STAFF RESEARCH INTERESTS
Dr Richard Austen-Baker: Contracts (doctrine, history and theory), torts; remedies and commercial law (
esp.sales, bailments and agency).
Dr Sarah Beresford: Labour relations and employment law; family law and society; property; equity and trusts; gender. Research interests are currently in the area of representations and notions of the family in legal discourse.
Dr Ian Bryan: Criminal justice; criminal law; evidence. He has researched and written in the field of criminal justice, in particular: the regulation of police powers; police-suspect relations; interrogations; confessions; evidential rules.
Dr Israel Butler: International law; human rights; international relations; the Inter-American human rights protection mechanisms, and the European Union.
Dr Mark Butler: Employment law, EU labour law; discrimination and social policy.
Dr Bella Chatterjee: Cyberlaw; socio-legal studies; gender and the law.
Dr Fergal Davis: Terrorism and law; civil liberties; legal history’ jurisprudence, particularly judicial review scepticism; public law, as well as ‘popular democracy’ and ‘web 2.0’.
Michael Doupé: Property law; environmental law; legal method.
Dr Agata Fijalkowski: Criminal justice; criminal law; constitutional law; international comparative criminal justice; comparative law and civil liberties.
Georgina Firth: Criminal justice; criminal law; feminist legal studies; comparative law; prison law; immigration and civil liberties.
Dr Sara Fovargue: Health care law, including clinical research, health care decision making, reproduction and reproductive choice, and the criminal regulation of the body.
Neil Kibble: Evidence; proof and judicial discretion/decision- making; crime and criminology.
Philip Lawton: Corporate law; corporate governance; socio- legal aspects of family business and equity and trusts. Philip worked in legal editorial roles in the publishing industry in the late 1970s and has been an academic lawyer since 1979 in the UK, China and Hong Kong.
Angus MacCulloch: Competition law. Much of his recent work has been on the reform of UK and EC competition law; particularly changes made to the enforcement of the competition rules.
Dr Barbara Mauthe: Public law, especially relations between local and central government and the regulation of decision- making processes.
Prof David Milman: Corporate law; insolvency law; international business law; partnership law. He is a member of the Editorial Advisory Board of the Company Lawyer. Having edited the Insolvency Lawyer, he became a co-editor
74 Arts and Social Sciences
to Sweet and Maxwell’s Company Law Newsletter and a founder co-editor of the Bankruptcy and Personal Insolvency Reports.
Dr Richard Frimpong Oppong: Private international law; public international law; international economic/commercial law; international human rights law in Africa.
Dr Suzanne Ost: Law and medical ethics (particularly euthanasia); the ‘euthanasia’ and medical experimentation programmes that were implemented in Nazi Germany; the law surrounding indecent images of children and the sexual grooming of children; criminal law and the morality of law.
Emeritus Prof Sol Picciotto: International business law and regulation; international economic law; international law; social theory of law.
Prof Peter Rowe: International humanitarian law (armed conflict); military law and the relationship between these two areas. Research interests lie in the fields of military law and the laws of war and he has published widely in journals in these fields, in addition to pieces on the law of evidence and tort. He was chairman of the UK Group of the International Society for Military Law and the Laws of War.
Dr David Seymour: Tort; land law; jurisprudence; social theory. David Seymour’s research interests include the relationship of law with antisemitism and the holocaust and the representation of law within the media of critical legal scholarship and “critical legal film”.
Prof Sigrun Skogly: International law, especially human rights. She has worked for research institutions and non-government organisations in the fields of human rights and development in the United States, Norway and elsewhere in Europe
Prof David Sugarman: English and continental legal history; legal education; legal profession; law and the state. Professor Sugarman is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society a member of a number of editorial boards.
Dr James Summers: International law; the rights of peoples, minorities and indigenous peoples; sources of international law; international environmental law; international organisations; European and international human rights.
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