David M. Trubek is Voss-Bascom Professor of Law and Senior Fellow of the Center for World Affairs and the Global Economy (WAGE) at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. From 1989-2001, he was the UW's Dean of International Studies and Director of the International Institute. He was awarded the Kalven Prize by the Law and Society Association and was appointed Chevalier dans l'Ordre des Palmes Academiques by the French government. He has published articles and books on the role of law in development, the social role of the legal profession, European integration, the impact of globalization on legal systems, the governance of work and welfare in a new economy, civil litigation, social theory, and critical legal studies.
Alvaro Santos is Emerging Scholars Program Assistant Professor at University of Texas at Austin School of Law where he teaches Law and Economic Development and International Trade Law. Santos is an S.J.D. candidate at Harvard Law School, where his dissertation focuses on the influence of global economic integration on domestic legal regimes regulating the labor market, particularly on the North American economic integration and its effects on Mexican labor relations. Santos' scholarly interests also include international law, transnational labor law, and law and social theory.
1. An introduction: the third moment in law and development theory and the
emergence of a new critical practice David M. Trubek and Alvaro Santos; 2.
Three globalizations of law and legal thought: 1850-2000 Duncan Kennedy; 3.
The 'Rule of Law' in development assistance: past, present, and future
David M. Trubek; 4. The 'Rule of Law', political choices, and development
common sense David Kennedy; 5. The dialectics of law and development Scott
Newton; 6. The future of law and development: second generation reforms and
the incorporation of the social Kerry Rittich; 7. The World Bank's uses of
the 'Rule of Law' promise in economic development Alvaro Santos.