William Twining

William Twining is the Emeritus Quain Professor of Jurisprudence at University College London. He is a leading member of the Law in Context movement and has contributed especially to jurisprudence, evidence and proof, legal method, legal education, and intellectual history. with recent focussing on "globalisation" and legal theory.[1][2] Central themes include the variety and complexity of legal phenomena; that many so-called “global” processes and patterns are sub-global, linked to empires, diasporas, alliances and legal traditions; that diffusion, legal pluralism, and surface law are important topics for both analytical and empirical jurisprudence; that, in a world characterised by profound diversity of beliefs and radical poverty, the discipline of law needs to engage with problems of constructing just and workable supra-national institutions and practices; and that adopting a global perspective challenges some of the main working assumptions of Western traditions of academic law.

At the start of his career Twining taught for seven years in Sudan and Tanzania. He has maintained an interest in Eastern Africa, and more broadly the Commonwealth, ever since. He has studied and taught in several leading UK and American law schools. He is currently a visiting faculty member at the University of Miami School of Law.

Twining is Co-editor of the Law in Context and Jurists series. He has held chairs in Belfast and Warwick and until 1996 he was Quain Professor of Jurisprudence.

Publications

External links

References

  1. http://www.ucl.ac.uk/laws/academics/profiles/index.shtml?twining University College London - biographical entry William Twining (Accessed Dec 2010)
  2. http://www.ucl.ac.uk/laws/academics/profiles/twining/ALICANTEINTERVIEW10Jan2010.pdf Raymundo Gama (2010) Interview with William Twining, UCL (Accessed Dec 2010)
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