Alexander Georgiou
BA, BCL
Examination Fellow since 2019
My research spans philosophical and doctrinal concepts in private law. My doctoral thesis explores the philosophical concepts which underpin 'performance-based remedies', as well as the scope and availability of those remedies in the positive law. Beyond my doctoral work, I take a broad interest in the laws of contract, tort, trusts, and unjust enrichment, and am also interested in wider questions of moral and political philosophy in the context of the law and civil justice systems.
- Postgraduate (BPTC) at BPP University, London (from 2019 to 2020)
- Postgraduate (BCL) at Brasenose College, Oxford (from 2018 to 2019)
- Undergraduate (BA, Jurisprudence) at Brasenose College, Oxford (from 2014 to 2017)
- Remedies in private law
- The law of obligations
- The law of trusts
- A Georgiou, ‘Taking trusts seriously’ (2021) LQR, forthcoming.
- A Georgiou, ‘What’s “unjust” about unjust enrichment: an answer at last?’ [2021] LMCLQ, forthcoming.
- A Georgiou, ‘In defence of Sempra’ [2019] LMCLQ 38.
- A Georgiou, ‘Marr v Collie: The ballooning of the common intention constructive trust’ (2019) 82 MLR 145.
- Temple Chambers BCL Scholar (2018).
- Martin Wronker Prize (2017).
- Gibbs Prize, Proxime Accessit (2017).