Mr Shakhawat Hossain
Lecturer

Dr Shakhawat Hossain

About
Research
Supported Research
Organisation/Leadership
Lecturing & Tutoring

BIO

Shakhawat Hossain is a lecturer of business law under the Accounting School of the CIM. He completed (wait for award) his PhD at the Faculty of Law and Justice, University of New South Wales (UNSW). He worked as an Assistant Professor of Law at various universities in Bangladesh. He holds an LLB (Hons) and LLM from Bangladesh, as well as a Master’s in Human Rights and Globalisation from the University of Keele, UK, which he completed on a prestigious British Commonwealth Scholarship. He also completed a certificate course in International Business Law at Xiamen University, China. Shakhawat undertook a research internship at the United Nations headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland. He has published several books and research journal articles. He worked as a casual academic of the UNSW Law Faculty and University of Western Sydney Law Faculty. 

Previous Research
  • Rohingya Refugee Crisis (2021)
  • India-Bangladesh enclave exchange (2016) 
Research Outputs
  • Utilizing Eurocentric Temporary Protection Directive as a Global Approach of Refugee Protection’ (2024) 9(1) Lambung Mangkurat University Law Journal, p.34-50 
  • Judging the Judges: Limiting the Judges’ Freedom of Expression and Extra-Judicial Expression’ (2022) 2(1) BAIUST Academic Journal p.231-243. 
  • Rohingya Refugee Crisis: Myth Mystery and Geopolitics’ (Darikoma Publications, 2021) 
  • The Politics of International Refugee Law and the Rohingya Refugee Crisis’ (2020) 1(1) BAIUST Academic Journal p.162-173. 
  • How and Why the Atrocities Against the Rohingya People is Genocide?’ (2020) 3(1) SCLS Law Review p.10-20. 
Supported Research
  • India-Bangladesh Enclave (2015-16)
Organisation/Leadership
  • Advocate, Supreme Court of Bangladesh 
  • Member of Australian G+T Public Law Centre 
  • Member of Commonwealth Scholars Commission UK. 
Lecturing & Tutoring
  • Former Casual Teaching Fellow: University of New South Wales (UNSW); University of Western Sydney.