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Email

sca27@cam.ac.uk

College Contact Details

Room: Room 6, The Pightle

Associate Professor

LLB (Dub), MJur (Oxon), MPhil (Cantab), PhD (LSE), FHEA, Barrister (of Gray's Inn, non-practising)

Interests

Dr Sinéad Agnew is the Catherine Seville Associate Professor in Law at the Faculty of Law and a Fellow of Newnham College. At the faculty, she teaches Equity to undergraduates and Advanced Private Law to postgraduates.

Before becoming an academic, Sinéad practised law for almost a decade, first as a barrister in London and subsequently as a litigation lawyer in Jersey, with a focus on civil fraud and asset-tracing, and offshore trusts law. She is a Barrister (of Gray’s Inn, non-practising), an Associate Member of Serle Court, a founding member of the Institute of Law in Jersey, an Academic Member of the Chancery Bar Association, a member of the Executive Committee of the Trusts Law Committee, and Treasurer and Secretary of the Cambridge Law Journal.

Sinéad's main research interests lie in the field of private law, including equity and the law of trusts, the law of obligations, and modern legal history. She is particularly interested in the moral justifications for, and the historical development of, equitable doctrine and equitable institutions such as the trust, and has published widely on these themes. Her work has been cited in the courts of England and Wales.

Sinéad has edited three essay collections: Modern Studies in Property Law: Volume 10 (Hart, 2019) (with Ben McFarlane), Pensions: Law, Policy and Practice (Hart, 2020) (with Paul S Davies and Charles Mitchell), and Law at the Cutting Edge: Essays in Honour of Sarah Worthington (Hart, forthcoming) (with Sir Marcus Smith). She is a co-author of Underhill and Hayton: Law of Trusts and Trustees 20th edn (LexisNexis Butterworths, 2022) (with Jonathan Harris, Paul Matthews and Charles Mitchell) and Sealy & Worthington’s Text, Cases and Materials in Company Law 12th edn (OUP, 2022) (with Sarah Worthington). Sinéad is also working on a monograph in which she seeks to explain the role of conscience in private law.

Publications