Justice Matters

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Brexit and the constitution: seven lessons

We’re having a constitutional moment – the Brexit process has exposed a fairly dysfunctional relationship between law and politics in Westminster. Some lessons learned. 

23 May 2019 / Dr Jack Simson Caird

Brexit and the politics of law-making

Should MPs be able to legislate contrary to the wishes of the government of the day? The Cooper Bill has raised fundamental questions over the relationship between law and politics in the United Kingdom 

18 April 2019 / Dr Jack Simson Caird

Some citizens are more equal than others

Citizenship-stripping: principled, random or opportunistic? The fall of ISIS and potential return to the UK of British citizens who left to fight under its banner confronts ministers with difficult and divisive issues 

18 April 2019 / Colin Yeo

Draft Domestic Abuse Bill: Progress or pitfall?

The draft Domestic Abuse Bill is dividing opinion. Initially hailed as a step-change, why is it now generating significant backlash? asks Christina Warner 

18 April 2019 / Christina Warner

Can we fix it? Yes we can

Reports come thick and fast of crumbling courts and inhumane conditions whilst 50% of the magistrates’ court estate is sold off for luxe developments. If the Ministry of Justice won’t fix things, might localisation be the answer? 

The youth court spiral

Legal aid, resource and disclosure issues are hitting the youth courts just as hard as the adult system. Without proper attention they will continue their downward spiral 

19 March 2019 / Joanne Kane

Remunerated whistleblowers

An argument for a new statutory framework: where money changes hands, and a whistleblower is paid for the disclosure of information, so much is still shrouded in mystery 

19 March 2019 / Jonathan Fisher KC
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R v E and the great disclosure debate

Measured working guide in an imperfect world 

26 February 2019 / Jerry Hayes / Mary Aspinall-Miles

The great disclosure debate: surviving a perfect storm

Rebuilding confidence in disclosure in criminal cases: a consideration of the recent failures and how they can be avoided in future 

26 February 2019 / Julia Smart / Lynne Townley

The ‘meaningful vote’

The fight for the right to decide – a quick guide to the Parliamentary showdown over the Brexit deal and what it bodes for the future 

26 February 2019 / Dr Jack Simson Caird
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Chair’s Column

Heading into summer

Chair of the Bar Sam Townend KC encourages colleagues to take a proper break over summer and highlights recent events and key activities for autumn

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