On May 26-27, 2021, the 5th Kazakh-French-Korean International Scientific Conference on International Law “Eurasian Challenges to International Economic Law after Brexit in the Context of COVID and RCEP”was held.

5/26/2021

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On May 26-27, 2021, the 5th Kazakh-French-Korean International Scientific Conference on International Law “Eurasian Challenges to International Economic Law after Brexit in the Context of COVID and RCEP” was held.  

Conference organizers: Normandy University of Le Havre, LexFEIM Research Center (France) University of Caen Normandy, Institute DESMOLOMBES (France) InHa University, Faculty of Law (South Korea) Al-Farabi Kazakh National University, Faculty of International Relations, Department of International Law The 5th international scientific joint Kazakh-French-Korean conference is aimed at analyzing current problems in the field of international trade law. EURASIA represents, as a potential, half of the world's population, or would represent, if it were economically and regionally integrated, the largest consumer market and production potential on earth. Based on this geopolitical and geo-economic background, this 2021 conference develops a problematic or analytical thread that explores whether such Eurasian economic integration is achievable or not. The conference participants will analyze this link or this relationship between these events (events in the EU, the US elections, the pandemic), as well as other Eurasian events, such as the situation in Belarus, the progress of the Chinese BRI and Kazakhstan's Nurly Zhol program, as dynamics affecting all the sub-regions of Eurasia, and how these relations and these relations are likely to form the structure of the international economic dynamics of their legal regulation on the continent. In addition to studying the consequences of BREXIT for the EU, the global economy and political stability in Europe and Asia, the conference participants are expected to consider the potential risks of similar situations in the integration associations of Eurasia, the negative consequences for individual states and the entire region, and ways to minimize them.