Ross Cranston


Sir Ross Frederick Cranston is a professor of Law at London School of Economics and a retired High Court judge. He is also a former British Labour Party politician, and served as the Member of Parliament for Dudley North between 1997-2005.

Early life

Cranston was born in Australia, and attended Wavell State High School in Brisbane, Queensland. He was later a student at the University of Queensland where he was awarded a BA in 1969 and LLB in 1970. From Harvard Law School, he gained LLM in 1973. From Oxford University, he was awarded DPhil in 1976 and DCL in 1998. He became a barrister of Gray's Inn in 1976.
Cranston was a professor at London School of Economics from 1992-97 and the holder of the Cassell chair in commercial law from 1993-97. Before that he held academic posts in the UK and Australia and the Sir John Lubbock chair in banking law at QMW, being a professor of Law at Queen Mary and Westfield College from 1986-91. He was made a Queen's Counsel in 1998.

Parliamentary career

After contesting Richmond in North Yorkshire in 1992, Cranston was elected as the Member of Parliament for Dudley North at the next general election in 1997 with more than half of the votes cast. He served as Solicitor General from 1998-01, when he returned to the back benches. After speculation amongst colleagues, he announced in 2005 that he would not stand for Parliament again in the 2005 general election. He was succeeded by Ian Austin.

Law career

Cranston was the Centennial Professor of Law at the LSE from 2005 to 2007, and returned as a professor of law from 2017.
Appointed as a High Court judge in October 2007, he was assigned to the Queen's Bench Division. Marcel Berlins wrote in The Guardian at the time that Cranston's appointment was unusual among judicial appointments in recent years, given that it occurred so soon after the end of his political career. Cranston retired with effect from 16 March 2017.