PROGRAMA DE PÓS-GRADUAÇÃO STRICTO SENSU

Internacionalização PPGD

Cursos Internacionais

O Programa de Pós-graduação stricto sensu em Direito da Regulação (PPGD) da FGV Direito Rio oferta de forma gratuita e periódica os Cursos Internacionais à sua comunidade acadêmica. Com duração de 15 horas/aulas, tratam-se de cursos de curta extensão ministrados por professores estrangeiros convidados. Confira abaixo os Cursos Internacionais ofertados até o momento:

  • Horário nos dias 6, 8, 13/05/2025: 17h às 20h. 
  • Horários no dia 15/05/2025: 15h às 16h30 e 17h às 20h.   
  • Professores responsáveis: Steven J. Balla (George Washington University) e Natasha Salinas (FGV Direito Rio)
  • Ementa: Regulation is one of the most common and important ways in which public policy is made around the world. Despite its centrality, the process through which regulation is made is often not well understood. The regulatory process has two key elements: analysis and participation. In this short course, we will focus on stakeholder and public participation in regulatory policymaking. Participation has the potential to enhance the quality and legitimacy of regulatory policymaking. But does participation in practice have such enhancing effects? To address this question, we will read and discuss theoretical, empirical, and applied research on participation in regulatory policymaking. These readings consider such issues as the identity of participants, the impact of participation on regulatory policymaking, and the promises and dangers of technology-enabled participation. The main jurisdictional focus of the course is the United States (including recent developments under Presidents Biden and Trump), although we will also encounter regulatory policymaking in such diverse settings as the European Union and People’s Republic of China.

  • Horário: 14h às 16h | No dia 10/4: 1h ás 17h. 
  • Período: 31/03/2025 - 10/04/2025
  • Professores responsáveis: E. Donald Elliott (Yale Law School) e Patrícia Sampaio (FGV Direito Rio)
  • Ementa: Introduction to the US and Brazil’s separation of powers. Analysis of the main precedents that built the Administrative State. Discussion of the scope and limits of administrative rulemaking in the US and in Brazil. Judicial review of facts and judicial review of public policies according to US Supreme Court and Brazil’s Supreme Court precedents. Assessment of US recent case law that overruled the idea of judicial deference to administrative decisions and its implications to Brazil. Characteristics of independent commissions under US and regulatory agencies under Brazilian Law.

  • Horário: 13h às 16h | 9h às 12h. 
  • Período: 14/06/2023 - 20/06/2023
  • Professor Responsável: Shauhin Talesh – UC Irvine Professor of Law, Sociology, and Criminology, Law & Society.
  • Ementa: This is a course on the relationship between private organizations and law.  Courts, legislation and regulations influence society by enacting and issuing rules that shape behavior. But organizations also play a big role in shaping and influencing the content and meaning of law. This course does not focus on how government and adjacent regulatory institutions attempt to regulate organizations and individuals in society.  This course turns the tables and focuses on how the private organizations shape, influence and  regulates so many aspects of society as a form of private governance.  This seminar styled course will focus on how private organizations shape the social and legal environment, focusing on the relationship between law and organizations in the context of employment, consumer protection, cybersecurity, policing and health. In particular, we will read a series of empirical articles that focus on how organizations mediate the way employers understand anti-discrimination law, how private organizations shape consumer protection legislation, how private organizations regulate laws governing police departments, how insurers act as regulators, and how health insurance regulates access to care. Throughout the entire course, we will pay particular attention to the conditions under which private organizations facilitate and inhibit inequality in society.  Students will gain an understanding of the rules and structures that regulate organizations, but also how organizations regulate so many aspects of society and the impact these forces have on social and economic inequality.
     
  • Horário: 13h30 às 16h30 
  • Período: 08/05/2023 - 12/05/2023
  • Professor Responsável: Nuno Garoupa - Ph.D. em Economia pela University of York (UK). Mestre em Direito (Master of Law - LL.M.) pela University of London. Vice-Diretor de Pesquisa e Desenvolvimento; Diretor da Graduação e; Professor de Direito da Antonin Scalia Law School, George Mason University.
  • Ementa: Theories of economic regulation; use of criminal law and regulation; forms of social and economic regulation; new trends – behavioral sciences and other critiques; comparative administrative law and economics.
     
  • Horário: 18h30 às 21h30. 
  • Período: 21/03/2022 - 25/03/2022
  • Professores Responsáveis: 
  1. Bruno Dantas – Ministro do Tribunal de Contas da União (TCU). Doutor e Mestre em Direito (PUC-SP). Possui Pós-Doutorado em Direito pela UERJ, com pesquisas desenvolvidas como Visiting Researcher na Cardozo School of Law (Nova York). Foi PostDoctoral Scientific Guest do Max Planck Institute for Regulatory Procedural Law (Luxemburgo) em 2017 e pesquisador visitante no Institute de Recherche Juridique da Universidade Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne em 2019. Foi Consultor-Geral do Senado Federal e Conselheiro do CNJ e do CNMP. Membro da Comissão de Juristas instituída pelo Presidente do Senado Federal para elaborar anteprojeto de novo Código de Processo Civil. Autor de diversos livros e artigos jurídicos.
  2. Fernando Leal – Doutor em Direito pela Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel na Alemanha. Doutor e mestre em Direito Público pela UERJ. Graduado em Direito pela UERJ. Professor e Coordenador do Mestrado Acadêmico em Direito da Regulação da FGV Direito Rio. Realizou estágio pós-doutoral na condição de pesquisador visitante na Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg.
  3. Matthew Stephenson - Professor de Direito na Harvard Law School, onde leciona direito administrativo, legislação e regulação, direito anticorrupção e economia política de direito público. Recebeu seu J.D. e Ph.D. (ciência política) de Harvard em 2003, e seu B.A. pela Harvard College em 1997. Sua pesquisa se concentra na aplicação de teoria política positiva ao direito público, particularmente nas áreas de processo administrativo, anticorrupção, instituições judiciais e separação de poderes.  
  4. Salim Neto - Mestre em Direito pela Universidade de Columbia, EUA. Especialista em Direito Internacional Comparado (Achievement in Foreign and Comparative Law) pela Parker School of Foreign and Comparative Law, Columbia University. Bacharel em Direito pela UERJ. Advogado. Organizador da Associação Carioca de Compliance (Rio Compliance). Palestrante em congressos e seminários de compliance. Professor convidado dos cursos de LL.M. em Direito do FGV Law Program.
  • Ementa: General Approach To Systemic Corruption; A Comparative Approach To Combatting Corruption;  Trends In Anticorruption Enforcement In Brazil;  Legal/Political Institutions And Corruption;  Theoretical And Historical Perspectives On Anticorruption Reform. 
  • Horário: 13h às 16h. 
  • Período: 09/11/2020 - 13/11/2020
  • Professores Responsáveis:
  1. Josef Ostransky - Is a lecturer at the MIDS, where he teaches international commercial and investment arbitration, and carries out academic research under the auspices of the Geneva Center for International Dispute Settlement (CIDS). Prior to joining the MIDS he was a research assistant at the CIDS, taught international investment law as a visiting lecturer at the Masaryk University, Faculty of Law, and worked in private legal practice as a junior associate in the dispute resolution group of Ambruz & Dark Deloitte Legal in the Czech Republic.
  2. Fernando Leal – Doutor em Direito pela Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel na Alemanha. Doutor e mestre em Direito Público pela UERJ.  Graduado em Direito pela UERJ. Professor e Coordenador do Mestrado Acadêmico em Direito da Regulação da FGV Direito Rio. Realizou estágio pós-doutoral na condição de pesquisador visitante na Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg.
  • Ementa: How and Why International Investment Law (IIL) Originated?: Conventional and Critical Accounts.  Legal, Regulatory and Institutional Framework of IIL.  Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) Primer (Mechanisms and Forums, Jurisdiction and Admissibility, Investment and Investor, The Award). IIL Substantive Law Framework: Domestic Regulation of Foreign Investment, Expropriation, Fair and Equitable Treatment, Non-Discrimination Standards.  Brazil in the IIL regime. The Effects of IIL: Intended and Unintended Consequences. IIL Today: Debates and Prospects (UNCITRAL Reform Debate). 
     
  • Horário: 18h30 às 21h30
  • Período: 09/07/19 – 16/07/2019
  • Professores Responsáveis:
  1. Auke Willems: 
  2. Fernando Leal
  • Ementa: Cross-border criminal law; international cooperation in criminal matters; European cooperation in criminal matters; fundamental rights; extradition; mutual legal assistance.
     

As manifestações expressas por integrantes dos quadros da Fundação Getulio Vargas, nas quais constem a sua identificação como tais, em artigos e entrevistas publicados nos meios de comunicação em geral, representam exclusivamente as opiniões dos seus autores e não, necessariamente, a posição institucional da FGV. Portaria FGV Nº19 / 2018.

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