Difference between revisions of "Alan Riley"

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In 2014 he started a business with another [[IfS]] fellow, [[Samantha de Bendern]].
 
In 2014 he started a business with another [[IfS]] fellow, [[Samantha de Bendern]].
  
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==Publications==
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In 2016 Alan Riley published ''Brexit: Causes and Consequences'' with another [[IfS]] fellow, [[Francis Ghilès]].
 
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==References==
 
==References==
 
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Revision as of 09:08, 9 August 2019

Person.png Alan Riley TwitterRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(academic, lawyer, journalist)
Alan Riley.jpg
Alma materDurham University, Edinburgh University
Member ofAtlantic Council, Institute for Statecraft, Institute for Statecraft/Tor team
Interests • Energy
• European law
• Tax havens
• Shale Gas

Dr. Alan Riley is an associate Senior Research Fellow of the Institute for Statecraft and a non-resident senior fellow with the Atlantic Council. He has published various papers about law and energy policy. He is Member of the Advisory Committee of the Energy Community.[1]

Background

Alan Riley studied law at Durham University, then obtained an LLM in EC Law from Edinburgh University, concluding his studies there with a PhD. This thesis was entitled A Radical Thesis: Reforming EC Competition Law. He qualified as a solicitor in 1991.

Career

Riley has written for a range of newspapers including the Financial Times, the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times. He was formerly Professor of Law, City University, London. Alan Riley has also written a number of academic papers including for International Energy Law Review.[2][3]

He has spoken at CYBERSEC[4]

Activities

In 2014 he started a business with another IfS fellow, Samantha de Bendern.

Publications

In 2016 Alan Riley published Brexit: Causes and Consequences with another IfS fellow, Francis Ghilès.

 

A Document by Alan Riley

TitleDocument typePublication dateSubject(s)
Document:China’s Strategy towards Europe: Implications and Policy Recommendations for EU Securityanalysis, policy recommendations26 December 2018China
21st century
Hypercompetition

 

Events Participated in

EventStartEndLocation(s)Description
Russia’s Strategy on NATO'S Eastern and Southern Flanks27 January 2017 09:30:0027 January 2017 16:30:00Barcelona Centre for International AffairsA CIDOB/The Institute for Statecraft/NATO meeting
Strengthening Europe's 'soft' and 'hard' defence25 March 2019 13:00:0025 March 2019 17:00:00Netherlands
The Hague
Clingendael Institute
Chatham House rule meeting with organised by the Institute for Statecraft and the Clingendael Institute.
Many thanks to our Patrons who cover ~2/3 of our hosting bill. Please join them if you can.



References


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