Research portfolio

Projects as a map
of the research programme.

The projects connect research questions, methods, institutional contexts, publications, talks and potential collaborations. They are organised by intellectual contribution rather than employer or chronology.

01

Current · Public and corporate remedy systems

Rights-Compatible Procedural Vitality

How can formally compliant procedures retain meaningful voice, contestability, professional judgement, effective remedy and institutional learning?

Core aims

To identify procedural ritualisation across public hybrid-justice and corporate-accountability systems and develop a transferable rights-based diagnostic framework. The project examines how AI-supported intake, classification, summarisation, drafting and review may preserve or weaken procedural fairness and meaningful human oversight.

Methods

Comparative socio-legal and doctrinal analysis; procedural rules, guidance, templates, screening and intake materials; reporting practices and AI-governance policies; selected family-mediation, court-connected mediation and corporate-remedy case studies; expert consultation and practitioner engagement.

Current outputs

  • Risks of Bureaucracy in Family Mediation and Guardrails for AI Use — chapter under review following abstract acceptance.
  • Conceptual article on procedural ritualisation.
  • Methodological article and diagnostic framework for procedural vitality.
  • Applied article on AI-supported grievance and compliance processes.
  • Book project on ritualisation, hybrid justice and AI-supported governance.

Applications & context

Research-led training on procedural fairness, AI-supported mediation, complaint handling and effective remedy; institutional diagnostics for mediation providers, grievance mechanisms, integrity systems and organisations using AI-supported workflows. Recent development includes research at the Oxford Institute of Technology and Justice.

View related outputs →Discuss collaboration →

02

Doctoral research · January 2022–April 2026

Mediation as Court and Court as Mediation

A New Institutional Approach to the Right to a Fair Trial under Article 6 ECHR: Mediation as Court and Court as Mediation.

Core aims

To explain how the institutional integration of mediation reshapes the meaning of the right to a fair trial and identify the criteria used—and missing—when fairness is assessed in civil-justice systems combining adjudication and court-connected mediation.

Methods

Doctrinal analysis of ECtHR jurisprudence; comparative and historical socio-legal analysis across selected Council of Europe states; semi-structured elite interviews with ECtHR judges; thematic coding; and a seven-criteria institution-centred framework comparing adjudication, mediation and hybrid procedures.

Linked research

  • Legal culture and judicial-system modernisation.
  • Confidentiality and public hearing under Article 6 ECHR.
  • Hybrid courts and judicial boundary work.
  • Implicit legal culture through elite judicial interviews.
  • Fair Trial Beyond the Courtroom monograph project.

Funding & contexts

Newcastle University; Max Planck Institute for the Study of Crime, Security and Law; European Court of Human Rights. Linked support includes Max Planck Society Scholarship, Newcastle Doctoral College awards, ESRC Impact Acceleration Account, ECtHR traineeship funding, Northern Bridge Consortium and Law School PGR Conference funding.

View related outputs →Funding record →

03

Published strand · ADR and human rights

Human-Rights Limits in Mandatory Mediation

What guardrails make mandatory or court-connected mediation compatible with autonomy, access to court, procedural fairness and protection of vulnerable parties?

Core contribution

A normative framework for evaluating mandatory mediation architectures without treating consent as a binary formality. The work links institutional design, judicial roles, coercion, vulnerability and the evolving meaning of Article 6 ECHR.

Methods

Comparative doctrinal analysis of mediation architectures; normative legal analysis of autonomy, consent and coercion; and structured comparison of jurisdictional models and judicial roles in ADR.

Articles, interview and talks →Discuss collaboration →

04

Current · Higher education

Inclusive Dialogic Feedback and Scalable Assessment

How can feedback in mass postgraduate education scale without collapsing into mechanisation, exclusion or pedagogically thin assessment?

Core contribution

The project critically connects Assessment for Inclusion, Learning Analytics, Dialogic Feedback Pedagogy and Coaching Dialogue, developing an Inclusive Dialogic Feedback Model that combines dialogue, ethical depth and institutional scalability.

Outputs

A research article currently under review; a 2025 conference paper; and the SIMByte Teaching Moments video contribution for the Academy of Management Social Issues in Management Division.

View related outputs →Teaching record →

05

Cross-cutting and interdisciplinary

Collaborative Research

Collaborative outputs extend the central programme into civil justice, international law, technology security, sustainability and environmental mediation.

Selected collaborations

  • The Singapore Convention: Five Years On, with Bryan Clark.
  • Future Resilience of the European Technology Security, with Miguel De Vera, Réka Koleszár and Giada Pasquettaz.
  • Harnessing the Sun, with Ashish Saraswat and Garima Tiwari.
  • Environmental mediation in legal education, with I. Kovalenko.

Collaboration interests

Comparative case studies, joint publications, grant applications, practitioner validation, institutional partnerships, workshops and research-led professional training.

View collaborative outputs →Ways to collaborate →

Methods

Cross-project capabilities

Research methods & areas of contribution

Legal analysis

Doctrinal, comparative and normative legal analysis; ECtHR jurisprudence; international and human-rights law.

Socio-legal research

Elite interviews, focus groups, qualitative document analysis, thematic coding and mixed-methods research.

Institutional design

Procedural mapping, legal-culture analysis, stakeholder systems and rights-compatible diagnostic frameworks.

Data & dissemination

SPSS, Stata, NVivo/MAXQDA, dataset curation, policy briefs, training, accessible publishing and public engagement.

Future

Architecture prepared; no empty tools published

Interactive research tools

Future tools may include a procedural-vitality diagnostic, mandatory-mediation safeguards assessment, Article 6 navigator, comparative mediation map and AI human-oversight checklist. Each will be linked to its methodology, limitations, citation and related research when ready.