Taking Human Rights Seriously at Work: The Past, Present and Future of Employment Law – Industrial Law Journal

Posted September 26th, 2025 in news by sally

‘Human rights are increasingly adopted as a perspective on employment law and the regulation of work. Yet there remains a lack of clarity over key questions such as how the relationship between employment law and human rights should be understood, why human rights law has had limited impact in this context and whether/how it might more effectively advance workers’ interests. This article uses the academic writings and judicial decisions of Sir Patrick Elias as a lens through which to consider these issues. It makes three central contributions, relating, respectively, to the past, present and future of employment law and human rights. First, it is suggested that employment law be reimagined so that human rights are a central and foundational concern, with a core goal of employment law being to ensure that human rights are taken seriously at work. Second, by reference to Elias’ scholarship and leading decisions, the article identifies the systemic barriers that mainstream interpretations of human rights law create to the protection of workers’ human rights. Finally, the article outlines potential future applications of human rights law in the employment context which, together, would represent a significant step towards a more comprehensive framework for protecting workers, that takes human rights seriously at work.’

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Industrial Relations Journal, 22nd September 2025

Source: doi.org

Crown court backlog in England and Wales hits new record of almost 80,000 cases – The Guardian

Posted September 26th, 2025 in news by sally

‘The crown court backlog in England and Wales has risen by 10% to a new record of almost 80,000 cases, while wait times for trial dates have reached up to four years.’

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The Guardian, 25th September 2025

Source: www.theguardian.com

Transparency in the Court of Protection – what is it good for and how long should restrictions last? – Transparency Project

Posted September 26th, 2025 in news by sally

‘By accident or design, Poole J appears to have found himself the Tier 3 transparency guru. In Re Gardner (Deceased)(Duration of Transparency Order) [2025] EWCOP 34 (T3) he made a range of important observations about (and in passing raised some questions about) the operation of the transparency framework within the Court of Protection.’

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Transparency Project, 25th September 2025

Source: www.mentalcapacitylawandpolicy.org.uk

A matter of life and breath for Ella – the formally acknowledged threat of air pollution as a breach of the right to life – Legal Studies

Posted September 26th, 2025 in news by sally

‘The death of Ella Kissi-Debrah in 2013 will be forever notable as the first instance in the United Kingdom of air pollution being recorded as contributing to the death of an individual. Whilst in itself a monumental shift in consideration of air pollution and the impact on human health, the recording by the coroner of Ella’s death as having been contributed to by air pollution has significant human rights implications. This piece considers the circumstances surrounding both Ella’s death and the report of the coroner and connects these to decisions of the European Court of Human Rights. It presents the argument that the failure to address a known risk to life presented by air pollution could constitute a breach of the right to life protected by Article 2 of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (ECHR). Cases in which environmental conditions are found by the Court to have breached Article 2 are rare, but this paper contends that the formal acknowledgement of the threat of air pollution as a result of Ella’s death means that failure to address it meets this threshold.’

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Legal Studies, 26th September 2025

Source: www.cambridge.org