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Dr Andy Aydın-Aitchison

Senior Lecturer in Criminology

Head of Subject Area: Criminology

PhD, MSc, MA (hons)

Office hours:

Email: Andy.Aydin-Aitchison@ed.ac.uk

SSRN: Papers

View my publications

Andy has been teaching and researching in criminology at the University of Edinburgh since 2006, first in the School of Social and Political Science and the in the School of Law from 2012 onwards. He has also held research posts with the Home Office and Cardiff University. He holds degrees from the University of Edinburgh and Cardiff University covering Criminology, Politics and Modern History.

Andy has served in leadership roles in postgraduate teaching, external relations, and research, as Postgraduate Research Director in the School of Law, and has regularly acted as co-director for the cross-school and cross-disciplinary MSc programme in Global Crime, Justice and Security. Andy has mentored several colleagues in early career research and lecturing roles, including BA Newton and ESRC Global Challenges Research post-doctoral fellows. He is an active PhD supervisor and has supervised PhDs to completion in topics including policy making, policy transfer, community policing and domestic violence. Andy continues to welcome applicants for doctoral study and post-doctoral mentoring. 

Current Research Interests

Andy's interests cover the criminology of atrocity crimes, and policing with a focus on governance and democracy.

He is currently focused on wartime detention camps in Herzegovina, atrocity and its aftermath in cinema, states' engagement with international criminal justice, and the pedagogy of atrocity criminology. With colleagues in Bosnia and Herzegovina and the Netherlands, he wrote the chapter on criminology and atrocity crimes for the latest 'Oxford Handbook of Criminology'.

His previous work on Bosnia and Herzegovina explored criminal justice reform as state-building and democratisation. Andy maintains his interest in democratic governance of police in research on Scotland with Dr Alistair Henry and Dr Ali Malik, and in relation to human rights with Ceren Mermutluoğlu. 

Visiting researchers

Research ethics and research resources

Research opportunities

Research projects

Public Law

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The public law research area at Edinburgh Law School provides cutting-edge research and teaching in some of the most pressing issues in contemporary law and politics.

Scottish Parliament chambers

It covers a wide variety of issues, including: questions of sub-state nationalism, plurinational constitutionalism, and the constitutionality of independence and secession of states; the legal and constitutional issues emerging from societies transition from conflict, such as inclusive peace process design and the role and status of peace agreements in constitutional and international law; the regulation and administration of environmental issues including climate change law; as well as the legal and constitutional implications of suprastate governance and adjudication, especially with respect to the EU and ECHR.

It has also been a major hub of research in pressing issues facing the constitutional futures of the UK, such as the 2014 Scottish Independence referendum and the process of the UK’s withdrawal from the EU.

Sanja Badanjak, Chancellor's Fellow

Kathryn Nash, Chancellor's Fellow

Christine Bell, Professor of Constitutional Law

Elisenda Casanas Adam, Senior Lecturer in Public Law and Human Rights

Navraj Singh Ghaleigh, Senior Lecturer in Climate Law

Cormac Mac Amhlaigh, Professor of Public Law

Stephen Tierney, Professor of Constitutional Theory

Neil Walker, Regius Professor of Public Law and the Law of Nature and Nations

Asanga Welikala, Lecturer in Public Law


Research Project Staff:

Juline Beaujouan, Senior Research Fellow

Tim Epple, Managing Director, Peace and Conflict Resolution Evidence Platform (PeaceRep)

Adam Farquhar, Research Associate and Data Officer

Niamh Henry, Research Data Engineer, Peace and Conflict Resolution Evidence Platform (PCREP)

Jinrui WangPeaceRep PeaceTech Visualisation Research Assistant

Robert Wilson, PeaceRep Research Fellow and Policy Co-ordinator

Laura Wise, PeaceRep Senior Research Fellow and Programme Coordinator

Book Chapters

Regionalized Governance in the Global South
Coe, Brooke; Nash, Kathryn. In: Cambridge University Press, 2023, p. 84. View chapter

Eppur Esiste! Legitimacy and longevity in the EU's long decade of crisis 
Mac Amhlaigh, Cormac. In: The Future of EU Constitutionalism. Ed, Matej Avbelj. 1st ed, Hart Publishing, 2023, p. 125-140. View chapter

Scottish Secession and the Political Constitution of the UK
Reid, Peter; Welikala, Asanga. In: Sceptical Perspectives on the Changing Constitution of the United Kingdom. Ed, Richard Johnson; Yuan Yi Zhu. 1st, ed, Hart Publishing, 2023. p. 307-330. View chapter

Journal articles

Peace agreements in a changing climate: Three ways in which climate change and peace processes interact
Epple, Tim. In: Environment and Security. 30.01.2025. View article

Incorporation Bills in the Scottish Parliament: The theoretical and practical consequences of uncertainty
Himsworth, Chris. In Public Law, 01.10.2024, p674-694. View article

A theory of plural constituent power for federal systems
Aroney, Nicholas; Duke, George; Tierney, Stephen. In: Global Constitutionalism, 19.01.2024, p. 1-21. View article

Provenance visualization: Tracing people, processes, and practices through a data-driven approach to provenance
Vancisin, Tomas; Clarke, Loraine; Orr, Mary et al. In: Digital Scholarship in the Humanities, Vol. 38, No. 3, 09.2023, p. 1322-1339. View article

The spaces of local agreements: Towards a new imaginary of the peace process
Bell, Christine; Wise, Laura. In: Journal of Intervention and Statebuilding, Vol. 16, No. 5, 01.02.2023, p. 563-583. View article

Working Papers

EU Constitutional Conflicts and Constitutionally Conforming Interpretation
Mac Amhlaigh, C. SSRN.

Keith Forum on Commonwealth Constitutionalism
The Keith Forum aims to harness the reservoir of comparative ideas from the Commonwealth for current UK constitutional debates, and to benefit Commonwealth states facing similar challenges.
Visit the Keith Forum website

Law and Polity Project
The Law and Polity Project addresses the challenges of how the modern state polity is affected by new legal and political forms.
Visit the Law and Polity Project website

Peace and Conflict Resolution Evidence Platform (PeaceRep)
PeaceRep re-thinks peace and transition processes in light of changing conflict dynamics, changing demands of inclusion, and changes in patterns of global intervention in conflict and peace/mediation/transition management processes.
Visit the PeaceRep website

The International Legitimacy Research Project
The International Legitimacy project is an interdisciplinary project examining various dimensions of legitimacy beyond the state.
Visit the International Legitimacy website

Edinburgh Dialogues on Post-Conflict Constitution Building
Edinburgh Dialogues on Post-Conflict Consitution Building is a partnership that seeks to bring together a network of academic and professional experts to share experiences, discuss contemporary challenges, and reflect on current scholarship and policy practice. The initiative is premised on the benefits of informed constitutional comparativism, an interdisciplinary approach to constitutional substance and processes, and the mutual benefits of regular and structured engagement between scholars and practitioners of constitution building.
 

Edinburgh Centre for Constitutional Law
The Centre for Constitutional Law provides a focal-point for research in public law and constitutional theory in the United Kingdom and beyond.
Visit the Edinburgh Centre for Constitutional Law website

Edinburgh Centre for Legal Theory
The Centre for Legal Theory combines an openness to diverse areas and styles of theoretical research with a deeply collegiate atmosphere.
Visit the Edinburgh Centre for Legal Theory website

Global Justice Academy
The Global Justice Academy is an interdisciplinary research network at the University of Edinburgh and beyond exploring global justice in its broadest sense.
Visit the Global Justice Academy website

Public International Law

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The public international law research area is a lively community of critical thinking, legal expertise, and theoretical reflection at Edinburgh Law School.

The scales of justice

The research area brings together accomplished scholars and experts bridging a wide span of contemporary international law, including global environmental law, international legal theory, the history of international law, international economic law, human rights, international criminal law, maritime law, and the laws of war.

We offer courses across all these areas, and maintain a busy schedule of public events on contemporary and historical issues in international and global law.

Paul Behrens, Reader in Law

Nehal Bhuta, Chair of Public International Law

Michelle Burgis-Kasthala, Senior Lecturer in Public International Law

Agata Daszko, Early Career Fellow in International Economic Law

Ana Maria Daza Vargas, Senior Lecturer in International Law

Deval Desai, Reader in International Economic Law

Andrew Farrer, Lecturer in Mental Health Law & Tutor Mentor

Filippo Fontanelli, Professor of International Law and Practice

James Harrison, Chair of Environmental Law

Nora Jaber, Lecturer in Law in the Globalised Muslim World

Andrew Lang, Chair in International Law and Global Governance

Gail Lythgoe, Lecturer in Global Law

Kasey McCall-Smith, Chair of International Law and Human Rights

Stephen Neff, Professor of War and Peace

Michael Picard, Lecturer in International Environmental Law

Francisco Quintana, Lecturer in Global Law

Rozemarijn Roland Holst, Lecturer in International Environmental Law

Gavin Sullivan, Reader in International Human Rights Law

Journal articles

Three waves of resource nationalism: A history of Quebec’s extractive path dependency
Beigi, Tina. & Picard, Michael. In: Environmental Politics. pp.1-21. 14.05.2025. View article

On human(made) nature: A socio-legal conceptual analysis of nature restoration in the North Sea
Roland Holst, R. & Zegers, R. In: Journal of Environmental Law. pp.1-23. 10.04.2025. View article

The road ahead for enforceability of intra-EU awards outside of the EU: The Achmea defense and the rise of domestic law considerations
Daszko, A. & Gallorini, C. In: American Review of International Arbitration. Vol.35, No.2. 28.02.2025. View article

Performances of responsibility: Market-based sustainability governance and the ‘responsibility economy’
Lang, A. In: London Review of International Law. Vol.12. No.3 27.02.2025. View article

Selective assistance as an evidentiary problem in genocide cases
Behrens, Paul. In Fordham International Law Journal. Vol. 47, No.2., 11.10.2024. View article

Of feline kings and spying spirits: Assessing the situation of duress in the Ongwen Case
Behrens, Paul. In Journal of International Criminal Justice, 23.08.2024. View article

Exploiting the deep seabed for the benefit of humankind: A universal ideology for sustainable resource development or a false necessity?
Roland Holst, R.J. In Leiden Journal of International Law, Vol. 37, No. 2, pp. 400-422. 21.07.24. View article

Contemporary international criminal law after critique: Towards decolonial and abolitionist (dis-)engagement in an era of anti-impunity. 
Burgis-Kasthala, Michelle; Sander, Barrie. In Journal of International Criminal Justice, , Vol. 22, No. 1, pp. 1-24. 17.06.24. View article

China's transboundary hydropower development at home and abroad: Exploring the regulatory interface between international water law and international economic law
Wouters, Patricia; Daza-Clark, Ana Maria; Devlaeminck, David J. In: Frontiers in Climate, Vol. 5, 1302103, 23.01.2024. View article

Global disordering: Practices of reflexivity in global economic governance
Lang, Andrew. In: European Journal of International Law, Vol. 35, No. 1, 9.03.2024, p. 1-47. View article

British contributions to law of the sea, the environment and natural resources
Boyle, Alan; Harrison, James. In: British Yearbook of International Law, 02.05.2023, p. 1-15. View article

Law and the political stakes of global crises: Lessons from development practice for a coronavirus world
Desai, D. In: Law & Policy, 18.01.2023. View article

The law of UK trade with the EU and the world after Brexit
Fontanelli, F. In: King's Law Journal, Vol. 34, No.1, 12.03.2023. View article

Time for justice? Reflections on narrative absences and presences in the Special Tribunal for Lebanon’s Ayyash decision
Burgis-Kasthala, M. In: European Journal of International Law, 30.01.2023, p. 1-30. View article

Edited Collections

Human Rights in Transition
Bhuta, Nehal. Collected Courses of the Academy of European Law. Oxford University Press. 2024. View collection

Challenges to contemporary criminal justice
Behrens, Paul. Contemporary Challenges to Criminal Justice. ed. / Paul Behrens. 1st. ed. Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2023. (Studies in International and Comparative Criminal Law). View collection

Books

The Rebirth of Territory
Lythgoe, Gail. Cambridge University Press, 2024. 312 p. (Cambridge Studies in International and Comparative Law). View book

Book chapters

The Energy Charter Treaty: The past, the present and the future
Daszko, A. In: New Institutional Architectures and Substantive Rules in International Economic Law - The EU and the UN Sustainable Development Goals. 2025. p.91-112. View chapter

Politically smart legal adaptation: A critical perspective on contemporary rule of law reform
Desai, Deval & Domingo Pilar. In: Handbook of the Rule of Law. Michael Sevel (Ed). Routledge. 2024. View chapter

Emerging dispute settlement principles and practices in RFMOs
Harrison, James. In: International Fisheries Law: Persistent and Emerging Challenges. Bjørn Kunoy; Tomas Heidar; Constantinos Yiallourides (Eds). Routledge. 2024, p. 88-105. View chapter

International trade law
Lang, Andrew, International Law. Malcolm Evans (Ed). Oxford University Press, 2024, 733-767. View chapter

The fruits of wrongdoing in international law: What does (and does not) happen when laws are broken
Neff, Stephen. Punishment in International Society: Norms, Justice, and Punitive Practices. Oxford University Press, 2024. View chapter

The spaces of the universal and the particular in International Law: Questioning binaries and uncovering political projects
Lythgoe, Gail. International Law and Universality. ed. / Isil Aral; Jean d'Aspremont. Oxford University Press, 2024. p. 23-42 (European Society of International Law). View chapter

Constitutional law and secession in Spain
Casanas Adam, Elisenda. The Routledge Handbook of Self-Determination and Secession. ed. / Ryan D. Griffiths; Aleksandar Pavković; Peter Radan. 1st. ed. London: Routledge, 2023, p. 604-616. View chapter

Compliance mechanisms under treaties relating to protection of the marine environment
Harrison, James. Research Handbook on International Marine Environmental Law. ed. / Rosemary Rayfuse; Aline Jaeckel; Natalie Klein; Ben Milligan. 2. ed. Edward Elgar, 2023, p. 104-123. View chapter

 

Nehal Bhuta

Nehal Bhuta is developing three workshops on Artificial Intelligence and the Rule of International Law: AI on the Battlefield, AI and the Digital Welfare State, and AI and Border Control. He has assembled an interdisciplinary group from Law, Philosophy, Sociology and Informatics and has applied for a new Carnegie Trust for the Universities of Scotland Workshop Grant. The aim of the workshop is to develop an international research network leading to a major Research Centre grant application addressing the following questions: Can essential global legal rules be “programmed in to AI systems to which decisions are delegated? What is the role of the human in interacting with the AI system? Can we design human-machine interactions in these contexts which improves legality? Can we envisage accountability for errors where the reasoning process of the AI System maybe undiscoverable?

Nehal Bhuta undertakes intellectual history research on the history of the concept of the state in international law, and the relationship between various state theories and theories of sovereignty and international order. This connects to an ongoing interest in the production and maintenance of political order at the state and sub-state level, and the various ways in which contemporary international law embeds, reproduces and performs these concepts of ordering, and claims of knowledge about how to produce and maintain these orders.

Michelle Burgis-Kasthala

Michelle Burgis-Kasthala’s project, The Privatisation of International Criminal Justice for Syria and Beyond, builds on extensive interviews and fieldwork conducted with the Commission for International Justice and Accountability and planned interviews with the UN’s Independent, Impartial Investigative Mechanism in June. The project seeks to identify the role of key public and private actors working towards the criminalisation of Syria’s civil war. To date, I have written two articles on this, both of which are under review. In the future, I plan to write specific pieces on the nature of extant archives generated as well as the relationship between international criminal justice and statebuilding. Further into the future, there may be scope for considering the phenomenon of privatised international criminal justice more broadly through a number of case studies.

Michelle Burgis-Kasthala’s future project, Building a State in Palestine through International Criminal Law?, builds on a sustained interest and expertise of mine in Palestine as well as a range of preliminary interviews and fieldwork. The project seeks to place Palestine’s current reliance on international criminal law within broader practices of statebuilding and various legal interventions.

Deval Desai

Deval Desai works in the field of administrative law and regulation, with an emphasis on the Global South.  He is currently undertaking a project entitled, Reversing the Gaze, in collaboration with colleagues from the Universities of Zurich and Basel, and funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation. The research explores the possibility of analysing political phenomena, such as the administrative state, by applying concepts derived from the Global South in the Global North – rather than the inverse, as is so often the case. This project develops his earlier work on the comparative knowledge and practices of legal experts in development, and engages with debates on decolonisation and methodological politics. 

Deval Desai also has an ongoing project supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation on the administration of social welfare funds and their implications for theories of the state. Drawing on the cases of India and Italy, the project studies the drives and effects of the hundreds of billions of dollars of earmarked welfare funds that have remained unspent and unappropriated. It examines the governance practices, sociopolitical contexts, and institutional designs that give rise to this phenomenon. Drawing on administrative law and fiscal sociology, it enquires into the limits of extant state theories in explaining a state that collects resources but does not spend them. 

Filippo Fontanelli

Filippo Fontanelli’s current research concerns the EU Charter’s Application to National Measures.

 The Charter applies to national measures implementing EU law, and thus can serve as standard of review for their legality. In the ten years since the Lisbon Treaty came into force, this scenario has never arisen. The Charter has been used, occasionally, to declare the unlawfulness only of domestic measures that also violated other rules of EU law. Arguably, for all the lip-service to the member states’ responsibility to observe human rights when they act as agents of the EU, the Court of Justice has been upholding a tacit pact. The Charter shall not be used to restrict member states’ action, and the mechanism of Art. 51 is effectively an empty promise.

Filippo Fontanelli is also working on two other projects:

Jurisdiction and Admissibility in Investment Arbitration – a New Framework. In investment arbitration, the line between jurisdiction and admissibility is blurred. Objections going to the tribunal’s power or the claim’s inadmissibility are hard to distinguish. My work seeks to show, through a theoretical reconstruction of the two notions, the correct test that tribunals should use to tell them apart. More importantly, it shows the practical implications of the distinction, demystifying some received views that often go unchallenged.

Can the fictio of EU law as fact save the EU from isolation? This research chronicles and assesses how the fictio of treating law as fact has come back into style to keep EU law from isolating itself. The thread of Opinion 1/91, Mox Plant, Opinion 1/09, Opinion 2/13 and Achmea makes it difficult to come up with any hypothetical scenario in which the Court of Justice of the European Union could allow other judicial bodies to handle EU law. The Advocate General’s views in Opinion 1/17 apparently validate CETA’s drafting tactic to distinguish expressly between law-as-law and law-as-fact, a strategy that might have spared WTO from the CJEU’s wrath. The Withdrawal Agreement (R.I.P.) stayed away from the fictio and foreshadowed a 2/13-like fiasco. This research exposes the nature and function of this device. Arguably, it is more reassuring than necessary, but it might just work.

James Harrison

One of James Harrison’s current projects is called 'Save our Seas through Law (SOS-LAW) – Strengthening the UK legal framework for the Protection of the Marine Environment’ and it is a collaboration with the Community of Arran Seabed Trust, looking at contemporary challenges with MPA governance in Scotland. The research draws upon relevant international law and best practices  in order to critically analyse the current Scottish/UK legal framework for MPA designation and management. The project is funded by a College Impact and Knowledge Exchange Grant.

James Harrison’s other main project looks at legal reform of inshore fisheries governance in Scotland.  I am carrying out this work in collaboration with the Sustainable Inshore Fisheries Trust and we are developing a case for substantial reform to the current legal framework for managing inshore fisheries. The project has both institutional and a substantive components to it.  My longer terms plans are to broaden this research to look at fisheries governance more generally, with a particular focus on the North-East Atlantic.

Andrew Lang

Andrew Lang has a number of projects in the field of global regulatory governance. He is currently undertaking a project on the history and evolution of the regulatory policy of the OECD, and its significance in the emergence of regulatory infrastructures for the global economy. This develops his earlier work on the regulatory impacts of international trade and investment law, which remains an important focus. It is also part of a broader strand of research re-thinking the nature and content of ‘neoliberalism’ as a politically diverse set of political practices, frames and habits of thought, across various domains of global economic governance. 

Andrew Lang also has a more specific research focus on international trade in financial services and other professional services. He has recently completed a commentary on the financial services provisions of the General Agreement on Trade in Services. He also has an additional project looking at the governance of mutual recognition agreements, with an initial focus on MRAs in the financial services sector.

Andrew Lang also has a recently completed project looking at the rise of heterodox capitalisms in the global economic order since the 1990s. The immediate impetus for the project is the current trade tensions between the US and China, which to a significant extent have their roots in the emergence of what has been called ‘Sino-capitalism’, a capitalist form (or combination of forms) which has some familiar aspects from other East Asian economies, and some which are not at all familiar. It is common to describe some of China’s practices and structures as ‘distorting’ global markets, and more generally to use the concept of a ‘market distortion’ to attempt to distinguish legitimate from illegitimate variation in the institutions of market capitalism. This paper elucidates some of the conceptual difficulties associated with that term, and assesses four potential ways in which it may nevertheless become legally and practically functional for this purpose. 

Kasey McCall-Smith

Kasey McCall Smith’s current research project 'Torture on Trial' examines the legal framework ensuring the complete prohibition against torture in an under-examined trial setting. The 2014 Senate Torture Report confirmed that many men detained in Guantanamo were tortured during the highly controversial US anti-terrorism campaigns. Five of these men are on trial in relation to the 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks on the US in the KSM trial. The military commission tasked with hearing these charges is proceeding in Guantanamo where the defendants have been held under the laws of war as suspected terrorists for over 15 years. Specifically, the project examines whether violations of the rules prohibiting torture impact a trial in real-time. Fundamentally, the project seeks to reaffirm that maintaining the prohibition against torture far outweighs arguments for allowing exceptions to the rule.

Kasey McCall Smith’s next major project aims to develop the terminology and approaches to the incorporation of human rights treaties in national legal systems. Following on from an article I published this year looking at the incorporation of children's rights, my preliminary findings were that there is little common ground upon which a basis for discussion about the incorporation of international law can be framed. A coherent reference framework is necessary in order to better facilitate discussions in various contexts, including political discourse, law and policy development and civil society engagement with government organs.

Gavin Sullivan

Gavin Sullivan joined Edinburgh Law School in February 2021 as Reader in International Human Rights Law. He was previously a Senior Lecturer in Law at the University of Kent (2016 – 2020) and was awarded his PhD (cum laude) from the University of Amsterdam. Gavin’s research focuses on the politics of global security law, technology and rights using socio-legal and ethnographic methods. His research interests include international organisations and collective security; algorithmic governance, accountability and international human rights; transnational and informal law, global pluralism and constitutionalism; counterterrorism and preemptive security. In 2020 Gavin was awarded a UKRI Future Leaders Fellowship for his socio-legal research project, Infra-Legalities: Global Security Infrastructures, Artificial Intelligence and International Law (2021 – 2028).  He leads an interdisciplinary team of scholars in international law, anthropology, socio-legal studies, computer science and security studies to examine how AI-led security, and the data infrastructures that sustain it, are reshaping global security law, rights and accountability and security decision-making. He is joined in this project by Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Dr. Dimitri Van Den Meerssche.

Gavin Sullivan is a practising solicitor with advocacy experience in public law, environmental law, international human rights and global security law. Since 2010 he has provided pro bono representation to people targeted by security lists worldwide, including before the UN Office of the Ombudsperson. Gavin has worked widely as an expert consultant on counterterrorism issues, including for the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights. He is a member of the ‘Transparency’ and ‘Legal Frameworks’ working groups of the Global Internet Forum to Counter Terrorism, co-covenor of the ESIL International Law and Technology Interest Group and on the Editorial Committee of the journal, Transnational Legal Theory. Gavin’s book - The Law of the List: UN Counterterrorism Sanctions and the Politics of Global Security Law (Cambridge University Press, 2020) – was awarded the 2021 International Studies Association STAIR Book Award for research bringing STS into dialogue with global politics, and the 2020 International Studies Association ILAW Book Award for research that makes an outstanding contributions to the field of international law.

Rebecca Sutton

Rebecca Sutton’s current research, funded by the Leverhulme Trust, investigates the role of emotions in ‘everyday’ International Humanitarian Law. This project seeks to uncover IHL's human component, exploring the emotional life and perceptual judgements of those who are expected to enact law in war. The first strand of the project examines the interplay of law and emotions in humanitarian negotiations, and the output will be an article in a generalist international law journal. The second strand explores the role of individual and collective emotions in IHL pedagogy. The outputs for this strand include co-authored articles on empathy in IHL training (with Emily Paddon Rhoads) and student emotions at the Jean Pictet IHL role-play competition (with Emiliano Buis). Rebecca’s first book is currently in production with OUP, due out in early 2021. It is entitled The Humanitarian Civilian: How the Idea of Distinction Circulates Within and Beyond International Humanitarian Law. Bringing some of her new research on emotions into the classroom, Rebecca is also piloting a module on Emotional Intelligence with LLM students in 2020 at Edinburgh Law School.

Rebecca Sutton’s future research builds on a new initiative that she has been piloting since 2019, entitled ‘Participatory Action Research’ in Conflict and Displacement Settings. This project explores the emancipatory possibilities and potential pitfalls of conducting 'participatory action research' with young people who are affected by armed conflict or displacement. Since the outbreak of the covid-19 pandemic, Rebecca has been working with Rohingya researchers based in Cox’s Bazar camps to train and support them in executing their own research projects.Rebecca’s Leverhulme project further includes an innovative pedagogical component, which involves partnering with practitioner organizations to develop bespoke legal trainings. The main output of this strand of Leverhulme research will be practical training advice for frontline practitioners. 

Dimitri Van Den Meerssche

Dimitri Van Den Meerssche’s research focuses on how digital technologies alter, disable or disrupt international legal norms and practices. He works as a Research Fellow for the UKRI-funded project Infra-Legalities: Global Security Infrastructures, Artificial Intelligence and International Law, where his specific current focus is on systems of algorithmic risk classification at the border. The aim of this project is to rethink global security governance by focusing on its material infrastructures and socio-technical settings – an approach inspired by science and technology studies and actor-network theory. In the context of this research agenda, Dimitri Van Den Meerssche also co-organizes the workshops on Artificial Intelligence and the International Rule of Law (a project led by professor Nehal Bhuta). In the next three years, Dimitri will be conducting ethnographic research in different sites of security governance – following the actants enrolled in and affected by its contemporary data infrastructures.

Dimitri Van Den Meerssche’s research on changing rationalities and techniques of governance also entails an engagement with problems of method(ology) and prospects of critique. In this light, he is currently convening a special issue on New Ways of Seeing Like a State – On the Problem of Critique in Global Governance, which takes on the invitation by professor Fleur Johns to reconsider and revisit the traditional tropes of critique in international legal theory.

Dimitri Van Den Meerssche is also still engaged in a research project on international organizations law – the law of the World Bank in particular. He is currently finalising a monograph – The World Bank’s Lawyers: The Life of International Law as Institutional Practice (under contract with Oxford University Press) – that provides a practice-based account of changes in the practice and politics of law within this institutional space.

Michael Picard

Michael Picard investigates the laws regulating the sources, pathways and sinks of industrial pollution. Why is it that alongside the growth of international environmental law, there has been a growth in global industrial pollution? In approaching this puzzle, Michael Picard examines the legal architecture of transnational corporate governance in its relationship to regimes of waste management. Michael Picard is also interested in the role of ignorance in international law. How does international law alternatively reproduce and resist (the manufacturing of) State blindness towards ecological hazard?

Ana Maria Daza Vargas

Ana Maria Daza Varga’s current work is concerned with mapping conflict around water resources in investor-state dispute settlement: Creating a database of all water-related investor-state arbitration disputes (ongoing) – classification under a typology of water usage and allocation. The typology divides investment disputes according to the economic activity that may trigger the conflict: trade in water; water services and sanitation; and water for industry. The first output using this database is a paper ‘Water is the new water: Mapping conflict around water resources in investor-state dispute settlement’.

Ana Maria Daza Varga is also writing a paper on the Defense Burden in Investment Treaty Arbitration: An Empirical assessment of Costs, Capacity and Solutions: Using the database of PITAD (Pluricourts – Oslo University), this paper seeks to: i) identify the costs that respondent states have collectively incurred in defending against investment treaty claims; and ii) determine the state-of-the-art regarding the degrees to which a respondent state’s defense burden in investment treaty arbitration might be considered to actually exist.

Stephen Neff

Stephen Neff current research projects are two:  (1)  a book on the history of natural-law thought; and  (2)  Oversight (as a general editor) of the Cambridge History of International Law.  Regarding the Cambridge History, I am also the editor of one of the individual volumes (covering the period 1870-1920), in addition to being on the board of editors for the project as a whole.

Edinburgh Centre for International and Global Law
The Edinburgh Centre for International and Global Law addresses contemporary international and global questions through both fundamental research and practical policy engagement.
Visit the Edinburgh Centre for International and Global Law website

Global Justice Academy
The Global Justice Academy is an interdisciplinary research network at the University of Edinburgh and beyond exploring global justice in its broadest sense.
Visit the Global Justice Academy website

Private Law

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Private law has been central to teaching and research at the University of Edinburgh since the establishment of the Chair of Scots Law in 1722.  Nearly 300 years later, it remains at the very heart of the activities of the Law School and of its degree programmes.

Court of Session

The focus of private law research at Edinburgh Law School is mainly, although not exclusively, the private law of Scotland.  Over the years a distinctive methodology has developed that gives particular weight to legal history and to comparative law. This has been as much concerned with the intellectual history of the law and the circulation of ideas across legal traditions as it has been with matters of legal doctrine. 

Scots private law lends itself naturally to comparative study since Scotland is a mixed legal system. Much Scots law originates in the civil law tradition of continental Europe but it has borrowed many principles and the case law method from its common law neighbours in England and Wales.  Edinburgh’s private lawyers work in a tradition that is outward-looking by its very nature. They maintain active research links with scholars in contintental Europe and with the larger common law world beyond the United Kingdom. 

Edinburgh’s private lawyers have long kept strong links with the courts and the legal profession, and with the Scottish Law Commission and the Scottish Government. The professional development seminars offered annually to legal practitioners have become a familiar institution in Scottish legal life and an important outlet for the Law School’s research expertise. The income raised has been used to fund research studentships in private law.

As Scottish Law Commissioners, Edinburgh’s private lawyers have been instrumental in re-making the modern Scots family law, and the Scots law of property and of contract. Members of the private law research area continue to play a part in the reform of family law and the law of security over property.

Gillian Black, Personal Chair of Scots Private Law

Alexandra Braun, Lord President Reid Chair of Law

David Cabrelli, Chair of Labour Law

Dan Carr, Senior Lecturer in Private Law

Paul J. du Plessis, Professor of Roman Law

David Fox, Chair of Common Law

George Gretton, Emeritus Lord President Reid Chair of Law

Amy Lawton, Senior Lecturer in Tax Law

John Macleod, Senior Lecturer in Private Law

Katy Macfarlane, Senior Teaching Fellow in Child and Family Law

Laura Macgregor, Chair of Scots Law

Hector MacQueen, Emeritus Professor of Private Law

Elspeth Reid, Emeritus Professor of Scottish Private Law

Kenneth Reid, Emeritus Professor of Scots Law

Andrew Steven, Personal Chair of Property Law

Remus Valsan, Senior Lecturer in Corporate Law

Scott Wortley, Lecturer in Commercial Law

Journal articles

Reforming the public and private law of the tenement
Carr, D.J. & Halliday, S. In: Juridical Review. 10.04.2025. View article

Why are the wrongs wrong? Scots lawyers’ approaches to justifying liability in delict
Macleod, J. In Edinburgh Law Review, Vol. 28, No1, 19.01.2024, p.1-41. View article

"A Number of Interesting Puzzles Involving the Law of Agency": VMS Enterprises Ltd v The Brexit Party Ltd
Macgregor, L. In: Edinburgh Law Review, Vol. 27, No. 1, 01.2023, p. 83-89. View article

Third Ole Lando memorial lecture : European Contract Law in the post-Brexit and (post?)-pandemic United Kingdom 
MacQueen, Hector L. In: European Review of Private Law, Vol. 30, No. 1, 1, 30.01.2022, p. 3-27. View article

Do we want a human first, and a lawyer second? Developing law student empathy through clinical legal educationLawton, Amy; Saban, Kathryn; Whittam, Sadie. In: International Journal of Clinical Legal Education, Vol. 29, No. 1, 28.04.2022, p. 4-31. View article

Acquisitive prescription of moveable property under Russian law 
Rudokvas, Anton D.; Steven, Andrew J. M. In: Edinburgh Law Review, Vol. 26, No. 2, 05.2022, p. 194-218. View article

A brief overview of purpose and overview clauses 
Wortley, Scott. In: Edinburgh Law Review, Vol. 26, No. 3, 30.09.2022, p. 443-448. View article

Book chapters

Administration of estates in Russia
Reid, E. In, Comparative Succession Law: Administration of Estates. Kenneth G C Reid; Jan Peter Schmidt & Reinhard Zimmermann (Eds). Oxford University Press. 2025. View chapter

Administration of Estates in Scotland
Reid, K. In, Comparative Succession Law: Administration of Estates. Kenneth G C Reid; Jan Peter Schmidt & Reinhard Zimmermann (Eds). Oxford University Press. 2025. View chapter

The Covid pandemic 2020-2022 and Scottish contract law
MacQueen, Hector. In: Privaatrecht Plenis Coloribus: Liber Amicorum Matthias Storme. Vincent Sagaert; Joeri Vananroye (Eds). Mechelen: Wolters Kluwer. 2024

Response to chapter 10 nullity reform: Redefining marriage
Black, Gillian. In: Family Law Reform Now: Proposals and Critique. Charlotte Bendall; Rehana Parveen (Eds) Hart Publishing. 2024. View chapter

Framing civil actions for wrongs as a spectrum: From tort law to pure enforcement
Bacharis, Grigoris. In: Private Law and the State. Andrew Robertson; Jason W Neyers (Eds). Hart Publishing. 2024. View the chapter

llegality and unjustified enrichment
MacQueen, Hector L. In: Europäisches und internationales Privatrecht: Festschrift für Christian von Bar zum 70. Geburtstag. Peter Mankowski; Helmut Grothe & Frederick Rielander (eds). Munich: C H Beck (2022) 

Scottish judges in Westminster : The case of Lord Dunedin 
Braun, Alexandra. Lurium itinera: Historical Comparative Law and Comparative Legal History. In Honour of Reinhard Zimmermann for His 70th Birthday on 10 October 2022. ed. / Nils Jansen; Sonja Meier. Mohr Siebeck, 2022. p. 29-51 (Beiträge zum ausländischen und internationalen Privatrecht; Vol. 138). View chapter

Accretion of title in Scots law : Property law doing what the granter is obliged to do 
Peterson, Alasdair; Macpherson, Alisdair. Lurium itinera: Historische Rechtsvergleichung und vergleichende Rechtsgeschichte; Historical Comparative Law and Comparative Legal History; Reinhard Zimmermann zum 70. Geburtstag am 10. Oktober 2022. ed. / Nils Jansen; Sonja Meier. Mohr Siebeck, 2022. p. 821-843 (Beiträge zum ausländischen und internationalen Privatrecht; Vol. 138). View chapter

Comparative law and the scope of duty : New parables for ancient riddles
Reid, Elspeth. Lurium itinera: Historische Rechtsvergleichung und vergleichende Rechtsgeschichte. Reinhard Zimmermann zum 70. Geburtstag am 10. Oktober 2022. ed. / Nils Jansen; Sonja Meier. Tubingen : Mohr Siebeck, 2022. p. 743-756 (Beiträge zum ausländischen und internationalen Privatrecht ; Vol. 138). View chapter

Scottish Law students in Germany in the 19th century and their influence on legal culture in Scotland 
Reid, Kenneth. Lurium Itinera: Reinhard Zimmermann zum 70 Geburtstag am 10. Oktober 2022. ed. / Nils Jansen; Sonja Meier. 1. ed. Tuebingen : Mohr Siebeck, 2022. p. 195-220 (Max-Planck-Institut für ausländisches und internationales Privatrecht: Beiträge zum ausländischen und internationalen Privatrecht; Vol. 138). View chapter

Books

The Law of Delict in Scotland
Reid, E. Edinburgh University Press (2022) View book

Edited collections

Continuity, Influences and Integration in Scottish Legal History: Select Essays of David Sellar 
MacQueen, Hector (Editor). Edinburgh : Edinburgh University Press, 2022. 408 p. (Edinburgh Studies in Law; Vol. 17). View collection

Working Papers

The Enhanced Role for the Scottish Courts under a Reformed Trust Law
Carr, D. (SSRN Electronic Journal), 2023.

Private Purpose Trusts: Good for Scotland?
Braun, Alexandra. Social Science Research Network (SSRN Electronic Journal), 2023. View working paper

Recognition in England of change of gender in Scotland: A note on private international law aspects
Clive, Eric. Social Science Research Network (SSRN Electronic Journal), 2023.
 

Recent research projects and collaborations by members of the private law reseach area, include:

Contract Law

Review of Contract Law - published by the Scottish Law Commission

Monetary Law

Money in the Western Legal Tradition - funded by the Gerda Henkel Stiftung

Security Law

Report on Moveable Transactions - published by the Scottish Law Commission

Succession Law

Nature and Role of Will-Substitutes - funded by the John Fell Fund, the British Academy and Leverhulme Trust

Edinburgh Centre for Private Law
The Edinburgh Centre for Private Law exists to foster and develop private law scholarship in the Law School.
Visit the Edinburgh Centre for Private Law website

Edinburgh Law Seminars
Edinburgh Law Seminars is the main outlet for the private law research areas CPD work.
View the Edinburgh Law Seminars website

The Children’s Panel for Scotland
A member of the Private Law Subject Area serves as member of the Children’s Panel.
Visit the Children's Panel for Scotland website

The EUCOTAX Network
Edinburgh Law School is the UK participating partner in a network established to stimulate the instruction in and research on European aspects of tax law.
View the EUCOTAX Network website

Ius Commune Research School
Edinburgh Law School is an Associate Partner in the Ius Commune Research School, which provides training in comparative legal methodology for our research students.
Visit the Ius Commune website

Max Planck Institute for Comparative and International Private Law, Hamburg
Edinburgh private lawyers are regular visitors at the Institute. Our research students have traditionally spent a year of their degree studying there.
Visit the Max Planck Institute website

Scottish Law Commission 
A number of Edinburgh private lawyers have served as Scottish Law Commissioners or contributed their expertise to the Commission’s consultations.
Visit the Scottish Law Commission website

University of Salzburg Summer School in Comparative Private Law
Each year a number of our Law undergraduates attend the Salzburg Summer School in Comparative Private Law.
Visit the University of Salzburg Summer School website

Legal Theory

Body

The legal theory research area is one of the teaching and research strengths of Edinburgh Law School. The research area is responsible for two of the large Ordinary classes (Critical Legal Thinking and Jurisprudence) and for a range of courses at Honours and Masters level, and have a vibrant postgraduate research community.

Old College masonry

Legal theory research at Edinburgh Law School covers a large variety of topics, including the role of law in post-state contexts, legal argumentation, general jurisprudence, and the philosophical foundations of private law, public law, criminal law, and international law.

Amalia Amaya Navarro, British Academy Global Professorship

Sharon Cowen, Professor of Feminist and Queer Legal Studies

Martin Kelly, Lecturer in Legal Theory

Chloë Kennedy, Professor of Law and History

Euan MacDonald, Senior Lecturer in Jurisprudence

Claudio Michelon, Professor of Philosophy of Law

Burkhard Schafer, Professor of Computational Legal Theory

Neil Walker, Regius Professor of Public Law and the Law of Nature and Nations

Journal articles

Exemplary arguers (for example, in law)
Amaya, Amalia. In: Topoi. 22.03.2025. View article

Challenging common good constitutionalism: Common Good Constitutionalism: Recovering the Classical Legal Tradition, by Adrian Vermeule, Polity Press, 2022, 270pp
Kelly, Martin David. In: Jurisprudence, 04.03.2024, p. 1-24. View article

Data, disclosure and duties: Balancing privacy and safeguarding in the context of UK university student sexual misconduct complaints
Cowan, Sharon; Munro, Vanessa E.; Bull, Anna et al. In: Legal Studies, 03.05.2024, p. 1-20. View article

Ambivalence, judicial craftmanship, and the development of the law: Variations on a theme of Benjamin Cardozo
Amaya, Amalia. In: The Yale Journal of Law and Humanities, Vol. 34-1, No. 34-1, 14.06.2023, p. 1-20. View article

Law and political imagination: The perspective of Paul Kahn
Walker, Neil; Goldoni, Marco. In: German Law Journal, Vol. 24, No. 4, 26.06.2023, p. 619-622. View article

Sovereignty, property and climate change
Walker, Neil. In: Edinburgh Law Review, Vol. 27, No. 2, 31.05.2023, p. 129-156. View article

Edited Collections

Direito Privado, Razão e Justiça
Michelon, Claudio. 1 ed. São Paulo : Almedina, Brasil, 2023. 226 p. View Collection

Book chapters

The virtues of disagreement and the perils of judicial deliberation
Amaya, Amalia. In: Judicial Character in Hard Times: On the Role of Judicial Virtues in Defending the Rule of Law. Tomasz Widłak (Ed). 2025. p.125–145. View chapter

La relevancia de la ética del carácter para la argumentación judicial
Amaya, Amalia. In: Centro de Estudios Constitucionales: Suprema Corte de Justicia de la Nación. Martín F. Böhmer; Carlos De la Rosa Xochitiotzi (Eds) Tirant lo Blanch. 2025. View chapter

Gardner's pluralistic virtue jurisprudence
Amaya, Amalia. From Morality to Law and Back Again: A Liber Amicorum for John Gardner. ed. / Michelle Madden Dempsey; François Tanguay-Renaud. 1. ed. United Kingdom: Oxford University Press, 2023. p. 38-55. View Chapter

The uses of precedent in legal argument
Michelon, Claudio. Philosophical Foundations of Precedent. Ed, Timothy Endicott; Hafsteinn Dan Kristjánsson; Sebastian Lewis. Oxford University Press, 2023. p. 117-129 (Philosophical Foundations of Law). View chapter

Primary duty/secondary duty?
Michelon, Claudio. Private Law and Practical Reason: Essays on John Gardner's Private Law Theory. ed. / Haris Psarras; Sandy Steel. Oxford University Press, 2023. (Oxford Private Law Theory). View chapter

Books

New Constitutional Horizons : Towards a Pluralist Constitutional Theory  
Mac Amhlaigh, Cormac. Oxford University Press, 2022. 248 p. (Oxford Constitutional Theory). View book

Law and Polity Project
The Law and Polity Project addresses the challenges of how the modern state polity is affected by new legal and political forms.
Visit the Law and Polity Project website

Edinburgh Centre for Legal Theory
Inaugurated in 2016, the Centre for Legal Theory promotes research collaboration between staff, students, and visitors.
Visit the Edinburgh Centre for Legal Theory website

Legal Theory Research Group
The Legal Theory Research Group organises a variety of events throughout the year, including a seminar series, work-in-progress sessions, a reading group, and a Spring workshop series.
Visit the Legal Theory Research Group website

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