TEACHING
My teaching activities centre around:
- My involvement as an Associate Research Fellow at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, London University;
- My new association with Derby University School of Law and Criminology
- In February 2016 I joined the Bingham Centre as an External Fellow and will be working with them on costitutional law projects
- My training practice; and
- My voluntary sessions on law and ethics at the Jewish Free School.
Institute of Advanced Legal Studies
For the last few years I have had the enormous pleasure of teaching on the LLM Legislative Drafting course at the IALS in the University of London, as well as on their annual summer course. I teach both practical and more academic aspects of legislative drafting, and I get enormous pleasure from these sessions with experienced and less experienced drafters from all over the world, who always bring a lot of thought-provoking and challenging ideas to the courses. The photos on the left are of one of my experimental sessions in the park!
I was also a founder member of the IALS’ Legislative Drafters forum – you can read or join the forum at http://legislativedrafters.blogspot.com/
I am an Associate Research Fellow of the IALS.
Derby University
I have a new association (as of summer 2012) with the School of Law and Criminology at Derby University.
My role as Visiting Professor of Legislation will involve a number of visits to the University to meet with academics and students, to advise on particular projects and to give occasional lectures and seminars. My first visit earlier this year was enormously enjoyable, and I found a range of exciting activities going on at all levels of the faculty, some of which I could understand and some of which I could even contribute to. I am enormously looking forward to developing an association with this vibrant institution over the coming years.
I gave my inaugural lecture in honour of Chief Justice Wilmot on Monday 19th November 2012, on the subject of the Dangerously Diminishing Distinction between the Civil and Criminal Laws. You can read the text of my lecture here.
Training
I have always enjoyed teaching and since I left the Office of the Parliamentary Counsel in 2010 I have taken advantage of my additional freedom as a non-civil servant to become involved in a number of training and teaching projects.
Over the last couple of years I have developed a particularly enjoyable relationship with civil servants and politicians in Wales. Since 2011 I have delivered a series of training sessions in statutory interpretation, legislative scrutiny and legislative preparation to Committees of the National Assembly for Wales, Clerks of the Assembly, Welsh Government Lawyers and Welsh Legislative Drafters.
In 2012 I delivered a 5-day course on statutory interpretation to drafting officers and others from the Attorney General’s Chambers, as part of the 2012 programme of ILKAP – the Malaysian Judicial and Legal Training Institute.
In 2013 I started working with Committees and staff of the Northern Ireland Assembly providing training in legislative scrutiny, along the lines that I have been doing for the National Assembly for Wales. At my most recent visit I had the pleasure of holding a seminar for law students at the University of Ulster and addressing the Attorney General’s Symposium on law-making.
In October 2013 I traveled to Myanmar where I conducted a series of seminars on legislative drafting and statutory interpretation organised by the United Nations Development Programme. I also provided support in reviewing some of the laws. At the opening of the seminar the Attorney General, Dr. Tun Shin thanked UNDP for organizing this seminar, and noted it “is the first one of its kind” and “is very beneficial for law officers as well as for the Office and Ministries in the country”. I had the pleasure of running follow-up seminars for the UNDP in Myanmar in November 2014, for members of the Union Attorney General’s Office, staff from a range of Ministries and districts, and parliamentary staff.
In February 2016 i joined the Bingham Centre for the Rule of the Law as an External fellow, I look forward to working with them on constitutional law projects.