‘The government’s Brexit strategy faces a fresh legal challenge in the high court on Friday when campaigners argue that parliament must separately legislate to remove the UK from the European Economic Area (EEA) and the single market.’
Full story
The Guardian, 3rd February 2017
Source: www.guardian.co.uk
‘The CCRC is the public body with statutory responsibility for independently investigating alleged miscarriages of justice in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. It is based in Birmingham. It is offering an internship, available to those who have completed the BPTC or LPC.
This is an exciting opportunity to assist in the CCRC’s casework and to experience an unusual perspective of the criminal justice system.
The internship will be for a period of 6 months starting in April 2017.
The annual salary is £15,103 (pro-rata), payable monthly.
Shortlisted candidates will be notified during week commencing Monday 27 February 2017; and interviewed at the CCRC in March 2017, dates to be confirmed.
The successful candidate will be notified of the outcome the end of March 2017. However they will have to undergo the vetting procedure applied to all CCRC employees, before their internship offers can be finally confirmed.
Closing date for applications is 12 noon Monday 20 February 2017.’
CCRC contact details are:
Tel: 0121 233 1473
Email: HR@ccrc.gov.uk
‘Caspar Glyn QC considers the Court of Appeal’s judgment today that an employee can be summarily dismissed for negligence and that a wrongfully dismissed employee cannot normally maintain an ongoing claim for wages.’
Full story
Cloisters, 24th January 2017
Source: www.cloisters.com
‘The Joint Committee report on high heels and dress codes at work shows that discriminatory dress codes can promote the sexualised objectification of women at work, disadvantage people with disabilities, inhibit employment prospects, impair work performance and cause long term and substantial damage to health.’
Full story
Cloisters, 26th January 2017
Source: www.cloisters.com
‘On 24 February 2012, Doug Paulley tried to do something most of us would not think twice about. He went to catch a bus. He wanted to get from Wetherby to Leeds to catch a train. The single wheelchair space was occupied, not by another wheelchair user, but by a pushchair. The bus driver asked the owner to move but did nothing more when she refused. Mr Paulley was unable to travel on that bus, so missed his train.’
Full story
Cloisters, 30th January 2017
Source: www.cloisters.com
‘A UK parliamentary committee has opened an inquiry into so-called ‘fake news’.’
Full story
OUT-LAW.com, 31st January 2017
Source: www.out-law.com
‘A High Court judge has rejected a judicial review challenge brought by four local authorities over the Transport Secretary’s decision to back a third runway at Heathrow Airport.’
Full story
Local Government Lawyer, 30th January 2017
Source: www.localgovernmentlawyer.co.uk
‘A transgender woman has been denied direct contact with her five children on the basis they would be shunned by their ultra-Orthodox Jewish community if she were allowed to meet them.’
Full story
The Guardian, 30th January 2017
Source: www.guardian.co.uk
‘Eyebrows were raised yesterday after a freedom of information request on ‘touting’ by criminal defence law firms – in which agents for rival solicitors poach potential clients even if they have representation – suggested few complaints have been made to the regulator.’
Full story
Legal Futures, 31st January 2017
Source: www.legalfutures.co.uk
‘Six people, including two former HBOS bankers, have been found guilty of bribery and fraud that cost the bank’s business customers and shareholders hundreds of millions of pounds.’
Full story
BBC News, 30th January 2017
Source: www.bbc.co.uk
‘A magistrate who refused to sit on a same-sex parenting case has been given a formal warning for misconduct.’
Full story
Daily Telegraph, 30th January 2017
Source: www.telegraph.co.uk
‘Access to the EU’s financial markets should be based on common recognition of global standards instead of the current “granular, technical and detailed” legislation, the head of the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has said.’
Full story
OUT-LAW.com, 30th January 2017
Source: www.out-law.com
‘More than £1.5m will go to projects that help wildlife and the environment as companies pay for breaking green laws, the Environment Agency has said.’
Full story
The Guardian, 30th January 2017
Source: www.guardian.co.uk
‘In circumstances of “normal” membership of the European Union, the UK Supreme Court’s dicta in the Miller judgment that EU law is an “independent and overriding source of domestic law” [Paragraph 65] may well have caused a constitutional storm. In the current unprecedented tempest of Brexit, however, Lord Neuberger’s announcement of this statement passed as little more than a side-wind. This short post will briefly turn the magnifying glass on this judicial formulation, which will be labelled the “conditional primacy” of EU law within the United Kingdom’s domestic constitutional order.
Full story
UK Constitutional Law Association, January 2017
Source: www.ukconstitutionallaw.org
‘The bookmakers’ trade body has reacted angrily to a report by MPs on fixed-odd betting terminals (FOBTs).’
Full story
BBC News, 31st January 2017
Source: www.bbc.co.uk
‘Investigations into miscarriages of justice are being hampered by premature destruction of court records, according to a campaign aimed at improving transparency in the criminal justice system.’
Full story
The Guardian, 31st January 2017
Source: www.guardian.co.uk
‘The government should learn lessons from failed attempts to introduce new technology to improve the way employment tribunals work, the Law Society has warned.’
Full story
Law Society’s Gazette, 27th January 2017
Source: www.lawgazette.co.uk
‘A teenage white supremacist who lauded the killer of MP Jo Cox as a hero has been found guilty of making a pipebomb.’
Full story
The Guardian, 27th January 2017
Source: www.guardian.co.uk
‘The judgments in Miller highlight the fact that the common law has never managed to arrive at a satisfactory intellectual framework for European law. I will focus first on Lord Reed’s dissent. On Lord Reed’s account, the situation is simpler than anyone who had observed UK and EU law for the past 45 years could have imagined. The UK takes a dualist approach to international law, and EU law is international law. Once this characterisation is accepted the case is over.’
Full story
UK Constitutional Law Association, 30th January 2017
Source: www.ukconstitutionallaw.org
‘Health secretary Jeremy Hunt today finally announced the details of the fixed costs regime for clinical negligence cases.’
Full story
Law Society’s Gazette, 30th January 2017
Source: www.lawgazette.co.uk