LSE Law School has a diverse and vibrant events programme. Convene and Social events provide our students opportunities for learning, enrichment and community building beyond the lecture theatre, our Research events focus on exchange of cutting-edge ideas, and we warmly welcome everyone with an interest in law to our Public Events.
Stay tuned …
  • Anti-colonial Resistance, Academic Freedom, and Political Dissent in Cameroon

    MAR 2.05 Marshall Building, 44 Lincoln's Inn Fields, LSE, United Kingdom
    Seminars 

    In this discussion, Barrister Caroline Mbinkar examines the “Nera 10” case as a window into the criminalization of political dissent and the shrinking space for academic and civic freedoms amid the Anglophone conflict in Cameroon. In 2018, ten professionals, including academics, associated with the Anglophone struggle were arrested in Nigeria and deported to Cameroon.
     
    Speaker: Caroline Mbinkar

  • Arbitration and Peace

    MAR 2.05 Marshall Building, 44 Lincoln's Inn Fields, LSE, United Kingdom
    Public Lectures 

    International arbitration, one of the most profound successes of international law in the twentieth century, provides that essential infrastructure.  The paper traces the history of the perpetual peace project, explains how international arbitration advances that goal and proposes how scholars and practitioners of international arbitration can contribute to that project in the twenty-first century.
     
    Speaker: Professor Peter Bo Rutledge

  • Vassal State? Britain and the USA After Trump 2.0

    MAR 2.05 Marshall Building, 44 Lincoln's Inn Fields, LSE, United Kingdom
    Public Lectures 

    In the third workshop addressing the question of national interest in the wake of the end of globalisation, Professor Peter Ramsay (LSE Law) and Dr Philip Cunliffe (UCL Risk and Disaster Reduction) will interview Angus Hanton, author of Vassal State: How America Runs Britain. 

  • Corporate Value and the Role of Shareholders

    MAR 2.05 Marshall Building, 44 Lincoln's Inn Fields, LSE, United Kingdom
    Public Lectures 

    Jill Fisch is the Saul A. Fox Distinguished Professor of Business Law. Professor Fisch is an internationally known scholar whose work focuses on the intersection of business and law, including the role of regulation and litigation in addressing limitations in the disciplinary power of the capital markets.
     
    Speaker: Professor Jill Fisch

  • When AI invents – Implications for the future of innovation

    MAR 2.05 Marshall Building, 44 Lincoln's Inn Fields, LSE, United Kingdom
    Seminars 

    The LTS hub is delighted to bring a timely conversation with Robert Peake (Parter, Keystone Law) and Prof Ryan Abbot (Consultant Solicitor Advocate, Keystone Law, and author of The Reasonable Robot: Artificial Intelligence and the Law) on the question of AI inventorship and the DABUS litigation in UK courts. 
     
    Speakers: Robert Peake & Ryan Abbott

  • Migration Masterclass Session 4 – Who Can Come, Who Can Stay, Who Must Go: A Practical Introduction to UK Immigration Law

    MAR 2.05 Marshall Building, 44 Lincoln's Inn Fields, LSE, United Kingdom
    Convene 

    This masterclass offers a practical introduction to UK immigration law.  Over four sessions, students will learn about the key legal instruments underpinning immigration law and their practical application.
     
    Speaker: Nath Gbikpi

    Convene events are organised for members of the LSE community.
  • After a security trades: Why post-trade infrastructure matters, how it works, and why there is currently a push to make it work better

    MAR 2.05 Marshall Building, 44 Lincoln's Inn Fields, LSE, United Kingdom
    Convene 

    In this talk, the key features of securities market infrastructure will be described. The current push to move from (sometimes leaky) national plumbing in Europe to more integrated cross border infrastructure will then be discussed.
     
    Speaker: Dr David Murphy

    Convene events are organised for members of the LSE community.
  • Migration Masterclass Session 3 – Who Can Come, Who Can Stay, Who Must Go: A Practical Introduction to UK Immigration Law

    MAR 2.05 Marshall Building, 44 Lincoln's Inn Fields, LSE, United Kingdom
    Convene 

    This masterclass offers a practical introduction to UK immigration law.  Over four sessions, students will learn about the key legal instruments underpinning immigration law and their practical application.
     
    Speaker: Nath Gbikpi

    Convene events are organised for members of the LSE community.
  • Migration Masterclass Session 2 – Who Can Come, Who Can Stay, Who Must Go: A Practical Introduction to UK Immigration Law

    MAR 2.05 Marshall Building, 44 Lincoln's Inn Fields, LSE, United Kingdom
    Convene 

    This masterclass offers a practical introduction to UK immigration law.  Over four sessions, students will learn about the key legal instruments underpinning immigration law and their practical application.
     
    Speaker: Nath Gbikpi

    Convene events are organised for members of the LSE community.
  • Migration Masterclass Session 1 – Who Can Come, Who Can Stay, Who Must Go: A Practical Introduction to UK Immigration Law

    MAR 2.05 Marshall Building, 44 Lincoln's Inn Fields, LSE, United Kingdom
    Convene 

    This masterclass offers a practical introduction to UK immigration law.  Over four sessions, students will learn about the key legal instruments underpinning immigration law and their practical application.
     
    Speaker: Nath Gbikpi

    Convene events are organised for members of the LSE community.
  • The Hidden Rules of International Trade – Trade Finance Masterclass Session 3

    MAR 2.05 Marshall Building, 44 Lincoln's Inn Fields, LSE, United Kingdom
    Convene 

    This certificate Trade Finance Masterclass Series at LSE Law School is designed to provide students with a comprehensive introduction to: (1) the legal rules and industry practice governing cross border trade and trade finance; (2) the continued challenge transitioning global trade from a paper based system to digital; (3) the risks arising for international trade when deals are impacted by economic sanctions or fraud.

    Convene events are organised for members of the LSE community.