Dr. Randall Stephenson, LL.M. (Columbia), M.St., D.Phil. (Oxon)
Forschungsinteressen
Dr. Stephenson's comparative research at the Department of Public Law examines the impact of the Internet and digital communications on networked accountability dynamics in contemporary democracies. His principal research project, Democracy and State Secrets: Calibrating Public Accountability in Modern Intelligence Gathering, examines whether mass 'full-take' information surveillance (and its legal authorisation) is consistent with established principles of self-governance, including theories of separation of powers, judicial review, and democratic accountability.
Vita
Randall Stephenson is a comparative public law and
defamation scholar specialising in the intersections between
press freedom, democratic theory, and networked
accountability dynamics. After obtaining his MSt and DPhil at
the University of Oxford (the latter awarded without revisions
or corrections), his doctoral thesis was published by a
leading academic issuer. A Crisis of Democratic
Accountability: Public Libel Law and the Checking Function of
the Press (Oxford: Hart 2018) examines the modern rise of public
interest/political speech defences in libel law. It argues that
the law and legal approaches in the UK, Australia, New Zealand,
Canada, and the United States are undertheorised, lack adequate
criteria for determining suitable doctrinal approaches, and
require a more precise understanding of ‘democracy’,
‘representation’, and ‘accountability’. The book’s
interdisciplinary law reforms incorporate innovative
advances in public accountability scholarship, recommending
jurisdictions adjust their pubic libel doctrine to match their
unique accountability profile and institutional networks.
Dr Stephenson’s legal scholarship has since been published in
The Modern Law Review, the Oxford Journal of Legal Studies, and
the Osgoode Hall Law Journal. Before attending Oxford, Dr
Stephenson practiced litigation as a senior associate at
Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP, a leading business law firm in
Toronto, Canada, and studied under prominent First Amendment
scholars and attorneys during his LLM studies at Columbia Law
School. He was also a panelist at the Law Commission of
Ontario's international conference on Defamation Law and the
Internet: Where Do We Go From Here? – one of the most thorough and
wide-ranging appraisals of digital communication's impact
on defamation law and public discourse to date.