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

Weekly Notes: legal news from ICLR — 13 February 2017

This week’s tour of the legal horizon includes a parliament voting, a speaker speaking, a court reporting, a president tweeting and a couple more of those referendum thingies. Will o’ the people or will o’ the wisp, we’ve all got democracy coming to us.     [Image via the ImmigrationJustice.US portal: see story below]   Parliament Continue reading

Weekly Notes: legal news from ICLR — 6 February 2017

This week’s roundup of legal news and commentary features a poor reflection on parliament, an attempt to bring employment law to heel, an investigation into fake news and a man with a fake tan. Never a dull moment these days. Brexit A Looking Glass Vote ‘I don’t understand you,’ said Alice. ‘It’s dreadfully confusing!’ ‘That’s the Continue reading

Family law no island (5): Precedent — a search for certainty in law

David Burrows continues his series discussing the impact on family law and practice of legal developments in other areas, with the first of two articles on the common law doctrine of precedent. 1. Precedent: a search for certainty in law Certainty and the law In his Sir David Williams lecture The Rule of Law 2016 (PDF) Lord Bingham Continue reading

Weekly Notes: legal news from ICLR – 30 January 2017

This week’s roundup of legal news and comment is all about the Law versus the Executive, with our Supreme Court upholding parliamentary sovereignty in the face of a trigger-minded executive at home and federal judges blocking executive overreach in the USA. Yes, it’s all been kicking off this week, but there’s a lovely ray of Continue reading

Weekly Notes: legal news from ICLR — 23 January 2017

This week’s roundup of legal news and comment includes a prime minister, three presidents, a consultation, and another referendum. No one can say it hasn’t been an eventful week! Politics May’s big speech: a hard (boiled) Brexit On Tuesday Theresa May delivered her much talked-up and widely anticipated speech on the UK’s big “plan” for Continue reading

Brexit: what the hell happens now? Book review

The Brexit vote took the nation by surprise. For those who voted to Leave, exiting from the EU can’t happen fast enough. But few seem to appreciate what is actually involved in achieving this. Ian Dunt’s book examines the options and implications, and makes clear that the referendum result was only the start of a Continue reading

Weekly Notes: legal news from ICLR — 16 January 2017

This opening salvo of our regular termtime bombardment of recent legal news and comment includes a war law jaw,  a mailmash on lawyers’ earnings, a mismatch on hate speech, and a ban on abusive cross examination. Plus legal snippets from foreign climes. International law AG: it’s war! But not as we know it The Attorney Continue reading

Human Rights in the World: Why the West is not necessarily the Best

At a panel presentation given at the Annual Meeting 2017 of the Association of American Law Schools in San Francisco this week, six law professors gave short talks on the topic of Human Rights Outside the West. Although each speaker approached the topic from a different perspective, there was a common theme: how well has Continue reading

#AALS 2017 Conference Diary

The story so far… Paul Hastings and Paul Magrath of ICLR are in San Francisco for the 2017 Annual Meeting of the Association of American Law Schools. We’re at Booth No 406 in the Exhibition Hall, sweltering under the chandeliers of what is otherwise known as the Grand Ballroom. Hundreds of law school deans, professors Continue reading