Simon Chesterman ( Professor ) named the New Dean of NUS Law

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http://www.straitstimes.com/BreakingNews/Singapore/Story/STIStory_729058.html


New NUS law dean has big plans for school

Published on Oct 31, 2011

By Amelia Tan

Professor Simon Chesterman has been named the new dean of the National University of Singapore (NUS) law school after more than 60 candidates were considered for the job.

His appointment takes effect on Jan 1 next year .

The 39-year-old Australian, currently the law school's vice-dean of graduate studies, joined NUS in 2007 as director of the New York University (NYU) School of Law Singapore Programme.

At a press conference on Monday, he outlined what he wanted to achieve. He said NUS needs to ensure that its graduates are not just good technical lawyers but are also creative thinkers and have the soft skills to work with people from different backgrounds
 
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New NUS law dean : Grads must be creative thinkers




Title: Grads must be creative thinkers: New NUS law dean

Source: Straits Times

Author: Amelia Tan



Legal News Archive


PROFESSOR Simon Chesterman has been named the new dean of the National University of Singapore (NUS) law school after more than 60 candidates were considered for the job.

His appointment takes effect on Jan 1 next year.

The 39-year-old Australian, currently the law school's vice-dean of graduate studies, joined NUS in 2007 as director of the New York University (NYU) School of Law Singapore Programme.

At a press conference yesterday, he outlined what he wanted to achieve. He said NUS needs to ensure that its graduates are not just good technical lawyers, but also creative thinkers with the soft skills to work with people from different backgrounds.

'If you just lecture to our students here, they are all very bright, they will understand what you say and they work out how to be examined. But if you want them to challenge you, you need to draw them out.'

To encourage students to question and engage in deep debates on legal issues, the NUS law school will be infusing knowledge of legal systems in different countries and legal theories across the entire curriculum.

These topics are currently taught as separate modules.

The school is also in talks with top schools in China to form partnerships for student exchanges and research.

More opportunities will also be offered for students to do pro bono work, so that they learn the law's impact on the less privileged. The school is also looking at attracting Singaporean students who want to pursue an overseas law education to come to NUS instead.

Prof Chesterman said he plans to increase the research done by faculty and do more to promote their work around the world.

He noted that new research centres, such as the Centre for Asian Legal Studies, which will open next year in NUS, will help boost the global profile of the university and Singapore.

He takes over from Professor Tan Cheng Han, 46, who has headed the NUS law school for 10 years and is the longest-serving dean.

Prof Tan, who will continue to teach and do research at the school, is credited with transforming it into one with a global outlook through partnerships with overseas institutions like NYU.

'Professor Simon Chesterman will bring fresh ideas and new energy to the school and has the confidence and support of my colleagues and the student community,' he said.

Prof Chesterman said he was asked if he would be interested to be considered for the role when the previous search for a dean started in 2008. But he declined as he did not feel ready.

He was new at NUS, had not yet achieved full professorship and wanted to focus on the NYU-NUS law programme, which he was running and was up for renewal.

But he felt ready to be considered when the search for a dean started last year. He said: 'The reasons not to run had disappeared. Then I started thinking about why I might want to do this. And I suppose the first thing is that I've enjoyed building institutions.'

He added: 'It's got the reputation of being the best law school in Asia.'

He is not the first foreigner to head the NUS law school. For example, British professor Geoffrey W. Bartholomew headed it from 1966 to 1968.

NUS provost Tan Eng Chye said a search committee identified about 60 possible candidates from countries such as the United States, Britain and Australia. Internally, Prof Chesterman was chosen from three potential nominees.

Prof Tan said: 'Given his international credentials and his keenness in research, especially in the area of intelligence and international law, Prof Chesterman has the necessary experience and drive to make one of the top law schools in Asia even better.'

NUS law school takes in about 250 undergraduates a year. The Singapore Management University also offers law programmes.

[email protected]

Wealth of legal experience

BORN and raised in Melbourne, Professor Simon Chesterman graduated with a first-class honours degree in the arts and law from the University of Melbourne.

He pursued a PhD in international law at the University of Oxford through a Rhodes Scholarship, and has lectured at top universities, including Oxford and France's Sciences Po.

He is a senior fellow at the University of Melbourne and the Institute for International Law and Justice at the New York University School of Law.

Prof Chesterman, who specialises in international law and intelligence, has extensive international experience, including stints with the United Nations in Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia.

His work in Asia includes being the founding editor of the Asian Journal of International Law and holding the post of deputy secretary-general of the Asian Society of International Law.

He speaks Mandarin, which he picked up as a secondary school student; he also learnt Latin and French in school.

He is married to President Tony Tan Keng Yam's daughter Patricia, whom he met while they were studying in Oxford. The couple have two young children.

A NEW PERSPECTIVE

'Professor Simon Chesterman will bring fresh ideas and new energy to the school and has the confidence and support of my colleagues and the student community.'

Professor Tan Cheng Han
 
.


New NUS law dean : Grads must be creative thinkers




Title: Grads must be creative thinkers: New NUS law dean

Source: Straits Times

Author: Amelia Tan



Legal News Archive


PROFESSOR Simon Chesterman has been named the new dean of the National University of Singapore (NUS) law school after more than 60 candidates were considered for the job.

His appointment takes effect on Jan 1 next year.

The 39-year-old Australian, currently the law school's vice-dean of graduate studies, joined NUS in 2007 as director of the New York University (NYU) School of Law Singapore Programme.

At a press conference yesterday, he outlined what he wanted to achieve. He said NUS needs to ensure that its graduates are not just good technical lawyers, but also creative thinkers with the soft skills to work with people from different backgrounds.

'If you just lecture to our students here, they are all very bright, they will understand what you say and they work out how to be examined. But if you want them to challenge you, you need to draw them out.'

To encourage students to question and engage in deep debates on legal issues, the NUS law school will be infusing knowledge of legal systems in different countries and legal theories across the entire curriculum.

These topics are currently taught as separate modules.

The school is also in talks with top schools in China to form partnerships for student exchanges and research.

More opportunities will also be offered for students to do pro bono work, so that they learn the law's impact on the less privileged. The school is also looking at attracting Singaporean students who want to pursue an overseas law education to come to NUS instead.

Prof Chesterman said he plans to increase the research done by faculty and do more to promote their work around the world.

He noted that new research centres, such as the Centre for Asian Legal Studies, which will open next year in NUS, will help boost the global profile of the university and Singapore.

He takes over from Professor Tan Cheng Han, 46, who has headed the NUS law school for 10 years and is the longest-serving dean.

Prof Tan, who will continue to teach and do research at the school, is credited with transforming it into one with a global outlook through partnerships with overseas institutions like NYU.

'Professor Simon Chesterman will bring fresh ideas and new energy to the school and has the confidence and support of my colleagues and the student community,' he said.

Prof Chesterman said he was asked if he would be interested to be considered for the role when the previous search for a dean started in 2008. But he declined as he did not feel ready.

He was new at NUS, had not yet achieved full professorship and wanted to focus on the NYU-NUS law programme, which he was running and was up for renewal.

But he felt ready to be considered when the search for a dean started last year. He said: 'The reasons not to run had disappeared. Then I started thinking about why I might want to do this. And I suppose the first thing is that I've enjoyed building institutions.'

He added: 'It's got the reputation of being the best law school in Asia.'

He is not the first foreigner to head the NUS law school. For example, British professor Geoffrey W. Bartholomew headed it from 1966 to 1968.

NUS provost Tan Eng Chye said a search committee identified about 60 possible candidates from countries such as the United States, Britain and Australia. Internally, Prof Chesterman was chosen from three potential nominees.

Prof Tan said: 'Given his international credentials and his keenness in research, especially in the area of intelligence and international law, Prof Chesterman has the necessary experience and drive to make one of the top law schools in Asia even better.'

NUS law school takes in about 250 undergraduates a year. The Singapore Management University also offers law programmes.

[email protected]

Wealth of legal experience

BORN and raised in Melbourne, Professor Simon Chesterman graduated with a first-class honours degree in the arts and law from the University of Melbourne.

He pursued a PhD in international law at the University of Oxford through a Rhodes Scholarship, and has lectured at top universities, including Oxford and France's Sciences Po.

He is a senior fellow at the University of Melbourne and the Institute for International Law and Justice at the New York University School of Law.

Prof Chesterman, who specialises in international law and intelligence, has extensive international experience, including stints with the United Nations in Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia.

His work in Asia includes being the founding editor of the Asian Journal of International Law and holding the post of deputy secretary-general of the Asian Society of International Law.

He speaks Mandarin, which he picked up as a secondary school student; he also learnt Latin and French in school.

He is married to President Tony Tan Keng Yam's daughter Patricia, whom he met while they were studying in Oxford. The couple have two young children.

A NEW PERSPECTIVE

'Professor Simon Chesterman will bring fresh ideas and new energy to the school and has the confidence and support of my colleagues and the student community.'

Professor Tan Cheng Han
Son get 12 year deferment. Assuming the couple's child are boys, how many year deferment will they get?
 
So what has happened to Tan Cheng Han ? Private practice ?

According to the report, he will continue to teach and do research in the law faculty.
He has also recently replaced TCB as the new non executive chairman of Chuan Hup Holdings.
 
Creative Thinking Must Ask PAP Elites

20070410_Lee-Hsien-Loong.jpg




Creativity has to start from a very young age like Conqueror. Talking to NUS grad now is a bit too late. Their brains are formed and solidified according to years of fascist education.

As for creativity thinking, obviously, we must ask PAP Talkcock-Loong and Do-nothing-VB and also that Toilet Auntie. How can we forget ! The best creativity is to get others to think for you while you are paid by the millions for doing absolutely everyone can do - "talking cock."
 
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Title: New NUS law school dean has uphill task: Forum
Source: Straits Times
Author:



Legal News Archive


NEW National University of Singapore (NUS) law dean Simon Chesterman's effort to produce creative thinkers in addition to technically capable lawyers may be an uphill task, as his students are the products of schools obsessed with assessments and rankings ('Grads must be creative thinkers: New NUS law dean'; Tuesday).

In Oxford University, law students are taught skills in comprehension, analysis and presentation. They are expected to read a good deal rather than take other people's word for things. They are expected to think hard about what they have read, so as to develop views not simply about what the law is, but also about why it is so. The Oxford courses are suited to practical application and most employers recognise this.

In Yale University's law school, those hoping for a place have to apply three years ahead of time. Even the applicant's grade point average (GPA) and Law School Admission Test (LSAT) are not conclusive, though they are persuasive. In recent years, Yale has received about 3,200 applications for 205 spots in the first-year class. The law dean is more interested in looking for talented, diverse and exciting students. He takes into account the applicant's essays, recommendations, activities, awards, work experience and background.

Each application file is reviewed by the Dean of Admissions. The strongest files are then considered by at least three faculty file readers. There is no cut-off for GPA or LSAT scores.

Hence, in the past, Yale has admitted an insurance claims adjuster, a junior economist, a published novelist, an American League pool player,a competitive diver, a Shakespearean actor, a concert pianist and so on.

In Harvard Law School, students are taught the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, which is compulsory. Harvard has a faculty at the cutting edge of legal theory and practice, and a talented student body drawn from across the nations of the world. Each application is considered in its entirety, including transcripts, extra-curricular and community activities, work experience, LSAT scores and writing samples.

Each year, Harvard admits applicants who believed they did not have a chance. Will NUS take such a risk, since for us, economic considerations take top priority? In Harvard, faculty and students learn together and collaborate on projects that will ultimately change their communities and the world.

However, I believe Professor Chesterman, with his wealth of knowledge and experience, will breathe new life into the law faculty and take the school to greater heights.
 
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However, I believe Professor Chesterman, with his wealth of knowledge and experience, will breathe new life into the law faculty and take the school to greater heights.

This last statement macham like "better cover my backside in case kanna sued". Spent the entire article insinuating that NUS cannot make it and then finally says that Prof President's son in law can do it! Damn lousy
 
More prove that the Royal Family truly is exceptional!
 
What a rare rae find? A golden needle in a barn of hay.

Note the tone of questions b4 the answers.
 
Creativity in legal profession?

How about applying that to accounting too? That should bring about interesting outcomes.
 
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