Marion Panizzon is assistant professor in international economic law of the University of Bern. A Swiss citizen, Marion obtained an LL.M. at Duke University School of Law and thereafter worked as a JIEL Editorial Assistant to Prof. John H. Jackson at the Institute of International Economic Law of Georgetown University. Her doctoral thesis, sponsored by a van Calker scholarship, dealt with Good Faith in the Jurisprudence of the WTO (Hart Publishing, 2006). At the World Trade Institute, Marion leads a research group mapping the treaty law for managing economic migration, financed by the National Center of Competence in Research (NCCR-Trade). Next to her NCCR projects, she is now leading a separate research project sponsored by the Swiss Science Foundation on conceptualizing transnational migration management as global administrative law. Her commissioned research included projects for the Institut du Développement Durable, Paris, the International Organization for Migration, the Friedrich-Ebert-Foundation and the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation. Marion lectures international trade regulation at the University of Bern. She teaches public international law courses for the MILE program of the WTI. Since 2010, Marion reads trade, migration and global labor markets for UNITAR and is a guest lecturer at the Center of Competence for Public Management at the University of Bern. Marion is co-editor of Intellectual Property: Trade, Competition, and Sustainable Development, Michigan University Press (2003), GATS and the Regulation of International Trade in Services, Cambridge University Press (2008) and Migration and Mobility Partnerships (forthcoming, 2010).
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