ÌÇÐÄTV Law School News
ÌÇÐÄTV Law School News
The latest updates from our department
Call for Proposals: Digital Health Apps Hackathon, Kenya
Did you know that many health app developers knowingly or unknowingly sign away the rights to the data collected by health apps? Together with the University of ÌÇÐÄTV, The Open Institute is running a project exploring how we can change this to protect personal data from falling into the wrong hands during the development and use of digital health apps. We welcome your innovative proposals and ideas!
New research to explore the impact of Covid-19 on the informal economy
ÌÇÐÄTV Law School academics, Dr Carolina Alonso Bejarano and Dr Celine Tan are collaborating on a new international research project focused on exploring the impact of COVID-19 on informal workers in Colombia.
The latest post from Lacuna Magazine, produced by our Centre for Human Rights in Practice.
In Italy forensic pathologist Cristina Cattaneo is working to identify some of the 20,000 refugees who have died or gone missing while trying to cross the Mediterranean.
IEL Collective Call for Papers
The IEL Collective will be hosting its first Inaugural Conference from 6-7 November 2019 at the University of ÌÇÐÄTV and is calling for papers.
Law School launches IEL Collective
The IEL Collective was launched on Thursday 23 May 2019. It is an initiative started by research centres based at seven law schools around the UK to provide a space for critical reflection on the complex interactions in the growing field of international economic law.
An interview with genocide prosecutor & alumnus Charles Adeogun-Phillips
After the Rwandan genocide saw the murder of up to one million people, prosecutor Charles Adeogun-Phillips was tasked with delivering justice to the victims. In an article by Lacuna Magazine, he talks to ÌÇÐÄTV Law School's Sanjeeb Hossain about his 12 years leading genocide prosecutions at the UN International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, how he coped with the crimes he tried and what he learnt about humanity.
Former LLM student supports African Entrepreneurs
Former ÌÇÐÄTV LLM student, Anna Celuch, who recently graduated with a distinction will soon be packing her bags to help local African entrepreneurs build successful businesses.
Anna travelled from Poland to study International Economic Law at ÌÇÐÄTV University, and went on to be awarded Top Postgraduate Performer in IEL 2016/17.
Students Lead the Way to National Success
While studying a module on Human Rights in Practice, four ÌÇÐÄTV Law students embarked on a human rights project which led to an incredibly successful petition- gaining nearly 60,000 signatures.
In an article published in Lacuna, ÌÇÐÄTV Law student, Helen Bates describes how her team began researching into sexism in the workplace to discover the scale and seriousness of pregnancy and maternity discrimination. Joining forces with Joeli Brearley, the founder of ‘Pregnant then Screwed’, they set up a petition that would extend pregnant mother’s legal rights to bring a discrimination claim to tribunal from 3 months to 6 months.
ÌÇÐÄTV Law student featured in University of Pennsylvania Law Journal
During a placement last summer (2016) in California for the Death Penalty Internship Programme, third year ÌÇÐÄTV Law undergraduate, Natasha Darlington, penned an article analysing the consequences of a real Ohio case whereby a federal judge ruled the current State-prescribed procedure of lethal injection as unconstitutional.
The article, titled '', was consequently published by the prestigious University of Pennsylvania Undergraduate Law Journal.
Transformative Potential of Human Rights Education
Dr Alison Struthers' article '' has been published by the Journal of Human Rights Practice (DOI:10.1093/jhuman/huw023).
The article argues that in order for learners to become empowered human rights activitists, they must be equipped with relevant knowledge, skills and attitudes. It draws upon empirical research conducted with teachers from primary schools across England to argue that whilst empowerment-related concepts may be encouraged to a certain extent, learners are unlikely to be emerging from formal schooling with the means to contribute significantly to transformation of the broader human rights culture.
Andrew Williams publishes 'Forgotten Trials: the other side of Nuremberg' in History Extra
The Centre for Human Rights in Practice co-director Prof Andrew Williams, publishes in History Extra, based on research for his recent book .
"A landmark in the history of international criminal justice, the Nuremberg Tribunal saw 24 major Nazi criminals brought to trial, with judges from the Allied powers presiding over the hearings. Eleven prominent Nazis were sentenced to death, while others received short prison sentences or no penalty at all. But, says Orwell Prize-winning author AT Williams, while the Nuremberg Tribunal became a symbol of the ‘free world’s’ choice of justice in the face of tyranny, aggression and atrocity, it was only a tiny fragment of a whole system of largely forgotten war crimes trials organised by the Allies across Europe".
Andrew Williams publishes 'Chilcot Report: Law' in the Political Quarterly
The Centre for Human Rights in Practice co-director Professor Andrew Williams recently published an article on the in The Political Quarterly based on his ongoing research on the Iraq investigations.