Monday, July 1, 2013

20 days, 4 countries and 10,000 miles or 20天,4个国家和10000英里



20 days, 4 countries and 10,000 miles or
20天,4国家和10000英里

Europe!


The last 20 days have been crazy. I have been to Belgium, The Netherlands, Norway and China and back again. When I entered the PhD program I assumed that there will be some travelling, but this has proven to be very intense and there is still quite a lot of travelling ahead!

Brussels and Maastricht proved to be a 10 day intense research visit to dig into European Competition and Public Procurement Law. The visit to the EU Commission’s Library proved to be very helpful in finding interesting literature that would have been difficult to get somewhere else – their catalogue is pretty impressive and has plenty of material in different languages.  But even better, I was able to meet some good friends and have very good food and beer in Brussels (wow, that Belgium beer is good stuff).

Maastricht was an interesting experience. Were 2 very intensive days of pure public procurement surrounded by a beautiful city, interesting talks and very experienced professionals. The seminar organized by EIPA on the recent developments of PP and its case law was not only interesting, but also very helpful to get a crash course of the latest news and to get a good idea of how the upcoming PP Directives will look like. Rumors point out that they will be enacted by the end of October 2013. Let’s see if that happens and what they will look like in the end.

China!


Then, after just 5 days in Norway it was time to grab a plane and visit Shanghai and Beijing. Wow, what a change. From cold and rainy Bergen to very hot, very humid and sometimes extremely rainy Shanghai and later to a very dry, but not that hot Beijing. What a trip!


In Shanghai we had a very interesting workshop/seminar with professors from the University of Fudan mainly dealing with Chinese legal culture and some comparative reflections to our PhD research projects. On our free time we had the chance to visit a multicultural city that truly demonstrates the change of China in less than 25 years. From rural China to a cosmopolitan top of the art modern city. Shanghai is a city of contrasts and neon lights.

On the other hand if Shanghai is the most westernized version of China, Beijing represents the most traditional and politically linked city in the country. Seat to the Forbidden City and the Tomb of Chairman Mao, Beijing is the center of decision making of this world leader. In Beijing we had the chance to visit the University of Renmin and participate at a round table with other PhD and Post-doc students. I had the privilege to do a 20 mins presentation on my project: Buyer Power, Competition Law and Public Procurement that met an interested audience (much to my surprise!).

To wrap up a very long post: I am exhausted of travelling, but this experience has been enriching and interesting to say the least and the contrast between the East and the West is sometimes even bigger than we can imagine, but also can be much smaller than expected. It is all about perception.

直到不久

Friday, May 3, 2013



Back from King’s


What a ride, after one week in sunny (yes, no jokes) London I am just back to good old rainy and SNOWY Bergen (yes, it snowed today, 3rd of May!!!). The London trip was a success in both professional and personal levels (tip to all out there: do not mix travelling with family and work unless there is no other way because you cannot do any of them properly!).

The purpose of the trip was to visit King’s College of London http://www.kcl.ac.uk/index.aspx and meet the group of scholars and students working on Competition Law (some very big names there, eh?) http://www.kcl.ac.uk/law/research/centres/european/programmes/eucompetition.aspx. We had the chance to meet Richard Whish, Christopher Townley, David Bailey, among others.

At King’s we visited the research facilities, the Maughan Library (a very impressive building with beautiful architecture), and had the chance to present for about 20 mins our projects at the University of Bergen and receive some feedback and suggestions.


The Maughan Library

I did a short presentation on my PhD research project entitled: “Buyer power, public procurement and public undertakings”. The presentation allowed me to introduce my research interests for the first time to an external group of specialists and to get some interesting comments from them. I have taken duly notice of their remarks and plan to use the suggestions well. As a side note, I am very happy that the remarks were all positive and not the sort of: “this PhD research project has no future or it is too ambitious or not novel”.

But I also went to London for personal reasons and it was a lot of fun. The food was amazing (we ate everyday a different kind of food) and the beer was plenty, cheap and great. Intensive sightseeing (Tower of London, outrageously expensive Westminster Abbey, Strand, Picadilly Circus, you name it....) Also, it was my first time in London as an adult and I enjoyed the vibrant city a lot, although it is not my favorite city in Europe. I’d rather visit Paris or Rome before a trip to London, but that is just a matter of personal taste.

Now I am back in Bergen, with not so great weather but plenty of things to do!

Sunday, April 14, 2013

Venezuelan elections revisited:


Not so long ago Venezuela held a presidential election. That was roughly 6 months ago. Yesterday, new elections took place. With the death of Chávez a new process was to be made and the hope for a change was in the air.

Today I woke up out of my home country but feeling that it is more divided than ever.


Source: El Universal (04/15/13 ) http://www.eud.com/

Or in numbers if you like:


Nicolás Maduro: 7,505,338

Henrique Capriles: 7,270,403

Yes, by a very narrow margin, under 1,5% the "successor" of Chávez has won the elections. This has been the narrowest result in the recent history of the country. The reflection of a reality. We are divided.


The link below has an interactive map with the results by each of the different states/provinces. It also has the data for the previous elections. Very interesting stuff. http://www.eluniversal.com/nacional-y-politica/mapa-de-resultados-electorales/

The opposition's leaders have requested the manual recount of the totality of votes and the CNE (the electoral body) should agree to this. If the results are fair, then there is nothing to loose. 

The atmosphere is strange, to say the least. The Military spoke giving their support to the incumbent regime. Websites are off (namely the one of the CNE), the tv broadcasters are not running any interesting information but just old images or rather silly information.

It will be a tense week. No doubt.

Maduro you have won the prize of dividing a country.