Democracy for a Sustainable World with Prof. James Bacchus [USALI Talk]
- Wednesday, January 21, 2026
- 3:00–4:00 p.m.
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Vanderbilt Hall, Seminar Room 208
- 40 Washington Square South New York, NY ,10012 (View Map)
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Vanderbilt Hall, Seminar Room 208
Speaker: James Bacchus, distinguished university professor of global affairs and director of the Center for Global Economic and Environmental Opportunity at the University of Central Florida
The path to global sustainable development is participatory democratic global governance – the only truly effective path to confronting pandemics, military conflict, climate change, biodiversity loss, and potential overall ecological collapse. So says James Bacchus in his new book, Democracy for a Sustainable World: The Path from the Pnyx. Bacchus argues that global democracy and global sustainable development can only be achieved jointly. Beginning with a visit to the birthplace of democracy in ancient Athens, a hillside called the Pnyx, Bacchus explores how the Athenians practiced democratic participation millennia ago. He draws on the successes and shortfalls of Athenian democracy to offer specific proposals for meeting today’s challenges by constructing participatory democratic global governance for full human flourishing in a sustainable world.
James Bacchus is distinguished university professor of global affairs and director of the Center for Global Economic and Environmental Opportunity at the University of Central Florida. He was a founding judge and was twice the chairman – the chief judge – of the highest tribunal of world trade, the Appellate Body of the World Trade Organization. He is a former member of the Congress of the United States, from Florida. He has served at every level of human governance in significant legislative, administrative, and judicial roles of responsibility. Democracy for a Sustainable World was listed by the Financial Times as one of the "Best Books" of the summer of 2025. Among his five previous books, two others, The Willing World and Trade Links, also appeared on the “Best Books” lists of the Financial Times. In 2024, he received the prestigious Weeramantry International Justice Award for his service, his scholarship, and his commitment to international law, peace, and sustainable development, and for his global humanism and leadership in the law.