Links
The organisation listed below are all involved in conducting, supporting or funding empirical research in law. If you would like your organisation included on this page, please contact Professor Angela Melville at the University of Manchester. The links have been divided into four categories:
- Funding bodies
- Research centres
- Learned societies and other academic organisations
- Research networks
Funding bodies
For more details on funding bodies see our research funding section.
Research councils, charities and other organisations
- Arts and Humanities Research Council
- British Academy
- Economic and Social Research Council
- Joseph Rowntree Foundation
- Leverhulme Trust
- Nuffield Foundation
- Socio-Legal Studies Association
Government departments
- Department of Health
- Foreign and Commonwealth Office
- Home Office
- Ministry of Justice
- National Assembly for Wales
- Northern Ireland Assembly
- Scottish Parliament
Research centres
- British Institute of International and Comparative Law
- Centre for Analysis of Risk and Regulation, LSE
- Centre for Empirical Legal Studies, UCL
- Centre for Legal Research and Policy Studies
- Centre for Socio-Legal Studies, Oxford
- Empirical Research Group, UCLA
- Feminist Legal Resesarch Unit
- Legal Services Research Centre
- OƱati International Institute for the Sociology of Law
- Research Institute for Law, Politics and Justice
- UK Centre for Legal Education
Learned societies and other academic organisations
- Academy of Social Sciences
- British Society of Criminology
- British Sociological Association
- Law and Society Association (US)
- Law and Society Association of Australia and New Zealand
- Society of Legal Scholars
- Socio-Legal Studies Association
- Society for Empirical Legal Studies, Cornell Law School
Research networks
- European Public Health Law Network
The European Public Health Law Network is a network of expertise on the use of law for the promotion and protection of public health across the European Union, as well as Croatia, Turkey, Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway. Membership is open to anyone whose work or research involves public health law, or the legal aspects of pandemic preparedness, in particular, lawyers and legal academics whose work addresses issues of public health, public health practitioners and public health academics whose work addresses issues of law.