The global economy generates wealth and prosperity just as it engenders poverty, inequality, and injustice. The systemic flaws in the operation of cross-border markets are evident where the mechanics of the global economy enable or exacerbate deprivation, food insecurity, capital flight, the exploitation of natural resources, or environmental harms. These crises might point to failures of domestic and multilateral governance, to failures of law, regulation and systems of accountability, as well as to the need to interrogate the dominant paradigms that shape the international economic order.
Situated at ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳ Human Rights and directed by , the Laboratory for Advanced Research on the Global Economy probes the challenges posed by the complexities of the global economy and their implications for human well-being. The Lab has been set up to create a dynamic space for research, from the conceptual to the practical and across disciplines, on the myriad places where human rights, fairness and justice intersect with economic globalisation.
The Lab will initiate and support cutting-edge research, identify and address gaps in policy and practice, and consolidate and cross-fertilise high-quality scholarship that is on-going but too often streamed into separate tracks. The Lab will provide a hub for creative work to undertake advanced theoretical, normative, as well as applied research on issues central to concerns around justice under conditions of globalisation.
The inaugural phase of the Lab's work was funded by the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the support is gratefully acknowledged.
Podcast:
Fresh Squeezed! The Opinio Juris Podcast, Episode 1:2, Dr Margot Salomon
Dr Margot Salomon‘s interview for the new Opinio Juris podcast series, Fresh Squeezed, is now available. In a series that seeks to ‘push the boundaries of international law’, Margot addresses entanglements of international human rights law with capitalism. She presents the past, present and possible postcapitalist future of human rights and, drawing on her own research over two decades, situates the emancipatory potential of human rights within a wider turn seen in the social sciences: away from exploitation and towards community, cultural economies, economic democracy, and much else. In introducing the interview, the host Mohsen Al Attar remarked that ‘This was more than just an interview; it was an intellectual journey designed to broaden our thinking’. The English transcript will be translated into Arabic, Chinese, French, Hindi, Portuguese, and Spanish. (November 2023)
Find out more .
Book Launch:
The Accumulation of Waste: A Political Economy of Systemic Destruction by Ali Kadri
Phenomenal waste has surfaced as the social form and substance of value. In capital’s totalizing process, which commodifies all that comes in its way, wasting classes consume the wasted classes. This book addresses the metamorphosis of value into waste and it focuses on wars as industries of perfect waste. Whereas wasted man is visibly the prevalent commodity on sale, this central element in the commodity relation is rarely mentioned. In line with this, the book examines how waste, as a surrogate value, eludes the crises of capital and maintains its resilience. (August 2023)
Find out more about the book .
Journal article:
Emancipating Human Rights: Capitalism and the Common Good by Dr Margot E Salomon
This article begins with a study of the political economy of welfare capitalism to demonstrate how the private quest for profit was never going to be undermined by the advance of socio-economic rights. Contrary to the conventional view among human rights lawyers, capital draws power from its rights or welfarism. It is in recognizing the role that socio-economic rights play in serving capitalism that the field of international law concerned with structurally transformative human rights can begin to explore how socio-economic rights inhibit alternative forms of social organization. This work then turns to investigate how socio-economic rights might yet emancipate people from capitalist property relations. (June 2023)
Find out more .
Book Launch:
The Capital Order: How Economists Invented Austerity and Paved the Way to Fascism by Clara Mattei
In The Capital Order, political economist Clara E. Mattei explores the intellectual origins of austerity to uncover its originating motives: the protection of capital—and indeed capitalism —in times of social upheaval from below. Drawing on newly uncovered archival material from Britain and Italy, much of it translated for the first time, The Capital Order offers a damning and essential new account of the rise of austerity—and of modern economics.
Hosted with ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳ Law School
9 November 2022, 5.00pm to 6.30pm
This urgent set of interviews on the ‘IMF and Human Rights’ with political economists, economists and lawyers is part of a Special Issue of the journal from Argentina, co-edited by Juan Pablo Bohoslavsky and Francisco Cantamutto. In collaboration with the SPEAK OUT! series at the Lab, we are very pleased to be able to share these powerful proposals ready to be actioned if the IMF and its member states are willing to take people and their human rights seriously. The contributors are Blyth, Burrow, García Muñoz, Ghosh, Girón, Ortiz & Cummins, Salomon, Sundaram, Ugarteche Galarzac, Varoufakis, and von Bogdandy, with a compelling foreword by Martti Koskenniemi. (May 2021)
A Theory of Forced Labour Migration
Dr Ali Kadri, former Visiting Fellow of the Lab, has published a new book which focuses on labour dislocation and migration of Palestinians between 1967 and 1992. His work is rich with theoretical insight and practical lessons; his use of language unforgiving and poetic; his challenges to the violence of capitalism essential.
Find out more about the book .
Are There Global Obligations to Assist in the Realization of Socio-Economic Rights?
Hosted with Department for Law and the Laboratory for Advanced Research on the Global Economy at ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳ Human Rights
Wednesday 11 March 2020, 6:30pm to 8:00pm
32L.B.07, 32 Lincoln's Inn Fields
Speaker: Dr Elena Pribytkova (European University Institute, Hebrew University of Jerusalem and University of Basel)
Chair: Dr Margot Salomon (ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳)
Dr Margot Salomon wins European Society of International Law Book Prize 2019
We are delighted to announce that Margot Salomon, ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳ Human Rights Member (Law), has just won the prestigious awarded by the European Society of International Law. The ESIL Book Prize is awarded each year at the ESIL Annual Conference for an outstanding published work in the field of international law. The jury was unanimous in awarding The Misery of International Law: Confrontations with Injustice in the Global Economy (OUP 2018) to Margot and her co-authors, John Linarelli (Durham) and Sornarajah (Singapore).
19 September 2019
Nihilists, Pragmatists and Peasants
Margot Salomon's recent publication ‘Nihilists, Pragmatists and Peasants’ exemplifies the contradictions faced by economic justice advocates who by working through international human rights law must confront international law’s contemporary capitalist background structure.
See it as an NYU Institute for International Law and Justice, MegaReg Working Paper.
18 September 2019
Legal Trajectories of Neoliberalism: Critical Inquiries on Law in Europe
Recently published is a collection of think pieces on ‘Legal Trajectories of Neoliberalism: Critical Inquiries on Law in Europe’ (2019) edited by Margot Salomon and Bruno de Witte. This volume is available as a Working Paper for the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies, EUI.
18 September 2019
Dr Ali Kadri published an extended essay which investigates the meaning of imperialism in Syria, providing a valuable addition to the ongoing debate on the Syrian crisis through the lens of imperialism, modern warfare, and geopolitics. It offers a detailed analysis of how the Syrian war has been the product of imperialist ambitions.
Read excerpted from the .
Andrea Shemberg chairs discussion on human rights impact assessments of trade agreements
On 26 February, Andrea Shemberg, Visiting Fellow of the Laboratory for Advanced Research on the Global Economy, chaired a discussion at Chatham House in London on human rights impact assessments (HRIA) of trade agreements. The basis for the discussion was a report authored by Dr. Jennifer Zerk, Chatham House Associate Fellow in the International law Programme. Shemberg has published a short blog post with reflections from the event on the ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳ Investment & Human Rights Hub - .
Can companies do business with Israeli settlements in Occupied Palestinian Territory while respecting human rights?
Speakers:
Peter Frankental, Economic Relations Programme Director Amnesty International, UK
Dr. Jan Kleinheisterkamp, ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳ Law Department, Transnational Law Project
Dr. Phyllis Starkey, Independent Policy Adviser and Former MP
Peter Webster, CEO of the EIRIS Foundation
Chair:
Andrea Shemberg, Visiting Fellow, Laboratory for Advanced Research on the Global Economy, ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳ Human Rights
Date: Wednesday 14 November 2018, 7.15pm - 8.30pm
Venue: Alumni Theatre, New Academic Building (NAB)
Co-hosted with the Department of Law at ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳.
Dr Ali Kadri joins the Lab as Visiting Fellow
Ali Kadri is a Senior Fellow at the National University of Singapore and formerly Head of the Economic Analysis Section at the United Nations regional office for Western Asia. Ali’s scholarship has focused on de-development and the issue of accumulation through destruction, the production of waste and militarism. Recent books include (2016) where he shows that the destructive tendencies of imperialism in the Arab world and Africa are neither accidental nor historically contingent, but systemic and necessarily rooted in the global crisis of overproduction. His most recent work is (2017).
Lab Visiting Fellow hosted Chilean government officials to discuss business and human rights
Andrea Saldarriaga, Visiting Fellow with the Laboratory for Advanced Research on the Global Economy, hosted a delegation of four representatives from the Chilean government, including the Under-Secretary for the Economy and Business and President of the Social Responsibility Council for Sustainable Development. The meeting addressed the Chilean National Action Plan on Business and Human Rights (NAP) and explored possible avenues for effective implementation, including in the area of foreign investment. Dr. Jan Kleinheisterkamp, Associate Professor of Law at the ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳ and Andrea Shemberg, Visiting Fellow Laboratory for Advanced Research on the Global Economy, attended to provide their expertise. The meeting was one important piece of work that Saldarriaga is undertaking to build understanding around State implementation of the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights.
On 26 November 2016 the Investment & Human Rights Project (IHRP) issued its recommendations to the government of Colombia to address investment policy in its National Action Plan (NAP) on Business and Human Rights. The recommendations are part of the IHRP’s work to support the implementation of the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights State Duty to Protect (DtP) and improve guidance available to States on foreign direct investment and investment policy in the development of NAPs. See or Spanish full version here.
On 16 November 2016, the Investment and Human Rights Project (IHRP) at the Centre’s Laboratory for Advanced Research on the Global Economy and the UN Working Group on Business and Human Rights hosted a joint session at the UN Annual Forum on Business and Human Rights. The session addressed how States should implement the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights (UNGPS) in the context of investment policy, drawing on the recent work by the IHRP in Colombia and Indonesia. The UN Panel discussion brought together representatives from both countries to discuss the current plans for investment policy to be included in their respective National Action Plans to implement the UNGPs. Andrea Shemberg of the IHRP was on the Panel along with a representative of Rio Tinto. Dante Pesce of the working group moderated. The UN Annual Forum is a public meeting, but registration was required
Dr Nicolas Bueno, Lab Visiting Fellow, has written a new article '' published in The International Journal of Human Rights (2017).
Speakers: Radhika Balakrishnan, Diane Elson, James Heintz. Chair: Dr Polly Vizard, Associate Director and Associate Professorial Research Fellow, CASE. 28 February 2017
Speaker: George Katrougalos, Alternative Minister for European Affairs - Foreign Ministry, Greece and Professor of Public Law. Chair: Professor Kevin Featherstone, Eleftherios Venizelos Professor of Contemporary Greek Studies and Professor of European Politics. Discussant: Sarah Paterson, Assistant Professor of Law. 14 November 2016
Speaker: Dr Matthias Goldmann. Chair: Dr Margot Salomon. 5 May 2016
Speaker: Dr Radha Ivory. Chair: Dr Margot Salomon. 11 February 2016
On 26 November the Investment & Human Rights Project (IHRP) issued its recommendations to the government of Colombia to address investment policy in its National Action Plan (NAP) on Business and Human Rights. The recommendations are part of the IHRP’s work to support the implementation of the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights State Duty to Protect (DtP) and improve guidance available to States on foreign direct investment and investment policy in the development of NAPs. See .
Economics and Law in Conversation Series
This new initiative offers a series of interviews with economists engaging with human rights law and the objectives that animate it. The central aim of the Series is to discover and deepen existing synergies between the two fields in the interest of social justice. The Economics and Law in Conversation Series is moderated by Dr Joshua Curtis, Visiting Fellow at the Lab.
On 16 November, the Investment and Human Rights Project (IHRP) and the UN Working Group on Business and Human Rights will host a joint session at the UN Annual Forum on Business and Human Rights. The session will address how States should implement the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights (UNGPS) in the context of investment policy, drawing on the recent work by the IHRP in Colombia and Indonesia.
The work of the Lab's Investment & Human Rights Project has informed the of the UN Working Group on Business and Human Rights to be presented to the Human Rights Council's 29th session, 15 June - 3 July 2015. In its report the UN Working Group draws on the Investment & Human Rights Project's organised by the UN Conference on Trade and Development in October 2014.
Dr Margot Salomon, Lab Director, was invited by the Speaker of the Greek Parliament to join the Special Committee of the Hellenic Parliament for the Audit of the Greek Debt (Debt Truth Committee). The Committee operates under the auspices of the Hellenic Parliament to evaluate Greek debt and to address whether parts of it may be deemed illegal, illegitimate or unsustainable.
On 4 March 2015, Andrea Shemberg, co-lead of the Lab's Investment and Human Rights Project, was part of an invited panel of specialists brought together for a Chatham House seminar to discuss the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) between the EU and the US:
On 25-27 February 2015, Andrea Saldarriaga, co-lead of the Investment and Human Rights Project, participated in in Geneva, Switzerland. The purpose of the meeting was to discuss the need for reform and identify strategies to help shape a sustainable-development friendly international investment framework.
Beyond Global Capitalism: Reclaiming the Future of International Law
During 2015, Dr Margot Salomon, Professor John Linarelli and Professor M Sornarajah will conduct collaborative research on the international legal regimes of investment, trade, finance and human rights and the terms on which humanity has been challenged by them. This project is a study of what is in essence the economic violence of international law and the basis for its redemption.
On 28 October 2014 the Lab hosted the launch of Arab Development Denied: Dynamics of Accumulation by Wars of Encroachment. Dr Ali Kadri, member of the Lab's Sounding Board, was joined by Professor John Weeks (SOAS) and Dr Jason Hickel (ÐÓ°ÉÂÛ̳) for a discussion on Kadri's examination of how the Arab world has undergone a process of developmental descent, or ‘de-development’ over the past three decades.
On 10 April 2014, the Lab's Investment & Human Rights Project launched the where users can explore the connections between investment and human rights, find relevant resources in the toolboxes, watch learning videos and read expert articles on a range of investment and human rights themes.
In December 2013, the Lab's Investment & Human Rights Project participated in the UN Annual Forum on Business and Human Rights. Andrea Saldarriaga moderated a multi-stakeholder panel discussion on Investment and Human Rights and Andrea Shemberg was a panellist in the discussion on the application of the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights to state-owned financial institutions.
At the UN Forum the Investment and Human Rights Project supported the launch of the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights' training on the UN Principles for Responsible Contracts integrating human rights risk management into State-Investor contract negotiations.
(April 2024)
The major Dutch broadsheet, de Volkskrant, popped over to London to interview Margot on international law and capitalism for a Saturday special series. During the extended interview, Margot explained the ways in which international law entrenches commodification and exploitation and the routes through which dominant interests are given primacy. After warning that alternatives to transnational accumulation are too easily dismissed, Margot closes the interview with bottom up solutions that secure economic democracy, centre local communities and their knowledge, and challenge legalized systems of oppression. Also recently interviewed as part of this series are the Marxist philosopher Kohei Saito and Martin Wolf of the Financial Times.
New working paper out August 2019:, Margot E Salomon and Bruno de Witte (eds)
Law is not merely a tool to resolve disputes and protect some people’s human rights; it is a mediator and an enabler.The focus of this workshop and its think pieces produced herein was on where and how the form and content of law in this dark period of Europe’s present – its core tenets, contemporary assumptions and organization, its rules and their interpretation – contribute to the dominant project that is neoliberalism.
The project was supported by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement No 703063 on ‘Legal Rights and the Political Economy of Debt and Austerity in Europe’ held by Dr Margot Salomon at the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies (RSCAS), European University Institute (EUI).
New working paper out August 2019:, Margot E Salomon and Bruno de Witte (eds)
Law is not merely a tool to resolve disputes and protect some people’s human rights; it is a mediator and an enabler.The focus of this workshop and its think pieces produced herein was on where and how the form and content of law in this dark period of Europe’s present – its core tenets, contemporary assumptions and organization, its rules and their interpretation – contribute to the dominant project that is neoliberalism.
The project was supported by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement No 703063 on ‘Legal Rights and the Political Economy of Debt and Austerity in Europe’ held by Dr Margot Salomon at the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies (RSCAS), European University Institute (EUI).
. Interview with Dr Margot Salomon 20 July 2015
Open Global Rights: by Asuncion Lera St. Clair, Senior Principal Scientist of the Climate Change Program at DNV GL Strategic Research and Innovation and member of the Lab's Sounding Board.
In her latest article Of Austerity, Human Rights and International Institutions, Dr Margot Salomon, Lab Director, offers a timely set of arguments as to what is required as matters of law and societal expectation when it comes to having international institutions respect socio-economic rights.
Open Global Rights: by Usha Natarajan, Assistant Professor in the Department of Law at the American University in Cairo, and member of the Lab's Sounding Board.
Open Global Rights: by Rachel Kurian, Assistant Professor in the International Institute of Social Studies of the Erasmus University and member of the Lab's Sounding Board.
Open Global Rights: . Eva Pils is Associate Professor, Centre for Rights and Justice, Faculty of Law of the Chinese University of Hong Kong and member of the Lab Supper Club.
Open Global Rights: by Professor Krista Nadakavukaren Schefer, professor of international law at the University of Basel’s Faculty of Law and member of the Lab's Sounding Board.
Open Global Rights: In the second Lab post on the Open Global Rights blog, researcher Louis Karaolis addresses the double European crisis of debt and asylum in .
Open Global Rights: The Lab is now a regular contributor to the Open Global Rights blog on Open Democracy. is a multilingual, online forum for debating human rights worldwide. In the first blog from the Lab, , Lab Director Dr Margot Salomon details how a range of actors responsible for austerity measures in Greece is at best ignoring and, at worst, violating socio-economic rights.
Lab Director, Dr Margot Salomon, was interviewed by Canada's foreign relations council as part of a series of interviews with Canadians who have made notable contributions to debates on global issues. In Dr Salomon talks about how globalisation has shaped the concept of human rights, how international organisations and companies can be held accountable for human rights abuses, and how our current system actually undermines development.
This urgent set of interviews on the ‘IMF and Human Rights’ with political economists, economists and is part of a Special Issue of the journal from Argentina, co-edited by Juan Pablo Bohoslavsky and Francisco Cantamutto. In collaboration with the SPEAK OUT! series at the Lab, we are very pleased to be able to share these powerful proposals ready to be actioned if the IMF and its member states are willing to take people and their human rights seriously. The contributors are Blyth, Burrow, García Muñoz, Ghosh, Girón, Ortiz & Cummins, Salomon, Sundaram, Ugarteche Galarzac, Varoufakis, and von Bogdandy, with a compelling foreword by Martti Koskenniemi. (May 2021)
In the latest Speak Out piece, Introduction to the Human Economy, Dr Nicolas Bueno questions the social necessity of traditional paid work. He presents the human economy framework outlined in the article ‘’ (International Association of Labour Law Journals Award 2017). How to reduce the fear of being unemployed, the risks associated with quitting an unfulfilling job or retiring earlier? Is there an economic model that could make us freer from traditional paid work and would work for all in both developing and developed countries? The discussion in this piece goes beyond the idea of a basic income. After presenting the historical origins of the right to work, influenced by the dogma of work, this piece introduces the terminology of the human economy. It questions the necessity of traditional paid work and discusses how it may be possible to achieve greater freedom from work whilst simultaneously securing a wide range of human benefits.
Read Introduction to the Human Economy here
In this piece on Development under Uncertainty in the Arab World, Dr Ali Kadri discusses obstacles to development in the Arab world with emphasis on the baleful impact of conflicts. He tells us about the social efficiency criterion, the legal corruption of institutional lenders, and how private interests exhibit a necrotrophic relationship with the public sector or indigenous economy. The key question to investigate, it is said, is the relationship between wars and violent social order restructuring.
Read the first piece in the series of Speak Out!
Economics and Law in Conversation
This new initiative offers a series of interviews with economists engaging with human rights law and the objectives that animate it. The central aim of the Economics and Law in Conversation Series is to discover and deepen existing synergies between the two fields in the interest of social justice.
In the final reflection piece for our Series of Conversations, Dr Joshua Curtis describes some of the major themes that emerged from the interviews with economists. Within the context of a suggested merger of heterodox economics and human rights law, the piece stresses strong commonalities including a shared depth of ethical commitment and a common aversion to technocratic policy solutions. Dr Curtis was a Visiting Fellow at the Lab from 2015-2016 and moderated the Series. He is currently a Postdoctoral Research Associate at the School of Law and Social Justice, University of Liverpool. Read the final reflection piece in our Series on Economics and Law in Conversation.
In our third Conversation, Ha-Joon Chang, Reader in Economics at Cambridge University, offers his thoughtful perspective on the relationship between economics, law and in particular human rights. He shows how an accurate picture of history, and a refusal to separate theoretically economics from politics, are both necessary to demystify the economic field and to think clearly about the laws and regulations that our present society requires.
Read the third entry in our Series on Economics and Law in Conversation
In our second Conversation, Margaret Somers, Professor of Sociology at the University of Michigan, traverses the relationship between a new sociology of human rights, the nature of citizenship and the structure of our political economy. She relates the lessons of Polanyi's work regarding the dependence of markets on social relations to the widening cracks in our present economic paradigm to then point us towards change. Read the second entry in our Series on Economics and Law in Conversation
In our first Conversation, Radhika Balakrishnan, an economist and Professor in Women's and Gender Studies at Rutgers University, shares her knowledge and experience of years of work at the intersection of human rights and economic policy. Read the first in our Series on Economics and Law in Conversation
Lab 'Views
In this inaugural series of interviews the Lab reaches out to Sounding Board members to find out how injustice functions in the areas in which they work and how the Lab's creative focus across disciplines can help inform their research.
LAB 'views
In the third in our series of interviews with Lab affiliates Dr Ali Kadri unpacks a complex and violent account of financialisation, militarisation and oil in the Middle East, and explains how human rights and sovereignty over natural resources of disempowered national working classes challenge economic orthodoxy. Dr Kadri is a member of the Lab Sounding Board. Read the interview
Lab 'views
In the second of our series of interviews with Lab affiliates we asked Dr Rachel Kurian to explain the role of 'flexicurity' when it comes to protecting workers, and to consider why austerity has become the dominant response to economic crises in Europe. Read the interview
Lab 'views: In the first of a series of interviews with Lab affiliates, we asked Professor Olivier De Schutter, as he comes to the end of 6 years as the UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food, what the key concerns are that undermine the exercise of the right to food, how change has taken place, and where we might next put our research energies. Read the Interview.