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Workshop: “Economic Governance of Social Media”

TILEC will be organizing a policy-oriented, academic workshop on “Economic Governance of Social Media” on 25-26 September 2025. Details and submission guidelines are here and on the workshop’s website. Deadline is 15 June. The background of the workshop follows below.

In 2023, there were 4.76 billion social media users worldwide, comprising 60% of the world population and over 90% of internet users. While social media have created a range of well-documented benefits, both for businesses and for individual users, the list of negative effects for democracy, individuals and society at large is growing: distribution of misinformation and hate speech, manipulation of individuals’ beliefs and behavior through news selection, the sheer amount of time spent on social media platforms, keeping people away from being productive, and negative trends in mental health, especially amongst children and young adults, cast a long, dark shadow over social media’s net effects.

Political scientist Lars Rensmann, asked about reasons for the recent upswing of radical right parties, summarized: ”Not populists like Trump but social media are the biggest threat.” The documented growing discontent of many voters with the political establishment (and more and more: the system of liberal democracy with rule of law and political checks and balances on those in power) has thrived on social media. Over the past decade, we have seen how social media has contributed to an extremely polarized society. Especially young people depend very much on TikTok in their news diet, where radical right-wingers successfully proclaim their message and facts matter little. Adults, too, often consume a large part of their news via social media or news aggregator sites. As Rensmann puts it: “Democracies work only when politics is based on facts. As long as that is not the case and people are shaped by propaganda, democracies are doomed.” The Financial Times’ editorial board proclaimed: “Europe’s democratic values are so fundamental that its leaders should not shy from enforcing rules designed to protect them — even if that risks clashing with the X or Meta bosses, or the returning US president.”

For Rensmann, the example of Elon Musk is a point of crystallization: “He has 203 million followers, he owns X, he spreads hate and disinformation, and he influences elections. Someone needs to stand up and not just say that social media is worrisome, but actually do something about the power of big business.”
This is the starting point for this workshop on “Economic Governance of Social Media.” While we understand that a service used by 60% of the world’s population must deliver some benefits, we take it as a working hypothesis that social media’s negative effects must be contained. The question is how, and by whom?

Such questions are the premise of the field of economic governance, which studies the structure and functioning of the legal and social institutions that support economic activity and economic transactions by protecting property rights, enforcing contracts, and taking collective action to provide physical and organizational infrastructure (Dixit, 2009, p.5). Economic governance is a broad concept that hosts both public-ordering institutions (governance by state authorities), private-ordering institutions (governance by formal or informal non-state actors), and hybrid forms. It tries to identify the optimal institutional setup, i.e., the optimal allocation of control rights over the design, adjudication, and enforcement of rules in any given socioeconomic environment.

The Tilburg Law and Economics Center (TILEC) has organized six economic governance workshops, which focused on the role of competition (in 2010), organizations (in 2013), social preferences (in 2015), data-driven markets (in 2017), the governance of big data and AI (in 2019), and political legitimacy (in 2022), respectively. Now, we strive to stimulate the debate how the negative effects of social media could be contained, both conceptually, practically, legally, and technically. During a multidisciplinary, discussion-intensive, deeply theoretical and policy-oriented two-day workshop in September 2025, we aim to learn from theoretical, empirical, experimental, and conceptual papers addressing the main question from various angles.

Specific topics of interest, organizational details, and submission guidelines are in the call for papers and on the workshop’s website.

Postdoctoral Researcher (Political Economy, AI, Autocracy) at Tilburg University

The Tilburg Law and Economics Center at Tilburg University, the Netherlands, is looking for a Postdoctoral Researcher to work, in a team, on “Artificial Intelligence in Autocratic Countries.” The goal of the project is to produce both fundamental research on the political economy of AI-development in autocratic countries (esp. China and Russia) and applicable advice for European policy makers.

Candidates should have a PhD in a social science, good empirical skills and experience in working with data (econometrics, statistics, and/or data science). The specific discipline of the PhD does not matter but political scientists, economists, economic geographers, or area specialists of China and/or Russia (or a related autocratic country and governance institutions) may have an advantage. Applicants should also have knowledge and interest in (i) politics, international relations, or political economy and also in (ii) digital industries, technology innovation, or AI-development. Specific knowledge of the countries, institutions, and languages of China or Russia is a plus but not mandatory.

Application deadline is 6 October 2024.

All details of the job and how to apply are here.

TILEC annual report 2023, interview, and TILEC, the film

The Tilburg Law and Economics Center has recently celebrated its 20th anniversary. For that purpose, we organized a great and very well-received conference and I gave an interview, looking back and forward. We also published TILEC’s annual report 2023 about acitivities in the last year. All this shows that and how TILEC is alive and kicking, both in the academic and in the policy sphere: 25 published journal articles, 17 book chapters, 2 policy reports, 21 TILEC Discussion Papers and 31 organized events, which are the backbone of the institute, document that TILEC’s 46 members and our network of 53 extramural fellows are not sitting idle.

Moreover, given the size of the institute, it is very remarkable that TILEC ranks in the top-10 of all Economics Departments & Research Centers globally and in the top-10 of International (read: non-US) Law Schools, measured by download statistics of research papers measured by the Social Science Research Network (SSRN). It is the only organization on the planet showing up on both of these lists, which documents the academic footprint we jointly have in the field of Law & Economics.

This footprint is complemented by more anecdotal evidence about the policy and societal impact that several TILEC researchers have, which has affected decisions at the European Court of Justice and the US Supreme Court, and legislative initiatives such as the EU’s Digital Markets Act and the Digital Services Act. We are especially happy that collaboration with the ACM is in the process of being intensified, which is also documented in a short video published on the TILEC website.

Summarizing, the world is changing around us, especially in the realm of technology, where AI is coming with a vengeance and raising gigantic questions that public authorities have to deal with. TILEC’s research program on the Governance of Economic Activity in the Digital Age will be adjusting along the way. TILEC researchers working on competition & regulation, institutions & governance, and standards & innovation stand ready to support them. This is an invitation.

20th Anniversary Conference of TILEC

For the past 20 years, the Tilburg Law and Economics Center (TILEC) has supported and stimulated academic research on the governance of economic activity. In its research themes competition & regulation, innovation, and institutions, TILEC members from law and economics study how interactions between users and firms, organizations and their members, public agencies and regulated entities, courts and litigants, as well as voters and political parties are governed. Therefore, on April 11 & 12, 2024, we are organizing an anniversary conference in Tilburg. It marks a time to gather outstanding researchers and policy makers in the domain of TILEC’s activities, to reflect and celebrate, to meet old friends and make new ones.

More background, a program, and a registration form are here.

Director of Tilburg Law and Economics Center

TILEC, the Tilburg Law and Economics Center, is a fascinating and very successful interdisciplinary research center at Tilburg University. Gathering more than 40 legal scholars and economists and over 50 extramural fellows mainly working at other organizations, TILEC was named a “global leader in its field of law and economics” by an external assessment committee.

I am very happy to announce that, as of September 2023, I have taken over the TILEC directorship from Panos Delimatsis, who performed the job over an impressive 12-year period. Here is my take on the Center, as published on TILEC’s website:

“TILEC’s main purpose is to organize interdisciplinary academic events related to the governance of economic activity in the digital age. It serves as a platform of exchange, especially between lawyers and economists. TILEC also strives to support policy-relevant, well-founded research of its members and to connect TILEC members with other researchers and decision makers in politics, firms, public agencies, and society at large. I am very grateful to be connected to this globally renowned research center, which has attracted attention from highest-level policy makers, judges, regulators and academics. Truly interdisciplinary research is the unique feature of the Center: it enriches a scholar’s life to see different perspectives on a “well known” subject, and it keeps us humble and awake to know that there is always somebody in the room who knows more. If you feel similarly, please do not be shy but get in contact with us!”

CfP: Workshop on Economic Governance and Legitimacy

TILEC, the Tilburg Law and Economics Center, will be organizing a workshop on “Economic Governance and Legitimacy” at Tilburg University, the Netherlands, on May 19-20, 2022.

A foundational question for any economic governance system concerns the legitimacy of its rules, where legitimacy is defined as the degree to which individual citizens believe they have a moral obligation to obey the ruler (Bisin, Rubin, Seror, and Verdier, 2021). Obviously, if (most) people believe the ruler (president, queen, chieftain, dictator, association director, influencer, etc.) has the right to rule, ruling becomes cheaper, quicker, and more efficient. But what are the origins of legitimacy in political, legal, and social systems across the world? Why do some players have a lot of influence and are listened to by many followers, whereas others do not (even if their arguments or proposals may be better)?

During a multidisciplinary and discussion-intensive two-day on-site workshop, we aim to learn from theoretical, empirical, experimental, and conceptual papers addressing the topic from various angles.

Keynote addresses will cross disciplinary boundaries between economics and law (Gillian Hadfield, Toronto), sociology (Sonja Opper, Bocconi), political science (Gérard Roland, Berkeley), and religion studies (Jared Rubin, Chapman).

The deadline for paper submissions is January 16, 2022. Papers should be submitted in PDF format to TILECgovernance@tilburguniversity.edu. More details are in the call for papers and at the Workshop website.

Post-Academic Training on Competition Law & Digital Regulation

The Tilburg Institute for Law, Technology, and Society (TILT) & the Tilburg Law and Economics Center (TILEC) jointly offer a post-academic training on Competition Law & Digital Regulation in January 2022. The program provides practitioners at law firms, in-house legal counsels, policy officials, or officials at regulatory authorities and sectoral bodies with a comprehensive overview of the legal issues relating to the application of competition law in the digital sector and the ongoing policy as well as legislative initiatives regarding the regulation of platforms and data.

The program is taught by a mix of distinguished practitioners who have direct experience of the rules and by an academic team whose members participate actively in the policy debates.

More information and registration is available here