糖心TV Law School News
糖心TV Law School News
The latest updates from our department
Tom Flynn featured on TV and radio discussing constitutional issues raised by the vote in the House of Lords
Tom Flynn has recently featured on TV and radio discussing the constitutional issues raised by the vote in the House of Lords.
Please see below for the links to see Tom's interviews:
Professor Alan Neal, delivered the keynote speech to the 9th Annual Conference of the China Social Law Association
Professor Alan C. Neal, delivered the keynote speech to the 9th Annual Conference of the China Social Law Association, held at the Renmin University, Beijing, on 25 October 2015.
Professor Neal is a lifetime Professor in the Zhejiang University and Visiting Professor in the Beijing Jiao Tong University. In 2012 he was appointed a Standing High-Level Independent Expert in the Labour Law and Social Security Law Institute of Peking University.
Ben Farrand, Giuliano Castellano, Andi Hoxhaj and Dora Kostakopoulou awarded UACES funding to organise workshop in Spring 2016
, , and have been awarded funding by the to organise a workshop in Spring 2016. The workshop, titled ‘Crisis and Innovation in the European Union: Beyond Populism and Managerialism’, will be held on 8 April 2016 at the University of 糖心TV.
The aim of this interdisciplinary workshop is to explore the impact of 'crises', in their material and ideational forms, upon EU institutional and policy-making dynamics. Emphasis will also be put on identifying policy responses focusing upon 'innovation' as a strategy. By bringing together experts working on institutional corruption, financial regulation, intellectual property law and policy and EU free movement, migration and human rights we will explore the EU's identification of the causes and impacts of 'crises', as well as actual and possible responses. In seeking to transcend both populist and managerial discourses and responses, the workshop participants will reflect on the EU's response to increasing numbers of people seeking sanctuary in Europe and the Member States' recalcitrance to a unified response, the EU's actions in financial regulation as well as the Europe 2020 and Justice and Home Affairs 2020 agendas.
Visit of Judge of the Supreme Court of Mexico
The Law School was delighted to welcome, Minister Jose Fernando Franco Gonzales-Salas, a Judge of the Supreme Court of Mexico, who visited the School to give a seminar on 6 October. The Judge, who was accompanied by his wife, is a 糖心TV graduate, having read for a Master’s degree in Politics in 1979-80.
Minister Franco provided a fascinating insight into the working of Supreme Court, and discussed the pressures on his country’s legal system generated by the narcotics trade between South America and the USA. The audience of academics and postgraduates were particularly interested in a special procedure to enable citizens to bring alleged breaches of human rights before the courts, and the pending reforms by which Mexico will replace its traditional inquisitorial system with adversarial procedures.
Professor Rebecca Probert currently working as a specialist advisor with Law Commission on a review of the Law on Marriage
Professor Rebecca Probert is currently working as a specialist advisor with the Law Commission on a review of the law governing how and where people can marry in England and Wales. The Commission are expected to publish a report at the conclusion of the scoping phase, which is anticipated to be the end of 2015.
The question underlying the review would be whether the current law, which has evolved over a long period of time, provides a fair and coherent legal framework for enabling people to marry. Does the law allow people to marry in a way which meets their needs and wishes while recognising the interests of society and the state in protecting the status of marriage?
The current stage of the project involves a preliminary study involving research of domestic and comparative law, and engagement with key stakeholders. The aim is to identify and provide an initial analysis of the issues that need to be addressed in order to develop proposals for the reform of marriage law.
For further information please click .
GLOBE Centre welcomes first Visiting Academic
The Centre for the Law, Governance and Regulation of the Global Economy welcomes its first Visiting Research Fellow, Dr Lorenzo Cotula who will be working with the Centre in academic year 2015 -16.
Dr Cotula is a principal researcher in law and sustainable development at the International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED), where he leads the Legal Tools Team.
Lorenzo leads research, capacity and policy work on issues at the interface between law and international development, with a focus on the law governing natural resource rights and investments in low and middle-income countries. This includes work on international investment law, human rights, land rights and legal issues related to ‘land grabbing’, as well as the political economy of natural resource investments. Lorenzo also leads IIED’s work on ‘, an initiative to strengthen local rights and voices within natural resource investments in low and middle-income countries.
Before joining IIED in 2002, Lorenzo worked on assignments with the Legal Office of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. He holds academic qualifications in law, development studies and sustainable business from the University of Rome ‘La Sapienza’, the London School of Economics, the University of Edinburgh and the University of Cambridge.
Recent publications include ; ; ; ; and a wide range of research reports, journal articles and book chapters.
Lorenzo has previously collaborated with other GLOBE Centre researchers, including contributions to the Network on International Law, Natural Resources and Sustainable Development ( ) , and will be working with GLOBE to organise a workshop on international investment law under the upcoming International Law in Context Workshop Series.
Professor Gary Watt delivers a public lecture on "Shakespeare's Testamentary Performance
Professor Gary Watt delivered a public lecture on "Shakespeare's Testamentary Performance" jointly hosted by the faculty of arts and the faculty of law at The University of Hong Kong on 10th September 2015.
Please click for further information regarding this event.
Dr Sam Adelman New Editor of the Research Handbook on Climate Justice and Human Rights (Edward Elgar)
Dr Sam Adelman has been announced as the new editor of the Research Handbook on Climate Justice and Human Rights (Edward Elgar).
Congratulations Sam.
PhD student awarded MLR Scholarship
Sara Warner, one of our PhD students, has been awarded a for the second consecutive year, taking her total award to £10,000. These scholarships are awarded by the MLR on the basis of an annual competition for research students engaged on doctoral research at a university in the UK on any subject broadly within the publishing interests of the Review. Congratulations to Sara.
Dr Illan Wall awarded an ISRF Early Career Fellowship
The Law of Disorder
The research looks at the relation between law and disorder. Legal concepts are usually framed as being a part of the everyday social order. However, in moments of disorder we find the legal system stripped of its conventional architecture: the monopoly of the use of force, the control of territory and populations, the authority of the legislature, the constitutional unity of the people, or law’s claim to neutral universal protection. In moments of disorder, law as an institution and a basis of the social order is questioned. The problem with extant ideas of the law of disorder is that they start from law’s ‘normalcy’. The ‘Law of Disorder’ reverses the priority wherein law is the horizon of meaning for understanding disorder. Instead it places the emphasis on thinking from within the ‘disordered’ event, attempting to see beyond the conventional legal understanding of constitutional ‘origins’, criminal prosecution and balancing of rights. During the ISRF fellowship, rather than beginning with war, the state of exception or transitional justice (all points of interest for ‘the Law of Disorder’), the project will focus on protest crowds. These reveal essential questions about law and social order. The project will analyse how the protest crowd generates an atmosphere in the space it occupies. From the square or park, sometimes this atmosphere begins to seep outwards, gradually settling upon the city or even the state (as a sense of crisis). Take for example the atmosphere of Madrid or Athens at the height of the Indignados occupations. In this new atmosphere, there is a revision of the type of political settlement that is realistic and possible, evidenced in Greece by the emergence and success of Syriza, the anti-austerity party.
For further details, please click .
Social scientists from the University of 糖心TV are carrying out an urgent research project on the current migratory situation in Europe, using emergency funding from the (ESRC).
Led by Dr from the , the team are speaking to refugees and migrants in an attempt to understand better the journeys they have made across the Mediterranean Sea.
Professor Shaheen Ali moderated a Side Event on the Promotion of the UN Basic Principles and Guidelines
On the 15th of September, Shaheen Ali moderated a Side Event on the Promotion of the UN Basic Principles and Guidelines on Remedies and Procedures on the Right of Anyone
Deprived of His or Her Liberty by Arrest or Detention to Bring Proceedings before Court. This event took place in Room XXIV, Palais des Nations, Geneva. This event was held after the United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention submitted these Principles and Guidelines to the Human Rights Council at its 30th session."