Dr Shahab Saqib

Dr Shahab Saqib

Birmingham Law School
Assistant Professor in Law

Contact details

Address
Birmingham Law School
University of Birmingham
Edgbaston
Birmingham
B15 2TT
UK

Dr Shahab Saqib is an Assistant Professor and Attorney in Law with research expertise in Anti-Discrimination Law, International Human Rights Law, Critical Legal Theory, Islamic Law, Immigration Law, and the laws of Pakistan. He frequently engages in consultancy and advocacy.

Qualifications

  • PhD, King’s College London, 2024
  • LLM, SOAS University of London, 2017
  • LLB, International Islamic University Islamabad, 2015

Biography

Dr Shahab Saqib is an Assistant Professor of Law at the University of Birmingham. He has previously worked as a lecturer in law at the University of Leicester, a teaching fellow at SOAS University of London, and a teaching consultant at Oxford Summer Courses. He has also been a visiting research fellow at the University of Toronto, a fellow of the Higher Education Academy (FHEA) and a member of the Global Scholars Academy at Harvard Law School 2024.

Dr Saqib’s research focuses on Anti-Discrimination Law, International Human Rights Law, Critical Legal Theory, Islamic Law, Immigration Law, and the laws of Pakistan. He is interested in examining the limitations of equality through a decolonial lens while demystifying the constructs of law and exploring their impacts in a socio-legal space. Dr Saqib has expanded his work into different research articles, three of which are forthcoming; one in the world-leading journal ‘Leiden Journal of International Law’, the other in an Oxford University Press volume with experts in the field, and the third one with Taylor & Francis.

Dr Saqib is a legal practitioner and Attorney in Law. He practises law in the Higher Courts of Lahore, specialising in commercial, Islamic, and human rights disputes. Based on his academic and legal expertise, he has given expert consultation to different international bodies like the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD) and the Committee on Migrant Workers (CMW) on a ‘joint general recommendation/comment on public policies for addressing xenophobia and its impact on human rights’. He is also leading a micro-credential project for University of London external degree programmes.

Dr Saqib is also actively engaged in community-focused work. He currently serves as a board member of the European Network Against Racism (ENAR), one of the largest pan-European anti-racism networks. In this role, he contributes to the development of policy strategies, research initiatives, and advocacy campaigns addressing racial injustice, with a particular focus on discrimination and the lived experiences of racialised and migrant communities. Dr Saqib regularly delivers workshops and training sessions, especially tailored for marginalised groups. These sessions aim to raise legal awareness, build capacity, and empower individuals to navigate systems that often marginalise them. His community engagement bridges academic research and grassroots activism, ensuring that his scholarship remains grounded in the realities of those most affected by exclusionary legal and social structures.

Teaching

Dr Saqib currently teaches:

  • Contract Law
  • Public Law

Dr Saqib has previously taught modules including:

  • International Human Rights Law
  • Discrimination Law
  • Islamic Law
  • Public International Law
  • Contract Law
  • Public Law

Postgraduate supervision

Discrimination Law
International Human Rights Law
Critical Legal Studies
Citizenship Studies
Migration
Islamic Law
Pakistan Law


Find out more - our PhD Law  page has information about doctoral research at the University of Birmingham.

Research

Dr Saqib’s research critically interrogates discrimination laws and their societal repercussions. He has a special interest in examining the historical genealogy of citizenship and how it acts as a proxy to further inequality. He approaches international law from third world approaches to international law (TWAIL) lens to challenge the legal episteme through a decolonial lens. He is also interested in comparative legal systems, indigenous studies, and religious laws, notably Islamic law, to conceptualise an alternative.

His publications provide a nuanced way of understanding equality. His paper, ‘Race as Citizenship Personified’ deconstructs ‘colour’ as a reliable factor to define race. He metaphorically establishes that it is an idiom to falsify the inequalities associated with race. Similarly, his paper on ‘Race Convention’ analyses different cases decided by the committee to argue how it misunderstands the evolving nature of racial discrimination. He is currently working on different projects that focus on identity formation through legal categories, with a special interest in race, citizenship, and migration, and their profound impacts on the lives and health of marginalised communities.

Dr Saqib is also a convenor of the Equality and Human Rights Law stream at the Socio-Legal Studies Association (SLSA), where he curates panels, workshops and roundtables that foreground cutting-edge research on structural discrimination. He is also an active member of the Critical Legal Conference (CLC), where he participates in different working groups. In addition, he is a member of ICON-S, where he is introducing an interest group on critical public law, aimed at interrogating how ostensibly neutral administrative and constitutional frameworks perpetuate exclusion and affect different communities.

Publications

Recent publications

Article

Saqib, S 2025, 'Avoiding the Semantic Conundrum of the Race Convention through the Forms of Racial Discrimination', Leiden Journal of International Law.

Saqib, S & Abbasi, MZ 2025, 'Teaching Contract Law across Multiple Jurisdictions', The Law Teacher.

Chapter (peer-reviewed)

Saqib, S 2026, Race as Citizenship Personified: Illuminating the Ghosts of Racial Discrimination in International Law. in Emancipating International Law: Confronting the Violence of Racialised Boundaries. Oxford University Press.

Saqib, S 2025, The ‘Model Act’ for Disaster Risk Reduction in International Law. in R Shaw (ed.), Encyclopedia of Disaster Risk Reduction. Springer Singapore.

Doctoral Thesis

Saqib, S 2024, 'Discrimination against Ideological Minorities: An Ideological Critique of International and Islamic Law through case studies of India and Pakistan', ???thesis.qualification.phd???, King’s College London . <https://kclpure.kcl.ac.uk/portal/en/studentTheses/discrimination-against-ideological-minorities-an-ideological-crit>

Other contribution

Saqib, S 2025, From Hostile Environment to Hostile Nation: False Regret and Lessons Unlearnt from the Windrush Scandal. University of Birmingham. <https://blog.bham.ac.uk/lawresearch/2025/10/from-hostile-environment-to-hostile-nation-false-regret-and-lessons-unlearnt-from-the-windrush-scandal/>

Saqib, S 2024, Suggestions for Developing CERD-CMW Joint General Recommendation/Comment on Public Policies for addressing Xenophobia and its Impacts on Human Rights..

Saqib, S 2022, Blasphemy, Human Rights and the intervention of the Supreme Court of Pakistan in the Mansha Masih case. Oxford Human Rights Hub. <https://ohrh.law.ox.ac.uk/blasphemy-human-rights-the-intervention-of-the-supreme-court-of-pakistan-in-the-mansha-masih-case/ >

Saqib, S 2022, Rethinking Elevation of Judges: Fate of an Idea Whose Time Has Come. Courting the Law. <https://courtingthelaw.com/2022/01/10/commentary/rethinking-elevation-of-judges-fate-of-an-idea-whose-time-has-come/ >

Saqib, S 2022, Symposium on Classism and the International Legal Profession: The Tragicomedy of Critics in the Classist Discourse of International Law. Opinio Juris. <http://opiniojuris.org/2022/12/22/symposium-on-classism-and-the-international-legal-profession-the-tragicomedy-of-critics-in-the-classist-discourse-of-international-law/>

View all publications in research portal