Skip to main content

IP, Media and Technology Law

Body

The work of the IP, media and technology research area at Edinburgh Law School covers some of the most dynamic areas of modern law, and encompasses two distinct disciplines, those of intellectual property law and IT and media law.

Old College skylight

Technological and social changes over the last thirty years, in particular in the ways in which we gather, give, and access information of all kinds, pose huge issues requiring a legal response.  The research area, therefore, deals with questions about how the law encourages and supports inventiveness, creativity and self-identification in both private and business life; how it regulates the collection, storage, processing, access, and dissemination of information by private and public actors; and how it controls use of mass information by government, business, and academe in their research and decision-making. 

Questions about artificial intelligence, blockchain technology, robotics, and autonomous machines are increasingly significant as well. The law on these matters cannot be considered only in its domestic setting.  The issues transcend national frontiers and require an international response.  The European Union has been especially important for the United Kingdom, but other regimes are virtually global in scope.  Comparison with other national systems, whether in the Americas, Asia, Africa or the Pacific, is also key, however, especially where there are political and trading ties with the United Kingdom.

Research and teaching range from the not very simple question of what the law is, through issues about how we got there and how it all works in practice, and on to debate about its justifications and how the law might be changed the better to protect its beneficiaries while also giving effect to legitimate public concerns.

Edinburgh Law School has a long-standing reputation for research and teaching in intellectual property (IP) law. Current members of the IP team offer expertise spanning copyright, designs, trade marks, IP’s relationship with innovation and creativity, IP and human rights, and IP enforcement.

Learn more about IP law at Edinburgh Law School

EU Law

Body

The EU legal order frames the most advanced system of regulation beyond the state that operates in the world today. Built on a strong research-teaching nexus, the EU law research area at Edinburgh Law School investigates and offers courses over a wide spectrum of topics at the forefront of what is currently happening in the field.

EU Flag

European Union law has always been central to Edinburgh Law School’s international reputation. The Europa Institute was founded as the Centre of European Governmental Studies in 1968. It is now a multi-disciplinary research centre within the University of Edinburgh devoted to the study of the governance, institutions, law, and policies of the European Union, and of Europe more broadly.

Members of the EU law research area have expertise in areas such as EU constitutional law, free movement law, citizenship, competition law, EU criminal law, EU fundamental rights, and immigration law. The world-leading research carried out at Edinburgh Law School is reflected in scholarly publications, externally funded research projects, and a commitment to engaging with local, national, and international institutions.

This goes hand in hand with a cutting-edge curriculum at both undergraduate and postgraduate levels, expressed through innovative methods of teaching and assessment: a variety of theoretical approaches and the involvement of practitioners in our teaching are combined with forms of evaluation that include oral presentation and the drafting of legal opinions.

Arianna Andreangeli, Professor of Competition Law

Rachael Craufurd-Smith, Reader in EU Law

Andrew Farrer, Lecturer in Mental Health Law & Tutor Mentor

Timothy Jacob-Owens, Early Career Fellow in Citizenship Law and Policy

Robert Lane, Senior Lecturer in EU Law

Leandro Mancano, Senior Lecturer in European Union Law

Veronica Ruiz Abou-Nigm, Chair of Private International Law

Drew Scott, Professor Emeritus of European Union Studies

Niamh Nic Shuibhne, Professor of European Union Law

Jo Shaw, Salvesen Chair of European Institutions

Journal articles

Writing about EU law in the UK after Brexit
Nic Shuibhne, Niamh. In: Northern Ireland Legal Quarterly. p.68-77. 10.04.2025. View article

The evolution of public order and public policy in EU Law: Europeanisation of essential state functions and the Union’s public order
Coutts, Stephen. In: European Papers. Vol.9, No.3, 25.02.2025. p. 1474-1485. View article

What Keck and Mithouard should have said: Preventing substantial barriers to market access
Nachtnebel, Niklas; Langrée, Antoine; Rodger, Fraser et al. In: European Papers - A Journal on Law and Integration, Vol. 8, No. 1, 13.07.2023, p. 363-372. View article

Protecting the legal heritage of former Union citizens: EP v. Préfet du Gers
Nic Shuibhne, Niamh. In: Common Market Law Review, Vol. 60, No. 2, 29.03.2023, p. 475-516. View article

Integration, membership and the EU neighbourhood
Cremona, Marise; Nic Shuibhne, Niamh. In: Common Market Law Review, Vol. 59, 01/12/22. p155-180. View the article

A theory of justice? Securing the normative foundations of EU criminal law through an integrated approach to independence
Mancano, Leandro. In: European Law Journal: Review of European Law in Context, 17.10.2022. View article 

Restricting human movement during the COVID-19 pandemic : New research avenues in the study of mobility, migration, and citizenship 
Jacob-Owens, Timothy; Piccoli, Lorenzo ; Dzankic, Jelena; Ruedin, Didier et al, In: International Migration Review, 15.11.2022. View article

Book chapters

Article 2 TEU: Determining ‘the Parameters of the EU Legal Order and the Duties Incumbent Upon Member States’
Nic Shuibhne, Niamh. In: The Pursuit of Legal Harmony in a Turbulent Europe: Essays in Honour of Eleanor Sharpston. Catherine Barnard; Adam Łazowski; Daniel Sarmiento (Eds). Hart Publishing, 2024. View chapter

Spurious neutrality
Shaw, Jo. In: The Pursuit of Legal Harmony in a Turbulent Europe: Essays in Honour of Eleanor Sharpston. Catherine Barnard; Adam Łazowski; Daniel Sarmiento (Eds). Hart Publishing, 2024. View chapter

What does the concept of 'structural principles' add to EU law? 
Nic Shuibhne, Niamh. EU External Relations and the Power of Law: Liber Amicorum in Honour of Marise Cremona. Kenneth A Armstrong; Joanne Scott; Anne Thies (Eds). Hart Publishing, 2024. p.7-27. View chapter

Europe in the global imaginary, the globe in the European imaginary: The legacy of sovereignty
Walker, Neil. EU External Relations and the Power of Law: Liber Amicorum in Honour of Marise Cremona. Kenneth A. Armstrong; Joanne Scott; Anne Thies (Eds) Hart Publishing, 2024. p117-134. View chapter

Economic activity and EU citizenship law: Seeding means-based logic in a status-based freedom
Nic Shuibhne, Niamh. Revisiting the Fundamentals of the Free Movement of Persons. ed. / Niamh Nic Shuibhne. Oxford University Press, 2023. p. 87-126 (Collected Courses of the Academy of European Law). View chapter

Imperial citizenship and the weaponisation of international law
Jacob-Owens, Timothy. Weaponised Citizenship: Should international law restrict oppressive nationality attribution?. ed. / Neha Jain; Rainer Bauböck. European University Institute, 2023. p. 24-27 (RSC Working Paper; Vol. 2023, No. 54). View chapter

'When Citizens Move, They Do So as Human Beings, Not as Robots': Opinion of Advocate General Sharpston in Ruiz Zambrano
Nic Shuibhne, Niamh. Shaping EU Law the British Way: UK Advocates General at the Court of Justice of the European Union. ed / G Butler & A Łazowski. 1.ed. Hart Publishing, 2022, p. 455-465. View article

Edited Collections

Revisiting the Fundamentals of the Free Movement of Persons in EU Law 
Nic Shuibhne, Niamh (Editor). Oxford University Press, 2023. 224 p. (Collected Courses of the Academy of European Law). View Collection

Europa Institute
The Europa Institute is a multidisciplinary research centre withing the University of Edinburgh devoted to the study of the governance, institutions, law, and policies of the European Union, and of Europe more broadly.
Visit the Europa Institute website

Edinburgh Centre for Data, Culture & Society
The Edinburgh Centre for Data, Culture & Society (CDCS) aims to support data-led research across the Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences. As new technologies enable us to develop novel methods, scale up our questions, and tackle interdisciplinary challenges, research is moving in exciting directions. CDCS helps its community stay at the forefront of developments in data-driven research, and highlights the vital contributions its researchers have to make to contemporary cultural debates and social issues.
Visit the Centre for Data, Culture & Society website

Criminology

Body

Criminology at Edinburgh is home to a collegiate and committed group of scholars and students. Building on a distinguished and impactful legacy of criminological research at the Edinburgh Law School, we take a broad view of the study of crime, criminology and criminal justice. We are proud to place equal importance on theoretical and policy-focused research, and to incorporate perspectives from the local to the global. Our work encompasses a broad range of methodologies including qualitative approaches, large-scale quantitative data analysis, and mixed methods. We actively incorporate our research into our teaching, ensuring it is current and topical.

Police van in Shetland

We work collaboratively with policy makers and practitioners from Scotland, the wider UK, and internationally.  Our research has been highly influential in supporting policy making and legislative change in Scotland through our working partnerships with organisations such as the Scottish Government, Police Scotland, the Scottish Prison Service and the voluntary sector, as well as our engagement with communities and the wider public. We are committed to shaping how problems of crime and justice are thought about in order to build safe and just societies. 

Collectively, our research interests include: imprisonment, penal theory and policy; democratic governance and politics; the sociology of punishment; citizenship, disenfranchisement and human rights; policing practice, governance and accountability; communities and crime; policing urban spaces and remote islands; global, transnational and transitional justice; violence, hate crime and crimes of atrocity; criminal justice reform in post war states; youth crime and justice; crime trends, patterns and inequalities; public health approaches to justice; law enforcement and Covid-19; cybercrime, cybersecurity and surveillance; judicial culture and sentencing practice; and comparative criminology. We also have interests in the impact of academic-practitioner collaborations, and the uses of criminological knowledge in shaping policy and practice.

We are home to the Edinburgh Study of Youth Transitions and Crime, a large-scale longitudinal study of pathways into and out of offending which has been running for 25 years; and the Policing the Pandemic project which is investigating the use and impact of police enforcement during the pandemic. Our research is supported by three inter-institutional, Scottish research centres: the Scottish Centre of Crime and Justice Research (SCCJR); the Scottish Institute for Policing Research (SIPR); and the Scottish Centre for Administrative Data Research (SCADR).

As well as a range of undergraduate courses, we teach two Postgraduate Masters programmes: an MSc in Criminology and Criminal Justice; and an MSc in Global Crime, Justice and Security. We have a large and diverse community of PhD students and warmly welcome applications and enquiries from prospective students with an interest in our areas of expertise.

Andy Aydin-Aitchison, Senior Lecturer in Criminology

Alistair Henry, Senior Lecturer in Criminology

Fiona Jamieson, Lecturer in Criminology

Richard Jones, Senior Lecturer in Criminology

Allison Kurpiel, Research Fellow in Criminology

Lesley McAra, Chair of Penology

Susan McVie, Professor of Quantitative Criminology

Dr Ana Morales-Gomez, Research Fellow in Criminology

Anna Souhami, Senior Lecturer in Criminology

Richard Sparks, Professor of Criminology

Milena Tripkovic, Senior Lecturer in Criminology

Dr Jamie Bennett - Honorary Fellow

Dr Jo Brown - Honorary Fellow

Dr Marianne Colbran - Honorary Fellow

John Crichton - Honorary Professor and Chair of the Royal College of Psychiatrists in Scotland

Mark Findlay - Honorary Fellow

David Garland, Professorial Fellow in Criminology

Malcolm Graham KPM - Honorary Fellow

Gill Robinson, Honorary Fellow

Journal articles

Raising the minimum age of criminal responsibility: Lessons from the Scottish experience
McAra, Lesley & McVie, Susan. In Current Issues in Criminal Justice, Vol. 36, No. 4, 06.11.2024. View article

Victims, perpetrators, and bystanders: Atrocity and its aftermath in the films of Jasmila Žbanić
Aydin-Aitchison, Andy. In: The British Journal of Criminology: An International Review of Crime and Society (BJC), Vol. 64, No. 5, 09.2024, p. 1114-1130. View article

Crime that 'withered away'? Democratic backsliding and non-punitive populism
Tripkovic, Milena. In International Criminology. 22.08.2024. View article

Policing and sense of place: 'Shallow' and 'Deep' security in an English town
Sparks, Richard.; Bradford, Ben.; Loader, Ian.; Girling, Evi. In The British Journal of Criminology: An International Review of Crime and Society (BJC), 21.07.2024. View the article

From parking tickets to the pandemic: Fixed penalty notices, inequity, and the regulation of everyday behaviours
Murray, Kath; McVie, Susan; Mattews, Ben et al. In: The British Journal of Criminology: An International Review of Crime and Society (BJC), 13.04.2024, p. 1-18. View article

Digital ritual: Police-public social media encounters and 'Authentic' interaction
Henry, Alistair. In: The British Journal of Criminology: An International Review of Crime and Society (BJC), 23.08.2023, p. 1-16. View article

Teaching atrocity criminology with ICTY archives: Disciplinarity, research, ethics
Aydin-Aitchison, Andy. In: Journal of Criminal Justice Education, 27.04.2023, p. 1-19. View article

No country for 'bad' men: Volatile citizenship and the emerging features of global neo-colonial penality
Tripkovic, M. In: The British Journal of Criminology: An International Review of Crime and Society, 24.01.2023, p. 1-17. View article

Book chapters

Youth justice in an age of uncertainty: Principles, performance and prospects
McAra, Lesley. The Oxford Handbook of Criminology. ed. / Alison Liebling; Shadd Maruna; Lesley McAra. 7. ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2023. p. 698 - 724. View article

Untold stories of police ethnography
Souhami, A. Routledge International Handbook of Police Ethnography. ed / Jenny Fleming, Sarah Charman. 1. ed. Routledge, 2023. p. 88-105. View chapter

Working papers

Victims, perpetrators, and bystanders: Atrocity and its aftermath in the films of Jasmila Žbanić
Aydin-Aitchison, Andy. (SSRN Electronic Journal), 2023.

Applied Quantitative Methods Network (AQMeN) Legacy
The Applied Quantitative Methods Network improved the understanding of UK social issues by providing independent research-based evidence
Visit the AQMeN Legacy website

Edinburgh Study of Youth Transitions and Crime
The Edinburgh Study for Youth Transitions and Crime (ESYTC) is a research programme that addresses fundamental questions about the causes of criminal and risky behaviours.
Visit the ESYTC website

Place, Crime and Insecurity in Everyday Life
The ESRC funded project explores the question of what does it mean to feel secure in Britain today.
Visit the Security in Place website

Policing the Pandemic
Policing the Pandemic is an ESRC-funded project that investigates the role of police enforcement in securing compliance with the Health Protection Regulations in Scotland, and the factors associated with non-compliance.
Visit the Policing the Pandemic website

Understanding Inequalities (Legacy)
Understanding Inequalities is an ESRC-funded project aiming to provide robust evidence to help reduce inequalities in Scottish society and beyond.
Visit the Understanding Inequalities website

Crime, Justice and Society Seminars
The Crime, Justice and Society seminars are a venue for research presentations and discussions on a broad range of topics, and takes up the remit of the former Centre for Law and Society for socio-legal scholarship.
View the upcoming Crime, Justice and Society Seminars 

Edinburgh Futures Institute
The Edinburgh Futures Institute (EFI) brings together people from across the University of Edinburgh and beyond to grapple with some of the world's most pressing questions.
Visit the EFI website

Scottish Centre for Administrative Data Research (SCADR) 
The SCADR aims to unlock the value of data routinely collected by government departments and other public bodies, so that it can be used to improve policies, services and lives.
Visit the SCADR website

Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research (SCCJR)
The SCCJR is a collboration between the Universities of Glasgow, Edinburgh, Stirling and Strathclyde. The SCCJR aims to produce research that informs policy and practice and advances our understanding of justice.
Visit the SCCJR website

Scottish Institute for Policing Research (SIPR)
SIPR is a strategic collaboration between 14 of Scotland's universities and the Police Service of Scotland, offering a range of opportunities for conducting relevant, applicable research to help the police meet the challenges of the 21st century and for achieving international excellence for policing research in Scotland.
Visit the SIPR website

Criminal Law and Evidence

Body

Criminal law and evidence research at Edinburgh Law School explores a range of criminal law and criminal justice areas.

Criminal Law image - Police tape

Members of the criminal law and evidence research area teach a number of courses across all levels of the undergraduate and postgraduate curricula, including:

  • Criminal Law (Ordinary); Evidence Law (Ordinary);
  • Criminal Law A: Harm, Offence and Criminalisation (Honours);
  • Criminal Law B: Doctrine and Theory (Honours);
  • Crime and Punishment in Enlightenment Scotland (Honours);
  • Sentencing: Law, Philosophy, and Practice (Honours);
  • General Principles of Criminal Law (LLM);
  • Sexual Offending and the Law (LLM); and
  • Current Issues in Criminal Law (LLM);

Members of the research area also supervise a wide range of undergraduate and postgraduate dissertations, and doctoral theses. The research area delivers a specialist taught Masters (LLM) programme in Criminal Law and Criminal Justice, which focuses on concepts and theories underpinning criminal law and criminal justice, and how these operate in practice.

The team has particular areas of research expertise across a range of criminal law and criminal justice areas including: criminalisation and the parameters of the criminal law (Cornford); feminist perspectives on sex, gender and the criminal law, particularly sexual offences (Cowan); the relationship between criminal law, legal theory and legal history (Kennedy); intersection of criminal law and criminal process, and evidence (Maher); and the ethics of criminal justice, sentencing, and punishment (Watson).

We welcome applications from prospective doctoral students wishing to study in these areas.

Current research projects include: The Scottish Feminist Judgments Project (Cowan and Kennedy); Identity Deception: A Critical History (Kennedy); The impact of law on trans people (Cowan), The Use of Sexual History Evidence and ‘Private Data’ in Scottish Sexual Offence Trials (Cowan); Trans Inclusive Guidance for UK Museums and Galleries (Cowan); Judicial Nudging: The First Decade of the Scottish Sentencing Council (Watson); Police Misconduct and Sentence Mitigation (Watson).

Grant Barclay, Early Career Fellow in Evidence and Criminal Law

Andrew Cornford, Senior Lecturer in Criminal Law

Sharon Cowan, Professor of Feminist and Queer Legal Studies

Chloë Kennedy, Professor of Law and History

Gabrielle Watson, Chancellor’s Fellow

Book Chapters

Police misconduct and sentence mitigation
Watson, Gabrielle. In: Responding to the Culpable State: Is Sentence Mitigation Appropriate?. Leo Zaibert; Julian V Roberts & Jesper Ryberg (Eds). Hart Publishing (Studies in Penal Theory and Ethics). 2025. View chapter

Andrew Ashworth, Principles of Criminal Law (1991)
Cornford, Andrew. Leading Works in Criminal Law. ed. / Chloë Kennedy; Lindsay Farmer. 1. ed. London: Routledge, 2023. p. 192-219 (Analysing Leading Works in Law). View chapter

Susan Estrich, Real Rape (1987)
Cowan, Sharon. Leading Works in Criminal Law. Ed, C Kennedy and L Farmer. London: Routledge, 2023. View chapter

Mind the Gap: Implementing ‘rape shield’ laws in Scottish sexual offences trials
Cowan, Sharon. New Directions In Sexual Violence Scholarship. Ed, K Gleeson and Y Russell. Taylor and Francis Group, 2023. p. 151-172. View chapter

The guilty plea and self-respect
Watson, Gabrielle. Sentencing the Self-Convicted: The Ethics of Pleading Guilty. Ed, Julian V Roberts; Jesper Ryberg. Oxford: Hart Publishing, 2023. p. 111-126. View Chapter

Edited collections 

Leading Works in Criminal Law
Kennedy, Chloë (Editor); Farmer, Lindsay (Editor). 1st ed. Routledge, 2023. 284 p. (Analysing Leading Works in Law). View collection

Journal articles

Communicating confidence: Suspended sentences as communicative punishment
Mojca M. Plesnicar, Milena Tripkovic. In Pravni zapisi. Vol. 2024, No. 1, pp. 239-271, 10.07.2024. View article

The aims and functions of criminal law
Cornford, Andrew. In: Modern Law Review, Vol. 87, No. 2, 03.2024, p. 398-429. View article

Digital ritual: Police-public social media encounters and 'Authentic' interaction
Henry, Alistair. In: The British Journal of Criminology: An International Review of Crime and Society (BJC), Vol. 64, No. 2, 01.03.2024, p. 452 - 467. View article

Sentencing Members of Minority Groups: Problems and Prospects for Improvement in Four Countries
Roberts, Julian V; Watson, Gabrielle, and Hester, Rhys. In: Crime and Justice. Online First. View article

Should ‘Gender Critical’ Views about Trans People Be Protected as Philosophical Beliefs in the Workplace? Lessons for the Future
Cowan, Sharon and Morris, Sean. In Forstater, Mackereth and Higgs, Industrial Law Journal, 51(1), 1–37, p.1-37. View article

Scottish Feminist Judgments Project
The Scottish Feminist Judgments Project re-imagines the processes and outcomes of judging from feminist perspectives.
Visit the Scottish Feminist Judgments Project website

Core Concepts in Criminal Law and Justice
A project on the foundation principles and concepts of Anglo-German Criminal Law and Justice, co-funded by the Göttingen Association for Comparative and International Criminal Law and Criminal Justice and the Fritz Thyssen Foundation.
Visit the Core Concepts in Criminal Law and Justice website

Centre for Legal History
The Centre for Legal History encourages the study of legal history with particular attention to Roman law and the broader civilian context.
Visit the Centre for Legal History website

Crime, Justice and Society Seminars
The Crime, Justice and Society seminars are a venue for research presentations and discussions on a broad range of topics, and takes up the remit of the former Centre for Law and Society for socio-legal scholarship.
View the upcoming Crime, Justice and Society Seminars 

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

Empirical Legal Research Network
The Empirical Legal Research Network serves as a nexus for those interested in empirical research and the study of law in society.
Visit the Empirical Legal Research Network website

GenderEd
GenderED is a virtual space to showcase excellence in teaching, research, and knowledge exchange and impact in gender and sexuality studies at University of Edinburgh, and to promote connectivity and interdisciplinarity.
Visit the GenderEd website

Commercial Law

Body

The focus of commercial law research at Edinburgh Law School is on commercial law, corporate law and governance, banking and financial law, and employment and labour law. Over the years a distinctive ‘Edinburgh’ methodology has been developed, which gives particular weight to legal history, comparative law, and law and economics methodological approaches.

Princes Street in Edinburgh

As well as using comparative law as an analytical tool for Scots law, many members of the commercial law research area have engaged in more general comparative-law work. This is reflected in innumerable publications, in participation in a large number of international projects and conferences, and in a steady flow of commercial law scholars in the team to Edinburgh, and of Edinburgh scholars to universities throughout the world.

The fact that Scots law is one of the world’s few ‘mixed’ legal systems - i.e., a legal system that combines (English) common law with (Continental) civil law - is particularly helpful for comparative-law engagement.

Andrew McLean, Lecturer of Law and Political Economy

Andrew Sweeney, Lecturer in Commercial Law

Amanullah Ahmadzai, Research Fellow

Arianna Andreangeli, Professor of Competition Law

Emilios Avgouleas, Chair in International Banking Law and Finance

Emilie Ghio, Lecturer in Corporate and Insolvency Law

David Cabrelli, Professor of Labour Law

Jonathan Hardman, Senior Lecturer in Company and Commercial Law

Simone Lamont-Black, Senior Lecturer in International Trade Law

Longjie Lu, Lecturer in Banking, Corporate and Financial Law

Lorna Richardson, Senior Lecturer in Commercial Law

Remus Valsan, Senior Lecturer in Corporate Law

Ruiqiao Zhang, Senior Lecturer in Corporate Finance, Corporate and Commercial Law

Journal articles

Regulating the very Limited Partnership
Hardman, Jonny. In: Legal Studies. 14.04.2025. p.1-19. View article

Denying corporate effect: A renewed regulatory tool
Hardman, Jonny & Watson, Susan. In: Law Quarterly Review. Vol.141. 17.03.2025. View article

Monopsony in labour markets: The corporate law contribution
Cabrelli, David & Kruszewska Ewa, In: Journal of Corporate Law Studies, Vol. 24, No.2, 14.02.2025, p.357-398. View article

Competitiveness versus competition? The Draghi Report and a new vision for competition policy in Europe
Andreangeli, Arrianna. In: Concurrences. 05.02.2025 View article

The freight forwarder as carrier: The purpose of house bills of lading
Lamont-Black, Simone. In: Lloyd's Maritime and Commercial Law Quarterly, Vol. 2024, No. 1, 14.02.2024, p. 72-105. View article

The arrestment of benefits: McKenzie v City of Edinburgh Council
MacPherson, Alisdair D. J.; Sweeney, Andrew. In: Juridical Review, Vol. 2024, No. 1, 29.03.2024, p. 16-26. View article

Regulating ESG rating firms as the gatekeepers for sustainable finance
Lu, Longjie. In: Capital Markets Law Journal, Vol. 19, No. 2, 01.04.2024, p. 184-206. View article

A critical evaluation of Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs): Payments’ final frontier?
Avgouleas, Emilios; Blair, William. In: Capital Markets Law Journal, Vol. 19, No. 2, 04.2024, p. 103-112. View article

Moveable transactions reform in Scotland: Acquiescence and the perils of over-pledging
Hardman, Jonathan. In: Butterworths Journal of International Banking and Financial Law, Vol. 39, No. 4, 01.04.2024. View article

Innovation against change
McLean, Andrew. In Journal of Antitrust Enforcement, Vol. 12, No. 3, 21.02.2024, p.378-395. View article

ESG-based remuneration in the wave of sustainability
Lu, Longjie. In: Journal of Corporate Law Studies, 15.09.2023, p. 1-43. View article

Empirical evidence for the continuing need to 'think small first' in UK company law
Hardman, Jonny; Ramirez Santos, Guillem. In: European Business Organization Law Review, Vol. 24, No. 1, 01.03.2023, p. 117-165. View article

The UK's director daisy chain: Empirical evidence of the interconnectivity of directors of UK publicly traded companies
Hardman, Jonathan; Rowell, Nicholas. In: European Business Law Review, Vol. 34, No. 2, 07.04.2023, p. 345-376. View article

Fixing the misalignment of the concession of corporate legal personality
Hardman, J. In: Legal Studies, 10.01.2023, p. 1-18. View article

Addressing the falling labour share in the UK and beyond: Labour law’s call to arms
Cabrelli, D. In: Edinburgh Law Review, Vol. 27, No.1, 18.01.2023, p3-33. View article

Book chapters

Traditional Justifications of Labour Law
Cabrelli, David. Oxford Handbook of the Law of Work. Gillian Lester; Guy Davidov; Brian Langille (Eds). Oxford University Press, 2024. p.103/114. View chapter

Labour law in the United Kingdom
Cabrelli, David. Are Legal Systems Converging or Diverging?: Lessons from Contemporary Crises. ed. / Emilie Ghio; Ricardo Perlingeiro. 1. ed. Springer, 2024. p. 81-100. View chapter

United Kingdom historical viewpoint
Hardman, Jonathan. Research Handbook on Shareholder Inspection Rights: A Comparative Perspective. Ed, Randall S. Thomas; John S. Beasley II; Paolo Giudici; Umakanth Varottil. Edward Elgar, 2023, p. 20-39 (Research Handbooks in Corporate Law and Governance). View chapter

The mismatch of public–private partnerships and the right to health
Hoekstra, Johanna; Yanes, Luis Felipe. Sustainable Public Procurement of Infrastructure and Human Rights: Beyond Building Green. Ed, Olga Martin-Ortega; Laura Treviño-Lozano. Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd., 2023, p. 160-192 (Corporations, Globalisation and the Law). View chapter

Edited collections 

Are Legal Systems Converging or Diverging? Lessons from Contemporary Crises
Ghio, Emilie (Editor); Perlingeiro, Ricardo (Editor). Springer, 2023. View collection

Re-examining Insolvency Law and Theory: Perspectives for the 21st Century
Ghio, Emilie (Editor); Wood, John M. (Editor); Gant, Jennifer L.L. (Editor). Edward Elgar Publishing, 2023. 308 p. View collection

Working papers

Tackling Labour Market Monopsony: A Role for Labour Law Reform
Cabrelli, D. (SSRN Electronic Journal), 2024.

Traditional Justifications of Labour Law
Cabrelli, D. (SSRN Electronic Journal), 2023.

Business Law in Scotland
Black, Gillian (Editor). 3 ed. Edinburgh : W. Green, 2015. View textbook

Commercial Law in Scotland
Richardson, Lorna; Macgregor, Laura; Garrity, Denis; Hardman, Jonny; MacPherson, Alisdair.
6 ed. Edinburgh : W. Green, 2020. View textbook

The Commercial Uses of Trusts: Rethinking the Traditional Approach
Zhang, Ruiqiao. Hart Publishing. 2024. View book

Comparative Company Law: A Case-Based Approach
Cabrelli, David; Siems, Mathias. 2 ed. Oxford : Hart Publishing, 2018. 584 p. View textbook

Employment Law in Context
Cabrelli, David. 3 ed. Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2018. 865 p. View textbook

Goods in transit
Bugden, Paul; Lamont-Black, Simone. 4 ed. London : Sweet & Maxwell, 2018. 1118 p. View textbook

Governance of Global Financial Markets: The Law, the Economics, the Politics
Avgouleas, Emilios. Cambridge University Press, 2012. 500 p. (International Corporate Law and Financial Market Regulation). View textbook

The Law of Agency in Scotland
Macgregor, Laura. W. Green, 2013. 340 p. View textbook

Principles of Banking Law
Cranston, Ross ; Avgouleas, Aimilios; van Zweiten, Kristin; Hare, Christopher.
3rd ed. Oxford, UK : Oxford University Press, 2018. 632 p. View textbook

Principles of Lender Liability
Hood, Parker. Oxford University Press, 2012. 752 p. View textbook

Reconceptualising Global Finance and its Regulation
Avgouleas, Emilios (Editor); Buckley, Ross P. (Editor); Arner, Douglas W. (Editor).
Cambridge University Press, 2016. 480 p. View textbook

The Trust as Patrimony: An Introduction
Valsan, Remus. Trusts and Patrimonies. ed. 
Remus Valsan. Edinburgh University Press, 2015. p. 3-12 (Edinburgh Studies in Law). View textbook

Edinburgh Centre for Commercial Law
The Edinburgh Centre for Commercial Law at Edinburgh Law Schools fosters research and promotes excellence in the teaching of commercial law.
Visit the Edinburgh Centre for Commercial Law website
 

Subscribe to