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

Weekly Notes: legal news from ICLR – 26 February 2016

This week’s guided tour takes us behind the scenes at the BBC in the 1970s, to the more contemporary legal world of tribunals, prosecutors and the Supreme Court, and then back to the BBC for a mashed up glimpse of fictitious Victorian grime and detection. (But, no doubt to everyone’s relief, nothing this week about Continue reading

Weekly Notes: legal news from ICLR – 19 February 2016

This week’s roundup of legal news and commentary includes the opening of the referendum season, the passing of two literary giants, the correction of a 30-year misdirection, and a new guide to Chancery practice. Plus Apple v FBI writ.   EU referendum In / Out / Shake it all about The Prime Minister David Cameron Continue reading

The Crime Museum

The Crime Museum is a collection of objects and documents preserved by the police from crimes they have investigated. It used to be called the Police Museum and is based at New Scotland Yard. A selection of its contents forms the basis of an exhibition currently (until 10 April 2016) on display at the Museum Continue reading

Weekly Notes: legal news from ICLR – 12 February

This week’s roundup of legal news and comment includes a new approach to prisons, notes and queries on court reporting, two legal issues on internet links and the end of the Indy. Prison reform Prime Minister outlines plan for reform of prisons On 8 February David Cameron spoke at the Policy Exchange on prison reform Continue reading

Expanding The Weekly Law Reports – Introducing Volume 4

We are pleased to announce a significant expansion in the coverage offered by The Weekly Law Reports. Since it entered circulation in 1953, The Weekly Law Reports has provided the most up to date and comprehensive generalist coverage of law-changing judgments in England and Wales. Over the past 63 years, the volume of cases entering Continue reading

Weekly Notes: legal news from ICLR – 5 February 2016

This week’s roundup of legal news and commentary includes the arbitrary detention of Assange; the ever-receding British Bill of Rights; a radio programme about divorce; matters of judgment, judgement (with an e) and instinct; and the future of electoral law. Inter, as they say, alia. [Updated 8 Feb]. Human rights UN working group finds Assange in “arbitrary” Continue reading

Weekly Notes: legal news from ICLR – 29 January 2016

This week’s roundup of legal news and commentary includes Lord Chancellor’s legal aid U-turn, a parliamentary look at the court fees hike, a welcome piloting of transparency in the Court of Protection, and some good and bad news on diversity.   Criminal Legal Aid Gove’s dramatic U-turn poses question And the question is: what next? Continue reading

Book Review: Kid Gloves, by Adam Mars-Jones

In a blend of biography, memoir and a certain amount of amateur legal analysis, Adam Mars-Jones discusses his sometimes difficult relationship with his father, the High Court judge Sir William Mars-Jones, whom he cared for in his declining years and now recalls both as a private man with his family and as a public figure Continue reading

Weekly Notes: legal news from ICLR – 22 January 2016

The week’s roundup of legal news and comment includes the Miranda case on the use of anti-terror law against journalists, calls for change in the law on sexual offences, a discussion of the pros and cons of print and digital media and of printing on vellum or paper, and, in our international section, some egregious Continue reading