AI and its impact on private law, liability, causation, proximity and other legal hurdles – Law Pod UK

Posted April 14th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘Rosalind English talks to Jacob Turner, barrister at Fountain Court Chambers, and Michael Workman, former lawyer at the Law Commission. Both are AI experts who have taken part in assembling the UK Jurisdiction Taskforce draft Legal Statement regarding liability for AI-related harm in England and Wales, pertaining to private law.’

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Law Pod UK, 13th April 2026

Source: audioboom.com

Family court reform and child-focused model to define final months of Family Division President’s tenure – Family Law

Posted April 14th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘Sir Andrew McFarlane has outlined significant reforms and priorities for the family justice system in a final “View” issued shortly before his retirement on 13 April 2026, with the nationwide expansion of a child-focused approach to private law proceedings taking centre stage.’

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Family Law, 13th April 2026

Source: www.familylaw.co.uk

Government introduces new criminal offences targeting harmful pornography and public sexual harassment – Family Law

Posted April 14th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘The Government has announced a series of legislative measures aimed at strengthening protections against violence against women and girls, including new offences targeting harmful online pornography and public sexual harassment.’

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Family Law, 13th April 2026

Source: www.familylaw.co.uk

Jury proposals “a cure worse than the disease” – Geoffrey Robertson KC, founding head of Doughty Street Chambers – Bar Council

Posted April 14th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘To coincide with this week’s committee stage of the Courts and Tribunals Bill, which threatens to significantly restrict jury trials, the Bar Council is publishing a polemical attack on the proposal by Geoffrey Robertson KC, founding head of Doughty Street Chambers.’

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Bar Council, 13th April 2026

Source: www.barcouncil.org.uk

Ronan Cormacain: Mandarin: Shining a light on prerogative legislation in the Chagos Islands – UK Constitutional Law Association

Posted April 14th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘The British Indian Ocean Territory Constitution Order 2004 is legislation made by Royal Prerogative. Section 9 provides that there is no right of abode in the Chagos Islands. In R (Mandarin) v HM BIOT Commissioner (31 March 2026) the British Indian Ocean Territory Supreme Court ruled that section 9 was irrational and quashed it. I argue that the judgment is correct, that the 2004 Order is a colonial anachronism and that is antithetical to constitutional principles, democratic principles and the rule of law.’

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UK Constitutional Law Association, 13th April 2026

Source: ukconstitutionallaw.org

Criminalising Asylum Beyond Prosecution: Exclusionary Law and Policy in the UK – EIN Blog

Posted April 14th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘This paper explores the “criminalisation” of asylum in recent UK law and policy, most notably the 2022 Nationality and Borders Act (NABA) and 2023 Illegal Migration Act (IMA), and the ways in which this framework has fed through into recent legislative and policy measures. Whilst the development and expansion of criminal offences relating to irregular entry and arrival may be considered the most overt form of “criminalising” people on the move, in this paper it is argued that the criminalisation of asylum in the UK today should not only be understood through the prism of crimmigration measures which are expressly penal in nature, but also through an array of measures which, although framed as administrative and civil, are similarly punitive in character and serve the criminal punishment rationale of retribution and deterrence. The legislative framework of the NABA 2022 and IMA 2023 has paved the way for this progressive “criminalisation” by sanctioning those arriving irregularly to the UK to claim asylum. This trend has been continued in recent law and policy, and progressively expanded in a manner that increasingly sanctions refugees for the very fact of having claimed asylum in the UK.’

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EIN Blog, 13th April 2026

Source: www.ein.org.uk

In depth: Who owns the moon? – Law Society Gazette

Posted April 14th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘The Artemis II mission has brought back into focus the extraction of space resources for commercial gain. But laws governing the exploitation of lunar materials remain an untenable fudge.’

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Law Society Gazette, 13th April 2026

Source: www.lawgazette.co.uk

HMCTS to study generating court transcripts with AI – Law Society Gazette

Posted April 14th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘The use of AI to generate criminal court transcripts – long proposed by campaigners for more open justice – is to be tested, the Ministry of Justice announced today. In the research HM Courts & Tribunals Service will test the accuracy of its in-house developed system, Justice Transcribe, in recording Crown court proceedings.’

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Law Society Gazette, 14th April 2026

Source: www.lawgazette.co.uk

Shifting the jeopardy onto bullying judges – Counsel

Posted April 14th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘Is the Judicial Conduct Investigations Office process fit for purpose? Women barristers’ experiences of bullying are not being reported or, if they are, they are not making it through the system, says Tana Adkin KC.’

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Counsel, 13th April 2026

Source: www.counselmagazine.co.uk

What if..? AI in legal workplaces – Counsel

Posted April 14th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘If lawyers using AI forget it is just a tool, and stop being ethical responsible lawyers, it will cause mayhem – Flora Page KC explores the legal and ethical pitfalls and offers essential guidance on developing good, safe AI practices in-house.’

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Counsel, 13th April 2026

Source: www.counselmagazine.co.uk

Drugs and violence persist at jail, says damning report – BBC News

Posted April 14th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘HM Chief Inspector of Prisons Charlie Taylor said that while some progress had been made to improve the situation at HMP Manchester, drugs, violence and a “poor regime” remained serious threats to stability.’

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BBC News, 14th April 2026

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

Misconduct inquiry over fatal schoolgirl crash – BBC News

Posted April 14th, 2026 in news by Simon

‘Eleven Metropolitan Police officers are being investigated by the police watchdog for their handling of the initial inquiry into a crash in Wimbledon that killed two schoolgirls three years ago, the BBC has been told.’

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BBC News, 14th April 2026

Source: www.bbc.co.uk