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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Early life and education  





2 Career  





3 Research  



3.1  Humanitarian intervention  





3.2  State-building  





3.3  Intelligence agencies  





3.4  Data protection and artificial intelligence  





3.5  Reports  





3.6  Other books  







4 Personal life  





5 Bibliography  



5.1  Fiction  





5.2  Non-fiction  





5.3  Lectures  







6 References  





7 External links  














Simon Chesterman







 

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Simon Chesterman
Born1973 (age 50–51)
NationalityAustralian
Alma materUniversity of Melbourne (BA, LLB)
Magdalen College, Oxford (DPhil)
Beijing International Studies University
EmployerNational University of Singapore
Notable workWe, the Robots? (2021)
One Nation Under Surveillance (2011)
Law and Practice of the United Nations (with Thomas M. Franck and David M. Malone, 2008)
You, The People (2004)
Just War or Just Peace? (2001)
SpouseMing Tan
Websitewww.simonchesterman.com

Simon Chesterman PPA(P) is an Australian legal academic and writer who is currently a vice provost at the National University of Singapore and dean of the NUS College. He was the dean of NUS Faculty of Law from 2012 to 2022. He is also senior director of AI governance at AI Singapore, editor of the Asian Journal of International Law and co-president of the Law Schools Global League.

ARhodes Scholar, Chesterman succeeded Tan Cheng Han as Dean of the NUS Faculty of Law on 1 January 2012.[1] Prior to January 2012, he was global professor and director of the New York University School of Law Singapore programme.[2] His research concerns international law, public authority, data protection, and the regulation of artificial intelligence. He is critical of what he sees as the changing and increasingly expanding role of intelligence agencies.[3] Chesterman is the author or editor of twenty books and four novels.

In 2013, Chesterman was appointed as a member of Singapore's Data Protection Advisory Committee,[4] and in 2016 joined the United Nations University Council.[5] From 2012 to 2017, he served as secretary-general of the Asian Society of International Law.

Early life and education[edit]

Chesterman attended Camberwell Grammar School and graduated with first class honours in arts and law from the University of Melbourne, where he won the Supreme Court Prize as the top student, and was editor of the Melbourne University Law Review. He obtained a Rhodes Scholarship and completed his doctorate in international law at the University of Oxford under the supervision of the late Sir Ian Brownlie.[1] He also holds a diploma in Chinese language from the Beijing International Studies University.[6] Chesterman's play "Everything Before the 'But' Is a Lie" was performed at Oxford's Burton Taylor Studio in 2000. It was directed by Rosamund Pike, who was then an undergraduate student at Oxford.[7]

Career[edit]

Chesterman is a founding editor of the Asian Journal of International Law, published from 2011 by Cambridge University Press.[citation needed] He is on the editorial boards of other journals including Global Governance,[8] Journal of Intervention and Statebuilding,[9] Security Dialogue,[10] and The Hague Journal on the Rule of Law.[11]

As Dean of NUS Law, Chesterman oversaw the first review of its curriculum in more than a decade. Changes introduced included greater exposure to the legal systems of Asia and a grade-free first semester.[12]

Chesterman also launched the most ambitious research agenda in the history of the faculty.[13] This entailed the creation of a series of new centres: the Centre for Asian Legal Studies, the EW Barker Centre for Law & Business, the Centre for Banking & Finance Law, the Centre for Maritime Law, the Centre for Legal Theory, and the Centre for Technology, Robotics, Artificial Intelligence & the Law.[14] This was said to be aimed at making Singapore a "thought leader" in legal research.[15][who?]

Fundraising efforts included support from Singapore's Ministry of Law for the new research centres, as well as $21m to name the Centre for Law & Business after former Law Minister Edmund W. Barker.[16] Four new endowed chairs were established: the Sat Pal Khattar Chair in Tax Law, the Amaladass Chair in Criminal Justice, the MPA Chair in Maritime Law, and the Saw Swee Hock Centennial Professorship.[17]

A push to increase experiential learning and ethics included the introduction of a mandatory pro bono scheme in 2014 and the creation of a Centre for Pro Bono & Clinical Legal Education in 2017.[18]

In September 2013, NUS Law convened the first ever Global Law Deans' Forum of the International Association of Law Schools. The meeting adopted the Singapore Declaration on Global Standards and Outcomes of a Legal Education,[19] which was intended to offer a "common language" for global legal education.[20][vague]

Under Chesterman's leadership, NUS Law rose from 22nd in the QS World Rankings in 2013 to 10th in 2021,[21] in the process overtaking Hong Kong University's faculty of law to become the top-ranked law school in Asia.[22]

Chesterman was appointed as dean of NUS Law for a fourth term in 2021, and will serve until 30 June 2023, after Professor Hans Tjio, who was appointed to be the next dean in July 2021, relinquished the position for medical reasons.[23] In the same year, he launched an initiative to increase diversity in the law school by shortlisting top students from all of Singapore's schools and increasing the technology component of the curriculum.[24]

Research[edit]

Humanitarian intervention[edit]

His doctoral thesis as a Rhodes Scholar, became one of his first books, Just War or Just Peace? Humanitarian Intervention and International Law.[25] Before publication as a book, the work had originally won a 2000 Dasturzada Dr Jal Pavry Memorial Prize for "best thesis in international relations".[26] One review article of this book by Nico Krisch in the European Journal of International Law described Chesterman's book as being pessimistic about humanitarian intervention, when compared to his contemporary Nicholas J. Wheeler who is more optimistic about establishing an international framework for "ideal humanitarian intervention".

Chesterman does not believe that "ideal humanitarian intervention" exists; according to Krisch, he instead belongs to the school of thought that argues that states should "justify their action based on political arguments" rather than relying on a "[humanitarian] recognition of exception to the use of force". Though the intervention would go against international law, it would be in Chesterman's words, a "venial sin".[27] As Krisch analyses, Wheeler also raises "plausible" opposition to this – it would create a "perception" that "powerful states" could ignore international law whenever they wished, pushing other countries to treat international law "equally cavalierly". Noting Chesterman's position, Krisch writes, "law loses much of its weight if its deviation from moral standards is openly admitted and other ways of justification are recognised." Chesterman further argues in Just War or Just Peace that the enforcement of the Iraqi no-fly zones and the Operation Deny Flight (the no-fly zone in Kosovo) went outside the framework of the United Nations, but Krisch calls this claim "overstated". Nevertheless, the book received an American Society of International Law Certificate of Merit.[28]

InJust War or Just Peace, Chesterman rejects the idea that the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (FRY)'s repression of the Kosovars represented a "supreme humanitarian emergency". Instead, as Nicholas Wheeler notes, Chesterman is "sympathetic" to Russia's historical argument before the Security Council (SC) "that the crisis did not merit an armed response". Going against the widely accepted view is that Russia's threat to use its UN Security Council veto against UN intervention in Kosovo was an act of "mere contrariness" to NATO, Chesterman instead argues NATO "never seriously contemplated that there might be genuine objections to the policies of NATO member states in their dealings with [the FRY]." Chesterman and his allies, Wheeler writes, would actually believe that Russia's official SC position matched its actual belief on the matter; to Chesterman, Russia would have changed its position had the situation "worsened along the apocalyptic lines predicted by NATO governments".[29]

Nevertheless, writing in the journal International Affairs, Wheeler concluded that "Chesterman has written a tour de force that exposes the weaknesses of the arguments supporting a doctrine of unilateral humanitarian intervention in international society ... Chesterman rejects the claim that states have a legal right to act as vigilantes in support of Council resolutions, even if they believe that this is the only means to stop a genocide. The powerfully argued thesis of this scholarly work is that accepting this proposition in law is 'a recipe for bad policy, bad law, and a bad international order'."[30]

As a Modern Law Review article noted, Chesterman condemned NATO's intervention in the Kosovo War as being "completely outside the United Nations system of security and a threat to global stability".[31] He later drew parallels between Kosovo and the arguments raised by Russia for its 2014 annexation of Crimea.[32]

State-building[edit]

Chesterman's book You, The People: The United Nations, Transitional Administration, and State-Building (Oxford University Press, 2004),[33] studies the foundation of new institutions in war-torn regions such as the former Yugoslavia and southeast Asia. Noting Chesterman's intent to highlight the mutually related yet sometimes mutually opposing "ends of liberal democracy and the means of benevolent autocracy," a review article in the George Washington International Law Review called it a "misdelivered message".[34] It was reviewed positively in the New York Review of BooksbyBrian Urquhart who wrote that "the weight of the subject and the depth of the research are supported by wit, candor, brevity, and analytical writing of a very high order."[35] Another review in Human Rights Quarterly stated that the book "speaks with the authority of a major global commission study and offers analyses and prescriptions with important implications for human rights scholars and practitioners."[36]

Intelligence agencies[edit]

Chesterman has written on the regulation and oversight of intelligence services, including a monograph published by Australia's Lowy Institute for International Policy in 2016.[37] In an opinion piece published in the global edition of The New York Times in November 2009, he argued for limits to the outsourcing of intelligence activities to private contractors such as Blackwater.[38]

Oxford University Press published Chesterman's twelfth book in March 2011. Entitled One Nation Under Surveillance: A New Social Contract to Defend Freedom Without Sacrificing Liberty, it examines what limits – if any – should be placed on a government's efforts to spy on its citizens in the name of national security.[39][40] Writing in the New York Review of Books, David D. Cole said that Chesterman "argues convincingly that the specter of catastrophic terrorist attacks creates extraordinary pressure for intrusive monitoring; that technological advances have made the collection and analysis of vast amounts of previously private information entirely feasible; and that in a culture transformed by social media, in which citizens are increasingly willing to broadcast their innermost thoughts and acts, privacy may already be as outmoded as chivalry."[41]

Data protection and artificial intelligence[edit]

In January 2014, Chesterman published an edited volume entitled Data Protection Law in Singapore: Privacy and Sovereignty in an Interconnected World (Singapore: Academy Publishing, 2014).[42]

He is also the author of We, the Robots? Regulating Artificial Intelligence and the Limits of the Law (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2021).[43]

Reports[edit]

Chesterman speaking at the Rule of Law Symposium 2012 in the Supreme Court Auditorium on 15 February 2012

Chesterman has been author or co-author of various reports for the United Nations, governments, and private bodies. Examples include:

Other books[edit]

Other publications have focused on the United Nations, particularly the role of its Secretary-General,[47] and the rise and regulation of private military and security companies.[48]

Personal life[edit]

Chesterman is married to Ming Tan, daughter of former President of Singapore, Tony Tan.[49]

Bibliography[edit]

Fiction[edit]

Non-fiction[edit]

Lectures[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "Professor Simon Chesterman to be new Dean of NUS Law School" (Press release). National University of Singapore. 31 October 2011. Archived from the original on 9 August 2014. Retrieved 14 March 2015.
  • ^ NUS Law School profile Archived 20 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine, NYU profile
  • ^ National University of Singapore, Young Researcher Award 2010 Archived 28 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine. Nus.edu.sg (24 May 2010). Retrieved on 2011-11-04.
  • ^ "Commission to administer Personal Data Protection Act". Retrieved 23 January 2013.
  • ^ "UNU Welcomes 12 New Council Members". Archived from the original on 26 May 2016. Retrieved 28 April 2016.
  • ^ "NUS Press Release, Annex 1" (PDF).
  • ^ "Review of "Everything Before the 'But' Is a Lie" in the "Daily Info, Oxford"". Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 10 March 2015.
  • ^ "Lynne Rienner Publishers | Global Governance Editorial Board". Rienner.com. Archived from the original on 23 August 2010. Retrieved 9 June 2010.
  • ^ "Taylor & Francis Journals: Welcome". Tandf.co.uk. Archived from the original on 18 November 2010. Retrieved 9 June 2010.
  • ^ "Security Dialogue". Sdi.sagepub.com. Archived from the original on 21 August 2004. Retrieved 9 June 2010.
  • ^ "Cambridge Journals Online – Hague Journal on the Rule of Law". Journals.cambridge.org. Archived from the original on 9 June 2010. Retrieved 9 June 2010.
  • ^ Tan, Amelia (29 January 2014). "NUS revamps law course to broaden knowledge". The Straits Times. Archived from the original on 8 August 2014. Retrieved 1 August 2014.
  • ^ "LawLink, January 2014". Archived from the original on 2 October 2017. Retrieved 10 November 2017.
  • ^ "NUS launches new think tank to explore legal issues surrounding the use of technology". The Straits Times. 5 December 2019.
  • ^ "New initiatives to enhance legal education and research at NUS". Archived from the original on 9 August 2014. Retrieved 1 August 2014.
  • ^ ""NUS' Centre for Law and Business renamed after Singapore's first Law Minister EW Barker", Channel NewsAsia, 29 May 2017". Archived from the original on 10 November 2017. Retrieved 10 November 2017.
  • ^ ""Top Law Don from Yale joins NUS Law", NUS Law, 2015". Archived from the original on 3 October 2017. Retrieved 10 November 2017.
  • ^ Sin, Yuen (31 October 2017). "New pro bono centre at NUS law faculty to boost chances for students to learn craft, support community". The Straits Times. Archived from the original on 10 November 2017. Retrieved 10 November 2017.
  • ^ "Singapore Declaration on Global Standards and Outcomes of a Legal Education (2013)" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2 October 2013. Retrieved 2 November 2015.
  • ^ Poh, Ian (26 September 2013). "Ian Poh, 'Introduce "Common Language" for Global Legal Education: NUS Law Dean', Straits Times, 26 Sept 2013". The Straits Times. Archived from the original on 30 September 2013. Retrieved 2 November 2015.
  • ^ "QS Rankings by Subject: Law (2013)". Archived from the original on 8 August 2017. Retrieved 10 November 2017.
  • ^ "QS World University Rankings by Subject 2021: Law & Legal Studies".
  • ^ "NUS Law's dean-designate relinquishes position 2 weeks after appointment, citing medical reasons". The Straits Times. 31 March 2021.
  • ^ Ng, Wei Kai (8 February 2021). "Ng Wei Kai, 'Top 5% of students in any JC or MI to be eligible for NUS Law test and interview shortlist', Straits Times, 8 Feb 2021". The Straits Times. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
  • ^ OUP: Chesterman: Just War or Just Peace?: Humanitarian Intervention – Oxford University Press. Oxford Monographs in International Law. Ukcatalogue.oup.com. 7 November 2002. ISBN 978-0-19-925799-7. Archived from the original on 8 October 2011. Retrieved 9 June 2010.
  • ^ Oxford University Gazette, 14 December 2000 Archived 9 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Ox.ac.uk. Retrieved on 2011-11-04.
  • ^ Krisch, N. (February 2002). "Review Essay Legality, Morality and the Dilemma of Humanitarian Intervention after Kosovo". European Journal of International Law. 13 (1): 323–335. doi:10.1093/ejil/13.1.323.
  • ^ "The American Society of International Law Past ASIL Award Winners and Honorees". Asil.org. Archived from the original on 27 September 2011. Retrieved 9 June 2010.
  • ^ Wheeler, Nicholas J. (1 December 2001). "Legitimating humanitarian intervention: principles and procedures". Melbourne Journal of International Law. 2 (2): 550–568. Gale A81763319.
  • ^ Wheeler, Nicholas J. (2001). "Review of International Law and the Use of Force; Just War or Just Peace? Humanitarian Intervention and International Law". International Affairs. 77 (3): 687–688. JSTOR 3095449.
  • ^ Charlesworth, Hilary (May 2002). "International Law: A Discipline of Crisis". Modern Law Review. 65 (3): 377–392. doi:10.1111/1468-2230.00385.
  • ^ Simon Chesterman, "Ukraine and International Law", Straits Times (15 March 2014) Archived 24 March 2014 at the Wayback Machine.
  • ^ "Oxford University Press: You, the People: Simon Chesterman". Us.oup.com. Archived from the original on 8 March 2012. Retrieved 9 June 2010.
  • ^ Marcella, David (2005). "MISDELIVERED MESSAGE". The George Washington International Law Review. 37 (3): 831–843. ProQuest 219701318.
  • ^ Urquhart, Brian (23 September 2004). "The Good General | Brian Urquhart". The New York Review.
  • ^ Siegel, Richard L (2005). "You, The People: The United Nations, Transitional Administration, and State-Building (review)". Human Rights Quarterly. 27 (2): 735–736. doi:10.1353/hrq.2005.0026. S2CID 143384609. Project MUSE 182777.
  • ^ "Shared Secrets: Intelligence and Collective Security", (Sydney: Lowy Institute for Public Policy, 2006) Archived 24 November 2010 at the Wayback Machine. Lowyinstitute.org. Retrieved on 2011-11-04.
  • ^ Chesterman, Simon. (12 November 2009) "Blackwater and the Limits to Outsourcing Security", "New York Times (Global Edition)/International Herald Tribune", 12 November 2009. Nytimes.com. Retrieved on 2011-11-04.
  • ^ Oxford University Press UK Archived 14 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine. Ukcatalogue.oup.com (24 February 2011). Retrieved on 2011-11-04.
  • ^ Oxford University Press USA Archived 29 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Oup.com. Retrieved on 2011-11-04.
  • ^ "New York Review of Books", 22 December 2011 Archived 6 March 2013 at the Wayback Machine. Nybooks.com (201-12-22). Retrieved on 2013-03-01.
  • ^ Academy Publishing Archived 24 March 2014 at the Wayback Machine.
  • ^ Chesterman, Simon (2021). We, the Robots?. doi:10.1017/9781009047081. ISBN 978-1-00-904708-1.[page needed][non-primary source needed]
  • ^ Chesterman, Simon (7 May 2008). "The UN Security Council and the Rule of Law". SSRN 1279849. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)[non-primary source needed]
  • ^ Government of Norway, National budget 2009, Chapter 5: The Management of the Government Pension Fund Archived 6 July 2010 at the Wayback Machine. Regjeringen.no. Retrieved on 2011-11-04.
  • ^ Mahbubani, Kishore; Chesterman, Simon (2010). "Asia's Role in Global Governance: World Economic Forum Global Redesign Initiative - Singapore Hearing". SSRN 1541364. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)[non-primary source needed]
  • ^ Simon Chesterman, Thomas M. Franck and David M. Malone, Law and Practice of the United Nations: Documents and Commentary (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008); Simon Chesterman (editor), Secretary or General? The UN Secretary-General in World Politics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007).
  • ^ Simon Chesterman and Angelina Fisher (eds), Private Security, Public Order: The Outsourcing of Public Functions and Its Limits (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009); Simon Chesterman and Chia Lehnardt (eds), From Mercenaries to Market: The Rise and Regulation of Private Military Companies (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007).
  • ^ "Grads must be creative thinkers: New NUS law dean". SMU Newsroom. November 2011.
  • External links[edit]


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