Permission granted to withdraw an admission made pre-action and in the defence – Quarterly Medical Law Review

Posted March 19th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘In this case the Claimant seeks damages against a number of Defendants alleging failures of diagnosis and management of chronic rhinosinusitis. He saw a number of medical professionals between January and April 2018 complaining of increasing sinus problems, which appear not to have been escalated to secondary care. The Claimant collapsed on 5th April 2018 and was taken to hospital, where a large abscess was found on his brain. This required treatment by several surgical procedures and it is claimed that the Claimant was left with a brain injury which would have been avoided with earlier intervention.’

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Quarterly Medical Law Review, 17th March 2026

Source: 1corqmlr.com

Government to review publication of statutory notices – Local Government Lawyer

Posted March 19th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘The Government said it plans to conduct a review of the statutory requirements on local councils to publish decisions on planning, road management and alcohol licensing in light of concerns over whether print newspapers are still an effective means of raising public awareness of this information.’

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Local Government Lawyer, 18th March 2026

Source: www.localgovernmentlawyer.co.uk

Introducing AI “should be next phase of tribunal reform” – Legal Futures

Posted March 19th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘Introducing artificial intelligence (AI) into tribunals should be “the next phase” of the HM Courts and Tribunal Service (HMCTS) reform programme, the Administrative Justice Council (AJC) has said.’

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Legal Futures, 19th March 2026

Source: www.legalfutures.co.uk

Labour law and epistemic injustice – UK Labour Law

Posted March 19th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘In this blog, I wish to set out the importance of considerations of epistemic (in)justice to labour law: the capacity of workers and employers as knowing subjects. This continues the tradition in labour law theory of thinking about the relevance of the unequal social positions of workers and their employers, but it does so in (I believe) novel ways. At the same time, thinking about epistemic justice and labour law allows us to challenge some of our most foundational assumptions about how we conceive justice in employment relationships: the autonomy of labour law as opposed to contract (law), the nature of employment injustice, the quality of workers and employers as persons, and ultimately how justice is meted out through the courts.’

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UK Labour Law, 18th March 2026

Source: uklabourlawblog.com

A Legal Black Hole in UK Waters? The Case of the MV Bella 1 – UK Constitutional Law Association

Posted March 19th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘Although there appears to have been a mutually satisfactory resolution of matters for the US and UK governments, important legal questions with implications for the future have been left unanswered. Moreover, what happened in this case may not be an isolated incident and the UK may have to address these legal questions again. This blog attempts to answer some of those questions.’

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UK Constitutional Law Association, 19th March 2026

Source: ukconstitutionallaw.org

The limits to Church-based employment requirements under EU Directive 2000/78: Katholische Schwangerschaftsberatung – Law & Religion UK

Posted March 19th, 2026 in news by Simon

Katholische Schwangerschaftsberatung (Social policy – Equal treatment in employment and occupation – Professional activities of Churches and other organisations whose ethics are based on religion or belief – Judgment)[2026] EUECJ C-258/24 [in French] was an Opinion by the Court on a referral by the German Federal Labour Court on the interpretation of Council Directive 2000/78 which, inter alia, bans employment discrimination on the basis of religion or belief.’

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Law & Religion UK, 19th March 2026

Source: lawandreligionuk.com

Uncertainty as government parks AI copyright reform – Law Society Gazette

Posted March 19th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘Plans for law reform to open up access to copyright material for training AI systems have been abandoned by the government in the face of trenchant opposition by rights holders. A long-awaited policy paper published today states that the government’s original proposal – to allow “data mining” of copyright works unless the holder specifically opts out – “is no longer the government’s preferred way forward”.’

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Law Society Gazette, 18th March 2026

Source: www.lawgazette.co.uk

Defence lawyers hail cap on agency charges as ‘important turning point’ – Law Society Gazette

Posted March 19th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘Defence lawyers say the imposition of a new cap on medical agency commission is a major change in how personal injury claims are handled.’

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Law Society Gazette, 18th March 2026

Source: www.lawgazette.co.uk

Foreign proceedings do not interfere with English claim, Court of Appeal finds – Law Society Gazette

Posted March 19th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘Procuring a claim in a foreign jurisdiction does not usually amount to criminal contempt of the English court, the Court of Appeal has ruled in the long-running litigation over the collapse of the Fundão Dam in Brazil. Allowing global mining giant BHP’s appeal and effectively striking out an application for criminal contempt against it, three judges said the company did not act improperly or interfere with the administration of justice in England and Wales by procuring and funding a claim in Brazil.’

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Law Society Gazette, 19th March 2026

Source: www.lawgazette.co.uk

Court of Appeal gives further guidance to family case experts – Law Society Gazette

Posted March 19th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘In H (Children: Expertise of Witness) three judges said that when an expert’s qualifications is called into question in another case, it is “almost always likely to be more appropriate to make an application to the Family Court than to bring an appeal”.’

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Law Society Gazette, 19th March 2026

Source: www.lawgazette.co.uk

Skilling up in AI – Counsel

Posted March 19th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘Artificial intelligence is bringing a new wave of jargon. To use AI tools effectively and understand the regulations shaping them, lawyers must first grasp the fundamental concepts underpinning the technology. This article aims to demystify some of the buzzwords and provides an overview of the practical limitations that matter most to the legal profession.’

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Counsel, 16th March 2026

Source: www.counselmagazine.co.uk

Human rights – countering misconceptions – Counsel

Posted March 19th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘The very notion of human rights seems increasingly to be getting a bad rap. The Human Rights Act (HRA), European Court of Human Rights and European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) have all been targeted and blamed for… well, what exactly? For failing to stop migrants crossing the Channel in small boats? For denying the sovereignty of Parliament and flouting democratic accountability? Or for being interpreted too broadly and so generally getting ahead of themselves? A relatively small, but apparently influential, number of spokespeople, such as Lord Sumption, have been getting much coverage and traction for their negative narratives about human rights, but without any clear evidential basis, and often without the media facilitating adequate representation of opposing views.’

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Counsel, 16th March 2026

Source: www.counselmagazine.co.uk

HMP Woodhill branded unsafe amid rising violence – BBC News

Posted March 19th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘A high security prison has been branded “not safe” after inspectors found some of the highest levels of violence, drug use and self-harm.’

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BBC News, 19th March 2026

Source: www.bbc.co.uk