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Our list of all research projects allows you to view and search the full list of projects in the faculty. Research projectsĪny research projects I’m currently working on will be listed below. I am also an Editor on ‘ Eutopialaw’ run by Matrix Chambers. In addition to numerous articles in peer-reviewed journals, my published work includes a textbook on EU Law (Pearson 2015) as well as two monographs: ‘Making Anti-Racial Discrimination Law (Routledge 2011) and ‘Discrimination as Stigma – A Theory of Anti-Discrimination Law’ (Hart 2017).

In 2018 I was a Fernand Braudel Fellow at the European University Institute in Florence, Italy and also a Visiting Professor at Harvard School of Public Health, working with STRIPED on weight stigma and anti-weight discrimination law. I have held Fellowships at the University of Michigan Law School (Ann Arbor, USA), Pompeu Fabra Universidad (Barcelona, Spain), the University of Sydney Law School (Sydney, Australia), McGill University Law School (Montreal, Canada) and at New Hall, Cambridge University. I am a Visiting Professor at Wake Forest University Law School and I have been a Visiting Professor at Science Po, Grenoble in France. Previously, I was Professor of EU Law and Social Justice in the University of Leeds’ School of Law. I founded the Temple Women’s Forum North in 2013 to extend the outreach work of Inner and Middle Temples to legal professionals in the North and North East. In 2017, I was elected an Academic Bencher of Inner Temple and appointed a member of the Valuation Tribunal for England (VTE).

I joined the School of Law at the University of Leeds in 2010. I graduated from the London School of Economics with a PhD in Law. I sit on the General Council of the International Society for Public Law (ICON-S). I organise an international forum which investigates black experiences of policing in the EU and the Black Female Professors Forum to promote black women in academia. Previous research projects have focused on the impact of separate opinions on judicial authority, the Advocate General in the CJEU, social action and legal reform cause lawyering and black and migrant women in European welfare states. My work is historical, empirical and socio-legal. I write on race and racism, anti-discrimination law and intersectional discrimination, social movements, the judiciary in Europe, and EU governance. My research interests fall in the fields of EU integration and racial integration. The Storytelling Animal finally reveals how stories shape us.I am the University’s Jacques Delors Professor of EU Law.
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Most successful stories are moral-they teach us how to live, whether explicitly or implicitly, and bind us together around common values. National myths can also be terribly dangerous: Hitler’s ambitions were partly fueled by a story.īut as Gottschall shows in this remarkable book, stories can also change the world for the better. It makes us vulnerable to conspiracy theories, advertisements, and narratives about ourselves that are more “truthy” than true. Of course, our story instinct has a darker side. Did you know that the more absorbed you are in a story, the more it changes your behavior? That all children act out the same kinds of stories, whether they grow up in a slum or a suburb? That people who read more fiction are more empathetic?

Storytelling has evolved, like other behaviors, to ensure our survival.ĭrawing on the latest research in neuroscience, psychology, and evolutionary biology, Gottschall tells us what it means to be a storytelling animal. He argues that stories help us navigate life’s complex social problems-just as flight simulators prepare pilots for difficult situations. In this delightful and original book, Jonathan Gottschall offers the first unified theory of storytelling. It’s easy to say that humans are “wired” for story, but why? Yet the world of story has long remained an undiscovered and unmapped country.

Even sporting events and criminal trials unfold as narratives. Humans live in landscapes of make-believe.
