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Centre for Commercial Law Studies (CCLS), Queen Mary

Description

In 1980, Sir Roy Goode decided to create an environment where practising commercial lawyers and those from academia could meet and exchange ideas. His vision was that by bringing together these different perspectives, it would have been possible to create better outcomes. And so the Centre for Commercial Law Studies (CCLS) was born.

It is an innovation that continues to bear results in teaching and research. One example is the Centre’s research on cloud computing being undertaken by its Institute of Computer and Communications Law – a rigorous academic undertaking, funded by industry to address a systemic challenge that has far-reaching consequences for providers of cloud services, as well as their users, whether individual, corporate or public sector.

By bringing academia and practice together, CCLS has become a world leader in commercial law research - proof positive that a diversity of ideas fosters academic excellence and helps achieve the previously unthinkable. CCLS has over 50 full-time academic staff and more than 75 practitioners, judges and visiting academics contributing to the teaching, research and life of the centre. CCLS’s advisory council and its Development Board are comprised of judges, solicitors, barristers, general counsel, business leaders and academics.

CCLS has approximately 100 doctoral and 1,000 postgraduate taught students from some 80 countries. Students benefit from learning from leading academics and experienced practitioners in their teaching teams. View School of Law postgraduate law programmes.

CCLS has a long history of contributing to the training of practitioners and industry professionals, as well as providing seminars and lectures that count towards continuing professional development.

CCLS’s objective is to disseminate research on the practice and development of law. The Centre’s academic staff contribute to the work of domestic and international bodies undertaking law reform, acts as consultants to governments, agencies and practitioners and engages in debate through seminars and conferences, such as recent joint seminars with the Financial Services Authority and the Bank of England. The Centre’s School of International Arbitration is accredited as a non-governmental organisation by the United Nations.

Offers funding

No, this infrastructure does not provide funding.

Founding year

1980

Contact details

Centre For Commercial Law
Northgate House
67-69 Lincoln's Inn Fields
London
WC2A 3JB
United Kingdom
Website: https://www.qmul.ac.uk/ccls/

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Categorisation

Type

  • University-based infrastructure
  • Centre

Project Tags

  • Development studies tag
  • Economics tag
  • Ethics tag
  • Information studies tag
  • Law tag
  • Media studies tag
  • Technology tag

University affiliation(s)

Queen Mary, University of London
London

Last modified:

2023-10-23 16:47:05

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