dunoff resume 2016 april

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Jeffrey L. Dunoff Page 1 of 21 J E F F R E Y L. D U N O F F Temple University Beasley School of Law, 1719 North Broad Street Philadelphia, PA 19122 Phone: 215.204.8233 • E-Mail: [email protected] ACADEMIC POSITIONS LAURA H. CARNELL PROFESSOR OF LAW, TEMPLE UNIVERSITY BEASLEY SCHOOL OF LAW Laura H. Carnell Professor of Law, 2011-present Charles Klein Professor of Law & Government, 2002-2008 Founding Director, Institute for International Law & Public Policy, 2001- 2013 Founding Director, Transnational LL.M. Program, 2000-present Associate Professor of Law, 1995-1998 Assistant Professor of Law, 1992-1995 VISITING PROFESSOR, SCHOOL OF PUBLIC POLICY CENTRAL EUROPEAN UNIVERSITY, Budapest, Hungary Fall 2013 VISITING PROFESSOR, HARVARD LAW SCHOOL 2008-09 academic year VISITING PROFESSOR, WOODROW WILSON SCHOOL, PRINCETON UNIVERSITY Spring term 2008, 2004, 2003, 2002, 1999 SELECTED ACTIVITIES & HONORS MEMBER, EDITORIAL BOARD, IRISH YEARBOOK OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 2015 – present MEMBER, EDITORIAL BOARD OF GLOBAL CONSTITUTIONALISM 2014 – present VISITING SCHOLAR, UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA LAW SCHOOL Fall 2013 MEMBER, E-15 EXPERT GROUP ON THE FUNCTIONING OF THE WTO, GENEVA 2013-present

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Jeffrey L. Dunoff Page 1 of 21

J E F F R E Y L. D U N O F F Temple University Beasley School of Law, 1719 North Broad Street Philadelphia, PA 19122 Phone: 215.204.8233 • E-Mail: [email protected] ACADEMIC POSITIONS LAURA H. CARNELL PROFESSOR OF LAW, TEMPLE UNIVERSITY BEASLEY SCHOOL OF LAW Laura H. Carnell Professor of Law, 2011-present Charles Klein Professor of Law & Government, 2002-2008

Founding Director, Institute for International Law & Public Policy, 2001- 2013 Founding Director, Transnational LL.M. Program, 2000-present Associate Professor of Law, 1995-1998 Assistant Professor of Law, 1992-1995

VISITING PROFESSOR, SCHOOL OF PUBLIC POLICY CENTRAL EUROPEAN UNIVERSITY, Budapest, Hungary Fall 2013 VISITING PROFESSOR, HARVARD LAW SCHOOL

2008-09 academic year VISITING PROFESSOR, WOODROW WILSON SCHOOL, PRINCETON UNIVERSITY Spring term 2008, 2004, 2003, 2002, 1999 SELECTED ACTIVITIES & HONORS

MEMBER, EDITORIAL BOARD, IRISH YEARBOOK OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 2015 – present MEMBER, EDITORIAL BOARD OF GLOBAL CONSTITUTIONALISM 2014 – present VISITING SCHOLAR, UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA LAW SCHOOL

Fall 2013

MEMBER, E-15 EXPERT GROUP ON THE FUNCTIONING OF THE WTO, GENEVA 2013-present

Jeffrey L. Dunoff Page 2 of 21

FELLOW, AMERICAN BAR FOUNDATION 2009 - present VISITING SENIOR RESEARCH SCHOLAR, PROGRAM IN LAW AND PUBLIC AFFAIRS, WOODROW WILSON SCHOOL, PRINCETON UNIVERSITY 2007 - 08 academic year. MEMBER, WARWICK COMMISSION ON THE FUTURE OF THE GLOBAL TRADE REGIME 2007 - 2008.

VISITING FELLOW Lauterpacht Research Centre for International Law, Cambridge University. January - July, 2005.

VISITING FELLOW Clare Hall, Cambridge University. January - July, 2005.

MEMBER, AMERICAN LAW INSTITUTE

October 2003 - present.

INVITED LECTURER Training Program for Chinese Judges. Summer 2008, Summer 2007, Summer 2006, Summer 2005, Summer 2003, Summer 2002.

MEMBER, NATIONAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. May 2000 - April 2003.

ASSOCIATE EDITOR Yearbook of International Environmental Law. 1999 - 2013.

INVITED LECTURER

National Judicial College, Beijing, China. December 2001. FRIEL-SCANLAN AWARD

Spring 2000.

VICE-CHAIR ASIL International Law International Economic Law Interest Group. 1999-2003.

VISITING FELLOW

Center of International Studies, Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University. Spring 1998.

FORD FOUNDATION FELLOW IN PUBLIC INTERNATIONAL LAW,

Georgetown University Law Center. September 1991 - August 1992.

Jeffrey L. Dunoff Page 3 of 21

BOOKS AND CONTRIBUTIONS TO BOOKS

INTERNATIONAL LAW: NORMS, ACTORS, PROCESS (with Steven Ratner & David Wippman) (4th edition, Aspen Publishers 2015)

TEACHER’S MANUAL FOR INTERNATIONAL LAW: NORMS, ACTORS, PROCESS

(with Steven Ratner & David Wippman) (4th edition, Aspen Publishers 2015) INTERDISCIPLINARY PERSPECTIVES ON INTERNATIONAL LAW AND INTERNATIONAL

RELATIONS: THE STATE OF THE ART (co-editor with Mark A. Pollack, Cambridge University Press 2013) Reviewed at 11 Journal of International Law and International Relations 85 (2015);

108 American Journal of International Law 597 (2014); 4 Asian Journal of International Law 227 (2014); 16 International Studies Review 328 (2014); 9 CEU Political Science Journal 266 (2014); 24 European Journal of International Law 987 (2013); 56 German Yearbook of International Law 639 (2013); 62 International and Comparative Law Quarterly 771 (2013)

International Law and International Relations: An Introduction to an Interdisciplinary Dialogue (with Mark A. Pollack), in INTERDISCIPLINARY PERSPECTIVES ON INTERNATIONAL LAW AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: THE STATE OF THE ART

3 (Jeffrey L. Dunoff & Mark A. Pollack, eds., Cambridge University Press 2013)

International Law and International Relations: What We’ve Learned, What’s Next (with Mark A. Pollack) in INTERDISCIPLINARY PERSPECTIVES ON INTERNATIONAL LAW AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: THE STATE OF THE ART 626 (Jeffrey L. Dunoff & Mark A. Pollack, eds., Cambridge University Press)

A New Approach to Regime Interaction, in INTERNATIONAL LAW: FACING

FRAGMENTATION 136 (Margaret A. Young, ed. Cambridge Univ. Press 2012) The Political Geography of Distributive Justice, in GLOBAL JUSTICE AND

INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC LAW: OPPORTUNITIES AND PROSPECTS 153 (Chios Carmody, et al eds., Cambridge University Press 2012)

How Not to Think about Safeguards, in LAW AND ECONOMICS OF CONTINGENT PROTECTION

IN INTERNATIONAL TRADE 401 (Kyle Bagwell et al, eds., Cambridge University Press 2010)

North American Regional Economic Integration: Recent Trends and Developments, in 1 EUROPEAN YEARBOOK OF INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC LAW 297 (C. Herrman & J.P. Terhechte, eds., Springer-Verlag 2010)

Jeffrey L. Dunoff Page 4 of 21

RULING THE WORLD? CONSTITUTIONALISM, INTERNATIONAL LAW &

GLOBAL GOVERNANCE (ed., with Joel P. Trachtman, Cambridge University Press 2009) Subject of book forum at 8 International Journal of Constitutional Law 517 (2010); reviewed at 102 American Journal of International Law 197 (2012); 14 International Studies Quarterly 182 (2012); 24 Leiden Journal of International Law 1035 (2011): 21 European Journal of International Law 798 (2010); 73 Modern Law Review 858 (2010); 89 Foreign Affairs No. 1 (2010)

A Functional Approach to International Constitutionalization (with Joel P. Trachtman), in RULING THE WORLD? CONSTITUTIONALISM, INTERNATIONAL LAW & GLOBAL GOVERNANCE 3 (Jeffrey L. Dunoff & Joel P. Trachtman, eds., Cambridge University Press 2009) The Politics of International Constitutions: The Curious Case of the WTO, in RULING THE WORLD? CONSTITUTIONALISM, INTERNATIONAL LAW & GLOBAL GOVERNANCE 178 (Jeffrey L. Dunoff & Joel P. Trachtman, eds., Cambridge University Press 2009)

Dysfunction, Diversion and the Debate over Preferences: (How) Do Preferential Trade Policies Work? in DEVELOPING COUNTRIES IN THE WTO LEGAL SYSTEM 45

(Chantal Thomas & Joel P. Trachtman, eds., Oxford University Press 2009) Does the United States Support International Tribunals? The Case of the Multilateral Trade System, in THE SWORD AND THE SCALES: THE UNITED STATES AND INTERNATIONAL COURTS AND TRIBUNALS 322 (Cesare Romano, ed., Cambridge University Press 2009)

The WTO Constitution, Judicial Power and Changing Patterns of Authority, in

CHANGING PATTERNS OF AUTHORITY IN THE GLOBAL POLITICAL ECONOMY 55 (Martin Nettesheim & Volker Rittberger eds., Palgrave Macmillan 2008)

When – and Why – Do Hard Cases Make Bad Law? The GSP Dispute,

in THE WTO AND DEVELOPING NATIONS 283 (George Bermann & Petros Mavroidis eds., Cambridge University Press 2007)

Developing Countries and the WTO: What=s Wrong with Inactivity?

in THE WTO AND DEVELOPING NATIONS 186 (George Bermann & Petros Mavroidis eds., Cambridge University Press 2007)

Levels of Environmental Governance, in OXFORD HANDBOOK OF INTERNATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL LAW 85 (Daniel Bodansky, et al. eds., Oxford University Press 2007) Lotus Eaters: The Varietals Dispute, the SPS Agreement, and WTO Dispute

Resolution, in TRADE AND HUMAN HEALTH AND SAFETY 153 (George Bermann & Petros Mavroidis eds., Cambridge University Press 2006)

Jeffrey L. Dunoff Page 5 of 21

Economic Analysis and International Law, in ECONOMIC ANALYSIS OF LAW: A EUROPEAN PERSPECTIVE (with Joel P. Trachtman) (Aristides N. Hatzis & Richard Posner eds., Edward Elgar Publishing 2006)

The Law and Economics of Humanitarian Law Violations in Internal Conflict, in

THE METHODS OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 211 (with Joel P. Trachtman) (Steven Ratner & Anne-Marie Slaughter eds., 2004)

Compliance at the WTO: Seduced by the Dispute Settlement System?, in

THE MEASURE OF INTERNATIONAL LAW: EFFECTIVENESS, FAIRNESS AND VALIDITY 196 (Canadian Council on International Law ed., 2004)

The Post-Doha Trade Agenda: Questions About Constituents, Competence and

Coherence, in THE WTO AND THE DOHA ROUND: THE CHANGING FACE OF WORLD TRADE 59 (Ross Buckley ed., 2003)

International Dispute Resolution: Can the WTO Learn from MEAs? in TRADE AND

ENVIRONMENT, THE WTO AND MEAS: FACETS OF A COMPLEX RELATIONSHIP 63 (2001)

The NAFTA Experience, in TRADE, ENVIRONMENT AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT

(P. Konz et al. eds., 2000)

Globalization and the Environment: The Limits of the Law, in SECURITY, TRADE AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY: A US/EUROPEAN UNION TRANSATLANTIC AGENDA 187

(C. Bonser ed., 2000) ARTICLES AND OTHER PUBLICATIONS

Mapping a Hidden World of International Regulatory Cooperation 78 LAW & CONTEMPORARY PROBLEMS 267 (2015) Hard Times: Progress Narratives, Historical Contingency and the Fate of Global

Constitutionalism, 4 GLOBAL CONSTITUTIONALISM 1 (2015) (with A. Wiener, M. Kumm, A. Lang & J. Tully)

Footloose and Duty Free? Reflections on European Union – Antidumping

Measures on Certain Footwear from China, 13 WORLD TRADE REVIEW 149 (2014) (with Michael O. Moore)

From Interdisciplinarity to Counterdisciplinarity: Is There Madness in Martti’s Method? 27 TEMPLE INTERNATIONAL & COMPARATIVE LAW JOURNAL 309 (2013)

Engaging the Writings of Martti Koskenniemi: Introduction to the Symposium,

27 TEMPLE INTERNATIONAL & COMPARATIVE LAW JOURNAL 207 (2013) Is Sovereign Equality Obsolete? Understanding Twenty-First Century International

Organizations, 43 NETHERLANDS YEARBOOK OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 99 (2013)

Jeffrey L. Dunoff Page 6 of 21

Review of Beyond Constitutionalism: The Pluralist Structure of Postnational Law

(Krisch), 107 AMERICAN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 483 (2013) China’s Role in the Evolving Global Order: Reflections on Ten Years of Membership

in the World Trade Organization, 18 CHINESE JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC LAW, No. 3 (2012) (commissioned lead article in symposium issue on the 10th anniversary of China’s accession to the WTO)

What is the Purpose of International Law?, 3 INTERNATIONAL THEORY 326 (2011)

Hudec’s Methods – and Ours, 20 MINNESOTA JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 437

(2011) International Law in Perplexing Times, 25 MARYLAND JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 11 (2010) (commissioned keynote paper for symposium issue).

Linking International Markets and Global Justice, 107 MICHIGAN LAW REVIEW 1039 (2009) Less Than Zero: The Effects of Giving Domestic Effect to WTO Law, 6 LOY. U. CHI. INTERNATIONAL LAW REVIEW (2009) (commissioned paper for symposium issue) Review of Fairness in the World Economy: US Perspectives on International Trade

Relations (Zampetti), 101 AMERICAN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 907 (2007)

The Many Dimensions of Softwood Lumber, 45 ALBERTA LAW REVIEW 319 (2007) (commissioned paper for symposium issue) Translated into Chinese and published as 朱榄叶 “软木案”的多维透视 in

19 CHINESE JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC LAW (2013) Constitutional Conceits: The WTO’s “Constitution” and the Discipline of

International Law, 17 EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 647 (2006) Translated into Chinese and published in 14 CHINESE JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC LAW 28 (2007)

Selected for inclusion in EJIL – A RETROSPECTIVE, a selection by EJIL editors of articles published during the journal’s first 25 years.

Why Constitutionalism Now? Text, Context and the Historical Contingency of Ideas,

1 JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL LAW & INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS 191 (2005) (commissioned paper for symposium in inaugural issue of peer-reviewed journal.

Jeffrey L. Dunoff Page 7 of 21

Public Participation in the Trade Regime: Of Litigation, Frustration, Agitation and Legitimation, 56 RUTGERS LAW REVIEW 961 (2004) (commissioned paper for symposium issue)

Translated into Turkish and published as Ticaret Rejiiminde Kamu Katilimi: Hukuki Ihtilâf, Engelleme, Çalkanti Zemini ve Meşruiyet, 56 ANKARA LAW JOURNAL 315 (2007)

Is Trade Law Fair?, 8 CHINESE JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC LAW 8 (2004) (published in both English and Chinese)

Book review of Environment & Statecraft: The Strategy of Environmental Treaty- Making (Barrett), 98 AMERICAN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 224 (2004)

The WTO’s Legitimacy Crisis: Reflections on the Law and Politics of WTO Dispute

Resolution, 13 AMERICAN REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL ARBITRATION 197 (2002)

Is the WTO Fair to Developing States?, 97 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 153 (2003)

How Should International Economic Disputes Be Resolved?, 42 SOUTH TEXAS LAW REVIEW 1219 (2001) (commissioned paper for symposium issue)

The WTO in Transition: Of Constituents, Competence and Coherence,

33 GEORGE WASHINGTON INTERNATIONAL LAW REVIEW 979 (2001) (commissioned paper for symposium issue)

Civil Society at the WTO: The Illusion of Inclusion?, 7 ILSA JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL AND COMPARATIVE LAW 275 (2001)

Some Costs and Benefits of Economic Analysis of International Law,

94 PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 18 (2000)

International Legal Scholarship at the Millennium, 1 CHICAGO JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 85 (2000) (commissioned paper for symposium in inaugural issue of journal)

The Death of the Trade Regime, 10 EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 733 (1999)

The Law and Economics of Humanitarian Law Violations in Internal Conflicts,

93 AMERICAN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 394 (1999) (with Joel P. Trachtman) (commissioned paper for symposium issue), reprinted in VI

INTERNATIONAL LAW: CRITICAL CONCEPTS IN LAW 47 (Joseph Weiler & Alan T. Nissel, eds. 2011); reprinted in part in L. DAMROSCH, ET AL, INTERNATIONAL LAW (5th ed. 2009; 4th ed. 2001), and reprinted in part in C. BLAKESLEY, ET AL, THE INTERNATIONAL LEGAL SYSTEM (5th ed. 2001)

Jeffrey L. Dunoff Page 8 of 21

Economic Analysis of International Law, 24 YALE JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 1 (1999) (with Joel P. Trachtman), reprinted in part in B. CARTER, ET AL, INTERNATIONAL LAW (5th ed., 2007; 4th ed., 2003)

Does Globalization Advance Human Rights?,

25 BROOKLYN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 125 (1999) (commissioned paper for symposium issue)

Border Patrol at the WTO,

9 YEARBOOK OF INTERNATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL LAW 20 (1998) (commissioned paper for symposium issue)

The Misguided Debate Over NGO Participation at the WTO,

1 JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC LAW 433 (1998)

Understanding Asia’s Economic and Environmental Crises, 37 COLUMBIA JOURNAL OF TRANSNATIONAL LAW 265 (1998)

Rethinking International Trade, 19 UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC LAW 347 (1998) (commissioned paper for symposium issue)

"Trade and": Recent Developments in Trade Policy and Scholarship --

And Their Surprising Political Implications, 17 NORTHWESTERN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL LAW AND BUSINESS 759 (1996-97) (commissioned paper for symposium issue)

Against Market Rationality: Moral Critiques of Economic Analysis in Legal Theory, 17 CARDOZO LAW REVIEW 431 (1996) (with Jane Baron) From Green to Global: Towards the Transformation of International Environmental

Law, 19 HARVARD ENVIRONMENTAL LAW JOURNAL 241 (1995), reprinted in part in B. CARTER & P. TRIMBLE, INTERNATIONAL LAW (3d ed., 1999)

Resolving Trade/Environment Issues: The Case for Trading Institutions,

27 CORNELL INTERNATIONAL LAW JOURNAL 607 (1994) Institutional Misfits: The GATT, the ICJ & Trade-Environment Disputes,

15 MICHIGAN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 1043 (1994), reprinted in part in R. FOLSOM, M. WALLACE & J. SPANOGLE, INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS TRANSACTIONS (11th ed., 2012; 10th ed., 2009; 9th ed., 2006; 8th ed., 2005; 7th ed.,

2004; 6th ed. 2003; 5th ed. 2002 and 4th ed. 1999), and reprinted in part in R. FOLSOM, M.WALLACE & & J. SPANOGLE, INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS TRANSACTIONS: TRADE AND ECONOMIC RELATIONS (2009); and reprinted in part in R. FOLSOM, M. WALLACE AND J. SPANOGLE, INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS TRANSACTIONS: A READER (1997)

Jeffrey L. Dunoff Page 9 of 21

Reconciling International Trade with Preservation of the Global Commons: Can We Prosper and Protect?, 49 WASHINGTON & LEE LAW REVIEW 1407

(1992), reprinted in part in B. WESTON, R. FALK & C. CHARLESWORTH, INTERNATIONAL LAW AND WORLD ORDER (3rd ed. 1997), and reprinted in part in L. GURUSWAMY, G. PALMER & B. WESTON, INTERNATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL LAW & AND WORLD ORDER (1994)

FORTHCOMING PUBLICATIONS AND WORKS IN PROGRESS How to Avoid Regime Collisions

CONTESTED REGIME COLLISIONS: NORM FRAGMENTATION IN WORLD SOCIETY xxx (Kerstin Blome, et al, eds, 2015)

Perspectives on the Perils, Promise, Politics – and Practice – of Interdisciplinarity

THE POWER OF LEGALITY: PRACTICES OF INTERNATIONAL LAW AND THEIR POLITICS xxx (Nikolas M. Rajkovic, et al, eds. 2015)

The Law and Politics of International Organizations

OXFORD HANDBOOK OF INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION xxx (Jacob Cogan, et al eds. 2016)

International Judicial Performances and the Performance of International Courts

THE PERFORMANCE OF INTERNATIONAL COURTS AND TRIBUNALS (Theresa Squatrito, et al eds. 2016) (with Mark A. Pollack)

A Typology of International Judicial Practices

THE JUDICIALIZATION OF INTERNATIONAL LAW – A MIXED BLESSING? (Geir Ulfstein & Andreas Follesdal, eds. 2017) (with Mark A. Pollack)

Modern International Legal Thought: A Prospectus for Political Scientists

(with Mark A. Pollack) International Courts and the Judicial Trilemma

(with Mark A. Pollack) Comparative International Judicial Practice: A Manifesto (with Mark A. Pollack) Can International Courts Address Community Interests? (with André Nollkaemper, Geir Ulfstein and Christina Voight).

Compliance as an Indicator for the State of Modern International Law

Jeffrey L. Dunoff Page 10 of 21

SELECTED PRESENTATIONS, SEMINARS & CONFERENCE PAPERS

“Evaluating Judicial Practices at the WTO,” at WTO 20th Anniversary Conference, hosted by WTO Appellate Body, at Harvard Law School. April, 2016. “Compliance as an indicator for the state of modern international law,” at

Berlin-Potsdam Research Group workshop on The International Rule of Law – Rise or Decline?, Berlin, Germany. April, 2016.

“Comparative International Judicial Practices: A Manifesto,” at Max Planck Institute

for International, European and Regulatory Procedural Law, Luxembourg City, Luxembourg. December, 2015.

“How to Study International Courts,” at Max Planck Institute for

Comparative Public Law and International Law, Heidelberg, Germany. December, 2015.

“Comparative International Judicial Practices: A Manifesto,” at research seminar on Global Governance, Haverford College. November, 2015. “Are Today’s Trade Agreements about Trade?”, at Haverford College. October,

2015. “Can Practice Theory Inform the Study of International Courts?” at Sociological

Inquiries into International Law, University of Toronto. October, 2015.

“The Performance of International Courts – and the Performances of International Judges,” at Workshop on the Performance of International Courts and Tribunals, Philadelphia, PA. October, 2015.

“Comparative International Judicial Practice: A Manifesto,” at European Society of International Law Annual Conference, “The Judicialization of International Law – A Mixed Blessing?” University of Oslo. September, 2015.

“Reversing Field: What Can International Relations Learn from International Law?” at American Political Science Association Annual Meeting. September, 2015.

“Elite Interviews of International Judges: Methodological and Empirical Insights,”

at American Political Science Association Annual Meeting. September, 2015. “International Courts and the Judicial Trilemma,” at ICON-S Annual Meeting, NYU

School of Law. July, 2015.

“International Judicial Dissent: Causes and Consequences,” at Law and Globalization Seminar, Yale Law School. March, 2015. “Interrogating the Effectiveness of International Courts,” at Pluricourts workshop on

the Effectiveness of International Courts, Weatherhead Center for International Affairs, Harvard University. September, 2014.

Jeffrey L. Dunoff Page 11 of 21

“Changing Conceptions of Regime Interaction – and of Interdisciplinarity,” at European Society of International Law 10th Anniversary Conference, “International Law and …,” University of Vienna. September, 2014.

“Old Approaches to New Developments: Should International Organizations be Subject to ‘Public Law’?” at conference on Rethinking the Boundaries of Public

Law and Public Space, European University Institute, Florence Italy. June, 2014.

“Mapping a Hidden World of International Regulatory Cooperation,” at conference on New Approaches to International Regulatory Cooperation, NYU School of Law. February, 2014.

“How to Avoid Regime Collisions,” at Contested Collisions, University of Bremen,

Germany. January, 2014.

“The Puzzle of International Judicial Dissent,” at workshop on Forgotten Practices in International Law, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam. January, 2014.

“New Trends in International Economic Law Scholarship,” at ASIL

International Economic Law Interest Group Junior Scholars Forum, the Wharton School. November, 2013.

“Judging the ICC: Torture, Deterrence, and the Uncertain Significance of

Statistics,” at Conference on Empirical Legal Studies, University of Pennsylvania Law School. October, 2013.

“After the (Second) Honeymoon: The Future of Interdisciplinary IL/IR Research,”

at World Trade Institute, University of Bern. June, 2013. “Footloose and Duty Free? Reflections on European Union – Antidumping

Measures on Certain Footwear from China,” at WTO Case Law 2013, European University Institute, Florence, Italy. June, 2013.

“The Politics, Promise and Perils of Interdisciplinarity: The Curious Case of International Law and International Relations,” keynote presentation at conference on The Power of Legality: The Practices of International Law and their Politics, European University Institute, Florence, Italy. May, 2013.

“From Interdisciplinarity to Counterdisciplinarty: Is There Madness in Martti’s Method?” at Workshop, Engaging the Writings of Martti Koskenniemi, Temple University Beasley School of Law. April, 2013.

“The Virtues of a Liberal Arts Education,” at Symposium on Teaching and the Liberal

Arts, Bryn Mawr College. April, 2013.

“Courts and (Regime) Conflicts: How Should the European Court of Justice Address Inconsistent Obligations Under EU and International Investment Law?” at Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University. March, 2013.

Jeffrey L. Dunoff Page 12 of 21

“What Can International Law Teach International Relations?” at International Relations Faculty Colloquium, Princeton University. February, 2013.

“What Can International Law Teach International Relations?” at Center for Law and Global Affairs, Sandra Day O’Connor School or Law, Arizona State University. February, 2013.

“Reversing Field: What Can International Relations Learn from International

Law?” at MacMillan International Relations Seminar Series, Yale University. December, 2012.

“International Judicial Dissent: Causes and Consequences,” at Conference on Judicial Institutions: Courts in Domestic and International Affairs, Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University. October, 2012.

“Beyond ‘Beyond Constitutionalism’: What Does Post-National Law

Look Like?” at American Society of International Law Annual Meeting. March, 2012. “Mapping Regime Interactions: A New Approach,” at Global Goverance Speaker Series, Mortara Center, School of Foreign Service, Georgetown

Universitty. March, 2012.

“International Law/International Relations: What’s New, What’s Next?” at 2012 American Society of International Law Research Forum, UCLA School of Law. November, 2011.

“See You in Court! Comparing US Approaches to Litigation at the ICJ and the WTO,” at The International Court of Justice: Rethinking the U.S. Relationship, George Washington University Law School. June, 2011. “International Law & International Relations: Taking Stock, Looking

Ahead,” at Interdisciplinary Research Group Book Workshop, Temple University Beasley School of Law. April, 2011.

“Retheorizing Regime Interaction,” at Law Program Speaker Series, Wharton School

of Business, University of Pennsylvania. April, 2011.

“Radically Rethinking Regime Interaction,” at International Law Colloquium, University of Georgia School of Law. March, 2011.

“Looking Beyond Sovereignty,” keynote address at conference on Sovereignty in Today’s World, Michigan State University School of Law. February, 2011. “Reconceptualizing the Architecture of the International Legal Order,” at LAPA 10th Anniversary conference, Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University. October, 2010. “International Law in Perplexing Times,” Donald F. Textor Endowed Lecture, Lehigh University. April, 2010.

Jeffrey L. Dunoff Page 13 of 21

“Hidden in Plain Sight: Assessing the Impact of International Regimes,” at Seminar on International Law and Its Impacts: The U.S. and the World, University of Minnesota Law School. March, 2010. “Reimagining Regime Interaction,” at Roundtable on Emerging Themes in International Law: Legal Theory, Human Rights, and Financial Regulation, Vanderbilt Law School. February, 2010. “International Law in Perplexing Times,” keynote address at conference on Multilateralism and Global Law: Evolving Conceptions of International Law and Governance, University of Maryland School of Law. October, 2009. “Nomos without Narrative” at Conference on Regime Interaction in International Law, Lauterpacht Research Centre for International Law, Cambridge University. June, 2009. “The Politics of International Constitutions: The Curious Case of the

WTO,” at faculty workshop, Harvard Law School. February, 2009.

“Ruling the World? Constitutionalism, International Law & Global Governance,” at International Law and International Relations Seminar, Weatherhead Center for International Affairs, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University. February, 2009.

“International Institutions: A Functional Approach,” at Seminar on International

Law and International Politics, Fletcher School of Law & Diplomacy. February, 2009. “The Inside-Out Logic of the WTO’s Distributive Justice Debate,” at Symposium, Distributive Justice and International Economic Law. Washington, D.C. November, 2008.

“The Politics of International Constitutions,” at University of Michigan Legal Theory Workshop. October, 2008.

“Ruling the World?: Constitutionalism, International Law and Global Governance,” at International Legal Theory Colloquium, Georgetown University Law Center. September, 2008. “A Functional Approach to Global Constitutions,” at International Law Workshop, Harvard Law School. September, 2008. “What is Global Constitutionalism?” Fletcher School of Law & Diplomacy. Tufts University. September, 2008. “International Law in Transnational Settings: The Substitution Effect,” at International Studies Association Annual Convention, San Francisco, CA. March, 2008.

Jeffrey L. Dunoff Page 14 of 21

“The Effect of Giving Effect to WTO Norms,” at WTO Law and Practice: The State of the Discipline, Chicago, IL. February, 2008.

“Global Constitutionalism and the International Trade Regime,” at Ruling the World book workshop, Temple University Beasley School of Law. December, 2007. “How Not to Think About Safeguards,” at Seminar on WTO Law, Columbia Law School. November, 2007. “Constitutionalism on the International Plane: The Case of the WTO,” at LAPA Seminar, Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University. November, 2007.

“China and the WTO: What’s New? What’s Next?,” presentation to Chinese judges, New York University School of Law. August, 2007. “The Many Dimensions of Softwood Lumber,” at Symposium: Free Trade or Fair? at Coeur d’Alene, Idaho. March, 2007.

“Global Constitutionalism: Is the WTO a Constitutional Entity?” at Institute for International Economic Law, Georgetown University Law Center. January, 2007.

“Some Secrets About Safeguards,” at Seminar on WTO Law, Columbia Law School.

November, 2006.

“WTO Law in U.S. Courts: Can Judicial Defiance Strengthen International Tribunals?” at American Political Science Association Annual Meeting, Philadelphia, PA. September, 2006.

“China and the WTO,” presentation to Chinese judges at New York University

School of Law. June 2006. “U.S. Support for Legalized Resolution of Trade Disputes: Myths and Realities,” at Conference, Next Steps in the U.S. Relationship with International Courts and Tribunals, George Washington University School of Law. May 2006. “When – and Why – Do Hard Cases Make Bad Law?” at Seminar on WTO Law,

Columbia Law School. November, 2005. “Two Cheers for the Fragmentation of International Law,” at Center on Global Legal

Problems, Columbia Law School. November, 2005. “The Political Dimensions of Constitutional Discourse,” at International Trade Law -

Theory and Practice Roundtable, Vanderbilt Law School. October, 2005. “Developing States at the WTO: What=s Wrong with Inactivity?” at Seminar on WTO

Law, Columbia Law School. October, 2005. “Commitment & Contingency: Legalized Dispute Resolution at the WTO,” at Law

and Policy of International Economic Relations Seminar, Georgetown University School of Law. September, 2005.

Jeffrey L. Dunoff Page 15 of 21

“Death, Dumping and Domestic Courts: Private Enforcement of International Norms,” International Law Colloquium at the George Washington University School of Law. September, 2005

“Domestic Enforcement of International Law: What Role for Private Parties?” at Centre for History and Economics, King=s College, Cambridge University. July, 2005. “U.S. Attitudes Toward Legalized Settlement of Trade Disputes: Contingency,

Contestation and Controversy,” at workshop on U.S. Attitudes towards International Courts and Tribunals, Asser Institute, The Hague. June, 2005.

“Constitutions & Crisis: The Constitutional Debate in the EU and the WTO,” at

Amsterdam Center for International Law, University of Amsterdam. June, 2005. “The DSU, Domestic Courts and the Paradox of Embedded Legalism,” at WTO

Luncheon Speaker Series, World Trade Organization. June, 2005.

“Enforcing Trade Law: The DSU, National Courts, and the British Weather,” at Fifth Annual WTO Conference, Gray=s Inn, London, sponsored by the British

Institute for International and Comparative Law. May, 2005.

“Health, Safety and the Environment at the WTO: What Role for the Appellate Body?” at Seminar on International Trade, Development and Monetary Relations, London School of Economics. March, 2005.

“The Puzzling Debate Over Constitutionalism at the WTO,” at Law Specialist

Seminar, London School of Economics. March, 2005.

“The Politics of Preferential Tariffs,” at Seminar on the WTO and International Economic Law, Cambridge University. February, 2005.

“Constitutional Ironies,” at Tel Aviv University School of Law Faculty Workshop.

December, 2004.

“Constitutional Conceits,” at Conference on The WTO at a Crossroads, Bar Ilan University, Israel. December, 2004.

“Constitutionalism’s Secret Ambition,” at Symposium on Changing Patterns of

Authority in the Global Political Economy, University of Tuebingen, Germany. October, 2004.

“WTO Law and Politics: Explaining the Turn to Constitutionalism,” at Delaware Valley International Law Day Conference, Temple University Beasley School of Law.

October, 2004. “Public Participation in the Trade Regime: Litigation, Frustration, Agitation and

Legitimation,” at Rutgers Law Review Symposium on Citizen Participation in the Global Trading System. March, 2004.

Jeffrey L. Dunoff Page 16 of 21

“New Trends in International Lawmaking: Conflicting Norms and the Rule of (International) Law,” at Princeton University Seminar on Law and Public Affairs. November, 2003.

“The WTO: Past, Present and Future,” to Chinese Judges at New York University

School of Law. July, 2003. “Is Trade Law Fair to Developing States?: Competing Conceptions of Fairness at

the WTO,” at American Society of International Law Annual Meeting. April, 2003.

“Resolving the WTO’s Trilemma: Mission Impossible,” at International Trade

Roundtable, Boalt Hall (Berkeley) School of Law. January, 2003. “Compliance at the WTO: Seduced by the Dispute Settlement System?” at Canadian

Council on International Law Conference on The Measure of International Law: Effectiveness, Fairness and Validity? in Ottawa, Canada. October, 2002.

“Lotus Eaters: The Varietals Dispute, the SPS Agreement, and WTO Dispute

Resolution,” at Columbia University School of Law. October, 2002.

“The WTO’s Legitimacy Crisis: Reflections on the Law and Politics of WTO Dispute Resolution,” at New York University School of Law Research Conference

on International Arbitration. September, 2002.

“Reflections on Justice After September 11th,” at Temple University School of Law. September, 2002.

“The Law of International Trade: An Introduction,” nine hour mini-course delivered

to Chinese Judges at New York University School of Law. August, 2002. “What Next for the Trade Regime, Part I”; “What Next for the Trade Regime, Part

II”, delivered as part of the 2002 U.S.- China WTO Roundtable at Temple University School of Law. July, 2002.

“Beyond Doha: The Future of the Trade Regime,” at Tsinghua University School of

Law, Beijing, China. December, 2001.

“China & the WTO,” at College of Political Science and Law, Beijing, China. December, 2001. “The WTO: An Introductory Course,” delivered at the National Judicial College in

Beijing, China to Chinese judges at invitation of China=s Supreme People=s Court. December, 2001.

“Globalization and Its Discontents: Reflections on Seattle, September 11th and

International Law,” at Center for International Studies, Bryn Mawr College. November, 2001.

Jeffrey L. Dunoff Page 17 of 21

“How Should Trade-Environment Disputes Be Resolved?” at International Environmental Law Committee of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York. April, 2001.

“International Dispute Resolution: What Can the WTO Learn from MEAs?” at

Conference, The World Trade Organization and Multilateral Environmental Agreements, sponsored by Heinrich Boll Foundation and Woodrow Wilson Center, Washington, D.C. March, 2001. “Economic Analysis and International Law,” at International Law Workshop, University of

Michigan Law School. March, 2001. “Resolving International Economic Disputes: An Institutional Perspective,” at

Conference, International Economic Conflict and Resolution, Houston, Texas. February, 2001.

“Does International Law Resolve International Disputes?,” at Woodrow Wilson

School, Princeton University. November, 2000. “Global Trade at the Millennium: What=s Wrong with the WTO?” Friel-Scanlan

endowed lecture, Temple University. November, 2000. “Civil Society at the WTO: The Illusion of Inclusion?” at Conference, International

Law in the 21st Century, sponsored by the International Law Association, New York City. October, 2000.

“The WTO in Transition: Some Questions About Constituents, Competence and

Coherence,” at Conference, Global Trade Issues in the New Millennium, George Washington University Law School. September, 2000.

“Hormones, Cattle & the Battle in Seattle: Why Have a Trade Regime?” at Georgetown University Law Center. April, 2000.

“The Costs and Benefits of Economic Analysis of International Law” at American

Society of International Law Annual Meeting. April, 2000. “The Politics of Regulatory Competition,” at Conference, Regulatory Competition and Economic Integration: Comparative Perspectives, Yale Law School. October, 1999. “Regulatory Heterogeneity and the Race to the Bottom: The Phantom Menace?” at

Transnational Law Roundtable, Temple Law School. September, 1999. “Millennium Round Matters,” at International Law Committee, Philadelphia Bar

Association. September, 1999.

“International Trade Law and Politics,” at Faculty Colloquium, Dickinson Law School. September, 1999.

Jeffrey L. Dunoff Page 18 of 21

“Misunderstanding International Trade,” at Robert M. Goldman Legal Theory Workshop, University of Maryland School of Law. April, 1999.

“Shrimp-Turtle’s Troubling Legacy: Illusion, Confusion & Preclusion,” at

Roundtable on the Shrimp-Turtle Decision and WTO Dispute Resolution, American Society of International Law Annual Meeting. March, 1999.

“Does Globalization Advance Human Rights? Tales of Synergy, Animosity and

Contingency,” at Symposium, The Universal Declaration of Human Rights at 50 and the Challenge of Global Markets, Brooklyn Law School. November, 1998.

“Trade and Environment, Institutional Competence and the Limits of the Law,”

Keynote Address at Symposium, Globalization and the Environment, sponsored by Institute for Development Strategies and Ecole Nationale d’Administration.

September, 1998. “Sustainable Development and International Competitiveness: The NAFTA

Experience,” at Seminar, Trade and Environment: Defining a Latin American Agenda, sponsored by International Center for Trade and Sustainable

Development, Santiago, Chile. September, 1998. “The Death of the Trade Regime,” at Center of International Studies, Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University. April, 1998.

“Rethinking International Trade,” at Conference, Linkages as a Phenomenon: An

Interdisciplinary Approach, American Society of International Law International Economic Law Interest Group Conference. December, 1997.

“Understanding International Trade: the Seduction of Theory,” at International

Studies Association - Midwest Annual Meeting. October, 1997.

“New Challenges to Traditional Understandings of the Trade Regime,” at International Economic Law Colloquia, Brooklyn Law School. February, 1997.

“Three Paradoxes of ‘Trade-and’ Law and Scholarship,” at Conference, Institutions

for International Economic Integration, American Society of International Law, International Economic Law Interest Group. May, 1996.

“Institutions, Incommensurability and International Law,” at Symposium, Trade and the Environment: Challenges for 1996, N.Y.U. School of Law. January, 1996.

“Trading Institutions: A New Forum for Resolving Trade/Environment Conflicts,”

at Symposium, Greening the GATT: Resolving Trade and Environment Conflicts, Cornell Law School. February, 1994.

“The Trade/Environment Debate: No Answer Is What the Wrong Question Begets,”

at Symposium, NAFTA: Trade and the Environment, University of Virginia School of Law. November, 1993.

Jeffrey L. Dunoff Page 19 of 21

“Environment and Trade: Environmental Implications of the NAFTA Trade Agreement,” Philadelphia Bar Association, Environmental Law Division. April, 1993.

“Reconciling International Trade with Preservation of the Global Commons:

Can We Prosper and Protect?” at Conference on Environmental Quality and Free Trade: Interdependent Goals or Irreconcilable Conflict?, Washington and Lee University. September, 1992.

CONFERENCES, SEMINARS, AND WORKSHOPS ORGANIZED

Carnell Chair Seminar: The Structure of International Legal Argumentation, Temple

University Beasley School of Law. April, 2016. Carnell Chair Workshop: The Performance of International Courts and Tribunals,

Temple University Beasley School of Law. October, 2015.

Carnell Chair Seminar: Between International Law and Politics: Subsequent Treaty Practice by the Parties, Temple University Beasley School of Law. February, 2014.

Temple International Law Roundtable: The Continent of International Law, Temple

University Beasley School of Law. May, 2013.

Carnell Chair Symposium: Engaging the Writings of Martti Koskeniemmi, Workshop at Temple University Beasley School of Law. April, 2013.

Fall 2011 International Law Colloquium. Lecture Series, Temple University Beasley

School of Law. September – November, 2011. Temple International Law Roundtable, “War Time: An Idea, its History, its

Consequences,” Temple University Beasley School of Law. September, 2011.

The Interpretation, Application and Enforcement of International Law. Book workshop, Temple University Beasley School of Law. May, 2011.

International Law & International Relations: Taking Stock, Looking Ahead. Book workshop, Temple University Beasley School of Law. April, 2011.

Temple International Law Roundtable, “Law Beyond Borders: Jurisprudence for a Hybrid World,” Temple University Beasley School of Law. October, 2010.

Spring 2010 International Law Colloquium. Lecture Series, Temple University

Beasley School of Law. January – April, 2010

Temple International Law Roundtable, “Does the Constitution Follow the Flag? The Evolution of Territoriality in American Law,” Temple University Beasley School of Law. October, 2009.

Jeffrey L. Dunoff Page 20 of 21

Temple International Law Roundtable, “Socializing States: Promoting Human Rights Through International Law,” Temple University Beasley School of Law. October, 2008.

Ruling the World? Constitutionalism, International Law and Global Governance, Book workshop, Temple University Beasley School of Law.

December, 2007. Spring 2007 International Law Colloquium, Lecture Series, Temple University Beasley School of Law. January-April, 2007. 2006 Delaware Valley International Law Day, Temple University Beasley School of Law. October, 2006 2005 Delaware Valley International Law Day, Temple University Beasley School of Law. October, 2005. 2004 Delaware Valley International Law Day, Temple University Beasley School of Law. October, 2004.

SARS, Public Health and Global Governance, Temple University Beasley School of Law. March, 2004. Papers published in 77 TEMPLE LAW REVIEW 144 (2004).

2003 U.S.-China Internet and E-Commerce Law Roundtable, Temple University

Beasley School of Law. July-August, 2003. Papers published in 18 TEMPLE INTERNATIONAL & COMPARATIVE LAW JOURNAL 1 (2004).

2003 Delaware Valley International Law Day, Temple University Beasley School of Law. November, 2003.

2002 U.S.-China WTO Roundtable, Temple University Beasley School of Law. July-August, 2002. Papers published in 17 TEMPLE INTERNATIONAL & COMPARATIVE LAW JOURNAL 97 (2003) EDUCATION GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY LAW CENTER

LL.M., International and Comparative Law, with distinction, 1992 Thomas Chetwood Prize (highest academic achievement in graduating class)

NEW YORK UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW

J.D., cum laude, 1986 Articles Editor, NEW YORK UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW Order of the Coif Morton Geller Award

HAVERFORD COLLEGE

B.A., magna cum laude, 1982 Phi Beta Kappa

Jeffrey L. Dunoff Page 21 of 21

LEGAL EXPERIENCE ATTORNEY 1989-91 REICHLER & SOBLE, Washington, DC

Representation of African, Asian and Latin American sovereigns in international and domestic litigation and arbitration. Legislative representation on foreign aid and international trade matters involving the Caribbean Basin Initiative; China's most favored nation trading status; foreign aid authorizations and appropriations.

LAW CLERK 1986-88 HONORABLE JOSEPH S. LORD, III, Philadelphia, PA

Drafted opinions, prepared legal memoranda, assisted in courtroom administration.

EXTERNAL REVIEWS

Referee: Cambridge University Press, Carolina Academic Press, Oxford University Press, Ethics & International Affairs, European Journal of International Law, Global Constitutionalism, International Studies Quarterly, Irish Yearbook of International Law, Leiden Journal of International Law, McGill Law Journal; Millennium – Journal of International Studies, World Politics, World Trade Review, Yearbook of International Environmental Law

External Reviewer: Bar Ilan University School of Law; Boston College Law School;

Brooklyn Law School; Case Western Reserve University School of Law; George Washington University School of Law; Hebrew University (Jerusalem) Law Faculty; Indiana University School of Law (Bloomington); Lahore University of Management Studies; Laval University School of International Studies; London School of Economics and Political Science (law); Marquette University Law School; Rutgers University (Camden) School of Law; Simon Fraser University School of International Studies; University of California, Irvine, School of Law; UCLA School of Law: University of Georgia School of Law; University of Houston Law Center; University of Kentucky Law School; University of Michigan Department of Political Science; University of Pennsylvania School of Arts and Sciences (political science); University of Pennsylvania School of Law; University of Washington School of International Studies; Vanderbilt University School of Law

Examiner or Member of Dissertation committees: Bond University, Australia (law); Hebrew University of Jerusalem (law); New York University (Politics Department); Temple University Beasley School of Law