Skip to main content
Overview
Affiliations
AffiliationTelephone
Principal of Collingwood College+44 (0) 191 33 44365
Chair in Law, Ethics and Government in the Durham Law School+44 (0) 191 33 44365
Associate in the Department of Philosophy 
Member of the Durham Law School
Associate in the School of Government and International Affairs

Biography

Professor Thom Brooks

Thom Brooks is Professor of Law, Ethics & Government at Durham Law School and Principal of Collingwood College, Durham University. A leading authority on citizenship, immigration policy and the ethics of punishment, his scholarship is distinguished by its practical impact: moving consistently from the seminar room into government, Parliament and the courts.

His work has informed the Law Commission's simplification of the Immigration Rules, shaped the wording of the EU referendum ballot paper earning recognition from ITV News as the man behind Leave and Remain and been formally acknowledged in Parliament for his contribution to the National Security Act 2023. In January 2026 he gave oral evidence to the House of Lords Justice & Home Affairs Committee and submitted written evidence to the Home Affairs Select Committee on citizenship and immigration.

A prolific and award-winning author, Brooks has published more than 25 books and hundreds of articles. His book Becoming British was described by Prime Minister Keir Starmer as 'a very good and thought-provoking read'. He is founding editor of the Journal of Moral Philosophy, serves on more than twenty editorial boards and ten academic book series and was the 112th President of the Society of Legal Scholars, as only the second President not British or Irish by birth. His scholarship on capital punishment was cited by the Connecticut Supreme Court in its landmark ruling abolishing the death penalty.

Policy impact & public service
Prof Thom Brooks at House of Lords Justice and Home Affairs Committee

Parliamentary Engagement

Government Advisory Work

  • Informed the Law Commission's simplification of the Immigration Rules (cited across 14 sections)
  • Cited by the Electoral Commission on the EU referendum question recommending the wording adopted by government
  • Advisory work for the Home Office, Ministry of Justice and Law Commission on law and policy reform
  • Invited to advise the Extremism Threats Unit, Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (October 2024)
  • Invited to advise the Ministry of Justice on principled punishment and sentencing guidelines (September 2024)
  • Member, QC (Hons) selection panel (2019–2021) · Chair, LNAT consortium (2021–2022)

Civic & Institutional Leadership

  • Principal, Collingwood College, Durham University supporting student leadership, civic opportunity and public engagement
  • Founding Director, Collingwood Future leading interdisciplinary initiative on AI, ethics and leadership (launching autumn 2026)
  • Inaugural and longest-serving Dean, Durham Law School (2016–2021) where doubled size and achieved best-ever QS and Times Higher rankings
  • Executive committee member, Fabian Society (currently serving third term)
  • Principal Fellow, Advance HE (2022)

International Contribution

  • Scholarship cited by the Connecticut Supreme Court in its landmark ruling abolishing the death penalty (2015)
  • Visiting scholar at HarvardColumbiaChicagoYaleOxfordPenn and NYU
  • Appointed to editorial advisory board of the Review of Politics, University of Notre Dame (2026)
  • Work translated into Chinese, Czech and Portuguese; cited in courts and legislatures across multiple jurisdictions
  • Delivered talks in Belgium, China, Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, Norway, Republic of Ireland, Serbia, Sweden, Turkey, UK and USA
Leadership & advisory work

Brooks has long been recognised as a trusted adviser to policymakers and public institutions in the United Kingdom and abroad. His counsel combines academic rigour with a deep commitment to fairness, accountability and the rule of law. Drawing on his expertise in law, ethics and public policy, he has provided independent, evidence-based advice on some of the most significant legal and constitutional issues of recent decades.

Whether advising government departments, mentoring future leaders, speaking to parliamentary committees, or shaping national debate on the rule of law, he upholds the highest standards of public service. He is available for speaking engagements, parliamentary and policy briefings, media commentary, and strategic consultancy on law, immigration and higher education.

Citizenship & Immigration Policy

  • Leading advocate for reform of the Life in the UK citizenship test and integration strategy
  • Research underpins national debates on citizenship education, integration and border policy
  • Informed the Law Commission's simplification of the Immigration Rules
  • Contributed to the House of Lords inquiry into the Life in the UK test, the EU referendum question and the National Security Act 2023

Justice, Ethics & Rehabilitation

  • Unified theory of punishment named one of the Top 100 Big Ideas for the Future by UK Research Councils
  • Contributed to Ministry of Justice seminars on principled punishment and sentencing guidelines (2024)
  • Scholarship on capital punishment cited by the Connecticut Supreme Court
  • Research used in reviews of sentencing frameworks and restorative justice policy

Higher Education & Leadership

  • Inaugural and longest-serving Dean of Durham Law School (2016–2021)
  • Principal, Collingwood College; Founding Director, Collingwood Future (AI, ethics and leadership)
  • 112th President, Society of Legal Scholars (2020–21)
  • Principal Fellow, Advance HE; Member, QC (Hons) selection panel
  • Chair, LNAT consortium
Fellowships & recognition

Fellow, Academy of Social Sciences: elected for distinguished contribution to social science and its application to public policy — one of the United Kingdom's highest social science honours.

Academic Bencher, Inner Temple: a senior honorary appointment of the Inns of Court, recognising exceptional contribution to law. Appointed 2018; listed in the Inner Temple Masters of the Bench register.

Member, Academia Europaea: pan-European learned academy of distinguished scholars. Also Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts and Fellow of the Royal Historical Society.

Jenny Jeger Prize, Fabian Society (2022): won for New Arrivals described by POLITICO as the first major pamphlet on Labour's immigration policy in over a decade.

112th President, Society of Legal Scholars (2020–21): only the second President in the Society's history not British or Irish by birth.

Top 100 Big Ideas for the Future: recognised by UK Research Councils for his unified theory of punishment.

Congratulated by House of Commons EDM 875 for transformative leadership of Durham Law School.

In their words

'A very good and thought-provoking read'.— Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Becoming British

'The first major pamphlet on Labour's immigration policy for over a decade'.— POLITICO on New Arrivals (Fabian Society, 2022)

'The man behind Leave and Remain'.— ITV News on Professor Brooks's role shaping the EU referendum ballot question

Books & selected publications
Brooks books

Punishment: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford University Press, forthcoming

Theories of Punishment. Cambridge University Press, forthcoming

Political Philosophy: The Fundamentals. Wiley-Blackwell, 2025

British Legal Reform: An Agenda for Change. Policy Press (eds with Catherine Atkinson MP and David Drew), 2024

Global Justice: An Introduction. Wiley-Blackwell, 2023

New Arrivals: A Fair Immigration Plan for Labour. Fabian Society, 2022 (won Jenny Jeger Prize)

Reforming the UK's Citizenship Test. Bristol University Press, 2022

The Trust Factor. Methuen, 2022 (cited: House of Lords Queen's Speech debate 2022)

Punishment: A Critical Introduction, 2nd edition. Routledge, 2021

The Oxford Handbook of Global Justice. Oxford University Press (ed.), 2020

Becoming British: UK Citizenship Examined. Biteback Publishing, 2016

Media & policy engagements

A trusted and regular commentator on citizenship, immigration, justice and constitutional affairs for UK and international media.

Recent (2026): BBC Radio Scotland · Newsweek · the i paper · House of Lords oral evidence · Home Affairs Select Committee written evidence

Past experience: BBC Radio 4 · BBC News · BBC Radio Scotland · ITV News · Sky News · CNN · The Times · The Guardian · The Telegraph · The Independent · Newsweek · the i paper ·

Media Archive →

Academic leadership

Principal, Collingwood College, Durham University — focusing on student leadership, opportunity and public engagement.

Founding Director of Collingwood Future, an interdisciplinary initiative on AI, ethics and leadership launching in autumn 2026.

Inaugural and longest-serving Dean of Durham Law School (2016–2021), doubled the School’s size, achieved best-ever QS and Times Higher rankings, congratulated in House of Commons EDM 875.

Visiting positions at ChicagoColumbiaHarvardNYUOxfordPennYale and others.

Teaching

Asylum, Immigration and Nationality Law and Policy

Criminal Law

History of Ideas

Jurisprudence & Political Philosophy

Law and Public Policy

Punishment 

UK Constitutional Law

Education
  • Ph.D. in Philosophy, University of Sheffield, Department of Philosophy, 2004
  • M.A. in Philosophy, University College Dublin, School of Philosophy, 2000
  • M.A. in Political Science, Arizona State University, School of Politics and Global Studies, 1999
  • B.A. Music and Political Science (dual major), William Paterson University of New Jersey, Department of Music and Department of Political Science, 1997

Research interests

  • British Politics
  • Capabilities
  • Citizenship
  • Constitutional Law
  • Criminal Law
  • Global Justice & Human Rights
  • Immigration Law & Policy
  • Labour Party
  • Law & Public Policy
  • Penal Theory & Ethics
  • Political & Legal Philosophy
  • Restorative Justice

Esteem Indicators

  • 2022: Jenny Jeger Prize:
  • 2022: Principal Fellow, Higher Education Academy:
  • 2022: Visiting Professor, LUISS Guido Carli:
  • 2021: Executive Committee, Society of Labour Lawyers:
  • 2021: Executive Committee, Fabian Society:
  • 2021: Member, Committee on Public Philosophy, American Philosophical Association:
  • 2021: Elected Member, Academia Europaea:
  • 2021: Member, Office for National Statistics (ONS) cross-Government Statistical Service (GSS) Migration Expert Group:
  • 2021: Member, European Law Institute:
  • 2021: Chair, LNAT (National Admissions Test for Law) Consortium:
  • 2021: Trustee, British Institute for International and Comparative Law (BIICL): Member, Finance and Audit Committee, BIICL

     

  • 2020: Academic Visitor, University of Chicago Law School:
  • 2020: Visiting Professor, LUISS Guido Carli:
  • 2020: Director, Labour Academic Network:
  • 2020: President, Society of Legal Scholars:
  • 2020: President, Society of Legal Scholars:
  • 2019: Visiting Professor, University of Nice (Cote d'Azur):
  • 2019: Academic Visitor, University of Pennsylvania Law School:
  • 2019: Visiting Scholar, Bioethics, New York University:
  • 2019: Visiting Scholar, Columbia Law School, Columbia University:
  • 2019: Vice President, Society of Legal Scholars:
  • 2018: Academic Bencher, The Honourable Society of the Inner Temple:
  • 2017: Distinguished Alumni Award, Arizona State University:
  • 2015: Visitor, Harvard Law School, Harvard University:
  • 2015: Visiting Fellow, Yale Law School, Yale University:
  • 2012: Visiting Scholarship, St John's College, Oxford:
  • 2012: Fellow, Royal Society of Arts:
  • 2011: Visiting Fellow, Department of Government, Uppsala University:
  • 2010: Fellow, Royal Historical Society:
  • 2010: Academic Visitor, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Oxford:
  • 2009: Academician of the Academy of Social Sciences:
  • 2009: Chair, Committee on Philosophy and Law, American Philosophical Association: Served as Chair from 2009-2012
  • 2008: Secretary, Association for Political Thought (UK): Secretary (2008-2012) of founding committee
  • 2006: Member of the Council, Hegel Society of Great Britain:
  • 2006: Executive Board Member, Political Studies Association: Executive Board Member (2006-2009)
  • 2004: Visiting Fellow, CEPPA, Philosophy, University of St Andrews:

Publications

Authored book

Chapter in book

  • The Problem of Hegel's Problem of Poverty
    Brooks, T. (2025). The Problem of Hegel’s Problem of Poverty. In M. Beech & K. Hickson (Eds.), Idea of the Good Society Essays in Honour of Raymond Plant (pp. 8-21). https://doi.org/10.1093/9780191983627.003.0002
  • Citizenship Tests
    Brooks, T. (2025). Citizenship Tests. In The Routledge Handbook of the Ethics of Immigration (pp. 201-210). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003037309-22
  • The Relevance of State Misconduct for Mitigating Punishment
    Brooks, T. (2025). The Relevance of State Misconduct for Mitigating Punishment. In J. V. Roberts, J. Ryberg, & L. Zaibert (Eds.), Responding to the Culpable State: Is Sentence Mitigation Appropriate? (pp. 131-144). Hart.
  • Philosophical Disagreement and Public Policy Making
    Brooks, T. (2025). Philosophical Disagreement and Public Policy Making. In M. Baghramian, J. Adam Carter, & R. Cosker-Rowland (Eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Philosophy of Disagreement (pp. 459-468). Routledge.
  • Cruel and Unusual Punishment
    Brooks, T. (2024). Cruel and Unusual Punishment. In J. Ryberg (Ed.), The Oxford Handbook of the Philosophy of Punishment (pp. 275-286). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780197750506.013.17
  • Immigration and Nationality
    Brooks, T. (2024). Immigration and Nationality. In C. Atkinson, T. Brooks, & D. Drew (Eds.), British Legal Reform: An Agenda for Change (pp. 188-201). Policy Press.
  • A “Global” Global Justice Theory
    Brooks, T. (2024). A “Global” Global Justice Theory. In J. Salamon & H. Lee (Eds.), The Bloomsbury Handbook of Global Justice and East Asian Philosophy (pp. 15-28). Bloomsbury.
  • Hegel’s Contextual Theory of Freedom: How “the Free Will Wills the Free Will”
    Brooks, T. (2024). Hegel’s Contextual Theory of Freedom: How “the Free Will Wills the Free Will”. In P. Diego Bubbio & A. Buchwalter (Eds.), Justice and Freedom in Hegel (pp. 29-39). Routledge.
  • Punishment
    Brooks, T. (2023). Punishment. In D. Pritchard (Ed.), Oxford Bibliographies in Philosophy. Oxford University Press.
  • Punitive Restoration
    Brooks, T. (2023). Punitive Restoration. In M. C. Altman (Ed.), Palgrave Handbook on the Philosophy of Punishment (pp. 639-656). Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-11874-6_29
  • Why Should Guilty Pleas Matter?
    Brooks, T. (2023). Why Should Guilty Pleas Matter? In J. V. Roberts & J. Ryberg (Eds.), Sentencing the Self-Convicted: The Ethics of Pleading Guilty (pp. 127-150). Hart Publishing.
  • British Idealism
    Brooks, T. (2023). British Idealism. In D. Pritchard (Ed.), Oxford Bibliographies in Philosophy. Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/obo/9780195396577-0015
  • Taking the System Seriously: On the Importance of "Objective Spirit" for Hegel's Philosophy of Right
    Brooks, T. (2021). Taking the System Seriously: On the Importance of "Objective Spirit" for Hegel’s Philosophy of Right. In S. Stein & J. Wretzel (Eds.), Hegel’s Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences: A Critical Guide (pp. 203-215). Cambridge University Press.
  • Saving Multiculturalism with Stakeholding: Hegel and the Challenges of Pluralism
    Brooks, T. (2020). Saving Multiculturalism with Stakeholding: Hegel and the Challenges of Pluralism. In J. Gledhill & S. Stein (Eds.), Hegel and Contemporary Practical Philosophy: Beyond Kantian Constructivism (pp. 305-317). Routledge.
  • Capabilities, Freedom and Severe Poverty
    Brooks, T. (2020). Capabilities, Freedom and Severe Poverty. In T. Brooks (Ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Global Justice (pp. 174-186). Oxford University Press.
  • Retribution
    Brooks, T. (2020). Retribution. In F. Focquaert, E. Shaw, & B. N. Waller (Eds.), The Routledge Handbook of the Philosophy and Science of Punishment (pp. 18-25). Routledge.
  • Climate Change Ethics and the Problem of End-State Solutions
    Brooks, T. (2020). Climate Change Ethics and the Problem of End-State Solutions. In T. Brooks (Ed.), Oxford Handbook of Global Justice (pp. 211-224). Oxford University Press.
  • Shame on you, shame on me? Nussbaum on shame punishment
    Brooks, T. (2019). Shame on you, shame on me? Nussbaum on shame punishment. In T. Brooks (Ed.), Shame Punishment (pp. 339-351). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315243290-9
  • The Life in the UK citizenship test and the urgent need for its reform
    Brooks, T. (2019). The Life in the UK citizenship test and the urgent need for its reform. In Citizenship in Times of Turmoil?: Theory, Practice and Policy (pp. 22-60). https://doi.org/10.4337/9781788119207.00009
  • The Life in the UK citizenship test and the urgent need for its reform
    Brooks, T. (2019). The Life in the UK citizenship test and the urgent need for its reform. In D. Prabhat (Ed.), Citizenship in Times of Turmoil?: Theory, Practice and Policy (pp. 22-60). Edward Elgar. https://doi.org/10.4337/9781788119214
  • Hegel's Philosophy of Law
    Brooks, T. (2017). Hegel’s Philosophy of Law. In D. Moyar (Ed.), The Oxford handbook of Hegel. (pp. 453-474). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199355228.013.21
  • Hegel on Crime and Punishment
    Brooks, T. (2017). Hegel on Crime and Punishment. In T. Brooks & S. Stein (Eds.), Hegel’s political philosophy : on the normative significance of method and system. (pp. 202-221). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198778165.003.0011
  • Beyond Reason: The Legal Importance of Emotions
    Brooks, T., & Sankey, D. (2017). Beyond Reason: The Legal Importance of Emotions. In P. Capps & S. Pattinson (Eds.), Ethical rationalism and the law. (pp. 131-148). Hart Publishing.
  • Punitive Restoration: Giving the Public a Say on Sentencing
    Brooks, T. (2016). Punitive Restoration: Giving the Public a Say on Sentencing. In A. Dzur, I. Loader, & R. Sparks (Eds.), Democratic theory and mass incarceration. (pp. 140-161). Oxford University Press.
  • Leadership and Stakeholding
    Brooks, T. (2015). Leadership and Stakeholding. In J. Boaks & M. Levine (Eds.), Leadership and ethics. (pp. 199-201). Bloomsbury Academic.
  • Why save the planet?
    Brooks, T. (2015). Why save the planet? In T. Brooks (Ed.), Current Controversies in Political Philosophy (pp. 138-147).
  • Introduction: Political philosophy: Current controversies
    Brooks, T. (2015). Introduction: Political philosophy: Current controversies. In T. Brooks (Ed.), Current Controversies in Political Philosophy (pp. 1-14).
  • The Capabilities Approach and Political Liberalism
    Brooks, T. (2015). The Capabilities Approach and Political Liberalism. In T. Brooks & M. C. Nussbaum (Eds.), Rawls’s political liberalism. (pp. 139-174). Columbia University Press.
  • Ethical Citizenship and the Stakeholder Society
    Brooks, T. (2014). Ethical Citizenship and the Stakeholder Society. In T. Brooks (Ed.), Ethical citizenship : British idealism and the politics of recognition. (pp. 125-138). Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Alcohol, Risk and Public Policy
    Brooks, T. (2014). Alcohol, Risk and Public Policy. In T. Brooks (Ed.), Alcohol and public policy. (pp. 27-33). Routledge.
  • Stakeholder Sentencing
    Brooks, T. (2014). Stakeholder Sentencing. In J. Ryberg & J. V. Roberts (Eds.), Popular punishment : on the normative significance of public opinion. (pp. 183-203). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof%3Aoso/9780199941377.003.0010
  • Democracy
    Brooks, T. (2014). Democracy. In D. Pritchard (Ed.), Oxford Bibliographies in Philosophy. Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/obo/9780195396577-0161
  • Juvenile offenders
    Brooks, T. (2014). Juvenile offenders. In T. Brooks (Ed.), Juvenile Offending (pp. 97-117). Routledge.
  • Capabilities
    Brooks, T. (2013). Capabilities. In H. LaFollette (Ed.), The International Encyclopedia of Ethics (pp. 692-698). Blackwell. https://doi.org/10.1002/9781444367072.wbiee624
  • Criminal Harms
    Brooks, T. (2013). Criminal Harms. In T. Brooks (Ed.), Law and Legal Theory (pp. 149-161). Brill Academic Publishers.
  • Citizenship
    Brooks, T. (2013). Citizenship. In H. LaFollette (Ed.), The International Encyclopedia of Ethics (pp. 764-773). Blackwell. https://doi.org/10.1002/9781444367072.wbiee632
  • Bernard Williams, republicanism, and the liberalism of fear : problems and prospects
    Brooks, T. (2013). Bernard Williams, republicanism, and the liberalism of fear : problems and prospects. In C. Herrera & A. Perry (Eds.), The moral philosophy of Bernard Williams. (pp. 107-113). Cambridge Scholars.
  • Global Justice and Politics
    Brooks, T. (2013). Global Justice and Politics. In F. D’Agostino & J. Gaus (Eds.), The Routledge Companion to Social and Political Philosophy (pp. 517-525). Routledge.
  • The problem with polygamy
    Brooks, T. (2012). The problem with polygamy. In T. Brooks (Ed.), Justice and the Capabilities Approach (pp. 377-390). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315251240-9
  • Natural Law Internalism
    Brooks, T. (2012). Natural Law Internalism. In T. Brooks (Ed.), Hegel’s Philosophy of Right (pp. 167-179). Blackwell. https://doi.org/10.1002/9781444354256.ch7
  • Between Statism and Cosmopolitanism: Hegel and the Possibility of Global Justice
    Brooks, T. (2012). Between Statism and Cosmopolitanism: Hegel and the Possibility of Global Justice. In A. Buchwalter (Ed.), Hegel and Global Justice (pp. 65-83). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-90-481-8996-0_4
  • Hegel and the Unified Theory of Punishment
    Brooks, T. (2012). Hegel and the Unified Theory of Punishment. In T. Brooks (Ed.), Hegel’s Philosophy of Right (pp. 103-123). Blackwell. https://doi.org/10.1002/9781444354256.ch4
  • Retribution and Capital Punishment
    Brooks, T. (2011). Retribution and Capital Punishment. In M. D. White (Ed.), Retributivism: Essays on Theory and Policy (pp. 232-245). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof%3Aoso/9780199752232.003.0013
  • What Did the British Idealists Ever Do for Us?
    Brooks, T. (2011). What Did the British Idealists Ever Do for Us? In T. Brooks (Ed.), New Waves in Ethics (pp. 28-47). Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel: Philosophy of Politics
    Brooks, T. (2010). Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel: Philosophy of Politics. In Oxford Bibliographies Online: Philosophy. Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/obo/9780195396577-0052
  • Punishment and British Idealism
    Brooks, T. (2010). Punishment and British Idealism. In J. Ryberg & J. A. Corlett (Eds.), Punishment and Ethics: New Perspectives (pp. 16-32). Palgrave Macmillan.
  • The right to trial by jury
    Brooks, T. (2009). The right to trial by jury. In T. Brooks (Ed.), The Right to a Fair Trial (pp. 83-98). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315085401-3
  • Muirhead, Hetherington, and Mackenzie
    Brooks, T. (2009). Muirhead, Hetherington, and Mackenzie. In W. Sweet (Ed.), The Moral, Social and Political Philosophy of the British Idealists (pp. 209-232). Imprint Academic.
  • A defence of jury nullification
    Brooks, T. (2009). A defence of jury nullification. In T. Brooks (Ed.), The Right to a Fair Trial (pp. 225-247). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315085401-7
  • Is Plato's Political Thought Anti-Democratic
    Brooks, T. (2008). Is Plato’s Political Thought Anti-Democratic. In E. Kofmel (Ed.), Anti-Democratic Thought (pp. 17-33). Imprint Academic.
  • Human Rights
    Brooks, T. (2007). Human Rights. In M. Bevir (Ed.), Encyclopedia of Governance (pp. 423-428). SAGE.
  • The Reception of Hegel in Britain
    Brooks, T. (2006). The Reception of Hegel in Britain. In A. Grayling & A. Pyle (Eds.), The Encyclopedia of British Philosophy (pp. 1424-1425). Thoemmes Continuum.
  • HART, Herbert Lionel Adolphus (1907-92)
    Brooks, T. (2005). HART, Herbert Lionel Adolphus (1907-92). In S. Brown (Ed.), The Dictionary of Twentieth-Century British Philosophers: Volume 1,2 (pp. 389-391). Bloomsbury.
  • Herbert Lionel Adolphus Hart
    Brooks, T. (2005). Herbert Lionel Adolphus Hart. In S. Brown (Ed.), Dictionary of Twentieth Century British Philosophers (pp. 389-391). Thoemmes Continuum.
  • Introduction
    Brooks, T., & Freyenhagen, F. (2005). Introduction. In T. Brooks & F. Freyenhagen (Eds.), The Legacy of John Rawls (pp. 1-21). Continuum.
  • Why Hegel Matters
    Brooks, T. (n.d.). Why Hegel Matters. In A. Alexander Davis & S. Rand (Eds.), New Perspectives on Hegel’s Philosophy of Right [Contracted by publisher]. Bloomsbury.

Edited book

Journal Article

Monograph

Other (Print)

Supervision students