Academic Lectures

I am an Associate Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies.

I have given a number of lectures at universities, including:

‘PINs, ATMs and liability’ on Wednesday 4 November 2009, 6pm to 7pm at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, London

‘Electronic evidence: some problem areas’ at the Tokyo Institute of Technology, Graduate School of Decision Science and Technology, O-okayama-campus, Tokyo at the invitation of Professor Hironao Kaneko. I prepared an essay explaining the haiku I wrote for the book I edited International Electronic Evidence (British Institute of International and Comparative Law, 2008) specially for this lecture, a copy of which is available here (April 2009)

Two lectures on digital evidence and electronic signatures to the students at ILS Law College, Pune (March 2008)

‘Digital evidence’ as part of the Master’s Degree in Criminal Investigation offered by the Faculty of Law, University of Rijeka, Croatia (October 2007)

‘Validating identity in a digital world’ as part of the course Informations- und Kommunikationssicherheit: Infrastrukturen, Technologien und Geschäftsmodelle run by Universität Frankfurt (May 2005)

‘Disclosure and Evidence in England & Wales A short introduction’ to Corporate Counsel Technology Institute at University of Widener School of Law , Wilmington, Delaware, United States of America, (over the telephone, February 2005)

From 2006-2008, I gave lectures to the students on the Information and Communication Technology LLM at the Department of Private Law, Faculty of Law, University of Oslo. As part of the day, I used to take the students on a walking tour of the four Inns of Court before we had lunch in Middle Temple Hall, perhaps followed with a tour of one of the libraries.

I give an introductory lecture at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies entitled ‘A brief outline of the English legal system’ to the students on the London University LLM degree each September (it is such a shame for the students, that the colleges in London no longer collaborate on this degree). I began this lecture in 2005, and we now include a barrister and solicitor in the second part of the lecture to discuss the profession in England & Wales.