If you want to have a client application that will provide a delegate that people can wire up to, then yes. You would use .net remoting for that.
I used this example: http://www.codeproject.com/KB/dotnet/DotNetRemotingEventsExpl.aspx
Basically what you are going to do, is to expose a remoting server that publishes a known object. The trick with events, is that the server has to know about the type that the client is wiring the event handlers to. So what you do in that case is that you also provide an abstract class as an event sink.
Basically that class will look something like this:
public abstract class MyEventSinkClass : MarshalByRefObject
{
public abstract void MyAbstractEventHandler(string arg1, string arg2);
public void MyEventHandler(string arg1, string arg2)
{
MyAbstractEventHandler(arg1,arg2);
}
}
Then on the client side they would create a class, and inherit from MyEventSinkClass. They put their logic for handling the event in the override for MyAbstractEventHandler. When they wire up the instance that they are using remoting for, instead of wiring like you normally would, they need to wire to their instance of the class that inherits MyEventSinkClass to the MyEventHandler Method. Then when the event fires, it will eventually call into the overriden method and execute their code.
You can find the details of how to setup a remoting server and client in the link I gave, it isn't difficult.