About
Rose Tempowski is the Undergraduate Programme Lead, Director of the SLS Death Penalty Casework Clinic and a Senior Teaching Fellow within Southampton Law School at the University of Southampton.
She specialises in Criminal Law, Human Rights and American Law.
Research
Research groups
Research interests
- Criminal Justice
- Juvenile Justice
- Intersection of Law and Science
- Legislative Process
Current research
Rose's PhD research designed a novel method of analysing and grading the quality of scientific narratives and authorities presented to US state legislative committees. Her research examined whether neuroscientific evidence regarding adolescent brain development, and its impact on decision-making, was discussed when state legislative committees considered legislation proposing alterations to the upper age limit of juvenile court jurisdiction, or the mechanism by which young people are transferred from the juvenile court to the adult criminal court.
Publications
Teaching
Rose is the Module Lead for Miscarriages of Justice (LAWS3089) and Legal Skills (LAWS1023/2037) on the LLB and also teaches tutorials for Criminal Law (LAWS1020). Rose is Module Lead for the legal component of the interdisciplinary module Engineering Management and Law (FEEG2006) in partnership with the Engineering and Business Schools.
As Director of the the SLS Death Penalty Casework Clinic, Rose supervises a team of undergraduate students conducting practical clinical work on active death penalty cases in the United States.
Biography
Rose joined the University of Southampton in 2022. Previously, she was a Senior Tutor at the University of Law where she taught across the LLB, LPC, GDL, MA and the PGDip/MA. Before this, Rose taught Criminal Law at Birmingham City University.
She was admitted as an attorney in the state of New York in 2013 and, through the legal charity ‘Amicus’, spent most of 2017 at the Arizona Capital Representation Project. In 2019, Rose was invited to be a Scholar-in-Residence at the Law Library of Congress in Washington DC to make use of their catalogue for her doctoral project.