Alexandre de Streel
and University of Namur
Alexandre de Streel is the Academic Director of the digital research programme at the Brussels think-tank Centre on Regulation in Europe (CERRE), professor of European law at the University of Namur and visiting professor at the College of Europe (Bruges) and SciencesPo Paris. He sits in the scientific committees of the Knight-Georgetown Institute (US), the European University Institute-Centre for a Digital Society (Italy) and the Mannheim Centre for Competition and Innovation (Germany).
His main research areas are regulation and competition policy in the digital economy (telecommunications, platforms and data) as well as the legal issues raised by the developments of artificial intelligence. He regularly advises the European Union and international organisations on digital regulation.
Previously, Alexandre held visiting positions at New York University Law School, the European University Institute in Florence, Panthéon-Assas (Singapore campus), Barcelona Graduate School of Economics and the University of Louvain. He also worked for the Belgian Deputy Prime Minister, the Belgian Permanent Representation to the European Union, and the European Commission. He has also been the chair of the expert group on the online platform economy, advising the European Commission.
Ideas for the Future of European Telecommunications Regulations
Recommendations for the Effective and Proportionate DMA Implementation
Improving EU Institutional Design to Better Supervise Digital Platforms
Making the Digital Markets Act more resilient and effective
EU liability rules for the age of Artificial Intelligence
New ways of oversight for the digital economy
The European proposal for a Digital Markets Act: A first assessment
Digital Services Act: Deepening the internal market and clarifying responsibilities for digital services
Digital Markets Act: Making economic regulation of platforms fit for the digital age
Digital markets and online platforms: new perspectives on regulation and competition law
Data sharing for digital markets contestability: towards a governance framework
Making data portability more effective for the digital economy
BigTech acquisitions: competition and innovation effects & EU merger control
Explaining the Black Box: when law controls AI
Internet platforms and non-discrimination
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