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David Kershaw is the current dean of the LSE Law School. The law school is one of LSE's largest and oldest departments, with over 60 academic staff. [1] [2] LSE Law School is located on Lincoln's Inn Fields in the Cheng Kin Ku Building (abbreviated as CKK, formerly the New Academic Building, NAB), named in honour of LSE donor Vincent Cheng’s ...
LSE alumni and faculty include 55 past or present heads of state or government and 20 Nobel laureates. As of 2024, 25 per cent of all 56 Nobel Memorial Prizes in Economics had been awarded, at least in part, to LSE alumni, current staff, or former staff. [13] LSE alumni and faculty have also won 3 Nobel Peace Prizes and 2 Nobel Prizes in ...
LSE (1960s) In 1969, a "Free LSE" was organised at ULU in response to the suspension of lecturers Robin Blackburn and Nick Bateson. The radical tradition of the Union continued in the 1970s. However, in 1971 there was a reaction against the student activism of the previous 5 years.
David Kershaw is a Professor of Law at the London School of Economics (LSE) and the current Dean of LSE Law School. [1] His research is focused on company law.As well as the author of a leading company law textbook, Kershaw's expertise focuses on accounting principles for companies, for which his work on post-Enron regulation received the Modern Law Review Wedderburn Prize, [2] directors ...
Jeremy Horder FBA, former Law Commissioner for England and Wales, professor of law at Oxford University and the London School of Economics; Sir Otto Kahn-Freund, professor of comparative law, University of Oxford, and a scholar in labour law; Robert F. Kennedy Jr., son of politician Robert F. Kennedy, law professor at Pace University School of Law
The faculty was ranked second in the UK for law in The Guardian University Guide 2025, [32] first in the Times Good University Guide 2025, [33] second in the Complete University Guide 2025, [34] 12th globally in the Times Higher Education World University Rankings 2024 by subject: law, [35] and 14th globally in the QS World University Rankings ...
The National Admissions Test for Law, or LNAT, is an admissions aptitude test that was adopted in 2004 by eight UK university law programmes [1] as an admissions requirement for home applicants. The test was established at the leading urgency of Oxford University as an answer to the problem facing universities trying to select from an ...
LSE Press was launched in 2018 [9] and publishes peer-reviewed open access research in the social sciences through books and journals (LSE Public Policy Review, [10] Journal of Illicit Economies and Development, [11] and Journal of Long-Term Care [12]). Student work is published through the Houghton Street Press imprint. The Library holds a ...