News from the Department of Law and Criminology
Dr Maja Grundler and co-author Prof Elspeth Guild wrote a blog for 'EU Immigration and Asylum Policy' titled 'Russian Nationals at the EU’s External Borders: Upholding Human Rights'.
Dr. Melissa Henderson draws on research undertaken with Professor Rosie Meeks to evaluate the benefits that mentoring programmes have in prison settings.
English Corporate Insolvency Law: A Primer is a concise yet rigorous outline of the English corporate insolvency and restructuring framework
Dr Marton Ribary published a co-authored paper on open data publishing and the interplay between data, data papers and research papers in the humanities and social sciences
The paper provides empirical support for criticisms of the turn towards including boys and LGBTQ youth as victims of ‘sex trafficking’, and of dominant discourse on ‘child trafficking’.
Dr Maja Grundler and Professor Elspeth Guild (QMUL) discuss whether Russian nationals fleeing military service can claim asylum in the EU
The study focused on self-harm in prisons during the COVID-19 lockdown
The Department of Law and Criminology is looking for new highly-qualified and forward-thinking professionals to join our team!
The article discusses intellectual property issues related to user-generated content on the internet.
Dr Oliveira’s article addresses the function of a hearing in arbitration to assess if a right to a hearing safeguards access to justice in arbitration.