We learned that the European Research Council has recently
decided to fund the CaPANES-project (ERC Consolidator Grant) by Professor D. De
Ruysscher.
On 17 March 2022, the European Research Council announced its decision to fund
the CaPANES-project. This project is an ERC Consolidator Grant of Prof. Dave De
ruysscher, who previously, in 2016, obtained an ERC Starting Grant. The ERC
Consolidator Grant is funded for the amount of 1.9 million EUR. The CaPANES-project
(Causal Pattern Analysis of Economic Sovereignty), which will last five
years, will analyze the legal concept of economic sovereignty from a historical
perspective. The present-day notion of sovereignty of states does not
adequately capture foreign trade relations, networks or economic clout. These
shortcomings have resulted from a historical reduction of the meaning of
sovereignty since the 1600s. The project will analyze legal concepts of sovereignty
that were developed before that time. Cases will be six networked cities of
commerce (Bruges, Southampton, Rouen, Lübeck, Toulouse and Florence) in the
period of 1400-1620. These cities were interconnected through trade routes,
correspondence and diplomacy. Legal concepts depicting the cities’ sovereignty
were crafted bottom-up and were often more encompassing than the legal concept
of sovereignty of today, also for economic relations. These concepts absorbed
changes taking place within cities and in the economic relations between
cities. In the CaPANES-project, agent-based and network methods will be used to
track down these changes. Developments at the level of individual cities, which
will be analyzed with agent-based models, influenced institutional set-ups,
constitutional approaches, the organization of trade and policies of access
toward foreigners. At the level of networks between cities, dynamics impacting
on sovereignty concepts related to foreign relations and these added legal features
that were different from those characteristics that resulted from developments
within cities. Network analysis will make it possible to detect the dispersal and
weight of sovereignty concepts and whether some concepts underpinned a
transnational field of sovereignty. Causal patterns underlying change in the
concepts mentioned will be the outcome of the research, and following a
comparison of historical with present-day situations, these patterns will be
used to propose an updated legal concept of economic sovereignty. The project’s
team consists of the principal investigator (Dave De ruysscher), one post-doc
and five PhD fellows.
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