Rundle, Kristen
Dr Kristen Rundle
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Experience keywords:
moral dimensions of the legal form; the rule of law; legal philosophy of Lon Fuller; law and the Holocaust; law's relationship to agency and vulnerability; child migration
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Kristen’s current research interests include: the moral dimensions of the form of law, the relationship between the concept of law and the rule of law, the place of practice in legal theory, law’s relationship to agency and vulnerability, Nazi legality, law and the Holocaust, child migration.
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Sectors and industries to which research relates:
Law
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The following references are sourced from LSE Research Online|. References that are linked lead to the full text.
Rundle, Kristen (2012) Form and agency in Raz’s legal positivism. Law and philosophy, online pp. 1-25. ISSN 0167-5249 Rundle, Kristen (2012) Law and daily life: questions for legal philosophy from November 1938. Jurisprudence, 3 (2). pp. 429-444. ISSN 2040-3313 Rundle, Kristen (2012) Forms liberate: reclaiming the jurisprudence of Lon L. Fuller. Hart Publishing, Oxford, UK. ISBN 9781849461047 Rundle, Kristen (2011) Improbable agents of empire: coming to terms with British child migration. Adoption and fostering, 35 (3). pp. 30-37. ISSN 0308-5759 Rundle, Kristen (2010) Julius Stone and the Eichmann trial: a duty to learn? In: Irving, Helen and Mowbray, Jacqueline and Walton, Kevin, (eds.) Julius Stone: a study in influence. Federation Press, Sydney, Australia. ISBN 9781862877917 Rundle, Kristen (2010) Myths of nation, law, and agency. Modern law review, 73 (3). pp. 494-509. ISSN 0026-7961 Rundle, Kristen (2009) The impossibility of an exterminatory legality: law and the holocaust. University of Toronto law journal, 59 (1). pp. 65-125. ISSN 0042-0220
LSE Research Online is the primary resource for references to publications. For queries or updates please email the LSE Research Online team at lseresearchonline@lse.ac.uk|.
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'Forms Liberate' analyses Fuller’s published writings and private papers, illuminating his recurrent concern to explore how the distinctive form of law relates to the expression of human agency.
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Kristen Rundle is a Lecturer in Law, with a specialty in legal philosophy. From 2003-2005 she taught at the Faculty of Law, University of Sydney, and from 2006-2009 held the position of Adjunct Professor at the Faculty of Law, University of Toronto. Previously, she served as Associate to Justice Michael Moore at the Federal Court of Australia, and worked as a Legislative Policy Adviser at the New South Wales Attorney-General’s Department.
Kristen holds an SJD from the University of Toronto, where she was also a Doctoral Fellow in Ethics at the Centre for Ethics. She also holds an LLM (honours) in public law and legal theory from McGill University, which she undertook as the 2001 Australian Lionel Murphy Postgraduate (Overseas) Scholar, and a combined BA/LLB degree (first class honours) from the University of Sydney.
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