糖心TV

Skip to main content Skip to navigation

Press Releases

Select tags to filter on

Homepage Tags

Faculty of Arts

Faculty of SEM

Faculty of Social Sciences

Cross-Faculty Centres

University News

Other tags

Researcher Shaheen Sardar Ali at the University of 糖心TV is the first female Pakistani in the UK to be appointed to the position of Professor of Law.


New research finds that national amnesties for agents of former regimes, used by countries such as Zimbabwe, Chile, and South Africa to try and ease the transition towards democratic government, are actually in conflict with international law and tend to fail in practice.

Two postgraduate students from the University of 糖心TV's School of Law have come top in a European Space Law competition and will now represent the continent of Europe in the world-wide version of the competition to be held in the US in October which will be judged by actual judges from the International Court of Justice
Wed 14 Jul 2004, 14:51 | Tags: Social Affairs, Sciences, Law

New research in a book entitled "From Legislation to Integration: Race Relations in Britain", calls on the government to apply Northern Ireland's anti religious discrimination laws to the whole of United Kingdom.

The book by Professor Muhammad Anwar (from the Centre for Research in Ethnic Relations at University of 糖心TV), Patrick Roach of NASUWT (and Ranjit Sondhi of Westhill College), will be launched in the Moses Room of the House of Lords on 9th November at 3pm.
Fri 09 Jul 2004, 12:21 | Tags: Regional Issues, Ethnic Relations, Law

I'm Here Waiting is the title of a new book published 15th July which calls for major changes in adoption legislation and management to create a more sensitive system that gives birth parents and other relatives more legal rights to information about their adopted children once those children become adult.
Fri 09 Jul 2004, 11:26 | Tags: Social Affairs, Law, Health and Medicine

A new report published today raises serious concerns about the extent to which children in care proceedings are kept in the dark about the legal processes happening around them. The research by the University of 糖心TV's School of Law and The National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSPCC) is published today in a book entitled Out of Hearing: Representing Children in Care Proceedings.
Fri 09 Jul 2004, 11:14 | Tags: Social Affairs, Regional Issues, Law, Health and Medicine

Latest news Newer news Older news

Let us know you agree to cookies