Jump to content

UEA Law School

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by CommonsDelinker (talk | contribs) at 09:15, 9 June 2020 (Replacing 247917_3a00fec7.jpg with File:Earlham_Hall,_Law_School_of_theUniversity_of_East_Anglia.jpg (by CommonsDelinker because: redirect linked from other project).). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Earlham Hall, home to UEA Law School

UEA Law School, founded in 1977, is a school within the University of East Anglia, dedicated to research and teaching in law. It is located in Earlham Hall, a seventeenth-century mansion situated on the edge of the UEA campus. From mid-2010 to early 2014, the school was temporarily located in the Blackdale School Building owing to essential renovation work. In national league tables UEA Law School has most recently been ranked 7th in the UK by The Guardian, placing it as one of the top law schools in the country.[1]

Academics

UEA Law School is a medium-sized law school. It has 23 full-time members of faculty who are assisted by 12 part-timers. The Head of the School is Professor Andreas Stephen, following Professor Peter Kunzlik, the former Head of the School, becoming Emeritus Professor in August 2017. The Professors are Michael Harker, Morten Hviid, David Mead, Rosemary Pattenden (Emeritus), Christopher Wadlow (Emeritus), Ian Smith (Emeritus), Peter Kunzlik (Emeritus), Owen Warnock, Gareth Thomas and Rob Heywood. [2]

Research

The 2008 Research Assessment Exercise rated 80% of the research as being at international level (2* and above), of which 40% was rated as being of either world-leading (4*) or internationally excellent quality (3*). [3]

The School has research centres or groupings in the areas of Competition Law, Media and Internet Law and International Company and Commercial Law.

Additionally, members of the School have international reputations for research in Medical Law, Intellectual Property Law, Public Order law, Evidence, Criminal Justice and Procedure, Comparative Private Law, Contract, Tort and Restitution, and Family law. In addition to these School-based research clusters, many researchers in the School belong to formal networks which go beyond the Law School. For example, the School's competition lawyers are members of the ESRC Centre for Competition Policy [CCP] and Morten Hviid of the Law School took over from Catherine Waddams as Director of the CCP in September 2010.

Notable alumni

Law

Politics

Other

Notable faculty

References