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News, analysis, comment and updates from ICLR's case law and UK legislation platform
This week ICLR participated for the first time in the #GreatLegalBake organised by the London Legal Support Trust. Among the creations on display were representations in cake form of ICLR’s key publications, both online and in print. For the online version, Paul Magrath created a batch of chocolate brownies iced to represent the minicards on the… Continue reading
This week’s roundup of legal news and comment includes charity regulation, media support, the law on trolling and intimidation, and the parole board. [Updated 15.02.18] Charities Regulation, reputational risk and safeguarding obligations The revelations in the media over the last week about Oxfam’s failure properly to investigate and deal with allegations of sexual misconduct by… Continue reading
This week’s roundup of legal news and comment focuses on access to justice and is dedicated to the memory of the late Sir Henry Brooke, who did so much to promote these things. Here he is at the Bach Commission (photo: Bar Council, from an article in Legal Voice) Sir Henry Brooke We were very… Continue reading
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 author… Continue reading
‘We need to be in touch with the real world; we need to make sure that we all play our part in promoting the highest standards, and in ensuring that we achieve and enhance the quality, integrity and best practice to which we aspire.’ Sir Geoffrey Vos, Chancellor, speaking to the Chancery Bar Association’s annual… Continue reading
David Burrows considers an old scandal and an even older statute in the context of a persisting impediment on the ability of the press to print lurid accounts of the private lives of those involved in defended divorce disputes. A modern protection for public morals A flurry of tweets and blog traffic earlier this month… Continue reading
This week’s roundup of legal news and comment includes legal aid and the rule of law, parole board transparency revisited, a court reporting crisis, and a divinely inspired judicial intervention in the jury room. Legal Aid Cash for courts not cases, says Gauke The new Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice, David Gauke,… Continue reading
This week’s roundup of legal news and comment includes a ministerial reshuffle, transparency of parole board and coroner’s court decisions, and media regulation. Politics All change at the Ministry As with the changing of the guard (depicted), cabinet reshuffles seem to involve a lot of individuals marching in and out of Downing Street, with not… Continue reading
Giving his first annual press conference since his appointment earlier this year, the Lord Chief Justice said his two main concerns would be to increase awareness of what judges do, and to secure reforms needed to modernise the justice system. After his speech, he answered questions from the press, some of which raised interesting issues… Continue reading
The great hall in the Royal Courts of Justice has a cathedral-like splendour by day, but on a freezing midwinter evening its dim chandeliers failed to dispel the cavernous gloom. It was here that a crowd of some 62 legal professionals gathered on the evening of Monday 11 December, to hear about the latest developments in… Continue reading