![]() |
|
|||
| about us | past issues | riesenfeld symposium | submissions | editorial board | member portal | subscribe | |
||||
Riesenfeld Award Winners |
The 2008 Stefan A Riesenfeld Symposium Realizing The Potential: Global Corporations And Human Rights The 2008 Riesenfeld Symposium will explore the potential of multinational corporations to advance human rights practices globally. It will bring together students, scholars, global business leaders, and legal practitioners in a collaborative, synergistic forum on the role of the legal profession in realizing humanitarian potential of corporate social responsibility.
About the Stefan A. Riesenfeld Symposium and Award The Spring 2000 Symposium "A Legacy of War: Displaced Masses in the Twenty-first Century,” sponsored by the Berkeley Journal of International Law, marked the beginning of the Stefan A. Riesenfeld Symposium series organized annually at Boalt Hall School of Law, University of California at Berkeley. Each year, the Journal publishes a Stefan A. Riesenfeld Symposium Edition which focuses on notable issues in international law. Every two years, the Riesenfeld Symposium includes a conference, and a Stefan A. Riesenfeld lecture is delivered in those years in which a conference is not held. Additionally, each year the Board of Editors of the Journal, with the approval by the Dean of Boalt Hall, presents a Stefan A. Riesenfeld Memorial Award to a distinguished scholar or practitioner who has made outstanding contributions to the field of international law. The purpose of the Award is to honor the memory of Professor Riesenfeld who devoted much of his life and career to the study and practice of international law, and to recognize a recipient who has demonstrated a commitment to the values and ideas that Professor Riesenfeld espoused and advocated. Professor Stefan Albrecht Riesenfeld was born on June 8, 1908 in Breslau, Germany. He studied at the University of Breslau, now University of Wroclaw, Poland, and received a Dr. Iur. summa cum laude in 1930 for his dissertation on the law of mutual insurance companies. Professor Riesenfeld then practiced with a Berlin commercial firm, and became a research associate of the Kaiser-Wilhelm Institute, founded by Ernst Rabel, Professor Riesenfeld's mentor who later escaped the Nazi regime by coming to teach at the University of Michigan. Professor Riesenfeld himself escaped Nazi Germany in 1934 at the age of twenty-six and came to Boalt Hall to work as a researcher of comparative law for the then-Dean Edwin Dickinson. Speaking little English on his arrival, Professor Riesenfeld nevertheless managed to graduate from Boalt Hall in 1937 with distinction, and to earn a J.S.D from Harvard in 1940. Professor Riesenfeld began his academic career at the University of Minnesota, simultaneously teaching law and earning an undergraduate degree in engineering, but he soon voluntarily enlisted in the U.S. Navy during World War II, and he served as and LST commander in the South Pacific, returning to his teaching post in Minnesota in 1946. In 1952, Professor Riesenfeld joined the Boalt faculty, where he remained until 1976 when school regulations required him to retire. Nevertheless, Professor Riesenfeld received continuous annual re-appointments at Boalt Hall until his death on February 17, 1999 at the age of ninety. During his academic career, Professor Riesenfeld wrote numerous books and articles on a wide range of international law topics, including maritime law, trade and developmnent law, the European Economic Community, treaty law, and labor law. He also served as Counselor for Public International Law at the U.S. Department of State, and was twice engaged to argue major cases before the International Court of Justice in the Hague. Professor Riesenfeld's public interests ranged from reform proposals of the German Civil Code during the Weimar Republic through participation in the drafting of Germany's Basic Law during the allied occupation to the United States Bankruptcy Commission's second reform effort. The Spring 2000 Symposium was the first Symposium that the Berkeley Journal of International Law hosted without Professor Riesenfeld's presence among us. By creating a Symposium and an Award in honor of his memory, the Journal has taken a small, but an appropriate step to thank him. This first Stefan A. Riesenfeld Symposium focused on refugees and displaced masses, a topic with which Professor Riesenfeld was particularly familiar, both personally and professionally. It is a privilege and honor to recognize so great a man and a scholar, and to continue his legacy and commitment to the study and development of international law at Boalt Hall School of Law.
|
|||
Riesenfeld Symposia
2008 - Realizing The Potential: Global Corporations And Human Rights |
||||
|
|
|||
Berkeley Journal of International Law ~ 372 Boalt Hall ~ University of California ~ Berkeley ~ 94702
510-642-5759
contact the webmaster