91¸£Àû Law School News
91¸£Àû Law School News
The latest updates from our department
Rebecca Probert is shortlisted for prize in the 2011 Family Law Awards.
Rebecca Probert has been shortlisted for a prize in the 2011 Family Law Awards. The Family Law Awards 2011 will be hosted by Clive Coleman and are an opportunity to celebrate and recognise the many successes and outstanding achievements of family law practitioners. They are an opportunity for Family Law and its readers to acknowledge the hard work and commitment throughout the year among the nominees and the profession as a whole.
The Awards will take place on 18 October 2011 at the Hilton Hotel on Park Lane, London.
For more details of this award see the link below.
Kathryn McMahon appointed Associate Editor of the Global Journal of Comparative Law: Call for papers.
Kathryn McMahon has been appointed an Associate Editor of a new journal Global Journal of Comparative Law which will publish its inaugural issue in 2012. 
New Book: Dalvinder Singh co-authors 'Debt Restructuring' (Oxford 2011)

Debt Restructuring, Oxford University Press, 2011, Rodrigo Olivares-Caminal, John Douglas, Randall Guynn, Alan Kornberg, Sarah Paterson, Dalvinder Singh, and Hilary Stonefrost, Edited by Nick Segal and Look Chan Ho
520 pages | 246x171mm
978-0-19-957969-3 | Hardback | 14 April 2011
Price: £155.00
Jackie Hodgson awarded 330,000 by the EU Commission.
Professor Jackie Hodgson has been awarded €330,000 by the EU Commission for an empirical project examining the procedural rights of suspects in police custody in the UK, France and the Netherlands. The study will be conducted over 2 years together with partners at the University of Maastricht, University of West of England, Justice, the Open Society Justice Initiative and Avon & Somerset Police. It will assist in the successful implementation of EU measures in this area - notably the right to custodial legal advice - and will establish practice-oriented training materials.
Alan Norrie's latest book Dialectic and Difference: Dialectical Critical Realism and the Grounds of Justice is jointly awarded the Cheryl Frank Memorial Prize.
Alan Norrie's Dialectic and Difference: Dialectical Critical Realism and the Grounds of Justice (Routledge, 2010) was jointly awarded the Cheryl Frank Memorial Prize for 2010. The prize is awarded for the year's best and/or most innovative new writing in or about the tradition of critical realism.
The Committee state that Dialectic and Difference expounds and develops dialectical critical realism and brilliantly demonstrates how it trumps the irrealism of the Western philosophical tradition in general and poststructuralism in particular. It makes a significant contribution to critical realist ethical theory.
The co-winner was Christian Smith for What is a Person? Rethinking Humanity, Social Life, and the Moral Good from the Person Up (University of Chicago Press, 2010)
Rebecca Probert publishes timely book on the marriage law of England.

The laws which govern the marriages of the British royal family have led to heartbreak, farce and confusion, and are unfit for the twenty-first century. In an era that values human rights and free choice, there is little certainty over questions as fundamental as the effect of marrying a Roman Catholic, or of marrying without the Queen's consent. Question marks still hang over the legal basis for royal civil marriage. Obscure acts of Parliament have threatened to render members of the royal family illegitimate and prevented others from following their hearts. Drawing on a wide range of sources including once-secret files in the UK's National Archives, The Rights & Wrongs of Royal Marriage recounts episodes from the eighteenth century right down to the present day that would not look out of place in Yes, Minister or The Mikado. Professor Rebecca Probert, the leading authority on the marriage law of England and Wales, is as characteristically clear when explaining the complexities of royal marriage law as she is in her other groundbreaking studies. Her prose is concise and elegant, and full of historical anecdotes that will have royalists and republicans alike laughing aloud and wide-eyed with astonishment.
Law Commission acknowledges the input of 91¸£Àû Law academics in recent Report on expert witnesses.
The Law Commission has just released its Report, Expert Evidence in Criminal proceedings in England and Wales. Bill O’Brian and Andrew Roberts submitted comments in response to the consultation paper and the Report acknowledges the impact of these in their analysis
The report is available online at this address:
Paul Raffield's latest book nominated for the Inner Temple Book Prize.
Paul Raffield's Shakespeare's Imaginary Constitution: Late-Elizabethan Politics and the Theatre of Law - has been nominated for the Inner Temple Book Prize, awarded by the Inner Temple every 3 years for a book which has made a profound contribution to the understanding or practice of law in the United Kingdom.
Centre's Report for the Scottish Human Rights Commission on HRIA Now Published.
In April 2010, Dr James Harrison, Mary Ann-Stephenson (External Member of the Centre) and Andrew Williams were commissioned by the Scottish Human Rights Commission to review all the practice of conducting human rights impact assessments in the UK and internationally and to produce guiding principles for conducting future human rights impact assessments.
Their final report includes an eight-step process that can be utilised in any HIA process and detailed recommendations for how those eight steps should be implemented. The report also includes illustrations of how this HRIA process will function.
The report can be accessed
For the Centre's other work on Human Rights Impact Assessments, please click
Professor Jackie Hodgson to deliver the opening address in the 3rd annual conference in the EU funded series The Future of the Adversarial System.
On April 1st, Professor Jackie Hodgson will deliver the opening address at Chapel Hill, UNC in the 3rd annual conference in the EU funded series The Future of the Adversarial System. For more info see
Jackie's blog
New book: 'International Economic Law, Globalization And Developing Countries', edited by Faundez and Tan
‘This book is both breathtaking in its scope and impressive in its attention to legal and institutional detail in situating developing countries in the evolving body of international economic law. Essays in this volume canvas most important areas of international economic law, including international trade law, international financial regulation, the regulation of foreign direct investment and multinational corporations, foreign aid, the enforcement of human rights standards and core international labour standards on multinational corporations, international enforcement of anti-corruption conventions, international competition law, international intellectual property rights, and international environmental law. A pervasive theme, compellingly developed, in most of these papers is the asymmetric structure of international institutions that generate rules in these various areas, in which developing countries are mostly rule takers, rather than equal participants. The current global financial crisis may provide a welcome opportunity for re-evaluating these institutional asymmetries. In any such re-evaluation, this book will provide a veritable cornucopia of constructive new insights.’
– Michael Trebilcock, University of Toronto, Canada
For more info, see