Blog

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

ICLR Pupillage Award 2018: We have a winner!

Congratulations to Daniel Wand, winner of the ICLR Pupillage Award 2018   Daniel will be starting pupillage in October 2018 in the Chambers of Timothy Raggatt QC, at 4 King’s Bench Walk, which has expertise in all areas of common law. Daniel attended Hayes School in Kent before completing his undergraduate and postgraduate studies in Continue reading

Weekly Notes: legal news from ICLR – 9 July 2018

This week’s roundup includes new courts for old, lower court fees, judicial recruitment, legal tech, and rapidly dating Brexit developments. Courts City of London fraud and cyber crime complex The Ministry of Justice announced last week that a new courts complex specifically designed to tackle cyber crime, fraud, and economic crime would be opened on the site of Continue reading

Weekly Notes: legal news from ICLR – 2 July 2018

This week’s roundup of legal news and comment includes an Act of Withdrawal, new judges, anonymised litigants, legal books and bullies, and a bit about ICLR. Plus murder and unwanted criminal connections overseas. Legislation EU Withdrawal Act The Queen gave her formal assent to the passage of the European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018, which you Continue reading

Weekly Notes: legal news from ICLR – 25 June 2018

This week’s roundup steals a march on Brexit, and casts an eye on probation, accountancy, family courts and young criminals, before tripping the maple leaf rag. Brexit March for second vote rambles against the shambles The second anniversary of the referendum in which just shy of 52% of those eligible to do so (some 17 Continue reading

Weekly Notes: legal news from ICLR – 18 June 2018

This week’s roundup covers a blocked ban on upskirting, bankers’ profitable wills, a looming crisis of children in care, open courts and a diverse judiciary, plus rifled copyright from the USA and a rebel yell from Oz.   Crime Upskirting shambles On Friday 15 June the Ministry of Justice announced that ‘“Upskirting” is set to Continue reading

Book review: Rewriting children’s rights judgments

Helen Stalford, Kathryn Hollingsworth and Stephen Gilmore (eds), Rewriting children’s rights judgments: from academic vision to new practice (Hart publishing, 2017) Reviewed by David Burrows   Judgments from a children’s perspective The authors describe their aim in Rewriting children’s rights judgments as of revisiting existing case law and redrafting judgements from a children’s rights perspective. Continue reading

Weekly Notes: legal news from ICLR – 11 June 2018

This week’s roundup of legal news and comment focuses on the courts, court reform, legal aid and family law. Court reform HMCTS Reform programme The Lord Chief Justice, Lord Burnett of Maldon, delivering the first Sir Henry Brooke Memorial Lecture under the title The Age of Reform, provided a somewhat panglossian* update on the current Continue reading

#BIALL2018 – Birmingham, here we come!

ICLR will be in Birmingham for the next few days attending the annual conference of the British and Irish Association of Law Librarians This year’s BIALL conference is being held at the Hilton Birmingham Metropole, NEC Birmingham, in the heart of the English midlands, from 7 to 9 June 2018. The theme of the conference Continue reading

Weekly Notes: legal news from ICLR – 4 June 2018

Returning on the eve of the new Trinity law term, we catch up on some of the legal stories and commentary over the last fortnight. These include the application of international law in cyberspace, of domestic law to social media, and of European law to data protection. Plus developments relating to judges, courts and case Continue reading

Book review: Judge Walden – Back in session, by Peter Murphy

Paul Magrath reviews the second volume of Peter Murphy’s  entertaining short stories about the Resident Judge of Bermondsey Crown Court This second volume of short stories about Charlie Walden, the resident judge of Bermondsey Crown Court, confirms his status as one of the enduring characters of legal fiction. But although the tales are told with Continue reading