Justice (R) Syed Mansoor Ali Shah is Distinguished Chair in Constitutionalism & Justice and Professor of Practice at the Shaikh Ahmad Hassan School of Law (SAHSOL), Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS). He has been appointed Oscar M. Ruebhausen Distinguished Visiting Fellow at Yale Law School (2026) and Bok Visiting International Professor at the University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School (2027). He previously served as Senior Puisne Judge of the Supreme Court of Pakistan and as Chief Justice of the Lahore High Court, completing over sixteen years of judicial service marked by transformative constitutional, commercial, and arbitration jurisprudence.

Widely recognised as a reform-minded and research-driven jurist, Justice Shah’s judicial work spans constitutionalism, judicial independence, human rights, electoral justice, climate justice, disability rights, gender equality, and child-centred justice. His judgments consistently reinforced dignity, inclusion, and democratic accountability as foundational constitutional commitments. He strengthened protections for minorities and vulnerable communities while affirming the sanctity of the vote and citizens’ right to meaningful political participation.

In the commercial sphere, he pioneered Pakistan’s modern pro-arbitration framework, strengthened enforcement of foreign arbitral awards, and institutionalised court-annexed mediation across Punjab. As Chair of the National Arbitration Law Committee (2023–2024), he led the drafting of a modern Arbitration Bill aligned with the UNCITRAL Model Law, aimed at positioning Pakistan as a competitive regional arbitration jurisdiction. He is an accredited mediator with CEDR (London) and remains actively engaged as an international commercial arbitrator and legal consultant.

Justice Shah also championed judicial modernisation and technological innovation. He introduced enterprise-level IT systems in the judiciary, promoted data-driven governance, and authored Pakistan’s first Supreme Court judgment on Artificial Intelligence, advocating ethical and responsible integration of emerging technologies into judicial processes.

Educated at the University of Cambridge and the University of the Punjab, and a graduate of Aitchison College, he began his professional career as a corporate and constitutional litigator and was a founding partner of Afridi, Shah & Minallah before his elevation to the bench in 2009.

In November 2025, he resigned from the Supreme Court in fidelity to constitutional supremacy and judicial independence, reflecting a principled commitment to institutional integrity.

Now engaged in academia, he is committed to building rigorous, ethical, and globally connected legal education in Pakistan. He mentors students across institutions and actively supports educational initiatives, including his alma mater, Aitchison College. Beyond academia, he remains actively engaged in international arbitration and is available for appointment as an international commercial arbitrator, mediator, and strategic legal consultant on complex cross-border disputes and regulatory matters.

Internationally, he is an Honorary Bencher of Lincoln’s Inn, a Judicial Member of the Global Judicial Institute on the Environment (Brazil), and a member of Yale University’s Global Constitutionalism Program. A widely travelled speaker, he has lectured at Harvard, Yale, NYU (New York and Abu Dhabi), the University of Chicago, Humboldt University of Berlin, and IE University, and represented Pakistan at COP-28 and COP-29 on climate-justice jurisprudence. In 2016, he was invited by Pope Francis to the Pontifical Academy of Sciences for dialogue on climate change and moral responsibility.

Justice Shah’s professional journey reflects a sustained devotion to constitutional morality, institutional reform, technological modernisation, and the principled advancement of justice.

Outside professional life, Justice Shah is an avid golfer, tennis and padel player, cyclist, and reader, with a strong interest in travel and music. His life’s work embodies a principled commitment to strengthening institutions, expanding fundamental rights, fostering innovation, and upholding the Constitution with clarity, courage, and conscience.