas need to reconceive and understand distributive justice from both an inter-generational and intra-generational perspective.

Comparative studies, as well as de jure condendo ones, will design multi-level institutions for sustainable development, finally questioning that various private institutions can be sheltered from the claims of social justice, such as the access to innovation, the fair distribution of decision-making rights to stakeholders within enterprises, the democratic self-government of common goods.

Strategic litigation will be studied in order to promote institutional change and respect for human rights inside and outside the courts.

Economic analysis will set the condition to verify when institutional change is supported by collective rational choice models and if it corresponds, thanks also to plasticity of preferences, to the emergence of game theoretical equilibria eliciting conformity (social norms).
Classi di laurea magistrale - Classes of master's degree:
LMG/01 Classe delle lauree magistrali in giurisprudenza
LM-1 Antropologia culturale ed etnologia
LM-16 Finanza
LM-48 Pianificazione territoriale urbanistica e ambientale
LM-49 Progettazione e gestione dei sistemi turistici
LM-50 Programmazione e gestione dei servizi educativi
LM-51 Psicologia
LM-52 Relazioni internazionali
LM-55 Scienze cognitive
LM-56 Scienze dell'economia
LM-59 Scienze della comunicazione pubblica, d'impresa e pubblicità
LM-62 Scienze della politica
LM-63 Scienze delle pubbliche amministrazioni
LM-64 Scienze delle religioni
LM-69 Scienze e tecnologie agrarie
LM-70 Scienze e tecnologie alimentari
LM-73 Scienze e tecnologie forestali ed ambientali
LM-75 Scienze e tecnologie per l'ambiente e il territorio
LM-76 Scienze economiche per l'ambiente e la cultura
LM-77 Scienze economico-aziendali
LM-78 Scienze filosofiche
LM-81 Scienze per la cooperazione allo sviluppo
LM-84 Scienze storiche
LM-87 Servizio sociale e politiche sociali
LM-88 Sociologia e ricerca sociale
LM-90 Studi europei
LM-92 Teorie della comunicazione
LM/SC-GIUR Scienze Giuridiche
LMG/01 GIURISPRUDENZA)
Dipartimento di Diritto pubblico italiano e sovranazionale - Via Festa del Perdono 7 - 20122 Milano
Title Professor(s)
Rethinking legal, ethical and economic approaches to sustainability: 1.1 Dimensions and dynamics of inequalities as well as their driving forces 1.2. The impact of environmental issues on international inequalities 1.3. Social rights and social inequalities 1.4. Age, ethnic, racial, gender and religious discriminations 1.5. Fighting growing inequalities: pre-distribution in place of re-distribution 1.6. The impact of financial markets and international monetary bodies on state democracy
Curriculum: Sustainable Development
S. Barić (University of Rijeka)
S. Bojanić (University of Rijeka)
E. Chiappero (Università di Pavia)
G. Grimalda (Kiel Institute, Germany)
Social justice, global and inter/intra-generational justice and access to justice: 2.1. Global Constitutional Law 2.2. Non-state non-judicial grievance mechanisms: the compatibility of internal complaints processes within businesses with international human rights law 2.3. The right to an effective remedy 2.4. Negotiation and Mediation 2.5. Addressing the Risks of Inequality of Arms and Power Imbalance 2.6. Environmental Justice 2.7. Inter-generational and intra-generational justice and new forms of constitutional balance among fundamental rights 2.8. Group Rights and Culture
Curriculum: Sustainable Development
S. Barić (University of Rijeka)
C. Bicchieri (University of Pennsylvania)
S. Dothan (University of Copenaghen)
New perspectives in the theories of justice: 3.1. New methods in the theory of justice; behavioural and experimental justice and their meaning for the realism of justice 3.2. What is the subject matter of justice? Distribution of welfare, resources, capabilities and functioning, autonomy, responsibility or consideration? 3.3. Their measurement as bases for social choice, constitutional and post-Constitutional contracts; the rank of principles such as equality, needs, merits and contribution 3.4. Multidimensional discrimination: sociology, law and economics
Curriculum: Sustainable Development
C. Bicchieri (University of Pennsylvania)
E. Chiappero (Università di Pavia)
P. Frances-Gomez (University of Granada)
S. Dothan (University of Copenaghen
Shared social responsibility for justice 4.1. Theories of shared intentions, conjoint action, deliberation, agreements and we thinking 4.2. The (economic psychology) cognitive dimension of joint action: framing and belief formation, reasoning and mutual simulations of minds 4.3. Multilevel forms of governance for implementing shared responsibility 4.4. CSR for gender equality policies and the effect on fertility 4.5. Models of multi-stakeholder participation in the implementation and monitoring of resilience and recovery plans
Curriculum: Sustainable Development
C. Bicchieri (University of Pennsylvania)
Institutional and non-institutional actors in the sustainability network: 5.1. HRs compliance and transparency in international organizations 5.2. Transnational Crimes as Obstacle to Sustainability 5.3. The role of national promotional banks or institutions and private economic agents (corporations and others) in supporting Sustainable Development 5.4. The role of NGOs, non-profit organizations and civil society in supporting sustainable development 5.5. Models of stakeholder corporate governance for Socially responsible and Sustainable Corporations 5.6. New Forms of Ecological Corporate Governance 5.7. Public-Private partnership for global health 5.8. Federalism and sustainability politics 5.9. Urban regeneration and inequalities 5.10 Deliberative Democracy, Behaviour and Climate Change
Curriculum: Sustainable Development
S. Barić (University of Rijeka)
S. Dothan (University of Copenaghen)
Environmental issues: 6.1. Ecology, Technology and Private Law 6.2. The Economics of International Environmental Agreements in the Quest of Sustainability 6.3. Implications of behavioural environmental law and economics 6.4. Fairness, Stability and Weakness of Private Incentives for International Environmental Agreements. 6.5. Sustainable Oceans 6.6. Climate Change, Sustainability and Human Rights 6.7. Corporate responsibility for climate change 6.8. Environmental protection within international investment and trade 6.9. Green procurement in the EU context 6.10. Space law and its impact on environmental issue
Curriculum: Sustainable Development
M. Khadjavi (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam)
P. Frances Gomez (University of Granada)
Political economy and public choice for sustainable development 7.1. Democracy in the face of globalization, the role of nation States and international institutions 7.2. Science and Sustainable Development 7.3. Populism VS deliberation and the quest for self-determination 7.4. The constitutional political economy of sustainable development 7.5. Accountability and rule of law concerns as indispensable features of democracy and Sustainable Development 7.6. Sustainable development and economic democracy: pre-distributive strategies to prevent inequalities in the context of change generated by the ecological and digital transition of the economy
Curriculum: Sustainable Development
E. Chiappero (Università di Pavia)
G. Grimalda (Kiel Institute, Germany)
S. Hargreaves Heap (King's College London)
Institutions and governance of the commons: 8.1. “Common pool resources” and their governance 8.2. Institutional models of self-governance for physical and knowledge infrastructures for the commons 8.3. Public health as a public good 8.4. Cultural and intellectual commons 8.5. The protection of knowledge commons from commodification 8.6. The tragedy of the commons and the role of Public Administration
Curriculum: Human Rights and Strategic Litigation
S. Bojanić (University of Rijeka)
S. Hargreaves Heap (King's College London)
M. Khadjavi (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam)
Social norms and sustainability: 9.1. Social norms and sustainable development 9.2. Collective choice and cognitive mechanism activating agreement and conformity to social norms 9.3. Game theoretical models of social norms emergence, selection and conformity 9.4. Social norm changes and EU Green Deal policies
Curriculum: Human Rights and Strategic Litigation
C. Bicchieri (University of Pennsylvania)
S. Bojanić (University of Rijeka)
G. Grimalda (Kiel Institute, Germany)
S. Hargreaves Heap (King's College London)
P. Frances-Gomez (University of Granada)
S. Dothan (University of Copenaghen)
Corporate governance and corporate social responsibility: 10.1. Business and Human Rights 10.2. The role Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) and/or Corporate Environmental Responsibility (CER) in stimulating Sustainable Development 10.3. Stakeholder vs. shareholder models of corporate governance for socially responsible and sustainable corporations 10.4. Instrumental vs constitutive view of corporate responsibility, the social contract of the firm amongst its stakeholders as a bargaining game and the redefinition of the “social interest” 10.5. Classical, evolutionary and behavioural game models for the explanation of the emergence and stability of sustainable collective mental models (frames) of corporate governance 10.6. Mandatory law, soft law and self-regulation through charters, bylaw, code of ethics, and management standards for sustainability 10.7. Corporate responsibility to respect human rights and access to justice for victims of corporate human rights violations 10.8. Economic democracy, Inequalities and Corporate Governance
Curriculum: Human Rights and Strategic Litigation
S. De Colle (IESEG School of business France)
I. Kunda (University of Rijeka)
P. Frances-Gomez (University of Granada)
Innovation technologies and sustainability: 11.1. Global privacy and cybersecurity 11.2. The Digital Commons 11.3. Legal issues related to the use of Big Data and AI 11.4. Technological innovations: new rights and their impact on the principle of equality and non- discrimination 11.5. The Smart Contracts 11.6. The emergence of global ‘data economy’ and the incidence on democratic regimes 11.7. For a sustainable taxation of the digitalised economy: targeted or system-wide reform 11.8. Public Administration and the “digital transition”: tools, goals, problems and prospects
Curriculum: Human Rights and Strategic Litigation
S. De Colle (IESEG School of business France)
I. Kunda (University of Rijeka)
P. Frances-Gomez (University if Granada)
Human rights and strategic litigation 12.1. Human rights between universal value and local implementation 12.2. Strategic Litigation networks’ structure, methodology and effectiveness 12.3. Impacts of Strategic Litigation on Court’s reasoning and judgements 12.4. Strategic Litigation and social justice: Public ethics, public reasoning and the justification of strategic litigation objectives 12.5. Strategic litigation and collective choices mechanisms 12.6. Strategic litigation for inclusive societies: gender equality, LGBTQ+I rights, rights of persons with disabilities
Curriculum: Human Rights and Strategic Litigation
S. Barić (University of Rijeka)
C. Nardocci
S. Dothan (University of Copenaghen)
The role of international public organizations in promoting a change in the vision of corporate purpose (corporate sustainability) (ex DM 118/2023)

Courses list

October 2023
Courses or activities Professor(s) ECTS Total hours Language
Compulsory
Introduction to Legal Research 3 30 English
Introduction to Social Science Research and Qualitative Methods 3 18 English
January 2024
Courses or activities Professor(s) ECTS Total hours Language
Compulsory
Business, Human Rights and Sustainable Development 3 16 English
Statistics and Econometrics for the Analysis of Growth and Development
3 16 English
February 2024
Courses or activities Professor(s) ECTS Total hours Language
Compulsory
Introduction to Game Theory 3 16 English
The Environmental, Social and Economic Dimensions of Human Development: a Research Agenda
3 15 English
March 2024
Courses or activities Professor(s) ECTS Total hours Language
Compulsory
Environmental Law, Public Administration and Collaborative Behaviours in Contracts 3 16 English
April 2024
Courses or activities Professor(s) ECTS Total hours Language
Compulsory
Comparative Corporate Law: Shareholder Value Vs Stakeholder Approach 3 16 English
Theories of Justice 3 16 English
May 2024
Courses or activities Professor(s) ECTS Total hours Language
Compulsory
Constitutionalism and Human Rights 2 10 English
June 2024
Courses or activities Professor(s) ECTS Total hours Language
Games, Economic Behavior and Institutions for Sustainability 3 20 English

Enrolment

Places available: 5

Call for applications

Please refer to the call for admission test dates and contents, and how to register.

Application for admission: from 27/06/2023 to 26/07/2023

Application for matriculation: from 25/09/2023 to 05/10/2023

Read the Call


Attachments and documents

Attachments to the call

Qualifications assessment criteria

Scores and exam schedule