
Latest blog articles
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Millions of years of history in Caves
Today we went on a tour of the caves beneath Sint Pietersberg Hill. Initially I was not very excited because I heard the caves were man-made and as we all know The Netherlands is not very famous with mountains, so I pictured a couple of small caves built in an attempt to fool tourists in Maastricht...
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What Do Legal Academics Do? A Post on the New Elgar Blog
A new blog on the social sciences and related areas.
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Aalt Willem Heringa and Bram Akkermans, eds, Educating European Lawyers, Intersentia, 2011
Constanze Semmelmann, lecturer EU law (University of St.Gallen, CH), visiting scholar, Institute for European Private Law (M-EPLI).
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The Future of the European Union and of EU Private Law
The integration level needed for a political union must certainly include private law, not only contract, but also family law, company law, tort law, property law and succession.
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“Blockupy” in Turin? A conference on Transnational Societal Constitutionalism
Conference in Turin on what social and legal theory has to offer in respect to how to tame the destructive expansionist tendencies in modern society.
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Maastricht European Contract Law Students Present Rules on EU Private Law
The Maastricht Project on European Contract Law shows the importance of innovation in legal education and what students can do when we give them the possibility to take matters into their own hands.
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Law and Hip Hop Music
Project aimed at analysing the role of law in hip hop music.
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CROBECO’s closing conference: concluded but far from over. (Brussels 31 May 2012)
The closing conference of the project should be considered a first step to more and more legal systems opening up their legal borders to cross border conveyances, and not necessarily only within the EU.
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Drug policy: the marvelous weed-pass.
The Netherlands; well known for its tolerant and laid back view on basically anything (except time). Being openly gay is not a problem. Euthanasia and Abortion are far from taboos anymore. But I guess especially our very tolerant drug policy is welcomed by most people from other countries. Too bad...