Keith Ewing

Keith D. Ewing (born 1955) is Professor of Public Law at King's College London[1] and co-author of two of Britain's leading textbooks in constitutional and administrative law, and labour law.

Biography

Ewing was educated at Edinburgh University and worked at Cambridge University in England, Monash University in Australia, Osgoode Hall in Canada, before joining the King's College London law school in 1992.

Ewing is recognised as a leading scholar in public law and labour law. He has written extensively on the funding of political parties. His most recent work relates to reforming labour law to strengthen trade union freedom, constitutional reform, relating to public participation in the political process and the status of social and economic rights..

Publications

Articles
Books
  • A Manifesto for Labour Law (2016)
  • (with Jacob Rowbottom and Joo-Cheong Tham) The Funding of Political Parties: Where Now? (Routledge 2011)
  • The Bonfire of the Liberties (Oxford University Press 2010)
  • (with AW Bradley) Constitutional and Administrative Law (Longman 2007)
  • The Cost of Democracy: Party Funding in Modern British Politics (Hart Publishing 2007)
  • (with Samuel Issacharoff) Party Funding And Campaign Financing in International Perspective (Hart Publishing 2006) Columbia-London Law Series
  • (with Hugh Collins and Aileen McColgan) Labour Law, Text, Cases and Materials (Hart Publishing 2005) ISBN 1-84113-362-0
  • (with Tom Campbell and Adam Tomkins) Skeptical Essays on Human Rights (Oxford University Press 2002)
  • (with Conor Gearty) The Struggle for Civil Liberties (Oxford University Press 2000)
  • Money, Politics and Law: A Study of Electoral Campaign Finance Reform in Canada (Clarendon Press 1992)
  • (with Conor Gearty) Freedom under Thatcher: Civil Liberties in Modern Britain (Oxford University Press 1990)
  • Britain and the ILO (1989)
  • The Funding of Political Parties in Britain (Cambridge University Press 1987)

Notes

  1. King's Law School staff page
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.