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Philip Jeyaretnam

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Nationality
  
Parents
  
J. B. Jeyaretnam

Religion
  
Anglican

Employer
  
Rodyk & Davidson

Name
  
Philip Jeyaretnam

Siblings
  
Kenneth Jeyaretnam

Role
  
Lawyer




Born
  
1964
Singapore

Occupation
  
Lawyer (Senior Counsel), Writer

Known for
  
Young Artist Award (1993)South-East Asian Write Award (2003)

Relatives
  
Kenneth Jeyaretnam; Harold Walker (former chairman AFC Bournemouth)

People also search for
  
J. B. Jeyaretnam, Kenneth Jeyaretnam, Margaret Jeyaretnam

Books
  
Abraham's promise, First Loves, Tigers in paradise, Raffles place ragtime

lifereframed philip jeyaretnam on challenges sgiff 2014


Philip Antony Jeyaretnam, SC (born 1964) is the Singapore chief executive officer and global vice-chair at Dentons. He is a Senior Counsel and a former President of the Law Society of Singapore. He is also a Singaporean lawyer and novelist. He is the son of Joshua Benjamin Jeyaretnam, who was a prominent opposition politician in Singapore. His brother, Kenneth Jeyaretnam, is the secretary-general of the opposition Reform Party.

Contents

Philip Jeyaretnam Mai Sabo Leh Kenneth Jeyaretnam spill the beans on M Ravi

Behind the scenes philip jeyaretnam prestige singapore january 2017


Early life and family

Philip Jeyaretnam Tigers In Paradise The Collected Works Of Philip

Philip received his early education at Raeburn Park School and the United World College of South East Asia in Singapore, and at the Charterhouse School in Surrey, England. He then went on to Corpus Christi College at Cambridge University, where he read Law and graduated with First Class Honours in 1986. He was admitted to the Singapore Bar in 1987, and was conferred the title of Senior Counsel in 2003, when he was only 38, one of the youngest lawyers to be appointed senior counsel.

Philip Jeyaretnam Philip Jeyaretnam Singapore39s PSC and the terrorists

Philip is the younger son of the late-Singaporean opposition politician, J.B. Jeyaretnam (who was the first opposition politician to be elected to Parliament in post-independence Singapore), and Margaret Walker. This makes Philip of Sri Lankan Tamil and English descent. Growing up, he was “inspired by both [his] parents who were lawyers”. He found his father’s court work “exciting” due to “the probing, the cut and thrust, the interplay between two opponents” which “appealed to [his] competitive streak”. Philip also said that his “best days are spent right in the thrust of battle in court” where he gets to “uncover things, to get to the truth”. His older brother, Kenneth Jeyaretnam, is currently an opposition politician in Singapore (leading the Reform Party, which was founded by his father shortly before his death in 2008).

Career

On 1 January 2011, Philip was appointed as managing partner of Rodyk & Davidson LLP, one of Singapore's leading law firms. In 2016, he led the firm's combination with Dentons, forming Dentons Rodyk & Davidson LLP. He holds the positions of Singapore chief executive officer and global vice-chair at Dentons. Philip is recognised as an expert in arbitration, construction law and litigation in major legal publications. Described by Legal500 as a ‘star’ and ‘master tactician’ in 2014, Philip’s recent and significant cases include representing The Wall Street Journal on issues arising from its coverage of the 1MDB affair and defending the Papua New Guinea Sustainable Development Programme against a suit by the Government of Papua New Guinea.

Boards and memberships

Philip is a member of the Singapore Public Service Commission and the Presidential Council for Minority Rights. He has served as the Chairman of Maxwell Chambers since 2010 and is a member of the SIAC Regional Panel of Arbitrators. In July 2005, Philip was appointed as a board member of the Singapore National Kidney Foundation by the then Minister for Health to help restore proper governance and public trust. He is a former President of the Law Society of Singapore, and was Founding Chairman of the Society of Construction Law from 2002 to 2004.

Philip used to chair the Board of Trustees for the nonprofit arts group the Practice Performing Arts School, founded by the late theatre doyen Kuo Pao Kun. In his view, the arts are as important as any other elements in the growth of a society. Writers, artists, composers, directors – whom he terms "ideas people" – are needed for a lively arts scene and that more should be done to encourage new ideas from artists. He also called for greater support from the private sector for “the serious arts”, since the popular arts are commonly “funded by the market and community organisations”.

Works

Philip's collection of short stories, First Loves, published in Singapore in 1987, claimed record sales on Singapore's Sunday Times bestseller book list. It won him the compliment as Singapore's "home-grown Maugham". First Loves and his debut novel Raffles Place Ragtime (1988) were both nominated for the Commonwealth Writers Prize (South-east Asia and the South Pacific). His second novel, Abraham's Promise (1995) won a highly commended book award from the National Book Development Council of Singapore. He was presented with the 'Young Artist of the Year' award in 1993, the Montblanc-NUS Centre for the Arts Literary Award in 1997, and a S.E.A. Write Award in 2003.

In 1990, he was a Fulbright Fellowship visitor to the University of Iowa International Writing Program and to the Harvard Law School. He was also an Adjunct Professor with the Department of Building at the National University of Singapore from 2005 to 2013.

In 2015, Abraham's Promise was selected by The Business Times as one of the Top 10 English Singapore books from 1965–2015, alongside titles by Arthur Yap and Daren Shiau.

Novels

  • Raffles Place Ragtime (1988, Times Books International; 2010, Marshall Cavendish Editions) ISBN 9971655004 ISBN 9789814302463
  • Abraham's Promise (1995, Times Books International; 2010, Marshall Cavendish Editions) ISBN 9789812045157 ISBN 9789814302685
  • Tigers in Paradise: The Collected Works of Philip Jeyaretnam (2004, Times Editions) ISBN 9812327924
  • Short Stories

  • Campfire (1983, second-prize winner of the National Short Story Competition)
  • Evening Under Frangipani (1985, winner of the National Short Story Competition)
  • First Loves (1987, Times Books International; 2009, Marshall Cavendish Editions) ISBN 9971654172 ISBN 9789812618979
  • Strangler Fig (2014, collected in Singapore Noir)
  • Moonshine in Singapore (2015, collected in Singathology)
  • Anthologies

  • Gwee Li Sui, ed. Written Country: The History of Singapore through Literature (2016, Landmark Publications) ISBN 9789814189668
  • Articles (professional)

  • Co-author, "Injunctions and Interim Relief", Civil Litigation in Singapore (Sweet & Maxwell, 2016)
  • Co-author, "The Granting of Mareva Injunctions in Support of Foreign Court Proceedings" (2016) 28 SAcLJ 503
  • Author, "The Presentation of Expert Evidence at Trial", Law and Practice of Commercial Litigation in Singapore (Sweet & Maxwell, 2015)
  • Author, "Indonesia Changes Course In Investor Protection", The Business Times, 26 June 2014 (Singapore: Singapore Press Holdings, 2014)
  • Author, "Myanmar And The New York Convention: Not Just A Piece Of Paper", The Business Times, 28 May 2014 (Singapore: Singapore Press Holdings, 2014)
  • Author, "S’pore’s Role In Int’l Arbitration In Asia", The Business Times, 20 May 2014 (Singapore: Singapore Press Holdings, 2014)
  • Building and Construction Law, Singapore Academy of Law Annual Reviews (vols. 2000 - 2004; co-author)
  • Articles (non-professional)

  • Inheritance (1991) - English-written essay, subsequently translated into German in 1993.
  • Raffles Place Reviewed (2016, The Straits Times)
  • Light Among The Shadows (2016, The Business Times Lifestyle)
  • References

    Philip Jeyaretnam Wikipedia