Authors
University Professor
,
EBS University in Oestrich-Winkel (Germany)
Emanuel V. Towfigh
Emanuel V. Towfigh is a University Professor at EBS University in Oestrich-Winkel (Germany) where he holds the Chair in Public Law, Empirical Legal Research and Law & Economics and is the Director of the BRYTER Center for Law & Digitalization at the Law School; he also serves as Professor for Law & Economics at the Business School (by courtesy). He is a Distinguished Scholar in Residence at Peking University’s School of Transnational Law in Shenzhen (China) and a Max Planck Fellow at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law in Heidelberg (Germany) where he heads the Center for Diversity in Law. Emanuel V. Towfigh’s research focuses on the law of democracy and political parties, on the relationship of law and religion as well as on questions of digitalization. It also includes work on anti-discrimination law and diversity.

Authors
University Professor
,
EBS University in Oestrich-Winkel (Germany)
Emanuel V. Towfigh
Emanuel V. Towfigh is a University Professor at EBS University in Oestrich-Winkel (Germany) where he holds the Chair in Public Law, Empirical Legal Research and Law & Economics and is the Director of the BRYTER Center for Law & Digitalization at the Law School; he also serves as Professor for Law & Economics at the Business School (by courtesy). He is a Distinguished Scholar in Residence at Peking University’s School of Transnational Law in Shenzhen (China) and a Max Planck Fellow at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law in Heidelberg (Germany) where he heads the Center for Diversity in Law. Emanuel V. Towfigh’s research focuses on the law of democracy and political parties, on the relationship of law and religion as well as on questions of digitalization. It also includes work on anti-discrimination law and diversity.

Authors
University Professor
,
EBS University in Oestrich-Winkel (Germany)
Emanuel V. Towfigh
Emanuel V. Towfigh is a University Professor at EBS University in Oestrich-Winkel (Germany) where he holds the Chair in Public Law, Empirical Legal Research and Law & Economics and is the Director of the BRYTER Center for Law & Digitalization at the Law School; he also serves as Professor for Law & Economics at the Business School (by courtesy). He is a Distinguished Scholar in Residence at Peking University’s School of Transnational Law in Shenzhen (China) and a Max Planck Fellow at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law in Heidelberg (Germany) where he heads the Center for Diversity in Law. Emanuel V. Towfigh’s research focuses on the law of democracy and political parties, on the relationship of law and religion as well as on questions of digitalization. It also includes work on anti-discrimination law and diversity.

Authors
University Professor
,
EBS University in Oestrich-Winkel (Germany)
Emanuel V. Towfigh
Emanuel V. Towfigh is a University Professor at EBS University in Oestrich-Winkel (Germany) where he holds the Chair in Public Law, Empirical Legal Research and Law & Economics and is the Director of the BRYTER Center for Law & Digitalization at the Law School; he also serves as Professor for Law & Economics at the Business School (by courtesy). He is a Distinguished Scholar in Residence at Peking University’s School of Transnational Law in Shenzhen (China) and a Max Planck Fellow at the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law in Heidelberg (Germany) where he heads the Center for Diversity in Law. Emanuel V. Towfigh’s research focuses on the law of democracy and political parties, on the relationship of law and religion as well as on questions of digitalization. It also includes work on anti-discrimination law and diversity.

