Nous
sommes heureux·euses de vous annoncer la parution, ce jeudi
27 mars
2025,
du 24è
numéro de Délibérée,
revue de réflexion critique sur la justice, les droits et les
libertés, co-éditée par la maison d’édition La
Découverte, dont le thème est consacré à la nationalité (vous
retrouverez ici
l'édito
du numéro et là
le sommaire).

Pour vous (ré)abonner en ligne à la version papier, rendez-vous sur le site de Cairn.info : https://www.cairn.info/revue-deliberee.htm
Pour vous (ré)abonner par courrier : le bulletin d’abonnement en pièce jointe est à imprimer et à renvoyer par la poste à l’adresse indiquée
Pour
celles et ceux qui hésitent encore à s'abonner, certains articles
publiés dans les précédents numéros sont en
accès libre sur
le
site Internet https://revue-deliberee.org et
le blog Médiapart de la revue :
https://blogs.mediapart.fr/revue-deliberee/blog
Vous pouvez aussi vous procurer la revue Délibérée dans toutes les bonnes librairies.
***
Le Thème - Épreuves de nationalité
Jules Lepoutre –
accompagné d’un encadré sur l’organisation du traitement du contentieux relevant du juge judiciaire par Simon Chardenoux
Dénaturaliser
sous
Vichy. Des
magistrats au travail
Claire Zalc
De
la preuve au soupçon. La
pratique du
certificat de nationalité
Émilien Fargues, Myriam Hachimi-Alaoui, Nicolas Blanc
À
Mayotte, la fabrique des étranger·ères
Rémi Carayol
accompagné d’un encadré sur le droit du sol à Mayotte par Yseult Arnal
Linda Guerry
Une
bonne conscience à peu de frais. Le
principe d’égalité hommes-femmes
Lisa Carayon
En variations
Déambulation
au tribunal de Bobigny
Jean-Claude Bouvier
Liberté
d’expression en sursis pour les magistrat·es
Isabelle Boucobza
Nos rubriques
L’invité·e
Chowra Makaremi
Justice partout
Judiciarisation et démocratie au Japon
Adrienne Sala
Justice pour toustes
Digne
ou sérieux ? Le
filtre de l’aide juridictionnelle par les cours suprêmes
Ana-Maria Falconi, Claire Lemercier
Pièces à conviction(s)
Notes de lecture sur :
Féminicides, une histoire mondiale, dirigé par Clarisse Taraud
La loi et l’ordre racial. Le droit comme instrument d’oppression des Noirs aux États-Unis, de David Diallo
La domination blanche, de Solène Brun et Claire Cosquer
Derrière le mythe métis, de Solène Brun
Pour
contacter la rédaction
: redac...@revue-deliberee.org et
en cas de difficulté concernant votre abonnement:
diff...@cairn.info
Call for Applications – deadline May 15th
Summer School : August 27–30, 2025, au Moulin d'Andé, France
The Business of the State: Elites, Expertise, and Policy Instruments Shaping the Public-Private Intersection
TEPSIS - Laboratoire d'excellence, Transformation de l'État, Politisation des sociétés, Institution du social
CMH ; Centre universitaire de Norvège, Univ. D’Oslo ; CESSP
Coordinated by :
Benjamin Lemoine (CMH, CNRS)
Marte Mangset (Centre universitaire de Norvège, Univ. D’Oslo)
Antoine Vauchez (CESSP, CNRS)
Invited speakers and discussants:
Cornel Ban (Copenhagen Business School)
Kristin Surak (London School of Economics)
Anna Tyllström (Institute for future studies/Uppsala University)
We invite doctoral students, postdoctoral researchers, master students and other academics to submit abstracts for participation in the international summer school and workshop, The Business of the State, taking place from August 27–30, 2025, at the scenic Moulin d’Andé in France. Organized by an interdisciplinary team of scholars within sociology, political science, political economy, socio-legal studies and history, this summer school aims to explore the dynamics of expertise, professional practices and tools of governance (legal, financial, economic) that shape the evolving boundaries between public and private sectors.
Our goal is to deepen theoretical and empirical understandings of how states and public entities—through their actions, investments, and assets—are (re)qualified, commercialized, and marketed. We will further explore how experts or professionals contribute to structuring public-private relationships.
This summer school will provide a platform to systematize and compare research on:
The types of knowledge involved in governance, competition, and compliance
The technical and legal instruments (e.g., contracts, prospectuses, extraterritorial mechanisms) that define public actors’ rights and obligations
The transformation of key concepts such as sovereignty, law, zones, and territory
Several professional groups will be central to our discussions, including consultants, business lawyers, in-house legal teams, tax experts, and senior officials from financial, legal, and diplomatic institutions. We will also focus on critical processes at the intersection of law, sociology, and political science, such as privatizations, public procurement, outsourcing, consulting markets, investment arbitration, and bond issuance.
The summer school will be organized around three main themes:
1. Public-Private Struggles for the Right to Regulate and Enclaves of Legal Sovereignty
This session explores how regulatory power—whether through laws, judicial rulings, or administrative decisions—has become a marketable asset subject to negotiation. We will analyze how governance today relies on experimentation, partnerships, and legal exemptions, effectively transforming regulatory power into a subject of public-private bargaining.
Guest Lecturer: Kristin Surak, London School of Economics
2. Money professionals and the redefinition of the public-private frontier
Circulation of elites, revolving doors, porosity and new ways of regulating the public-private frontier (consulting firms, investors, business lawyers and economic intelligence).
This second section will focus on the professions and private industry that do business with the State, for whom public power and sovereignty are objects, investment vehicles, clients, targets, partners, allies or adversaries. For example, we'll be looking in detail at money professionals (economists, corporate lawyers, tax advisors, fund managers and financial directors) and how they acquire and exercise expertise and authority, but also distribute resources: they can decide who is authorized, and under what conditions, to access credit. The world of public-private money professionals raises new questions about how to delimit professional groups, and raises the issue of demarcating the boundaries between the public and private spheres.
Guest lecturer: Anna Tyllström, Institute for Future Studies/Uppsala University
3. The State as a financial player in a globalized world
This third theme will be devoted to the study of new forms of government action and financial intervention. Indeed, while public authorities play the role of issuer of debt securities and provide the private financial sector with a whole range of vehicles for investing their capital (the invested state), states and public organizations also act as investors through various channels: sovereign wealth funds and public investment banks (the investor state). The aim is to understand any tensions between these different roles, and to see how the practices and roles of the investor state and the invested state are affected by the norms, codes and practices specific to global financialization.
Guest lecturer: Cornel Ban, Copenhagen Business School
Target audience: The selected audience will be masters students, doctoral students, post-doctoral students and scholars working in Europe and beyond on topics at the crossroads of political sociology, political economy and socio-legal studies, with a focus on knowledge, professionals, tools and infrastructures at the frontier between the public and private sectors.
The summer school lasts 4 full days and will take place at scenic site Moulin d'Andé (125 km North-West of Paris). It will be given exclusively in English. Each course will be organized around two different formats:
*A morning plenary session featuring experienced international researchers presenting the state of the art and the theoretical and methodological challenges of a particular research theme.
*An afternoon structured around the presentation and discussion of young researchers’ own work.
One of the evenings will be organized around a screening-discussion of a documentary. A final discussion may be organized with the young researchers and the instructors at the end of the summer school, to build a proposal for a publication.
Important : While participants are expected to cover their own travel expenses, accommodation and catering will be provided on site.
Proposals are due by May 15th and should include a CV, a summary of current research (one word page) and be sent to Marte Mangset (marte....@sosgeo.uio.no), Antoine Vauchez (antoine...@uni-paris1.fr) or Benjamin Lemoine (benjamin...@ens.psl.eu).
![]() | |