Warwick Law School News
Warwick Law School News
The latest updates from our department
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 Modern Law Review Scholarship 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 here.
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."
Professor Shaheen Ali elected as Associate Member of the International Academy of Comparative Law
Professor Shaheen Sardar Ali was elected as Associate member of the International Academy of Comparative Law (IACL) in its election round of 2015. Founded at The Hague on 13 September 1924, the IACL is the leading international institution bringing together scholars in the field of comparative law. According to its Statutes, membership of the IACL is composed of Titular Members and Associate Members who in turn, elect new Associate Members
Professor Rebecca Probert publishes new edited book 'Marriage Rites and Rights'
Recent years have seen extensive discussion about the continuing retreat from marriage, the increasing demand for the right to marry from previously excluded groups, and the need to protect those who do not wish to marry from being forced to do so. At the same time, weddings are big business, couples are spending more than ever before on getting married, and marriage ceremonies are increasingly elaborate. It is therefore timely to reflect on the rites of marriage, as well as the right to marry (or not to marry), and the relationship between them.
To this end, this new interdisciplinary collection brings together scholars from numerous fields, including law, sociology, anthropology, psychology, demography, theology and art and design. Focusing on England and Wales, it explores in depth the specific issues arising from this jurisdiction’s Anglican heritage, demographic development, current laws and social practices.
Illan Wall gives keynote at Critical Legal Conference
Dr Illan rua Wall gave a keynote at the 2015 Critical Legal Conference in the Aula Leopoldina at the University of Wroclaw in Poland. He presented five theses on crowds. In response to the events of Occupy, the Indignados, the so-called Arab Spring and the miriad of other recent disorders, he developed a legal theory of disorder and political turbulence.
Research Seminar - Friday 11th October
African Constitutional Reviews, Elections and Human Rights: The Case of Tanzania
Professor Chris Maina Peter will be holding a research seminar on ‘African Constitutional Reviews, Elections and Human Rights: The Case of Tanzania.’ The seminar will begin with lunch at 12:30 and will start at 1pm in S2.12.
Professor Peter will be discussing the ongoing Tanzanian Constitutional Review and electoral process in the context of African Constitutional Reviews. Recent review processes in Africa have had significant implications for human rights and democracy and in the case of Tanzania this has raised significant issues in relation to the right to self-determination as well as general human rights including women's rights.
Professor Chris Maina Peter is a leading African expert on Human Rights and Constitutionalism. He is Professor of Law at the University of Dar es Salaam and a Member of the UN Committee on Elimination of Racial Discrimination.
Crossing the Mediterranean Sea by boat: Mapping and documenting migratory journeys and experiences
Dr Dallal Stevens (Law, Warwick), Associate Professor Vicki Squire (PaIS, Warwick), Professor Nick Vaughan-Williams (PaIS, Warwick), Dr Angeliki Dimitriadi (ELIAMEP, Athens), and Dr Maria Pisani (Malta), have been awarded over 150K for an ESRC Urgent Research project entitled 'Crossing the Mediterranean Sea by boat: Mapping and documenting migratory journeys and experiences.’
Crossing the Mediterranean Sea by boat: Mapping and documenting migratory journeys and experiences
While migrant deaths en route to the European Union are by no means new, the level and intensity of recent tragedies is unprecedented. More than 1850 deaths were recorded January-May 2015, demanding swift action on the part of EU Member States. This project produces a timely and robust evidence base as grounds for informing policy interventions developed under emergency conditions across the Mediterranean. It does so by assessing the impact of such interventions on those that they affect most directly: migrants or refugees themselves. This project undertakes such an assessment by engaging the journeys and experiences of people migrating, asking:
- What are the impacts of policy interventions on migratory journeys and experiences across the Mediterranean?
- How do refugees or migrants negotiate complex and entwined migratory and regulatory dynamics?
- In what ways can policy be re-shaped to address migrant deaths at sea?
The project focuses on three EU island arrival points in Greece, Italy and Malta. Qualitative interview data, both textual and visual, is produced through an interdisciplinary participatory research approach. The project contributes: an interdisciplinary perspective on the legal and social implications of policy interventions in the region; a comparative perspective on migratory routes and methods of travel across the Mediterranean; a qualitative analysis of the journeys and experiences of refugees and migrants; and methodological insights into participatory research under emergency conditions.
Warwick Law Students interviewed for the Boar
Warwick Law school students have recently been interviewed for the Boar, to discuss the legal representation they're providing to death row inmates in the USA as part of a summer internship.
Please see below for the article:
http://theboar.org/2015/08/20/warwick-law-students-to-defend-us-death-row-inmates/
Law School - Annual Research Report 2015
The Annual Research Report showcases the varity and excellence of the law school's research activities, and the strength of the School as a research community.
Please see below for the report
ESRC Festival of Social Science - Prisoner wellbeing and the experience of punishment
The CJC is delighted to have been awarded funding by the ESRC to host an event as part of the ESRC Festival of Social Science on Saturday 14 November 2015.
The CJC multi-format event aims to bring together different perspectives on the experience of punishment, in order to raise awareness of, promote social science research on and generate debate on prisoner wellbeing and its consequences to criminal justice policy and practice. The full-day event will encourage an interactive open debate between academics and non-academics through drawing on a range of perspectives on the topic, from that of those responsible for formulating and implementing prison policy, and that of social scientists researching punishment and criminal justice, to that of those with first-hand, lived experiences of punishment within prisons. Interactive sessions will include: screening and discussion of the film ‘Herman’s House’ (a movie about the communication between an architect and a life prisoner in the US); a workshop run by the Empty Cages Collective about the conditions and experience of imprisonment in England and Wales; and an exhibition of prisoners’ creative self-expression (letters, photography, paintings, etc.) followed by discussion.