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News, analysis, comment and updates from ICLR's case law and UK legislation platform

The Social-Distancing Compliant White Book Charity Relay Reading Challenge 2020

The Social-Distancing Compliant White Book Charity Relay Reading Challenge 2020

Are you up to the mark on rules and regs? Can you cut the mustard with civil procedure small print? Do you have a fine and as yet unruined reading voice? If so, why not sign up to this charity challenge and help provide essential legal sport. (Shouldn’t that be “support”? Ed) The current crisis Continue reading about The Social-Distancing Compliant White Book Charity Relay Reading Challenge 2020

‘Right to buy’ to be extended to prisoners
Publishing the courts: Judgments and public information on the Internet – Lord Justice Brooke (2003)

Publishing the courts: Judgments and public information on the Internet – Lord Justice Brooke (2003)

Text of a speech given by Lord Justice Brooke, Lord Justice of Appeal, at the Commonwealth Law Conference – Melbourne, 15 April 2003. Courts in many parts of the Commonwealth are adopting the Internet as a key mechanism to communicate information about their role and function and to distribute their judgments. In this paper the Continue reading about Publishing the courts: Judgments and public information on the Internet – Lord Justice Brooke (2003)

What is a Law Report?

What is a Law Report?

A law report is a record of a judicial decision on a point of law which sets a precedent. Not all decisions taken in a court of law set a precedent, however interesting they may be in terms of the facts of the case or its consequences. A decision is only reportable if lays down Continue reading about What is a Law Report?

Family Law No Island: Partial disclosure of material in family proceedings

Family Law No Island: Partial disclosure of material in family proceedings

Continuing his series discussing the impact on family law and practice of legal developments in other areas, David Burrows considers the grounds on which one party in proceedings may restrict the disclosure to one or more other parties of documents and other materials before the court, and the scope and procedure for doing so. Disclosure Continue reading about Family Law No Island: Partial disclosure of material in family proceedings

Victims or Villains – is the freedom of the press under threat?
General Election 2017: what the party manifestos say about law and justice
Book review: Evidence in Family Proceedings by David Burrows
The legacy of LASPO

The legacy of LASPO

It is four years since the Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012 came into effect, on April Fool’s day 2013. The Act itself was passed five years ago. Its effects, as we predicted at the time, have been seismic. Image: The Manifesto of Justice (from UK General Election 2015) The policy behind Continue reading about The legacy of LASPO

Restricted and Redacted: Where now for human rights and digital information control?

Restricted and Redacted: Where now for human rights and digital information control?

Last November the Information Law and Policy Centre Annual Lecture and Workshop brought together a wide range of legal academics, lawyers, policy-makers and interested parties to discuss the future of human rights and digital information control. Paul Magrath from ICLR was there. The papers from the workshop have recently been published in a special edition Continue reading about Restricted and Redacted: Where now for human rights and digital information control?