UCL FACULTY OF LAWS Quain Chair of Jurisprudence Further Particulars This document sets out the following information for appointments to the Quain Chair of Jurisprudence in the Faculty of Laws at UCL. Page Application Procedure 1 About UCL 2 About the UCL Faculty of Laws 4 Job Description 5 Person Specification 7 Application Procedure In addition to completing the online application form, candidates should upload the following supplementary documentation: • A curriculum vitae (including list of publications) • A letter of application explaining your interest in the post (2 pages maximum) • A statement detailing your research achievements to date, and your research plans over the next 12-24 months (2 pages maximum) • Up to three research outputs for the selection panel to examine • The names and addresses of three referees who are leading figures in Jurisprudence, Philosophy or Political Theory (including at least one referee based outside the candidate's country of residence) • Details of current salary. Please note the online system will accept up to two attachments, so the documents should be merged. If you have difficulty uploading any documents please send these instead to academic.services@ucl.ac.uk. The closing date for submitting applications and supporting documents is Sunday 14 December 2014. Shortlisting is expected to be completed by Friday 23 January 2015, and all candidates will be notified of the outcome of their application. Interviews are expected to take place on Thursday 12 February 2015. If you have limited availability on this date, please indicate your preferred time in your letter of application. If you are shortlisted and are unable to attend on the interview date, it will normally be impossible to offer you an alternative date. However, where you can attend on the date but wish to change the time of interview, we will try to accommodate you. 1 of 9 UCL FACULTY OF LAWS Please note that when candidates are shortlisted, their referees will be asked to provide a reference in advance of the interviews. All candidates are advised to alert their referees about the possibility of a request for this being sent in late January, with a short window of time before it is due. If you wish to have an informal and confidential discussion about your suitability for the post, the duties attached to the post, and/or Jurisprudence at UCL, please contact the Faculty Dean, Professor Dame Hazel Genn QC (h.genn@ucl.ac.uk), the Faculty Vice Dean (Staffing), Professor Charles Mitchell (charles.mitchell@ucl.ac.uk) or Professor George Letsas (george.letsas@ucl.ac.uk). If you have any queries regarding the application process, please contact the Faculty Staffing Officer, Laura Allum (l.allum@ucl.ac.uk, 020 7679 1467). About UCL Background Information UCL is one of the world's top universities. Based in the heart of London, it is a modern, outwardlooking institution. At its establishment in 1826, UCL was radical and responsive to the needs of society, and this ethos – that excellence should go hand-in-hand with enriching society – continues today. UCL's excellence extends across all academic disciplines; from one of Europe's largest and most productive hubs for biomedical science interacting with several leading London hospitals, to worldrenowned centres for architecture (UCL Bartlett) and fine art (UCL Slade School). UCL is in practice a university in its own right, although constitutionally a college within the federal University of London. With an annual turnover exceeding £800 million, it is financially and managerially independent of the University of London. The UCL community UCL's staff and former students have included 21 Nobel prizewinners. It is a truly international community: more than one-third of our student body – nearly 27,000 strong – come from 150 countries and nearly one-third of staff are from outside the UK. UCL offers postgraduate research opportunities in all of its subjects, and provides about 200 undergraduate programmes and more than 400 taught postgraduate programmes. Approximately 45% of the student community is engaged in graduate studies, with about 37% of these graduate students pursuing research degrees. Quality of UCL's teaching and learning UCL has the best academic to student ratio of any UK university (The Times, 2013), enabling small class sizes and outstanding individual support. In the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise (RAE), UCL was rated the best research university in London, and third in the UK overall, for the number of its submissions that were considered of ‘world-leading quality'. The RAE confirmed UCL's multi-disciplinary research strength, with outstanding results achieved across the subjects, ranging from biomedicine, science and engineering and the built environment to laws, social sciences and arts and humanities. 2 of 9 UCL FACULTY OF LAWS UCL is independently ranked as the most productive research university in Europe (SIR). The Thomson Scientific Citation Index – which catalogues journal articles and citations in the sciences, social sciences and arts and humanities – shows that UCL is the second most-highly cited European university. Equality UCL is proud of its longstanding commitment to equality and to providing a learning, working and social environment in which the rights and dignity of its diverse members are respected. The Equalities website has everything you need to know about Equalities at UCL and some initiatives are highlighted below: Sabbatical Leave following maternity - UCL provides one term of sabbatical leave without teaching commitments for research-active academics returning from maternity, adoption or long-term carer's leave. This support for returners enables staff to more quickly re-establish their research activity. Achievement of eight Athena SWAN awards - for good employment practice for women working in science, engineering and technology (SET) in higher education and research. Tackling underrepresentation - UCL has two workforce equality targets. These targets are to increase the employment of black and minority ethnic (BME) support staff in grades 1-8 to 31% in line with the economically active BME population of Greater London; and to incrementally equalise the representation of men and women in senior grades (9 and 10) with the ultimate aim of a 50:50 split of women and men at this level. Encouraging flexibility - 82% of respondents to the 2009 UCL staff survey felt that their working time could be flexible. UCL's Work Life Balance policy gives employees the right to request a flexible working pattern. Location and working environment Based in Bloomsbury, UCL is a welcoming, inclusive university situated at the heart of one of the world's greatest cities. UCL's central campus is spread across approximately three square kilometres of central London and is within easy reach of Euston, King's Cross and Marylebone mainline stations, the Eurostar terminal at St Pancras and the following Underground stations – Euston Square, Warren Street, Goodge Street and Russell Square. Road connections to the M1 and M40 motorways give easy access. For more information about UCL's teaching, research, community engagement, achievements and history, please see http://www.ucl.ac.uk/about-ucl 3 of 9 UCL FACULTY OF LAWS About the UCL Faculty of Laws The Faculty of Laws For almost 200 years, UCL Laws has been one of the leading centres of legal education in the world. Recognised as offering an outstanding educational experience to our students, we combine a strong theoretical foundation in the law with practical teaching from world-leading academics and practitioners. Our community of intellectually dynamic scholars responds to today’s global challenges, and through our research, we help to shape government policy, national and international law and its practice. At the heart of legal London, we attract the leading figures in the field to contribute to our vibrant programme of events, informing public debate and understanding of contemporary social, legal, environmental and economic issues. The UCL Laws student body numbers around 960 students, divided between 500 undergraduate, 400 taught graduate, and 60 graduate research students. The faculty has an academic staff of some 55 professors, lecturers and readers, as well as many visiting professors, lecturers and distinguished judicial visitors, and our dedicated team of professional services staff provides valuable support to both our students and academic staff. Throughout our long history, we have been committed to the values of the founders of UCL: justice, liberty and equal rights for all. As a faculty, we work together to promote these values among our staff and students, and as part of UCL, we harness the potential of cross-disciplinary research and expertise to address the world’s key problems. Jurisprudence at UCL Laws The Faculty has a long and distinguished history of enquiry into theoretical aspects of all laws as well as into theoretical questions about the nature of law itself. From the outset of law teaching at UCL in 1828, the influence of theory upon both legal education and the growth of legislation in accordance with utilitarian principles was heavily influenced by John Austin, one of the two founding professors of law. This reforming and theoretical influence was immense and is part of the spirit of the Faculty today. The Bentham Project, a college-based collaborative research team which is producing the authoritative edition of Jeremy Bentham’s Collected Works, is organised out of the Faculty. Jurisprudence is taught as a compulsory subject on the LLB curriculum and informs a large part of the Faculty’s interdisciplinary approach to research. The importance of jurisprudence and legal theory within the Faculty is marked by the Quain Professorship. Ronald Dworkin, whose work in the past 30 years has had a global impact on the agenda of the modern debate in legal and political philosophy, held the Quain Chair from 1998 to 2005. Other holders of the Chair have included Glanville Williams, well-known for his theoretical approach to the criminal law, Lord Lloyd of Hampstead QC, whose Lloyd on Jurisprudence has introduced decades of law students world-wide to Jurisprudence, and William Twining (now Research Professor in the Faculty) whose influence on academic legal education around the world has been immense. The most recent holders of the Chair have been Ross Harrison (now Emeritus Quain Professor at UCL), the political philosopher and former Provost of King’s College, Cambridge, G.A. Cohen, the distinguished moral and political philosopher, and former Chichele Professor of Social and Political Thought at All Soul’s College, Oxford, and John Tasioulas (now Yeoh Professor of Politics, Philosophy & Law at KCL), best known for his work on the philosophy of human rights and international law. 4 of 9 UCL FACULTY OF LAWS Job Description Job Title Quain Chair of Jurisprudence Grade 10 Hours Full Time (36.5 hours per week) Available 01 September 2015 Responsible to Dean of Faculty of Laws The appointment will be made on the Professorial Grade 10 salary scale dependent on qualifications and experience of appointee. This is a full-time position, however working on a part-time basis will be considered, subject to discussion with the appointee. The usual minimum is 15 hours per week. The successful candidate will be a world-class scholar in the general area of legal philosophy and legal theory, which may include major theoretical contributions in substantive law or in a discipline related to law. The Quain Professor will join an active group of colleagues among whom are Sylvie Delacroix, Stephen Guest, Jeff King, George Letsas, Riz Mokal, Prince Saprai and Philip Schofield in Laws, Cécile Laborde and Saladin Meckled-Garcia in Political Science, and Veronique Munoz-Darde and Jonathan Wolff in Philosophy. In addition to contributing to our LLB and LLM teaching and supervising PhD students, activities may include co-convening the UCL Colloquium in Legal & Social Philosophy, teaching on the cross-disciplinary MA in Legal and Political Theory, and contributing to the work of several research centres, including the Centre for Ethics and Law and the Institute for Human Rights The role and responsibilities for the post are outlined below. The Role and its Responsibilities 1 Research The Quain Professor must contribute to the advancement of Jurisprudence by research and scholarship (defined as commitment to, and practice in, the acquisition and synthesis of knowledge and understanding) that is world-leading, and meets the highest standards of excellence in terms of originality, impact and rigour. To contribute to the advancement of scholarship in the field, through publications and other research activity of international significance and which makes strong impact both in terms of reach and significance. To effectively share the research findings with a range of audiences. To seek out, engage in and lead funded research projects and initiatives. To contribute to and enhance the Faculty’s research culture. 5 of 9 UCL FACULTY OF LAWS 2 Learning and Teaching The Quain Professor must contribute to the advancement of Jurisprudence through teaching and by pedagogical innovation. 3 To contribute to teaching on undergraduate and postgraduate taught courses offered by the Faculty. To offer specialist supervision to research students. To contribute to the development and organisation of courses and programmes. To use new technologies and media appropriately to support teaching and postgraduate research. Colloquium in Law and Social Philosophy As well as contributing to the advancement of Jurisprudence through research, scholarship and pedagogical innovation, the Quain Professor must work with colleagues in the organization of the annual Colloquium in Law and Social Philosophy at which distinguished thinkers in legal and political philosophy present new research. The Colloquium brings together expertise in legal and political philosophy from around UCL and beyond. It features leading legal, political, and moral philosophers who discuss work in progress. Speakers over the years have included philosophers whose work has had a major impact in contemporary philosophy, such as Simon Blackburn, GA Cohen, John Finnis, Rainer Forst, Samuel Freeman, Charles Fried, Frances Kamm, Christine Korsgaard, Onora O'Neill, Joseph Raz, Samuel Scheffler, Amartya Sen, Bernard Williams, and many others. 4 Quain Lectures in Jurisprudence The Quain Professor must also work with colleagues in the organisation of this annual lecture series and editing of the associated book series. The Quain Lectures were founded in 2011 and are the first published lecture series in Jurisprudence. The list of Quain lecturers includes Philip Pettit, Joseph Raz, John Gardner and Cass Sunstein. 5 Knowledge transfer/exchange and engaging communities The Quain Professor is expected to contribute to quality of life or the economy through the application of knowledge in practice to the benefit of the broader community (i.e. commerce, industry and the public domain). 6 To engage in a range of knowledge transfer or public engagement activities. Enabling The Quain Professor must contribute to the Faculty’s strategic leadership, and governance, or make a significant contribution to the achievement of the Faculty’s and UCL’s wider goals and aims, which furthers the discipline, and/or facilitates and enhances the personal contributions of academic colleagues. 7 Staff and Professional Development To pursue academic excellence through a continuing commitment to academic, professional and personal development. Such other duties as may reasonably be requested. 6 of 9 UCL FACULTY OF LAWS In addition: The postholder will be expected to actively follow UCL policies including Equal Opportunities policies. The postholder will be expected to maintain an awareness and observation of Fire and Health & Safety Regulations. As duties and responsibilities change, this job description will be reviewed and amended in consultation with the postholder. In undertaking your responsibilities you will be responsible to the Dean of Faculty and, ultimately, to the Provost. 7 of 9 UCL FACULTY OF LAWS Person Specification The successful candidate must be recognized as a world-leading scholar in their field, and must present evidence of the ability to teach successfully at higher education level, and research of a world class level of excellence (REF 4*). Candidates must demonstrate the following: An outstanding international research profile with substantial seminal contributions to knowledge or other outcomes appropriate to the discipline and demonstrable impact; Evidence of contributions to peer review bodies/committees, professional organisations, learned societies, government committees or Research Councils etc; Evidence of academic leadership and a proven ability to lead, develop and motivate colleagues; Evidence of introducing innovative change to the curriculum and of a significant contribution to the skills/ knowledge base in relation to teaching and learning within an Institution and/or discipline; An appropriate number of research students successfully supervised; Evidence of a significant impact of knowledge transfer/exchange on practice or on quality of life through ongoing engagement with communities; Evidence of excellence in teaching and/or evidence of a significant contribution to the management or administration of an academic Department, or Faculty. Personal Style, Skills and Qualities Communication and interpersonal skills appropriate for teaching, supervision and collaborative work. Evidence of flexibility and adaptability in approach to work. Evidence of contribution to academic policy formulation and strategic planning at Faculty level. Evidence of commitment to personal learning, academic and professional development. Commitment to equal opportunities. In addition to the person specification criteria, the successful candidate will need to meet UCL’s expectations of Academic excellence, as outlined in ‘Excellence and the UCL community: a shared endeavour’ (http://www.ucl.ac.uk/excellence/). A hard copy of this document is available on request. This will inform the candidate’s induction, probation, and appraisal, in discussion with the Faculty Vice Dean (Staffing). 8 of 9 UCL FACULTY OF LAWS The Appointment The position is full time and available from 01 September 2015. Salary, dependent on qualifications and experience, will be on the Professorial scale (salary negotiable on appointment but with a minimum starting salary of £66,482 per annum inclusive of £2,919 London Allowance). You would be eligible to join the recommended occupational pension scheme for Universities, the Universities' Superannuation Scheme (USS). The leave allowance is 27 working days’ annual leave per annum plus Statutory Bank Holidays (normally 8) and local discretionary holidays (normally 6). 9 of 9
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