UNIDROIT Co-Hosts Conference Honouring Its Centenary

On 21 April 2026, UNIDROIT co-hosted the International Conference on the Origins of UNIDROIT at the Law Faculty of Sapienza University of Rome. Taking place the day after the official opening ceremony marking UNIDROIT’s centenary, the conference marked the first academic event of the centenary year. Co-organised with Sapienza University of Rome, and the Max-Planck-Institut für Rechtsgeschichte und Rechtstheorie, the conference brought together eminent legal historians, scholars, practitioners, and senior officials who have contributed to and shaped the work of UNIDROIT, to examine the intellectual and institutional foundations of one of the world’s oldest intergovernmental organisations dedicated to the harmonisation of private law.

Opening Remarks

The conference opened with remarks from Professor Antonella Polimeni, Rector of Sapienza University, Professor Luisa Avitabile, Dean of the Law Faculty of Sapienza University, Professor Mirzia Bianca, Director of the Legal Science Department, and Professor Oliviero Diliberto, Director of the Higher Education Programme on Roman Law. Professor Ignacio Tirado, UNIDROIT Secretary-General and Professor Stefan Vogenauer, Director of the Max-Planck-Institut für Rechtsgeschichte und Rechtstheorie in Frankfurt, also addressed participants, situating the conference within the broader significance of the Centenary year.

 

 

 

 

 

 

The keynote address was delivered by Professor Arthur Hartkamp, Emeritus Professor at Radboud University and Emeritus Doyen of the UNIDROIT Governing Council, on the theme of “UNIDROIT 100 Years: Harmonisation of Transnational Private Law.” Drawing on decades of engagement with UNIDROIT, Professor Hartkamp offered a panoramic reflection on the evolution of private law harmonisation and the enduring relevance of UNIDROIT’s mission in a rapidly changing global legal landscape.

Panel Discussions

The conference was structured around three thematic panels and a roundtable, each addressing a core element of UNIDROIT’s historical and intellectual legacy.

The first panel, titled “The Origin of UNIDROIT: the Crisis in the First Half of the 20th Century and the Role of an International Institution for the Unification of Private Law“, examined the historical circumstances that gave rise to the Institute and the central contributions of foundational jurists to the project of private law unification. Chaired by Professor Anna Veneziano (Deputy Secretary-General, UNIDROIT), Professor Andrea Di Porto (Emeritus Professor, Sapienza University of Rome), Professor Luigi Capogrossi Colognesi (Emeritus Professor, Sapienza University of Rome), and Professor Ferruccio Auletta (Professor, LUISS, Rome) explored the visions of Vittorio Scialoja, Pietro de Francisci, and Mariano D’Amelio respectively in shaping UNIDROIT’s early development. Professor Meiling Huang (Principal Legal Officer, UNIDROIT) further examined the role of non-European jurists in the Institutes formative years, a perspective that highlights the global foundations of UNIDROIT from its inception.

 

 

 

 

 

 

The second panel, titled “UNIDROIT and the Early Contribution of Civil Lawyers in Shaping Uniform Law.” chaired by Professor Herbert Kronke (Emeritus Professor, Heidelberg University; former Secretary-General of UNIDROIT), focussed on the intellectual legacies of towering figures in the civil law tradition whose work proved formative for the development of uniform private law. Professor Stefan Vogenauer examined the foundational contribution of Ernst Rabel; Professor Philippe Dupichot (Sorbonne University, Paris, and President of the Association Henri Capitant) addressed the enduring connection between Henri Capitant and UNIDROIT; Professor Marie Goré (Panthéon-Assas University, Paris) considered the role and contribution of René David to uniform law; and Professor Ignacio Tirado spoke on the significance of Alfredo Rocco’s time at UNIDROIT, and his contribution as a bridge between the Institute and the League of Nations.

The third panel, titled “UNIDROIT and Common Law Doctrines: Some Salient Examples” was chaired by Professor Louise Gullifer, (Dean of the Law School, University of Cambridge). The panel was honoured by a greeting from Sir Roy Goode (Emeritus Professor, Oxford University; UNIDROIT Governing Council Member ad honorem), who joined online to welcome participants and reflect on his longstanding and distinguished association with the Institute. Professor Peter Winship (Emeritus Professor, Southern Methodist University, Dallas), Professor Michele Graziadei (University of Turin), Professor Joachim Bonell (Emeritus Professor, Sapienza University of Rome), and Professor Herbert Kronke joined as panellists, exploring the decisive role played by common law scholars and practitioners in shaping UNIDROIT’s work across successive generations, examining, respectively, Karl Llewellyn’s engagement with UNIDROIT and its work on international sales law; Harold C. Gutteridge and Fredrick H. Lawson as comparative lawyers; Allan Farnsworth as a co-architect of the UNIDROIT Principles; and Clive Schmitthoff as a scholar whose career embodied the spirit of transnational law.

 

 

 

 

 

 

The three panels gave way to a roundtable on “The Effects of Transnational Law on Domestic Law,” chaired by Professor Stefania Bariatti (Professor, University of Milan; UNIDROIT Governing Council). The session brought together perspectives from multiple legal systems and jurisdictions. Professor Carlo Angelici (Emeritus Professor, Sapienza University of Rome) addressed the dialectic between national legal orders and transnational law; Professor Guido Ferrarini (Emeritus Professor, University of Genoa) examined transnational law and corporate due diligence as a new paradigm; Professor Louise Gullifer reflected on the gradations between hard, soft, and softer law in the domestic reception of transnational norms; and Ms Sharon Ong (Director-General, Singapore Ministry of Law; UNIDROIT Governing Council) presented on Singapore’s experience of domestic implementation and global legal innovation within the UNIDROIT framework.

Closing Remarks

The conference concluded with remarks from Professor Maria Chiara Malaguti, President Emerita of UNIDROIT, who linked the gist of each panel with reflections on the day’s contributions; Professor Anna Veneziano, who underscored the enduring relevance of the Institute’s historical foundations to its present work; and Professor Ignacio Tirado then looked ahead, reaffirming UNIDROIT’s mission in global legal harmonisation and the ambitions that will carry the Institute through its Centenary year and beyond.

As the first academic conference of the UNIDROIT Centenary, the event combined both a reflective and forward-looking perspectives, undertaking a rigorous examination of the intellectual currents that shaped UNIDROIT’s foundation, the individuals across civil law and common law traditions who built its methods and instruments, and the non-European voices whose contributions have too often remained at the margins of institutional memory. By recovering and critically engaging with this history, the conference affirmed that understanding the origins of UNIDROIT is inseparable from understanding its mission, and offered a starting point from which the Institute enters its centenary.

The full Conference programme can be found here.

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