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Attending Scholars (in alphabetical order by last name) 

Attending Scholars

Robert B. Ahdieh

Margaret Allars

Michael Asimow

Jack M. Beermann

Cora Chan

Wen-Chen Chang

Indra Spiecker genannt Döhmann

Yoav Dotan

Seong Wook Heo

Herwig C. H. Hofmann

Gabriel Bocksang Hola

Cheng-Yi Huang

Narufumi Kadomatsu

David Law

Tzu-Yi Lin

Peter L. Lindseth

Anne Meuwese

Neysun Mahboubi

Richard Murphy

Matthew S. R. Palmer

Victor V. Ramraj

Edward L. Rubin

Johannes M M Chan SC

Jens-Peter Schneider

Shen Kui

Peter L. Strauss

Russell L. Weaver

Jiunn-Rong Yeh

Staff

Robert B. Ahdieh

A graduate of Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs and Yale Law School, Robert B. Ahdieh served as law clerk to Judge James R. Browning of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit before his selection for the Honor's Program in the Civil Division of the U.S. Department of Justice.

While still in law school, Ahdieh published what remains one of the seminal treatments of the constitutional transformation of post-Soviet Russia: Russia's Constitutional Revolution - Legal Consciousness and the Transition to Democracy. Ahdieh's work has also appeared in the Michigan Law Review, the NYU Law Review, the Southern California Law Review and the Emory Law Journal, among other journals.

Ahdieh's scholarly interests revolve around questions of regulatory design. His particular emphasis has been various non-traditional modes of regulation, including those grounded in dynamics of coordination. Paradigms of coordination, though relatively less attended to in the legal literature, hold significant promise both in helping us to theorize existing regulatory patterns and in fostering new regulatory constructs.

Ahdieh has explored these issues in a variety of transactional areas, including corporate and securities law, international trade and finance, and contracts. Within these, Ahdieh’s work has emphasized two particular patterns of coordination. The first—intersystemic governance—draws on domestic regimes of federalism and transnational regimes of global governance and subsidiarity, to highlight patterns of jurisdictional overlap that, in their very complexity, may offer significant benefits. The second—patterns Ahdieh places under a rubric of ‘The New Regulation’—draws more directly on coordination game dynamics, to highlight various non-traditional regulatory forms, as well distinct occasions for potential regulatory intervention.

During the 2007-2008 academic year, Ahdieh is a visiting professor and the Microsoft/LAPA Fellow at Princeton University's Program in Law and Public Affairs.

Ahdieh's courses include Contracts, Comparative Law, International Trade Law, Corporate Federalism and Emerging Markets Law.


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