Weekly Notes

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

Weekly Notes: legal news from ICLR – 18 September 2015

The latest buffet of legal news and events includes confusion over sex cases, the heroic resistance of art to official state stupidity, and links to some interesting reading and lectures. And over the next week Team ICLR is in Berlin, to record its impressions of international librarianship.   Ai Weiwei at the RA Prisoner of conscience makes art Continue reading

Weekly Notes: legal news from ICLR – 11 September 2015

This week’s collection of legal news and related matters includes the legality of drone strikes, the fate of Just Solutions, the future of human rights legislation and the decline and fall of English literature’s most controversial novel.   Legality of drone strikes Is there a Kill List? The announcement by David Cameron in the House Continue reading

Weekly Notes: legal news from ICLR – 4 September 2015

We resume our weekly survey of legal news and events with a catchup of what’s been happening over the vacation, both at home and abroad. Red Queen redux What does acquitted phonehacking defendant Rebekah Brooks’ reinstallation as chief executive at News Corp UK say about money, Murdoch and management? Reading Beyond Contempt, Peter Jukes’ eyewitness Continue reading

Weekly Notes: legal news from ICLR – 24 July

This week’s baggage reclaim of legal news and open and shut cases includes yet more to-ing and fro-ing on industrial action by legal aid lawyers, the tale of a terror trial that can’t be told, an attempt to prevent the plagiarism of punchlines and the locking of law behind a licence to Lexis. (Alliteration is Continue reading

Weekly Notes: legal news from ICLR – 17 July

This week’s roundup of legal news and events is brought to you from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where ICLR is showing at the annual conference of the American Association of Law Libraries (AALL). It sees both a President and a Lord Chancellor in jail; a parliamentary look at the latter’s role; and a barristerial vote for direct Continue reading

Weekly Notes: legal publishing news from ICLR – 10 July 2015

This week’s collection of legal news and events includes a major update to ICLR Online, a surprise move in legal publishing, an after dinner speech, a Gentleman’s view of gentlemen’s clubs, and a worrying retreat from the open justice rule.   Legal Publishing ICLR Online version 2.5 goes live ICLR Online, the simple and effective Continue reading

Weekly Notes: legal news from ICLR – 3 July 2015

This week’s playlist of legal news includes a decision not to defend, a decision not to prosecute reviewed, a fretting over intellectual property claims, and a direction to save only the most expensive and interesting divorces for our top family judges. Plus the usual catalogue of dreadfulness from overseas. Defence lawyers down tools Solicitors support direct action while Bar Continue reading

Weekly Notes: legal news from ICLR – 26 June 2015

This week’s tour d’horizon of legal issues covers a ministerial speech and its reception, a legal uprising, approval for a flawed scheme of advocatory accreditation, more tales of thwarted transparency, and a majority decision of the US Supreme Court making the Constitution fit for pride. Apologies for late posting – due to a Microsoft-enabled file loss issue. (Recovered eventually.) Continue reading

Weekly Notes: legal news from ICLR – 19 June 2015

This week’s collection of legal news and events includes more on Magna Carta, a legal triumph for Lego, a despatch on dubious dealings, and a survey of sickness and stress in the Civil Service. Plus more horrors from Abroad. And some nice pictures. You’re welcome.   Magna Carta redux Universal law that anyone can cite Celebrating the Continue reading

Weekly Notes: legal news from ICLR – 12 June 2015

This week’s roundup of recent legal news and events includes a magna kerfuffle over Magna Carta, transparency in family law and the case of the missing mum, and some truly awful stuff going on in foreign legal climes. Magna Carta wars Octocentenary stirs up jurisprudential ding-dong There are three primary sources of law in this Continue reading