 My name is Kasim Sheik, I'm a Doctor for Law. My specialism is in Public International Law and I have a subspecialism in International Human Rights Law, cover a little bit of international criminal law. It all depends on the kind of flavour of the course that we're doing in the year. So I teach on a module called International Law and World Affairs and the point of the module is to give students exposure to what's happening in the world around them. So we cover things like issues of terrorism, we look at international climate change, we look at international treaties and trade talks, we look at human rights violations, so there's a whole mix of different things about the world around them. And what we do in this particular course isn't just focus on theory, we look at the practice of how states are behaving towards each other. There's a lot of unrest at the moment for example with the US, there's tensions in the Middle East, there's concerns in South America and we look at all these different areas. The best thing is that it's entirely topical, literally something can happen in the world yesterday, today or tomorrow and we will look at it in class that week. We'll examine it, we'll look at it from lots of different perspectives and look at it within the context of the module as a whole. So it's ever evolving and ever changing. I love interacting with students from a whole range of different backgrounds across the world. So what I find is that we see lots of different viewpoints on the areas that we cover, so lots of different viewpoints on terrorism, whether human rights are applicable to them or not. We look at the difference in world opinions on trade, we look at issues of whether a country can go to war or not and all the different students have different perspectives on these things and that makes for a very vibrant discussion forum.