Our University held the Academic Forum "Money Laundering and International Arbitration," whose central purpose was to strengthen the understanding and legal-economic analysis of the tensions between economic integration and trade restrictions, within the framework of international law and economic law.
During the sessions, law students actively participated in presentations, debates, and case study analyses, developing a solid legal foundation with relevant legal standards and critical reasoning. The evaluation demonstrated satisfactory performance and notable improvements in their ability to identify regulatory tensions, apply legal frameworks, and propose justified solutions.
The forum also provided a forum for generating proposals for legal policies and practices, aimed at training jurists capable of critically analyzing complex phenomena such as money laundering and proposing well-founded responses within the international arena.