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 …
  • Legal and Political Theory Forum – Interception: State Surveillance from Postal Systems to Global Networks, MIT (New Start Time 5.30pm)

    Moot Court Room 7th Floor, Cheng Kin Ku Building, LSE, London, United Kingdom
    Seminars 

    The Legal & Political Theory Forum was set up in September 2007 in order to provide an umbrella for seminars and colloquia on topics of common interest to scholars and graduate students working in various disciplinary areas, but particularly in the fields of politics and law.
     
    Speaker: Bernard Keenan

  • PIL Hub: ‘Democracy for a Sustainable World’

    Moot Court Room 7th Floor, Cheng Kin Ku Building, LSE, London, United Kingdom
    Seminars 

    The PIL hub lunch-time seminar series aims to provide an opportunity to discuss and debate leading research on contemporary, theoretical and historical issues of international law.
     
    Speaker: Professor Jim Bacchus

  • PIL Hub: ‘The Vulnerability of States in International Law’

    Moot Court Room 7th Floor, Cheng Kin Ku Building, LSE, London, United Kingdom
    Seminars 

    The PIL hub lunch-time seminar series aims to provide an opportunity to discuss and debate leading research on contemporary, theoretical and historical issues of international law.
     
    Speaker: Dr Yusra Suedi

  • Masterclass with Dr Janis Sarra

    Moot Court Room 7th Floor, Cheng Kin Ku Building, LSE, London, United Kingdom
    Seminars 

    Dr Janis Sarra will lead this masterclass on public interest and restructuring and insolvency law.
     
    Speaker: Dr Janis Sarra

  • PIL Hub: ‘The Right to Food: Between Availability and Accessibility’

    Moot Court Room 7th Floor, Cheng Kin Ku Building, LSE, London, United Kingdom
    Seminars 

    The PIL hub lunch-time seminar series aims to provide an opportunity to discuss and debate leading research on contemporary, theoretical and historical issues of international law.
     
    Speaker: Professor Aeyal Gross

  • Legal and Political Theory Forum – The Bonds of Freedom: Liberated Africans and the End of the Slave Trade, Yale UP

    Moot Court Room 7th Floor, Cheng Kin Ku Building, LSE, London, United Kingdom
    Seminars 

    The Legal & Political Theory Forum was set up in September 2007 in order to provide an umbrella for seminars and colloquia on topics of common interest to scholars and graduate students working in various disciplinary areas, but particularly in the fields of politics and law.
     
    Speaker: Jake Subryan Richards

  • Legal and Political Theory Forum – The Public Constitution Defined: On the Importance of Being Recognised as Important

    Moot Court Room 7th Floor, Cheng Kin Ku Building, LSE, London, United Kingdom
    Seminars 

    The Legal & Political Theory Forum was set up in September 2007 in order to provide an umbrella for seminars and colloquia on topics of common interest to scholars and graduate students working in various disciplinary areas, but particularly in the fields of politics and law.
     
    Speaker: Alon Harel

  • War and Law: Rethinking the Crime of Aggression

    Moot Court Room 7th Floor, Cheng Kin Ku Building, LSE, London, United Kingdom
    Seminars 

    What exactly is aggression? Does the crime of aggression simply criminalise our enemies? Or is the crime of aggression truly the “crime of crimes”: a crime containing, what the IMT described as, “the accumulated evil of the whole”? Should Putin stand trial? Netanyahu?
     
    Speakers: Claus Kress and Gerry Simpson