Eva van der Zee is a junior professor (tenure-track) in international law with a focus on behavioural law and economics at Hamburg University, Institute of Law and Economics
Eva's current research focuses on the role and interrelation of formal and informal regulatory systems in promoting sustainable development using insights from the social sciences. In her two current projects, entitled "Human Rights and Environmental Due Diligence Instruments to Foster Corporate Compliance" and “Law, Planning Theory, and Environmental Assessments”, which are both funded by the Ideen und Risikofund of Hamburg University, she studies the role of international, European and national law in corporate compliance and environmental assessment processes respectively using quantitative and qualitative research methods, as well as insights from legal theory, planning theory, behavioural economics, and sociology.
Her main fields of research are:
· Behavioral law and economics, legal theory, planning theory, motivation crowding theory
· EU law, focusing on consumer protection, competition, and environment
· Public and private regulation
· Public international law, focusing on trade, investment, environment, and human rights
· Corporate social responsibility, socially responsible investment
Her broader research interests include political economy and distributive justice.