Dr Graeme Cunningham

  • Lecturer in Private Law (School of Law)

Biography

Dr Graeme Cunningham joined the Law School in September 2021. 

He attained a law degree (LL.B.(Hons.) from the University of Glasgow in 2012, followed by a master’s degree by research in History and Philosophy of Law (LL.M.) from the University of Edinburgh in 2013 and a master’s degree in Classics (M.Litt.) from the University of Glasgow in 2014.  

In 2019, he was awarded a doctorate (Ph.D.) by the University of Glasgow for his thesis Law, Rhetoric and Science: Historical Narratives in Roman Law. This research was supervised by Professor Ernest Metzger and Professor Catherine Steel.  

Before joining the Law School, Dr Cunningham held positions as Lecturer in Law at Abertay University, Teaching Fellow in Roman Law at University College London, and as a visiting lecturer on the University of Manchester’s liberal arts course Understanding Rhetoric

Research interests

Dr Cunningham’s principal research interest is Roman law, especially how ideas about Roman law have impacted upon contemporary understanding of private law in Scotland and Europe. This research is conducted in three connected ways: 

The first strain of research is interested in the construction of narratives of science, progress and systematisation in nineteenth and twentieth century jurisprudence. The aim of this research is to examine why and how these narratives arose and the impact they have on the formation of contemporary law across Europe.  

The second strain of Dr Cunningham’s research examines how social, cultural and philosophical factors informed legal decision-making and juristic thought at Rome. This approach is designed to re-evaluate the ascription of scientific isolation to the methodology of lawyers at Rome. Tying into the first strain, this research aims to show that several pervasive ideas about the Roman approach to law are based on a misinterpretation of the primary sources.  

The third strain of research considers law reform in Scotland, with a view to widen discussion of the role of Roman law in the development of Scots law. 

 

Publications

List by: Type | Date

Jump to: 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020
Number of items: 6.

2023

Cunningham, G. (2023) Flavius, Gnaeus. In: Whitmarsh, T. (ed.) Oxford Classical Dictionary. Oxford University Press. (Accepted for Publication)

Cunningham, G. (2023) Rhetoric and Roman Law. In: Serafim, A. and Papaioannou, S. (eds.) Companion to Ancient Rhetoric. de Gruyter. (Accepted for Publication)

2022

Cunningham, G. (2022) Squandered chances: administrators' duties and losing a chance to sell. Journal of Professional Negligence, 38(2), pp. 100-104.

Cunningham, G. (2022) Craig Anderson, Roman Law for Scots Law Students. Edinburgh Law Review, 26(1), pp. 143-144. (doi: 10.3366/elr.2022.0753)[Book Review]

2021

Cunningham, G. (2021) Justinian's Digest 9.2.51 in the Western Legal Canon: Roman Legal Thought and Modern Causality Concepts. By Wolfgang Ernst. [Cambridge: Intersentia, 2019. xii + 177 pp. Paperback €49.00. ISBN 978-1-78068-832-9.]. Cambridge Law Journal, 80(1), pp. 197-200. (doi: 10.1017/S0008197321000088)[Book Review]

2020

Cunningham, G. (2020) The place of rhetoric in late Republican law: some thoughts on pietas and the querela inofficiosi testamenti. In: Spagnolo, B. and Sampson, J. (eds.) Principle and Pragmatism in Roman Law. Hart Publishing, pp. 79-88. ISBN 9781509938964

This list was generated on Thu Apr 18 17:33:57 2024 BST.
Number of items: 6.

Articles

Cunningham, G. (2022) Squandered chances: administrators' duties and losing a chance to sell. Journal of Professional Negligence, 38(2), pp. 100-104.

Book Sections

Cunningham, G. (2023) Flavius, Gnaeus. In: Whitmarsh, T. (ed.) Oxford Classical Dictionary. Oxford University Press. (Accepted for Publication)

Cunningham, G. (2023) Rhetoric and Roman Law. In: Serafim, A. and Papaioannou, S. (eds.) Companion to Ancient Rhetoric. de Gruyter. (Accepted for Publication)

Cunningham, G. (2020) The place of rhetoric in late Republican law: some thoughts on pietas and the querela inofficiosi testamenti. In: Spagnolo, B. and Sampson, J. (eds.) Principle and Pragmatism in Roman Law. Hart Publishing, pp. 79-88. ISBN 9781509938964

Book Reviews

Cunningham, G. (2022) Craig Anderson, Roman Law for Scots Law Students. Edinburgh Law Review, 26(1), pp. 143-144. (doi: 10.3366/elr.2022.0753)[Book Review]

Cunningham, G. (2021) Justinian's Digest 9.2.51 in the Western Legal Canon: Roman Legal Thought and Modern Causality Concepts. By Wolfgang Ernst. [Cambridge: Intersentia, 2019. xii + 177 pp. Paperback €49.00. ISBN 978-1-78068-832-9.]. Cambridge Law Journal, 80(1), pp. 197-200. (doi: 10.1017/S0008197321000088)[Book Review]

This list was generated on Thu Apr 18 17:33:57 2024 BST.

Grants

Dr Cunningham was awarded a College of Social Sciences Scholarship by the University of Glasgow to undertake doctoral research. 

Supervision

Dr Cunningham welcomes interest from prospective research students in the fields of Roman law, legal history, Scots private law and comparative private law.  

Teaching

  • Obligations 1A  
  • Obligations 1B 
  • Introduction to Legal Study/Legal Skills for Graduates 
  • Property Law 
  • Property Law for Real Estate Surveyors (Urban Studies) 

Additional information

Affiliations: 

Stair Society 

 

Select Presentations: 

Abertay Law Research Group. November 2020. Abertay University.  

Scottish Legal History Group. September 2019.  

Société Internationale Fernand de Visscher pour l'Histoire des Droits de l'Antiquité, September 2019. University of Edinburgh.  

Principle and Pragmatism in Roman Law. September 2019. Trinity College, Cambridge.  

Justice at Glasgow, February 2019. University of Glasgow.  

Société Internationale Fernand de Visscher pour l'Histoire des Droits de l'Antiquité, September 2018, Jagiellonian University, Kraków.  

Société Internationale Fernand de Visscher pour l'Histoire des Droits de l'Antiquité, September 2017. Bologna University.  

Ancient Law in Context, January 2017. University of Edinburgh.  

Edinburgh Postgraduate Law Conference, January 2016. University of Edinburgh.