UCL Laws Staff

UCL Laws People

  JOHN TASIOULAS BA LLB (Melbourne), DPhil (Oxford)
Quain Professor of Jurisprudence

contact details:
Tel: +44 (0)20 7679 1461 | internal: x21461
Email: john.tasioulas@ucl.ac.uk
Administrator: Ann Tucker
+44 (0)20 7679 1545 | internal: x21545

Profile
John Tasioulas joined UCL in January 2011 as the Quain Professor of Jurisprudence. He was previously a Reader in Moral and Legal Philosophy at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Oxford. He has also taught at the universities of Melbourne and Glasgow and has held visiting research posts at Melbourne and the Australian National University. His research grants include two Research Leave Awards from the Arts and Humanities Research Council (2001 and 2004) and a British Academy Research Development Award (2008-2010) for a monograph-length project on the philosophy of human rights. He is currently a member of the AHRC Peer Review College. He is on the editorial boards of the American Society of International Law Studies in International Legal Theory and the Journal of Applied Philosophy.

Research
Professor Tasioulas’ research interests revolve around Socrates' question, 'How should one live?', and the attempt to draw out the moral, political and legal implications of an acceptable answer to it. His current research is mainly focused on the following three strands of inquiry:

(a) the philosophy of human rights: He is engaged in writing a monograph that develops a pluralistic, interest-based account of human rights, one that - among other things – seeks to provide us with the intellectual resources to respond to the familiar objection that human rights reflect merely Western values. It also tries to draw out the theory's implications for the evaluation and development of international law;

(b) the philosophy of crime and punishment: He has defended a new version of the 'communicative' theory of punishment, the idea that punishment is justified as censure for certain kinds of wrong-doing. This version of the theory strives to make room for both the values of retributive justice and mercy. He also has an ongoing interest in the question of the grounds for criminalizing conduct; and

(c) the philosophy of international law, including such topics as the legitimacy of international law, the nature and scope of state sovereignty, international crimes (e.g. crimes against humanity), and the nature of customary international law.

Professor Tasioulas also has on-going research interests in a number of other topics, including the nature of moral wrong-doing and the responses appropriate to it, the components of human well-being, the plurality of ethical values, as well as meta-ethical questions about the reality of moral values and the possibility of moral knowledge.

Publications

Work in progress:

Selected recent publications include:

Books

Articles

Current Teaching
Undergraduate
To be confirmed

Graduate
To be confirmed

PhD Supervision
Professor Tasioulas welcomes approaches for supervision from prospective PhD students.

 

 

Page updated on 31 January, 2012