Nottingham Law School 2016/17

Who will teach me? Andrea Nicholson Andrea is a member of our Centre for Conflict, Rights and Justice, and is actively involved in research on contemporary forms of slavery. She is currently involved in a large interdisciplinary project concerning historical and contemporary slavery, and teaches International Human Rights on undergraduate and postgraduate courses. Elizabeth Chadwick Elizabeth’s main research and teaching interests lie in the fields of international humanitarian law, the self-determination of peoples, international terrorism, and international crimes. She has a specific and long-standing research interest in the area of laws of armed neutrality, a subject on which she has published regularly over many years. Peter McTigue Peter specialises in employment law, and was a solicitor representing applicants and respondents at all stages of the employment tribunal process. He undertakes research into various areas including discrimination, disability, HIV and employment law. The objective of his current research is to explore and evaluate the extent to which English law protects people living with HIV within an employment relationship from discrimination. He is also a member of the First-tier Tribunal Social Entitlement Chamber, which hears appeals in relation to disability benefits. Dr Loretta Trickett Dr Trickett has published on men’s fear of crime, bullying, gang violence, sexual assault and hate crimes against BME communities and disabled people. She has completed a research study with Nottinghamshire Police on the Policing of Hate Crime and is currently working on a number of academic articles on

how hate crime training for police officers, hate crime perpetrators and hostility against women. Louise Taylor Louise is Deputy Director of the School’s Centre for Conflict, Rights and Justice, and her research focuses on criminal justice and human rights. She is especially interested in issues pertaining to victims’ rights, restorative justice, and the legitimacy of criminal justice institutions and processes. Elspeth Berry Elspeth is a qualified solicitor and an Associate Professor. She tutors Human Rights in Europe on the LLM, as well as the LLB Human Rights module. She has published a number of articles on human rights, including on human rights in the business context and on the relationship between the European Convention on Human Rights and EU human rights law. She is also currently supervising a postgraduate research student in international human rights. Tom Lewis Tom studied law and history at the University of Oxford, before going on to qualify and practice as a solicitor specialising in civil litigation. Tom is Director of the School’s Centre for Conflict, Rights and Justice, and researches and writes in the fields of constitutional law and human rights, with a particular interest in the rights to freedom of expression and freedom of religion and belief. Go to www.ntu.ac.uk/nlsstaff for more information.

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