Dr Raphael Girard
Lecturer in Law
Overview
Dr Raphaël Girard is a Lecturer in Law (E&R) at the University of Exeter Law School, where he is also Director of the Graduate LLB Law programme. He convenes the Graduate LLB constitutional and administrative law core module and a module on law, democracy and populism. Raphaël holds a PhD in comparative constitutional law from the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE). Prior to joining the Exeter Law School as Lecturer in Law in January 2021, he taught public law at the LSE Law School from 2018 to 2021, as well as privacy and data protection at Peking University (LSE-PKU Summer School) in 2018.
Raphaël's main research areas include constitutional law, comparative constitutional law and constitutional theory. He is particularly interested in the intersections between populism, authoritarianism, constitutionalism and democracy.
His PhD thesis was supervised by Professor Jo Eric Khushal Murkens and Associate Professor Jacco Bomhoff and was examined by Professor Kim Lane Scheppele (Princeton University) and Professor Martin Loughlin (LSE). For his PhD, Raphaël received full funding from the LSE Law School (LSE PhD studentship) and the Fonds de recherche du Québec - Société et culture (FRQSC) (doctoral award).
Raphaël holds an LLM (with distinction) with a specialism in public international law from the LSE as well as dual degrees in civil law and common law (BCL and LLB) from McGill University, in Montréal. He also completed a semester at the University of Groningen, in the Netherlands.
He is a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (FHEA). Raphaël is also a lawyer (barrister and solicitor), member of the Québec Bar since 2016. Prior to entering academia, he practised privacy, data protection and access to information law at a large law firm in Canada. He also acted as law clerk to the Honourable Marie-Anne Paquette (now Chief Justice) and the Honourable Sophie Picard at the Superior Court of Québec, as well as full-time research assistant to Professor René Provost at McGill University.
Research
- Main research areas: Public law; constitutional law; comparative constitutional law; constitutional theory
- Main themes: Populism; authoritarianism; constitutionalism; courts; democracy; democratic backsliding
- Secondary research areas: Privacy and data protection; information technology
Research group links
Publications
Copyright Notice: Any articles made available for download are for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and the copyright holder.
| 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019 | 2017 | 2015 |
2022
- Vitale D, Girard R. (2022) Public Trust and the Populist Leader: A Theoretical Argument, Global Constitutionalism, volume 11, no. 3, pages 548-570, DOI:10.1017/S2045381722000107.
- Girard R. (2022) Populism, executive power and 'constitutional impatience': courts as institutional stabilisers in the United Kingdom, Constitutional Studies, volume 8, pages 35-61. [PDF]
2021
- Girard R. (2021) Accountability, Populism and Expertise: The United Kingdom Government's Response to Covid-19, Public Law, pages 707-726.
- Girard R. (2021) Populism, ‘the People’ and Popular Sovereignty, Constitutional Change and Popular Sovereignty: Populism, Politics and the Law in Ireland, Routledge, 77-92.
2020
- Girard R. (2020) Populism, Executive Power and ‘Constitutional Impatience’: Courts as Institutional Decelerators in the United Kingdom.
- Girard R. (2020) Le populisme : une crise de confiance?, Revue francaise de science politique, volume 70(5).
2019
- Girard R. (2019) Yascha Mounk, The People vs. Democracy: Why Our Freedom Is in Danger and How to Save It, Cambridge, MA and London: Harvard University Press, 2018, 400 pp, hb £21.95, The Modern Law Review, volume 82, no. 1, pages 196-200, DOI:10.1111/1468-2230.12397. [PDF]
2017
- Gratton E, Girard R. (2017) Using Social Insurance numbers for identification purposes: Canadian perspective on legal and privacy risks, Trusts & Trustees, volume 23(4), pages 431-452, DOI:10.1093/tandt/ttw250.
2015
- MÉGRET F, GIRARD R. (2015) Diasporas, Extraterritorial Representation, and the Right to Vote, Canadian Yearbook of international Law/Annuaire canadien de droit international, volume 52, pages 185-221, DOI:10.1017/cyl.2015.18.