The Patchwork in the Sky
This research critically examines how the eight largest global markets regulate airlines from the three different perspectives of trade and market access, investment and airline alliances. The eight jurisdictions considered in this dissertation are Brazil, China, the European Union, India, Indonesia, Japan, the United States of America and the United Kingdom.
These jurisdictions have been selected as they were the eight largest markets, based on the number of passengers carried between 2010 and 2019.
This dissertation seeks to contribute to the existing literature by demonstrating that in spite of multiple attempts to reform the regulatory framework for airlines over the last thirty years, with respect to these eight markets, progress has been slow and has prolonged an archaic and opaque regulatory framework that is arguably no longer fit for purpose. This dissertation will consider three prospective pathways for future reform of the airline industry in the wake of COVID-19 and suggest that in spite of the tremendous upheaval of the airline industry through the pandemic, issues pertaining to the regulation of trade, investment and alliances will continue to polarise the industry, legislators and regulators for a long time to come.
Click here for the full dissertation.
Click here for the live stream.
Also read
-
Andrés Caceres Solari on No room for Human Rights in Gaza and Ukraine: How the Law Legitimizes Urban Devastation
Pick Our Brains Session with Andres Caceres Solari
-
Teacher Information Points at UM
UM faculties now host Teacher Information Points (TIPs) that offer local, “just-in-time” and on-demand support for teaching staff. The aim is simple: to provide help that is closely connected to day-to-day teaching practice.
-
Globalisation & Law Network seminar with Damian Chalmers
On 4 November 2025, the Globalisation & Law Network had the honour of welcoming Prof. Damian Chalmers to discuss his paper “The EU’s Governing by Legal Shadows”.