Alumni of King's College London - Law

Law

  • Sir Robin Auld – Lord Justice of Appeal
  • Sir Horace Avory – judge and criminal lawyer
  • Sir Louis Blom-Cooper – judge and lawyer
  • Sir Harold Bollers – Chief Justice of Guyana
  • Michael Caplan – judge and solicitor
  • Sir Mackenzie Chalmers – judge
  • Philippe Couvreur – Registrar at the International Court of Justice
  • Edmund Davies, Baron Edmund-Davies – Law Lord
  • John Eekelaar - legal scholar
  • Sir David Foskett – High Court judge
  • Sir Cyril Fountain - Chief Justice of The Bahamas
  • Michael Fox – lawyer
  • Neil Kaplan – judge and arbitrator
  • Frances Kirkham – judge
  • Abdul Koroma – judge of the International Court of Justice
  • Sir Leonard Knowles – Chief Justice of The Bahamas
  • Amber Marks – barrister
  • Wayne Martin – Chief Justice of Western Australia
  • Peter McCormick – lawyer
  • Sir David Penry-Davey – High Court judge
  • Ilana Rovner – judge
  • Jenny Rowe – Chief Executive of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom
  • J. Sarkodee-Addo – Chief Justice of Ghana
  • Jaishanker Manilal Shelat - Judge, Supreme Court of India (1966-73)
  • Sir Jeremy Sullivan – Lord Justice of Appeal
  • John Taylor – Chief Justice of Lagos
  • Syed Shah Mohammed Quadri - Judge, Supreme Court of India (1997-2003)

Read more about this topic:  Alumni Of King's College London

Famous quotes containing the word law:

    A quality is something capable of being completely embodied. A law never can be embodied in its character as a law except by determining a habit. A quality is how something may or might have been. A law is how an endless future must continue to be.
    Charles Sanders Peirce (1839–1914)

    All men, in the abstract, are just and good; what hinders them, in the particular, is, the momentary predominance of the finite and individual over the general truth. The condition of our incarnation in a private self, seems to be, a perpetual tendency to prefer the private law, to obey the private impulse, to the exclusion of the law of the universal being.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)

    Unless the law of marriage were first made human, it could never become divine.
    George Bernard Shaw (1856–1950)