Legal advice

The Legal Team is able to provide advice on a number of different legal matters. However, please note that we are not usually able to provide advice on private matters such as work projects outside of the terms of your employment with the LSE.

If you require legal advice, please contact the Head of Legal, Kevin Haynes, or the Legal Officer, Refel Ismail, for advice or further information. 

Agreements

Legal agreements can take many forms – they can be a contract, deed, a trust or a memorandum of understanding – and they can be complicated. As such, you can contact either Kevin Haynes or Refel Ismail for information and advice on legal agreements of all kinds. We can draft or review agreements.

Please note that, in relation to non-standard legal agreements, for practical reasons, Council has delegated its day-to-day responsibilities to the Director of the School and School Secretary, both of whom can sign any legal document and delegate authority to others to sign legal documents in accordance with the School’s Scheme of Delegated Legal Authority (PDF). Please refer to the Contracts Guidance (PDF) for further information.

As such, in the first instance, please submit all non-standard legal agreements to be signed to the School Secretary. When submitting a legal agreement for signature to the School Secretary, please complete and return the Contract Compliance Sheet (DOC). 

Deeds are not the same as contracts and must be executed differently. If you have a deed, please refer to section 5-6 of the School’s Scheme of Delegated Legal Authority (PDF) for further information. 

Litigation and Dispute Resolution

If you receive a legal claim from, or you wish to make a legal claim against, a third party, or are involved, or likely to be involved, in any other kind of dispute, please contact either Kevin Haynes or Refel Ismail in our team as soon as is practicably possible for advice on resolving the matter. Please also forward any legal documents. It is important that the School responds to all legal claims promptly because deadlines will apply to the process.

External Legal Advice - The School has entered into a four year agreement with Pinsent Masons LLP, which enables the School to benefit from reduced hourly rates and an agreed level of customer service. Kevin Haynes manages the relationship between the School and it's preferred supplier of legal services. Because of the preferential rates and other benefits, this firm should always be used for external legal advice; unless the School Secretary grants permission to go elsewhere. Academic and other revenue raising departments must pay for their own legal advice.

Instructing Legal Advisors - Only members of the School’s Management Committee or Service Leaders have the authority to instruct external legal advisers on behalf of the School. There are some exceptions to this rule to enable key members of staff to instruct lawyers; but these arrangements must be agreed by the relevant Service Leader, because they are accountable for the expenditure of their Division. Members of academic departments wishing to instruct the School’s Legal Advisers should first contact the School Secretary or Kevin Haynes

Intellectual Property

The School does not have an intellectual property policy. As such, the School adopts the general legal UK position under the Copyright Designs and Patents Act 1988 and deals with all intellectual property queries on a case by case basis. If you wish to obtain advice relating to intellectual property, including the use of our or third party logos and registered trademarks, please contact Kevin Haynes or Refel Ismail for further information. 

Copyright protects literary, dramatic, musical and artistic works as well as films, sound recordings, book layouts, and broadcasts. If you want to copy or use a copyright work, you usually have to obtain permission from the copyright owner or apply for a licence. However, please note that there are a few exceptions where you can copy or use part or all of a copyright work without obtaining the copyright owner’s permission. The most applicable exception is where the use is considered to be for “educational purposes”, allowing copying of works in any medium as long as the following conditions apply:

1. The work must be used solely to illustrate a point – this means that it is directly relevant to the course of study;

2. The use of the work must not be for commercial purposes;

3. The use must be fair dealing; and

4. It must be accompanied by a sufficient acknowledgement.

You should also note that under the School’s Copyright Licence and Newspaper Education Establishment Licence which are issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency and Newspaper Licensing Agency respectively, the amount of copying that we are permitted to do is restricted. This often causes problems with regard to the copying and circulation of academic and other text, including uploading material on Moodle.

It is usually permissible to copy the greater of up to a chapter, an entire article or 10 per cent of a publication. Copying chapters separately from the same book is not permitted. We would encourage you to utilise the Scanned Readings Service offered by the LSE Library to help us comply with our Copyright Licence. You can also visit the LSE Learning Technology and Innovation (“LTI”) website at lse.ac.uk/copyright for more information. Our current Newspaper Education Establishment Licence enables us to perform occasional copying of both the printed and online versions of national newspapers plus a small number of regional newspapers. You can contact Kevin Haynes for further advice.

Insurance

The School must alert its insurers to any legal action or claims that might be, or has been, taken against it as soon as possible. Information concerning the School’s insurance policies can be found here. If you have any queries about insurance protection, claims or legal action, please contact Kevin Haynes or Refel Ismail for all insurance related matters.

If you are travelling abroad, you should contact the School’s Health and Safety Team to ensure you are properly covered in the region to which you are travelling and for the work you will be undertaking. In some instances, your department or division will need to pay an additional sum to extend our current level of cover.

Film Screenings

If you wish to screen a film in public (for example, as part of an event), you will need to obtain relevant licences; such as a Screening Licence to cover copyright and a Premises Licence/Temporary Event Notice to comply with the Licensing Act 2003. Screening licences can be obtained from a ‘filmbank’, such as the BFI, Filmbankmedia or MPLC, or direct from the copyright owner if a film (or the production company) is not covered by a filmbank (the School has no flimbank licence for this reason). Permission is not needed under s34(2) of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, if a film is being shown to students for educational purposes.

Applications must be made to the local council for a Premises Licence or Temporary Event Notices. Under the Licensing Act 2003, an exemption also exists for screenings of films for the purpose of information, instruction or education. You can find guidance on licensing at Camden Council. You can also contact Kevin Haynes or Refel Ismail.

The School currently holds the following licences:

1. CLA Licence Certificate 2016-17 (PDF)

2. NLA Licence Certificate 2016-17 (PDF)

3. CLA Higher Education Licence 2016-19 (PDF)