Resurrecting a dead horse? PACE Code B and local authority enforcement powers – St Philips Barristers

Posted May 2nd, 2025 in news by sally

‘Defence arguments have a habit of resurrecting themselves as one generation of lawyers takes up the baton from the previous generation. In this article, Dan Jacklin explores a recent spate in defendants raising the issue of noncompliance with PACE Code B when subject to various local authority powers of entry, search, inspection and seizure, is a case in point.’

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St Philips Barristers, 30th April 2025

Source: st-philips.com

Family Law for Family Life: Rethinking the Boundaries of Family Law – Current Legal Problems

Posted May 2nd, 2025 in news by sally

‘A key function of family law is to regulate family breakdown and conflict. Consequently, family law has been characterized as under threat as family disputes have been diverted from courts and lawyers, and its norms have become inaccessible to many. This article questions the scale of the threat. It argues for a rethinking of the boundaries of family law to shift focus away from dispute resolution and towards more constructive and anticipatory approaches. It shows how family law norms and rules might usefully be understood at the beginning of, or during, relationships. As such, the relevance of family law can be recaptured by seeing it as a tool for better informed—and perhaps normatively better—relationships over time; family law can be for family life, as well as family conflict. Finally, the article considers how contemporary shifts in the modalities of family law might be embraced and extended to accommodate a family law for family life agenda.’

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Current Legal Problems, 22nd April 2025

Source: academic.oup.com

Man’s £4,000 fine for noisy rooster leaves neighbours cock-a-hoop – The Guardian

Posted May 2nd, 2025 in news by sally

‘Subjecting your neighbours to early starts is nothing to crow about, the owner of a cockerel has discovered to his cost.’

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The Guardian, 1st May 2025

Source: www.theguardian.com

Assisted dying, vulnerability, and the potential value of prospective legal authorization – Medical Law Review

Posted May 2nd, 2025 in news by sally

‘Concern for vulnerable people is a crucial issue when considering the legalization of assisted dying (AD), but the meaning and normative significance of vulnerability in this context is under-explored. We examine vulnerability and the protective obligation through the lens of vulnerability theory to improve understanding of vulnerability in the context of AD. By appealing to a more nuanced account of vulnerability, we argue that the current ban on AD in England and Wales is a blunt tool that lacks compassion and fails to recognize the importance of personal autonomy, as well as the relationship between vulnerability and autonomy. Recently, some emerging lawful models of AD purport to better protect the vulnerable via prospective legal authorization. This is also a feature of recent English Assisted Dying bills, with proposals for judicial or quasi-judicial authorization, and so we consider the potential value of prospective legal authorization. Although this approach risks being burdensome for applicants, we suggest that it could, in principle, not only safeguard vulnerable individuals, but also enhance end-of-life autonomy thereby offering support for a restrictive approach to lawful AD.’

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Medical Law Review, 17th April 2025

Source: academic.oup.com

LGBTQ+ charities warn of ‘genuine crisis’ for trans people after UK ruling – The Guardian

Posted May 2nd, 2025 in news by sally

‘Fourteen national LGBTQ+ charities have written to Keir Starmer seeking an urgent meeting to discuss what they describe as “a genuine crisis for the rights, dignity and inclusion of trans people in the UK” after the supreme court’s ruling on biological sex.’

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The Guardian, 2nd May 2025

Source: www.theguardian.com

The Inconspicuous Impact of Feminist Pressure through Law – Current Legal Problems

Posted May 2nd, 2025 in news by sally

‘Law reformers tend to be remembered as those responsible for transforming the law; but for their involvement, the law may not have changed as it has. Yet when evidence of this is not apparent, we might discard as remote campaigns which were in fact very important. These campaigns may have been neither immediately nor directly successful, but had, what I have termed, ‘inconspicuous impact’. Inconspicuous impact is an effect upon the law that did ultimately lead to change, but not in a linear or short-term fashion. The effect is inconspicuous because it relates to efforts to change the law that are not typically viewed or credited as having contributed to reform, perhaps because those efforts were initially or ostensibly unsuccessful. The inconspicuousness of impact is especially characteristic of feminist efforts to reform the law through legal channels since historically, feminists have struggled to gain a sympathetic ear among members of the executive or judiciary. This has often left feminist pressure groups outside of formal law-making processes, but they have nevertheless been lawmakers in an indirect sense. This article is about why, and how, we should pay attention to the more subtle ways in which feminists have contributed to law’s development. Using examples from the attempts of one feminist pressure group to use law as a tool for change – the Married Women’s Association – I identify reasons why impact can be inconspicuous and why this should lead to revisionist accounts of legal history. I argue that this approach compels us to look in different places, widen our intellectual bandwidth, and rethink what constitutes law reform.’

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Current Legal Problems, 19th April 2025

Source: academic.oup.com

Windrush Compensation Scheme: 2025 Guide – Richmond Chamers

Posted May 2nd, 2025 in news by sally

‘The government has recently announced a £1.5 million fund to support access to compensation for victims of the Windrush scandal. This is in the form of the Windrush Compensation Advocacy Support Fund which aims to offer support to those applying to the Windrush Compensation Scheme.’

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Richmond Chambers, 28th April 2025

Source: immigrationbarrister.co.uk

Cybersecurity in the UK – House of Commons Library

Posted May 2nd, 2025 in news by sally

‘This briefing provides an overview of cybersecurity in the UK. It explains the nature of the cyber threat, including how cyber attacks work. It describes the policy and regulatory frameworks, as well areas of reform such as ‘ethical hacking’.’

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House of Commons Library, 1st May 2025

Source: commonslibrary.parliament.uk

Family Law Newsletter – Spire Barristers

Posted May 2nd, 2025 in news by sally

‘Family Law Newsletter – April 2025; Articles, news, legislation updates and case updates from Care Proceedings, Private Law and Financial Remedy matters.’

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Spire Barristers, 21st April 2025

Source: www.spirebarristers.co.uk

Assisted dying impact assessment to put price on enacting change in England and Wales – The Guardian

Posted May 2nd, 2025 in news by sally

‘A long-awaited assessment of the impact of assisted dying legislation will put a price on administrating the procedure for the first time and is expected to conclude it will save parts of the NHS money by accelerating the deaths of terminally ill people.’

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The Guardian, 1st May 2025

Source: www.theguardian.com

Personal Injury and Clinical Negligence Newsletter – St John’s Buildings

Posted May 2nd, 2025 in news by sally

‘In this edition we have articles from four experienced members of the St John’s Buildings team: David Taylor, Catherine Dent, Jessica Denton and James Ellis, tackling subjects including disadvantage on the labour market claims, police errors of judgment and negligence, and the assessment of expert’s fees in composite agency invoices.’

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St John's Chambers, 24th April 2025

Source: stjohnsbuildings.com

The Fraud Newsletter – Red Lion Chambers

Posted May 2nd, 2025 in news by sally

‘The Fraud Newsletter is out now summarising the latest developments in fraud from April 2025 including:

– Our exclusive Q&A with Jonathan Fisher KC on his Independent Review of Disclosure
– The news on the latest arrests and charges in SFO bribery investigations
– New guidance on corporate self-reporting
– The FCA’s annual work programme for 2025/2026’

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Red Lion Chambers, 1st May 2025

Source: redlionchambers.co.uk

MPs set to vote on decriminalising abortion in England and Wales – The Guardian

Posted May 2nd, 2025 in news by sally

‘MPs are expected to vote on whether to decriminalise abortion in England and Wales this summer, with two Labour backbenchers to put forward amendments to government legislation to change the law.’

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The Guardian, 1st May 2025

Source: www.theguardian.com

Stay Another Day: Court of Appeal Set to Reconsider Samantha Danyelle Clarke v Matthew Poole and Others [2025] EWCA Civ 447 – Ropewalk Chambers

Posted May 2nd, 2025 in news by sally

‘The Court of Appeal is set to consider the correct legal test for imposing a stay on a personal injury claim where a claimant does not wish to undergo a medical test relevant to issues of causation and quantum. The test was previously considered to be the test in Laycock v Lagoe [1997] PIQR 518.’

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Ropewalk Chambers, 1st May 2025

Source: ropewalk.co.uk

Woman jailed for killing violent man suffered abuse after release, Cornwall inquest hears – The Guardian

Posted May 2nd, 2025 in news by sally

‘A woman who was jailed for life for murdering a violent man when she was 17, spending five years in prison before a successful appeal, suffered exploitation and abuse after she was freed, her inquest has been told.’

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The Guardian, 1st May 2025

Source: www.theguardian.com

Disrepair Claims: to plead or not to plead? – St Ives Chambers

Posted May 2nd, 2025 in news by sally

‘Disrepair litigation remains a regular feature of the county court landscape and recent cases have brought into sharp focus the adequacy of the pleadings underpinning such claims. Commencing litigation with a cogent and well-founded statement of case is critical not only to the parties’ respective prospects of success, but also to case management decisions and costs recovery.’

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St Ives Chambers, 22nd April 2025

Source: d23mtoo6rceerw.cloudfront.net

New single UK tax on share transfers to be introduced – OUT-LAW.com

Posted May 2nd, 2025 in news by sally

‘A new single tax on transfers of shares and securities will be introduced to replace the current separate taxes of stamp duty and stamp duty reserve tax (SDRT), HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) has confirmed.’

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OUT-LAW.com, 1st May 2025

Source: www.pinsentmasons.com