Center for Transnational Legal Studies | |
---|---|
Established | 2008 |
Type | Private |
Academic staff | 18 |
Students | 60-80 per term |
Undergraduates | 0 |
Postgraduates | 60-80 per term |
Location | London, England |
Campus | Central London |
Website | Center for Transnational Legal Studies |
The Center for Transnational Legal Studies (CTLS) is a global educational center for the study of transnational law.[1] The Center was founded in London in October 2008 as a joint venture between ten leading law schools from around the world, each contributing faculty and students to the center.[1][2] The Center's founding institutions are Georgetown University Law Center, University of Toronto, Kings College London, National University of Singapore, ESADE, Fribourg University, Free University of Berlin, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, University of Torino, University of Melbourne, and the University of São Paulo. The Center also has several affiliate institutions, Sciences-Po, Bucerius Law School and Wacedo[3]
The CTLS facilities are located at Swan House at 37-39 High Holborn Street in London's legal quarter. Students and faculty have access to Kings College Law Library and student housing at the Sebastian Street apartments.[4]
The Center's curriculum was developed by an Academic Council of faculty from all of the founding law schools[5] and all courses address topics in transnational or comparative law, legal theory or legal practice.[6][7][8][9] designed for students intent on transnational careers.[10]
Academics from the CTLS have also offered public lectures on international legal topics,[11] and in addition to the Center's main academic term program, offers administrative support for the Georgetown Law summer program in London.[4]