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Faculty of Law

Mohsen al Attar

 



Mohsen al Attar

PhD (in progress) York University
LLM Stockholm University - 2004
LLM University of Texas - 2001




Contact details:

Building 803, Room 3.07
17 Eden Crescent
Auckland

Tel: +64 (0)9 373 7599 ext. 86524
Email: m.alattar@auckland.ac.nz


Available to students:

Mondays 3 - 5pm

Profile

"Liberating education consists in acts of cognition, not transferals of information."
Paulo Freire

Knowledge and experience are highly subjective concepts. Part of me would say that I possess both, having worked as a barrister in Canada and the United States on matters of domestic and international significance and having obtained multiple postgraduate degrees in intellectual property law, international law, and sociolegal studies. Yet, this stance is highly unsatisfactory for another part of me, the more dominant one, regards knowledge and experience as processes that humans engage in rather than objects we acquire. In other words, I do not perceive myself as a vessel that is steadily being filled but as a wheel in continuous motion propelled by the friction that knowledge and experience provoke. This perception informs my pedagogical philosophy and, by extension, my interactions with the students with whom I come in contact.

Returning briefly to the introductory quote from Paolo Freire, I must say that it is of immense relevance for it reveals not only my outlook on teaching but also my position on the purpose of education; in a single word, liberation. Education is a process intended to encourage the emergence of critical consciousness, of the individual and the collective, empowering us to intelligently consider our reality and opine on the levels of liberty we enjoy. Indeed, in any given circumstance, reality is the object of reflection and freedom the object of pursuit. Accordingly, our struggle to educate ourselves is in fact a struggle to understand reality, a necessary first step if we are to develop the ability - and the will - to intervene in the world and serve the cause of human emancipation. There is more.

Education, not unlike emancipation, is praxis; we reflect upon our world not simply to gain a greater understanding of it but to acquire the means to act upon it in wise and meaningful ways. We do so by searching for a complete view of reality, a view that reveals the connections between issues and challenges but also one that ascertains the way we exist in the world we study. Often times, the topics we discuss can appear remote leaving us with the impression that a chasm exists between education and everyday life. Professors therefore have the duty to personalise their lessons, to make them more real to students whilst affirming the importance of intellectual investigation. I have struggled to this very end in a variety of ways, sometimes by demystifying theory, other times by underscoring history, and yet at others by individualising the lessons and making them more relatable to students’ daily lives. By so doing, I believe that students can grasp how grand academic theory - which many professors espouse - can be applicable to everyday life - which all students participate in.

Ultimately, I believe that education is the quintessential exercise in freedom. By deepening our consciousness education permits us to transcend ourselves, to move forward with the awareness that even the very nature of humankind is susceptible to revolutionary transformation at the hands of an informed mind.

Research Interests

International Trade Law
Law & Development
Islamic Law
Globalisation
Intellectual Property Law

Recent Courses

  • Law & Society (LAW121)
  • From Colonialism to Globalisation: International Law and the Making of the Third World (LAW495)
  • Islamic Law (LAW455)

Qualifications

PhD (candidate - 2008), Osgoode Hall Law School, York University
LLM, Stockholm University, 2004
LLM, University of Texas, 2001
Inactive member of the Barreau du Québec (admitted 1999)
Inactive member of the State Bar of California (admitted 2001)

Mohsen teaches and researches in the areas of Law and Society, International Trade Law, and Class Struggle. Currently, he is captivated by the writings of Antonio Gramsci, an Italian political philosopher of the early twentieth century, and Malcolm X, an American revolutionary and intellectual of the mid-twentieth century.


Read Mohsen's recent articles in the media (follow the links below):

Israeli efforts to erase history of occupation are doomed
'Calls for mutual restraint ring hollow, for only one side is in a position to exercise it, writes Mohsen al Attar... '

Mohsen al Attar: Liberty, fairness demand justice to be available to all
'To say that the rule of law lies at the foundation of our society seems rather trite. Yet, the recent suggestion to nearly halve the funding of community law centres reminds us what the rule of law actually represents...'








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