Researcher

My Expertise

Professor Ben Golder is a Professor of Law based in the School of Law, Society and Criminology in the Faculty of Law + Justice at UNSW. Prior to joining UNSW, Ben taught law at the University of East London, University College London, Birkbeck College and New York University in London.His work is situated at the intersection of critical legal theory, contemporary political theory, and critical engagements with international law and human rights. He has published broadly in these and related fields, in two monographs (Foucault’s Law, written with Peter Fitzpatrick and published by Routledge, in 2009, and Foucault and the Politics of Law, published by Stanford University Press, in 2015) and in over 40 refereed journal articles and chapters in edited collections. Ben’s work has appeared in: Law, Culture and the Humanities; Law & Critique; Social and Legal Studies; Jurisprudence; Humanity; and, the International Journal of Law in Context.

Ben’s current book project examines the ways in which different assertions of human rights are made in the absence of a foundationalist claim about what it means to be a human being. Entitled Human Rights After Humanism: The Politics of Postfoundationalism, and under contract with Cambridge University Press, this new book asks what kinds of political and legal subjectivity are generated by thinking about human rights in the absence of the human, as such.

Ben has presented work at leading academic conferences in the United States, Canada, Europe, the United Kingdom and in Asia. He has been welcomed as a Research Visitor at the Center for the Study of Law and Society at the University of Berkeley, California, and at the Centre for Critical Legal Studies at the University of Warwick. Nationally, he is an Associate Member of the Institute for International Law and the Humanities at the University of Melbourne, a Research Associate at the Australian Human Rights Institute and a Member of the Gilbert + Tobin Centre of Public Law at UNSW. Ben is one of the founders, with colleagues in the Faculty of Arts, Design and Architecture and in the Faculty of Law + Justice, of the interdisciplinary research network Critique: A Network in Social, Political and Legal Thought.

Ben has a doctorate in legal theory from the University of London (Birkbeck College) and first class honours degrees in both law and English literature from UNSW. His current editorial roles reflect his intersecting research interests. Ben is one of the Editors of Contemporary Political Theory and is a member of the Editorial Committee of Law & Critique, as well as serving on the Editorial Board of the Australian Journal of Human Rights.

Ben actively welcomes applications to pursue postgraduate study in the areas of legal theory and jurisprudence, contemporary political theory, and critical engagements with international law and human rights. Ben is an experienced supervisor and examiner of Phd dissertations in these and related fields. Currently he is supervising topics on a diverse range of topics: a genealogy of the right to resist; a theoretical and archival analysis of the sexed, raced and gendered dimensions of Prohibition in early twentieth-century America via the work of Georges Bataille; an ethnographic account of Pakistani terror trials; and a critique of the aerial politics of migration and deportation in the Mediterranean. Beyond his intellectual interest in current and former students, Ben has a particular interest in postgraduate supervision, mentoring and career development for higher degree and early career researchers. At UNSW, Ben convenes an interdisciplinary Skillshare group of Higher Degree Research students (see here). Beyond UNSW, Ben collaborates with colleagues at the University of Melbourne and La Trobe University to deliver ‘TASC’ (‘The Academic Skills Circle’) (see here).

A former Associate Dean for Education (2017-9) in the Faculty of Law, Ben has an ongoing interest in questions of critical legal pedagogy. Along with other colleagues, he convened the first three Legal Education Research Conferences held at UNSW in 2017, 2019 and 2021 and he is a member of the Australian Progressive Legal Studies network. Ben has taught public law and criminal law and currently teaches courses on: legal theory, law and social theory, and the politics of human rights.

 

Keywords

Fields of Research (FoR)

Law in context, International and comparative law, Legal Theory, Jurisprudence and Legal Interpretation, Human Rights Law

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Biography

Professor Ben Golder is a Professor of Law based in the School of Law, Society and Criminology in the Faculty of Law + Justice at UNSW. Prior to joining UNSW, Ben taught law at the University of East London, University College London, Birkbeck College and New York University in London. His work is situated at the intersection of critical legal theory, contemporary political theory, and critical engagements with international law and human...view more

Professor Ben Golder is a Professor of Law based in the School of Law, Society and Criminology in the Faculty of Law + Justice at UNSW. Prior to joining UNSW, Ben taught law at the University of East London, University College London, Birkbeck College and New York University in London. His work is situated at the intersection of critical legal theory, contemporary political theory, and critical engagements with international law and human rights. He has published broadly in these and related fields, in two monographs (Foucault’s Law, written with Peter Fitzpatrick and published by Routledge, in 2009, and Foucault and the Politics of Law, published by Stanford University Press, in 2015) and in over 40 refereed journal articles and chapters in edited collections. Ben’s work has appeared in: Law, Culture and the Humanities; Law & Critique; Social and Legal Studies; Jurisprudence; Humanity; and, the International Journal of Law in Context.

Ben’s current book project examines the ways in which different assertions of human rights are made in the absence of a foundationalist claim about what it means to be a human being. Entitled Human Rights After Humanism: The Politics of Postfoundationalism, and under contract with Cambridge University Press, this new book asks what kinds of political and legal subjectivity are generated by thinking about human rights in the absence of the human, as such.

Ben has presented work at leading academic conferences in the United States, Canada, Europe, the United Kingdom and in Asia. He has been welcomed as a Research Visitor at the Center for the Study of Law and Society at the University of Berkeley, California, and at the Centre for Critical Legal Studies at the University of Warwick. Nationally, he is an Associate Member of the Institute for International Law and the Humanities at the University of Melbourne, a Research Associate at the Australian Human Rights Institute and a Member of the Gilbert + Tobin Centre of Public Law at UNSW. Ben is one of the founders, with colleagues in the Faculty of Arts, Design and Architecture and in the Faculty of Law + Justice, of the interdisciplinary research network Critique: A Network in Social, Political and Legal Thought.

Ben has a doctorate in legal theory from the University of London (Birkbeck College) and first class honours degrees in both law and English literature from UNSW. His current editorial roles reflect his intersecting research interests. Ben is one of the Editors of Contemporary Political Theory and is a member of the Editorial Committee of Law & Critique, as well as serving on the Editorial Board of the Australian Journal of Human Rights.

Ben actively welcomes applications to pursue postgraduate study in the areas of legal theory and jurisprudence, contemporary political theory, and critical engagements with international law and human rights. Ben is an experienced supervisor and examiner of Phd dissertations in these and related fields. Currently he is supervising topics on a diverse range of topics: a genealogy of the right to resist; a theoretical and archival analysis of the sexed, raced and gendered dimensions of Prohibition in early twentieth-century America via the work of Georges Bataille; an ethnographic account of Pakistani terror trials; and a critique of the aerial politics of migration and deportation in the Mediterranean. Beyond his intellectual interest in current and former students, Ben has a particular interest in postgraduate supervision, mentoring and career development for higher degree and early career researchers. In 2022 Ben was awarded the ARC PGC Research Supervisor Award for the Faculty of Law and Justice (a UNSW student-nominated and judged award) and the UNSW Vice-Chancellor’s Award for Excellence in Higher Degree Research Supervision. In 2023 Ben was awarded the Australian Legal Education Awards Excellence in Teaching (Research Supervision) Award, as well as the Australian Council of Graduate Research's Award for Excellence in Graduate Research Supervision. At UNSW, Ben convenes an interdisciplinary Skillshare group of Higher Degree Research students (see here). Beyond UNSW, Ben collaborates with colleagues at the University of Melbourne and La Trobe University to deliver ‘TASC’ (‘The Academic Skills Circle’) (see here).

A former Associate Dean for Education (2017-9) in the Faculty of Law, Ben has an ongoing interest in questions of critical legal pedagogy. Along with other colleagues, he convened the first three Legal Education Research Conferences held at UNSW in 2017, 2019 and 2021 and he is a member of the Australian Progressive Legal Studies network. Ben has taught public law and criminal law and currently teaches courses on: legal theory, law and social theory, and the politics of human rights.


My Research Supervision


Supervision keywords


Areas of supervision

Legal theory; political theory; human rights; critical international law; public law


Currently supervising

Research supervision

Sonia Qadir (PhD), working on discourses of security and counter-terrorism in Pakistan under the Security, Precarious Populations and the Neoliberal Age Scientia Project. Jointly with Daniel McLoughlin and Vicki Sentas.

Angela Smith (PhD), working on techniques of offshore migration governance under the Security, Precarious Populations and the Neoliberal Age Scientia Project. Jointly with Daniel McLoughlin and Vicki Sentas.

Trang Phan (PhD), "Human Rights, Corporations, and the Question of Duty-Bearing Capacity". Jointly with Fleur Johns. 

Janet Hill (PhD), "Neoliberalism's Ascent and the Parallel Rise of Human Rights: Correlation, Causation, or Coincidence?". Jointly with Daniel McLoughlin.

Fleur Ramsay (PhD), "Sovereign Pleasures and Prohibitions: Law and Law-breaking in the Prohibition Era in the United States (1919-1933)". Jointly with Vicki Sentas.

Costa Avgoustinos (PhD), "Reconciling Climate Change and Social Justice in Earth Jurisprudence". Jointly with Gabrielle Appleby

Marie Hadley (PhD), “Mike Tyson's Moko: Tattoos, Law and Cultural Appropriation”. Jointly with Kathy Bowrey

Dorothea Anthony (PhD), "The Human Rights Principle of Indivisibility and Its Ideological Significance in the Contemporary Age". Jointly with Andrew Byrnes. Completed

Stephen Young (PhD), "The Legal Performativity of Indigenous Peoples' Free Prior and Informed Consent". Jointly with Fleur Johns. Completed

Keiran Hardy (PhD), "Ruthlessness and Sympathy: Smart Power Thinking in Counter-Terrorism and Counter-Insurgency". Jointly with George Williams and Lucia Zedner. Completed

Erin MacKay (PhD), "Therapeutic Jurisprudence: The Right Framework for Law Reform in Matters involving Indigenous Women and Sexual Violence?". Jointly with Julie Stubbs. Completed

Joseph Indaimo (PhD), "The Self, the Other and Human Rights: Lacan, Levinas and the Ethics of Alterity". Jointly with Robert Shelly. Completed.

David Carter (LLM), "Law's 'insubordinate openness' and the use of HIV-Related Offences in the Governance of Healthcare in New South Wales". Jointly with Tyrone Kirchengast. Completed.

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Location

Room 225
Level 2, The Law Building
UNSW Sydney
UNSW Kensington Campus
Sydney NSW 2052
Australia
(Access via Gate 2 off High Street)

Contact

+61 2 9385 1843