The Lord Chancellor has approved the appointment of:
- Professor Solene Rowan as the Law Commissioner for Commercial
& Common Law from 8 September 2025 to 7 September 2030
- Professor Lisa Webley as the Law Commissioner for Property,
Family & Trust Law from 1 September 2025 to 31 August 2030.
Professor Solène Rowan
Professor Solène Rowan is currently the Chair of Contract Law,
the Vice-Dean for Students, Culture & Community, and the
Director of the LLB / Master 1 programme at the Dickson Poon
School of Law, King's College London. She is also an Honorary
Professor at the Australian National University and a Visiting
Professor at Paris Panthéon-Assas University.
Solène's principal areas of expertise are contract law,
commercial law, and comparative law, all with a particular focus
on remedies. She is an award-winning author of two monographs and
articles in leading international legal publications, and a
member of the editorial team of Chitty on Contracts. Her work has
been widely cited by law reformers and courts domestically and
abroad.
Solène was previously a Professor at the University of Oxford, an
Associate Professor at the London School of Economics and
Political Science and the Australian National University, and a
Fellow and College Lecturer in Law at Queens' College, Cambridge.
She read law as an undergraduate at King's College London and
Paris Panthéon-Sorbonne University and obtained an LLM and a PhD
from the University of Cambridge.
Professor Lisa Webley
Since 2018, Professor Webley has been the Chair in Legal
Education and Research for the Birmingham Law School, University
of Birmingham. From 2019 –2023, she served as Head and Dean of
Birmingham Law School.
Both did not declare any political activity.
The Law Commission aims to ensure that the law is as fair,
modern, simple and as cost-effective as possible. It conducts
research and consultations to make systematic recommendations for
consideration by Parliament.
Appointments of Commissioners to the Law Commission are made by
the Lord Chancellor under the Law Commissions Act 1965.
Appointments are regulated by the Commissioner for Public
Appointments and recruitment processes comply with the Governance
Code on Public Appointments.