Conference Agenda

Overview and details of the sessions of this conference. Please select a date or location to show only sessions at that day or location. Please select a single session for detailed view (with abstracts and downloads if available).

Please note that all times are shown in the time zone of the conference. The current conference time is: 16th June 2025, 02:14:17pm EEST

 
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Session Overview
Date: Thursday, 05/Sept/2024
8:15am - 5:30pmREG 3: Registration
Location: Hall - Registration Desk
8:30am - 10:30amFRANCO 3: French-Speaking Seminar - Session 3: Varia
Location: Auditorium 2
Session Chair: Prof. Vincent MABILLARD, Université Libre de Bruxelles
8:30am - 10:30amHAA/Exec: Independent Administrative Authorities/The Executive State
Location: Room B2
Session Chair: Prof. Stavroula KTISTAKI, Panteion University
Session Chair: Prof. Vassilis KEFIS, Panteion University
8:30am - 10:30amPSG 1-4: e-Government : Citizens perspectives on e-Gov.
Location: Room A2
Session Chair: Prof. C. William WEBSTER, University of Stirling

Discussant for session 4 : Ignacio Criado

8:30am - 10:30amPSG 4-3: Regional and Local Government : Session 3 - B Central-Local relations and inter-municipal cooperation C Local Governance and service delivery
Location: Room A1
Session Chair: Prof. Martin Jolyon LAFFIN, Queen Mary University of London
8:30am - 10:30amPSG 7-3: Ethics and Integrity : Public Value
Location: Room Γ2
Session Chair: Prof. Leonie HERES, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
8:30am - 10:30amPSG 8-4: Citizen Participation
Location: Room A4
8:30am - 10:30amPSG. 11-3: Strategic Management in Government
Location: Room Δ1
Session Chair: Prof. Åge JOHNSEN, Oslo Metropolitan University
Session Chair: Prof. Francesco LONGO, Bocconi University
8:30am - 10:30amPSG. 17-3: Sociology of State - Resilience and Reforms and CoREX
Location: Room Ε1
8:30am - 10:30amPSG. 18-4: Justice and Court Administration : Artificial Intelligence in the Judiciary II
Location: Room Δ12
Session Chair: Prof. Anne SANDERS, Bielefeld University
8:30am - 10:30amPSG. 20-3: Welfare State Governance and Professionalism - Strengthening Welfare Policies and Professional Competences: The Role of Research and Evidence
Location: Room ΣΤ5
Session Chair: Dr. Elisabetta NOTARNICOLA, CERGAS SDA Bocconi
8:30am - 10:30amPSG. 23-4: Administration, Diversity and Equal Treatment
Location: Room Ε14
Session Chair: Prof. Anna SIMONATI, University of Trento
Session Chair: Dr. Rocco FRONDIZI, University of Rome Tor Vergata
9:00am - 10:30amPA: The Contribution of the Humanities to Public Administration
Location: Saki Karagiorga II Auditorium
Session Chair: Prof. Edoardo ONGARO, Open University
Session Chair: Dr. Fabienne MARON, International Institute of Administrative Sciences

Speakers

  • Prof Geert Bouckaert, KU Leuven, Belgium
  • Prof Wolfgang Drechsler, Tallinn University of Technology, Estonia, UCL – IIPP, UK
  • Prof. Edoardo Ongaro, Open University, UK
  • Prof Albert Mejier, Utrecht University, The Netherlands
  • Dr Michele Tantardini, Penn State, PA, USA

There seems to be a gap in the current research (and practice) in Public Administration about the major contribution the humanities can and ought to make to the advancement of public administration and public governance. While social sciences such as political science, public policy, sociology, management, social psychology and others are part and parcel of the ‘administrative sciences’ – and their contribution is reflected in the workings of corresponding EGPA Permanent Study Groups investigating the contribution such disciplines can provide to the administrative sciences - the contribution the humanities can furnish to the development of the field of PA appears to have been overlooked, or at the very least not to have been developed in a systematic way across the humanities. The (re-)discovery of the humanities for the field of PA may be beneficial to the progress of the field in a number of ways.
 
The aim of this panel is to draw attention to this gap, examine in a critical and integrated way the contribution that can be provided by the humanities for the development of Public Governance and Public Administration, and discuss possible ways forward to bring the humanities (much) more systematically into Public Administration, and how EGPA may contribute to this endeavour.

9:00am - 10:30amPSG 2-3: Public Sector Performance
Location: Room B6
9:00am - 10:30amPSG 6-4: GPSO : Regulation
Location: Room Γ1
Session Chair: Prof. Muiris MAC CARTHAIGH, Queens University Belfast
9:00am - 10:30amPSG 9-4: Teaching Public Administration : "Tools & Strategies for New Faculty: Publishing & Reviewing"
Location: Room Γ5
Session Chair: Dr. Ian C. ELLIOTT, University of Glasgow
9:00am - 10:30amPSG. 10-3: Law and Public Administration : Automatisation of administrative decision-making in sectoral law and practice;
Location: Room Γ6
Session Chair: Prof. Dacian Cosmin DRAGOS, Babes Bolyai University
9:00am - 10:30amPSG. 12-4: Public Sector Financial Management : 4. Financial sustainability and strategic planning
Location: Auditorium 3
Session Chair: Prof. Giuseppe GROSSI, Kristianstad University
9:00am - 10:30amPSG. 19-4: Collaborative Networks and Social Innovation : Collaborative Networks and Social Innovation : Local Governance, Networks and Innovation I I
Location: Room B1
Session Chair: Prof. Luca MAZZARA, University of Bologna
Session Chair: Dr. Fulvio SCOGNAMIGLIO, Open University & Università degli Studi Milano Bicocca
9:00am - 11:15amEAPAA 4: EAPAA General Meeting and Board (on invitation - members only)
Location: Meeting Room 1 U-shape - Salle du Conseil du Recteur
9:00am - 11:15amPSG 3-4: Public Personnel Policies 4:Inclusive Leadership and Collaboration
Location: Room B5
Session Chair: Prof. Adrian RITZ, Bern University
9:00am - 11:15amPSG 5-3: The Politics and Management of Policing and Public Safety
Location: Room Γ4
9:00am - 11:15amPSG. 13-4: Public Policy : Public encounters
Location: Room B3
Session Chair: Prof. Fritz SAGER, University of Bern
9:00am - 11:15amPSG. 22-4: Behavioural Public Administration
Location: Room Γ3
Session Chair: Prof. Raanan SULITZEANU-KENAN, Hebrew University
10:30am - 10:45amCoffee 6: Break
Location: Hall or Garden
11:30am - 1:00pmPLEN 2: Public Administration and the Future of Democracy
Location: Saki Karagiorga II Auditorium
Session Chair: Prof. Michael BAUER, European University Institute

Introduction by Prof Dr. Michael Bauer, European University Institute (Italy)

Speakers : 

Dr Paraskevi Ant. Dramalioti , Secretary General of Coordination at the Presidency of the Government. (Greece)

Prof Dr Eva Sørensen, Professor of Public Administration and Democracy at Department of Social Sciences and Business, Roskilde University (Denmark)

Prof Dr Benoît Rihoux, Full Professor in Political Science at the University of Louvain UCLouvain  (Belgium)

 

1:00pm - 2:00pmLunch 3: Break
2:00pm - 3:30pmPSG 6-5: GPSO : Agencies
Location: Room Γ1
Session Chair: Prof. Muiris MAC CARTHAIGH, Queens University Belfast
2:00pm - 3:30pmPSG. 18-5: Justice and Court Administration : Court Independence and Autonomy
Location: Room Δ12
Session Chair: Prof. Andreas LIENHARD, Center for Public Management, University of Bern
2:00pm - 4:00pmFRANCO 4: French-Speaking Seminar - Round Table (in French) De l’art de l’impossible devenant possible : Les administrations et les politiques publiques à l’ère de la transition écologique
Location: Auditorium 2
Session Chair: Emil TURC, Aix-Marseille Université

Speakers : 

Margarita Chondrou-Karavasili, conseillère spéciale pour l'environnement et le changement climatique, Architecte d.p.l.g., MSc Regional and Urban Planner, Grèce

Thomas Cottinet, directeur Ecolab, Commissariat général du développement durable, Ministère de la Transition écologique et de la Cohésion des territoires, France

Florian Favreau, professeur associé EM Normandie, docteur ès sciences de gestion, docteur en droit, France

Marcel Guenoun, conseiller recherche et développement, Direction interministérielle de la transformation publique (Ministère de la transformation et de la Fonction publiques), France

Présentation de la table-ronde :

Les pouvoirs publics ont, à travers les politiques publiques et les moyens de l’administration, entamé les différents chantiers, inséparablement scientifiques et politiques, de la transition écologique, tels que les politiques climatiques (réduction des émissions et adaptation), la protection de la biodiversité, la transition énergétique (décarbonation et électrification), l’économie circulaire, la permaculture, la sobriété, l’aménagement durable du territoire (artificialisation des sols et densification), la gestion intégrée des eaux, etc.

Les défis sont nombreux, épineux et d’apparence inextricable, à la fois dans les diagnostics et la recherche de solutions : la disproportion des échelles d’action, les inerties des dépendances de sentier, l’ampleur des transformations et des mobilisations nécessaires, la disparité des temps, individuel, démocratique, écologique et administratif, les cloisonnements sectoriels et institutionnels, la diversité des points de vue, les jeux politiques et géopolitiques. Tous les sujets de droit sont concernés, voire des parties prenantes non présentes (générations futures, populations éloignées), et bénéficient ou contribuent conjointement, souvent de manière indiscernable ou incertaine, aux causes ou conséquences de ces actions. De manière plus immédiate, les chaînes de valeur étendues des biens et services -voire leur intersectorialité- imposent la cooptation de la gouvernance (privée) des entreprises et des secteurs économiques ou encore de la mobilisation, et parfois de l’auto-organisation (les “communs”) des citoyens et des consommateurs, comme un acteur clé de ces transformations sociales et économiques émergentes.

Les administrations publiques, centrales comme territoriales, ont donc été chargées de transformer l’impensable et l’impossible d’hier et d’aujourd’hui, non seulement en pensable et en possible, mais également en réalisations administratives durables pour demain.

Depuis la mission « Adaptation au changement climatique » de l’UE (H2020), aux Plans action climat nationaux, et aux agendas 21 des collectivités, un grand foisonnement de dénominations recouvrent les différentes « climatisations » de l’action publique (Hrabanski et Montouroy 2022), dont les politiques en faveur de l’environnement, les politiques publiques de transition écologique, la politique climatique, les politiques d’atténuation du changement climatique, politique d’adaptation au changement climatique, etc. On constate d’ailleurs, à travers l’Europe et le monde, une grande diversité des approches empiriques, avec deux grandes composantes : l’atténuation (limiter l’impact des activités humaines sur le climat et l’environnement) et l’adaptation (limiter les impacts des évolutions du climat sur les sociétés humaines et l’environnement).

Cette table ronde est appelée, en première intention, à effectuer un point d’étape : avec le progrès des savoirs et des mises en œuvre, comment les diagnostics de ce qui est possible et (encore) impossible ont-ils évolué dans les politiques de transition écologique ? Comment se déplace au fil du temps le caractère inextricable, épineux (« wicked ») des problématiques environnementales ? Elle s’interroge ensuite sur les réussites de mise en œuvre des politiques publiques sur lesquelles on peut prendre appui, et sur les défis nouveaux de ces mises en œuvre. Enfin, à l’heure où des objectifs de réduction des émissions de gaz à effet de serre toujours plus ambitieux sont annoncés, la politique climatique est encore à la recherche des moyens qui lui permettraient d’atteindre ces objectifs. Dans le dialogue entre les administrateurs, consultants et chercheurs, vers quels sujets les sciences sociales, et tout particulièrement le management public, devraient-ils tourner leur regard à ce stade pour mieux dialoguer avec les acteurs de ces politiques, administratifs, sectoriels, sociaux, et proposer des apports plus percutants au besoin d’accélération des effets de ces politiques ?

2:00pm - 4:00pmPSG 1-5: e-Government : Legal and institutional perspectives on e-Gov.
Location: Room A2
Session Chair: Prof. Albert Jacob MEIJER, Utrecht University

Discussant for session 5 : William Webster

2:00pm - 4:00pmPSG 2-4: Public Sector Performance
Location: Room B6
2:00pm - 4:00pmPSG 3-5: Public Personnel Policies 5: Public Leaders at Different Hierarchical Levels
Location: Room B5
Session Chair: Prof. Lotte Bøgh ANDERSEN, Aarhus University
2:00pm - 4:00pmPSG 4-4: Regional and Local Government : Session 4 - C Local Governance and service delivery
Location: Room A1
Session Chair: Prof. Ellen WAYENBERG, Ghent University
2:00pm - 4:00pmPSG 5-4: The Politics and Management of Policing and Public Safety
Location: Room Γ4
Session Chair: Michael IBRAHIM-SAUER, German University of the Police
2:00pm - 4:00pmPSG 7-4: Ethics and Integrity : Crafting 2
Location: Room Γ2
2:00pm - 4:00pmPSG 8-5: Citizen Participation
Location: Room A4
2:00pm - 4:00pmPSG 9-5: Teaching Public Administration
Location: Room Γ5
Session Chair: Dr. Monika KNASSMÛLLER, WU Vienna
2:00pm - 4:00pmPSG. 10-4: Law and Public Administration : Rule of law, transparency and participation in PA
Location: Room Γ6
Session Chair: Prof. Krisztina F. ROZSNYAI, ELTE University Budapest
2:00pm - 4:00pmPSG. 12-5: Public Sector Financial Management : 5 Public Sector Digitalization and Innovation
Location: Auditorium 3
Session Chair: Dr. Sotirios KARATZIMAS, Athens University of Economics and Business
2:00pm - 4:00pmPSG. 13-5: Public Policy: Equality and equity in service delivery
Location: Room B3
Session Chair: Prof. Anat GOFEN, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
2:00pm - 4:00pmPSG. 15-3: PATI
Location: Room Δ1
Session Chair: Dr. Erkki KARO, Tallinn University of Technology
2:00pm - 4:00pmPSG. 16-1: Public Marketing and Communication
Location: Room B2
Session Chair: Prof. Christophe ALAUX, AIX MARSEILLE UNIVERSITY
Session Chair: Prof. Martial PASQUIER, University of Lausanne (UNIL)
Session Chair: Prof. Vincent MABILLARD, Université Libre de Bruxelles
2:00pm - 4:00pmPSG. 17-4: Sociology of State - Resilience and Reforms and CoREX
Location: Room Ε1
2:00pm - 4:00pmPSG. 19-5: Collaborative Networks and Social Innovation :Innovation in Collaborative Networks
Location: Room B1
Session Chair: Prof. Luca MAZZARA, University of Bologna
Session Chair: Dr. Manuela BARRECA, Università della Svizzera italiana
2:00pm - 4:00pmPSG. 20-4: Welfare State Governance and Professionalism - Strengthening Welfare Policies and Professional Competences: The Role of Research and Evidence
Location: Room ΣΤ5
Session Chair: Prof. Mirko NOORDEGRAAF, Utrecht University
2:00pm - 4:00pmPSG. 21-3: Policy-advisory system and evidence organisation
Location: Saki Karagiorga II Auditorium
Session Chair: Prof. Caspar VAN DEN BERG, Leiden University
2:00pm - 4:00pmPSG. 22-5: Behavioural Public Administration
Location: Room Γ3
Session Chair: Prof. Oliver JAMES, University of Exeter
2:00pm - 4:00pmPSG. 23-5: Administration, Diversity and Equal Treatment
Location: Room Ε14
Session Chair: Prof. Anna SIMONATI, University of Trento
Session Chair: Dr. Rocco FRONDIZI, University of Rome Tor Vergata
4:00pm - 4:15pmCoffee 7: Break
Location: Hall or Garden
4:15pm - 5:45pmCOORD: Coordination of Public Policies in the Context of Effective Democratic Governance: Failures and Advantages
Location: Room A4
Session Chair: Dr. Judit KALMAN, Corvinus University Budapest, Hungary

Speakers : 

Ruben Tamboleo: “The struggled coordination in Spain: between integration and differentiation”.
Maria Ferreira: “Mainstreaming European Public Policies as an Exercise in Policy Coordination: Case-studies from the European Commission”.
Andrius Puksas: "Exploring the Impact of Policy Coordination Triggers and Obstacles in Lithuanian Governance Practices".
Anna Uster and Judit Kalman– "Exploring Coordinative Fatigue and Benefits in Successful Youth At-Risk Policies: A Comparative View Between Israel and Hungary"

This panel integrates collaboration with COST Action CA20123 Intergovernmental Coordination from Local to European Governance-Working Group 3
.
The effectiveness and legitimacy of democratic governance in modern States depend crucially on their coordination ability. There is still a serious lack of knowledge among scholars and practitioners on how to organize and process intergovernmental coordination in those various instances. Coordination, vital for organizational efficacy, involves aligning efforts toward common goals. Despite challenges, it's crucial for governance and successful development initiatives (Bouckaert et al., 2010; Trein et al., 2021). Public administration scholars emphasize its significance (see in Bouckaert, Peters, & Verhoest, 2022). Effective coordination necessitates synchronizing policy formulation and action within public financial management frameworks. National development strategies must ensure policy coherence by aligning with financial management frameworks. Proper coordination among public organizations at the national level enhances efficiency and facilitates successful implementation of development policies and programs, fostering progress and sustainable governance. Achieving coordination between executive actors of territorial units is one of the major challenges of today's politics (Begum, & Momen, 2019; Peters, 2018). External effects and thus the interdependence of political actions beyond borders of sovereign authority have increased dramatically, necessitating better coordination of decision-making and actions across territorial units as well as across levels of government in an increasingly complex environment (Peters, 2015). Marume and Jaricha (2016) present coordination as the synchronization of efforts, but conceptualize it from both positive and negative perspectives. On a positive note, it means bringing about cooperation and teamwork among the persons and units of an organization. But in negative terms, it means removing conflicts, values, inconsistencies, overlapping, and working at cross-purposes among persons or units of an organization. Hence, the above conceptualization with respect to coordination makes it clear that coordination is much more than cooperation of one person with another or others toward a common goal (Marume and Jaricha, 2016).

This panel aims to delve into the intricate dynamics surrounding policy coordination, exploring its implications for effective democratic governance. By scrutinizing both failures and advantages, we seek to unravel key insights into optimizing policy coordination mechanisms within democratic frameworks.

4:15pm - 5:45pmPSG 1-6: e-Government : Accounting and Legitimacy
Location: Room A2
Session Chair: Dr. Shirley KEMPENEER, Tilburg University

Discussant for session 6 : Karl Löfgren

4:15pm - 5:45pmPSG 3-6: Public Personnel Policies 6 Trade-offs in Public Sector Outcomes
Location: Room B5
Session Chair: Dr. Carina SCHOTT, Utrecht University
4:15pm - 5:45pmPSG 6-6: GPSO : Overload & prioritization
Location: Room Γ1
Session Chair: Prof. Lise RYKKJA, University of Bergen
4:15pm - 5:45pmPSG 9-6: Teaching Public Administration
Location: Room Γ5
Session Chair: Dr. Monika KNASSMÛLLER, WU Vienna
4:15pm - 5:45pmPSG. 12-6: Public Sector Financial Management : 6 Audit and Assurance
Location: Auditorium 3
Session Chair: Prof. Marco BISOGNO, University of Salerno
4:15pm - 5:45pmPSG. 13-6: Public Policy : Citizen-State Interaction and Administrative Burdens
Location: Room B3
Session Chair: Dr. Nadine RAAPHORST, Leiden University
4:15pm - 5:45pmPSG. 18-6: Justice and Court Administration : Human Resources
Location: Room Δ12
Session Chair: Prof. Anne SANDERS, Bielefeld University
4:15pm - 5:45pmPSG. 19-6: Collaborative Networks and Social Innovation : Collaborative Networks Innovation for Public Values
Location: Room B1
Session Chair: Prof. Luca MAZZARA, University of Bologna
Session Chair: Dr. Fulvio SCOGNAMIGLIO, Open University & Università degli Studi Milano Bicocca
4:15pm - 5:45pmPSG. 22-6: Behavioural Public Administration
Location: Room Γ3
Session Chair: Sheeling NEO, Erasmus University Rotterdam
4:15pm - 5:45pmReSPA: Inclusive and Transparent Policy-making in a Digital World
Location: Room B6
Session Chair: Jelena MRDAK, Regional School for Public Administration

Speakers :

 

  • Nedzib Delic

Public Administration Reform Coordinators Office - Cabinet of the Chairman of the Council of Ministers, Bosnia and Herzegovinia

  • Lidija Ljumovic,  Director General

Ministry of Public Administration Developing and Cooperation with CSOs, Montenegro

  • Gordana Gapikj Dimitrovska

State Advisor,  Ministry of Information Society and Administration, North Macedonia

  • Danilo Roncevic,  Director of Human Resources Management Service

Government of the Republic of Serbia,  Human Resources Management Service, Serbia

  • Qendrim Bytyqi

Acting Head, Department for Management of Public Officials,  Ministry of Internal Affairs, Kosovo

The Discussion panel will focus on the following indicative topics:

  • To present current practices from the Western Balkan region in using digital tools for more inclusive and transparent policy-making.
  • To identify challenges and barriers in using digital tools in policy processes.
  • To discuss future trends and innovations in policy-making, such as using behavioral insights to help design better policies

The digital revolution is reshaping governance and policy-making processes worldwide. Digital tools and technologies offer unprecedented opportunities to enhance inclusivity and transparency in policy-making, fostering greater civic engagement, accountability, and trust in government institutions. This panel discussion aims to explore the current landscape, challenges, and best practices associated with inclusive and transparent policy-making in the digital age.
 
Key topics will be addressed by the panelists as: the use of digital tools for civic engagement will be explored, including platforms and applications that facilitate citizen participation in policy-making, how digital technologies can enhance transparency in governance through open data and digital reporting and the challenges and risks associated with digital policy-making, such as the sustainability of digital solutions, internal coordination among government institutions, digital divide etc.

4:15pm - 6:15pmDIALOGUE 2: EURO- ASIA Panel on: Collaborative and participative governance for better public policies
Location: Auditorium 2
Session Chair: Prof. Calin Emilian HINTEA, Babes Bolyai University

Opening Address:

Si RUOXIA - Vice President of CAPS

Prof. Eko PRASOJO, President of AGPA

Prof. Jean-Michel EYMERI-DOUZANS, President of EGPA

Speakers :

Prof. Peng LIU: Institutional Isomorphism and Regulatory State Building: The Case of Food and Drug Administration of China (10 min)

Prof Eva SORENSEN: Collaborative Governance in Europe: Research Trends and empirical developments (10 min)

Prof Yongzheng YANG: The impact of regulatory instruments on nonprofits ‘compliance: Evidence from a survey experiment in China (10 min)

Prof Lei ZHAI: The Competitive Logic of Chinese Local Governments Based on Policymaking (10 min)

Prof Yazhuo HUANG: From “Isomorphic Responsibility” to Governmental Responsibility System: Explaining Grassroots Overburden and Exploring Solutions. (10 min)

Prof Elke LOEFFLER:  Participative Governance in Europe: Main Trends and Perspectives (10 min)

Concluding remarks

4:15pm - 6:15pmPanel: Meet the Editors
Location: Room A1
Session Chair: Prof. Andrew MASSEY, King's College London

Speakers

  • Sabine Kuhlmann – International Review of Administrative Sciences
  • Ian Elliott – Public Administration and Development
  • Sara Rinfret – Public Affairs Education
  • Albert Meijer – Information Polity
  • Helen Yu - Public Personnel Management
  • Gabriela Lotta - JPART
  • Bert George – Public Management Review (Video)
4:15pm - 6:15pmPSG 7-5: Ethics and Integrity : Integrity
Location: Room Γ2
Session Chair: Prof. Leonie HERES, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
4:15pm - 6:15pmPSG. 16-2: Public Marketing and Communication
Location: Room B2
Session Chair: Prof. Christophe ALAUX, AIX MARSEILLE UNIVERSITY
Session Chair: Prof. Martial PASQUIER, University of Lausanne (UNIL)
Session Chair: Prof. Vincent MABILLARD, Université Libre de Bruxelles
4:15pm - 6:15pmPSG. 20-5/ PSG. 21-4: Special Joint Session
Location: Saki Karagiorga II Auditorium
Session Chair: Prof. Tanja KLENK, University of the Federal Armed Forces Hamburg
Session Chair: Prof. Sonja BLUM, Bielefeld University
7:00pmTransport 1: Departure of the Busses from Panteion University to Dinner Venue

Departure time will be confirmed during the Conference and on the App Conf4Me 

7:30pmTransport 2: Departure of the Busses from Panteion University to Dinner Venue

Departure time will be confirmed during the Conference and on the App Conf4Me 

8:15pm - 11:30pmDinner: EGPA Conference Dinner

Il Giardino, Δημοτικό Κολυμβητήριο Γουδή Εντός Αθλητικού Κέντρο, Athina 115 27

11:30pmTransport 3: Departure of the first Busses to Panteion University

 
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