The event will open with institutional greetings from Sandro Staiano, Director of the Department of Law of the University Federico II, Maura Striano, Councilor for Education and Families of the Municipality of Naples, Antonio Giordano, Board Member of the National Italian American Foundation and President of the Sbarro Health Research Organization, Costanzo Jannotti Pecci, President of the Union of Industrialists of Naples, Benedetto Migliaccio, President of the Filangieri Academy Della Porta, Riccardo Imperiali di Francavilla, Representative of the heirs of Gaetano Filangieri at the Civic Museum Filangieri, Fabio Ferraro, Director of the Advanced Course in European Union Law at the University Federico II.
The discussion will be moderated by Amedeo Arena, full professor of European Union law at the Federico II University and creator of the Filangieri Prize for young jurists, and will see the participation of distinguished speakers from the academic world and legal professions.
Francesca De Rosa, professor of history of justice at the University Federico II, will focus on the centrality of the law in the “nation” of Naples, highlighting how Filangieri laid the foundations for a new approach to the relationship between law and power. Francesco De Santis, professor of civil procedural law, will analyze the subjection of the judge to the law, showing the evolution of this principle from Filangieri to the present day.
Raffaele Sabato, judge at the European Court of Human Rights, will discuss the obligation to motivate judicial decisions, drawing a direct line between eighteenth-century reflections and current practices. Michela Troisi, professor of constitutional procedural law, will explore the genesis of the constitutional legitimacy review in Italy, highlighting how the insights of Filangieri and Mario Pagano are at the basis of a central procedure in the Italian constitutional architecture.
Finally, Gian Marco Antonelli, notary and member of the Public Law Studies Commission of the National Council of Notaries, will examine the challenges to the rule of law principle posed by the implementation of European anti-money laundering legislation, connecting the current debate on legality and justice to issues dear to Filangieri.