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Martijn Hesselink

Full-time Professor

Department of Law

Contact info

[email protected]

[+39] 055 4686 764

Office

Villa Salviati- Castle, SACA110

Administrative contact

Valeria Raso

Working languages

Dutch, English, French, Italian

Curriculum vitae

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Links

SSRN

Martijn Hesselink

Full-time Professor

Department of Law

Biography

Martijn Hesselink was appointed Professor of Transnational Law and Theory at the EUI in September 2019. Prior to joining the EUI, he was Professor of European Private Law at the University of Amsterdam, where he was also the founding Director of the Centre for the Study of European Contract Law. Professor Hesselink is an editor of European Law Open. He served as a member of the European Commission's expert group on European contract law and wrote numerous studies, reports and briefing notes on matters of contract law and consumer law for the Legal Affairs Committee of the European Parliament.Professor Hesselink has been a visiting professor or fellow at several universities, including René Descartes (Paris V), Roma Tre, Católica Global School of Law (Lisbon), Panthéon-Sorbonne (Paris I), Sciences Po (Paris), Columbia Law School (New York), and the Institute for European and Comparative Law (Oxford).

He published many articles, in leading international journals, and several books, including most recently Justifying contract in Europe: political philosophies of European contract law (Oxford University Press, 2021). His current main research interests include: social justice, radical democracy, revolution, and their relationships to law, in particular the private law and constitutional law of the EU. His main approaches to the law are normative and critical.

Recent research output

View more Research Output Go to Cadmus

Additional information

I welcome research proposals on: 

  • (European) private law and its theory
  • EU justice 
  • EU democracy 
  • Transnational law, justice and democracy 
  • Legal epistemology   
  • Legal EurocentrismI

I particularly encourage researchers to adopt normative or critical approaches to law, such as moral and political philosophy, feminist theory, and critical race theory.

  • Normative approaches to law
  • The political philosophy of European contract law
  • Legal epistemology: what do legal scholars know?
  • Transnational injustice and private law
  • Knowing EU law
  • EU justice
  • Law & Eurocentrism (together with Neha Jain and Sarah Nouwen)
  • Intersectionality & private law (together with Lyn Tjon Soei Len)
  • The law and politics of digital fairness ) (together with Candida Leone and Tommaso Fia)
  • The revolution
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