Davinia Aziz is an Adjunct Assistant Professor at the National University of Singapore Faculty of Law, where she has taught Public Law on a number of part-time appointments since 2003. Davinia teaches and writes on topics in Singapore constitutional and administrative law, public international law and international organizations. She read law at the National University of Singapore, and has a Bachelor of Civil Law degree from the University of Oxford, where she matriculated at Magdalen College. She graduated with a Master of Laws from New York University, where she was a Hauser Global Scholar and Mamdouha Bobst Global Scholar. Davinia has held previous appointments at the Supreme Court and the Subordinate Courts. She is currently Deputy Senior State Counsel at the International Affairs Division of the Attorney-General’s Chambers, where she advises on public international law.
Articles
Privileges and Immunities of Global Public-Private Partnerships: A Case Study of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, International Organizations Law Review (2009)
The question of whether it is at all appropriate to extend privileges and immunities regimes...
The Utility of an International Legal Approach to the Jerusalem Question, Singapore Journal of International and Comparative Law (2003)
International law has not acquitted itself well when invoked to assist in the resolution of...
Punishment as Response to Harm: Why the Attempt Warrants Lesser Punishment than the Completed Crime, Singapore Journal of Legal Studies (2002)
In this article, the author sets out the case for punishing a person who unsuccessfully...