Apr 6, 2016 | Blog, Criminal justice, Regulation
Dr Graham Smith, Senior Lecturer in Regulation, outlines the Undercover Policing Enquiry in advance of a seminar on the 14th April 2016, for which places are available here. Policing is a tricky business. In the last twenty years or so the idea of democratic...
Mar 11, 2016 | Blog, Regulation
Professor Robert Thomas writes on the concerns with the lack of public engagement and the legal framework in long awaited devolution in England. So far, devolution has concerned 15 per cent of the UK’s population leaving the remaining 85 per cent more or less as it...
Nov 16, 2015 | Blog, Regulation
In his two part blog Professor Robert Thomas provides an overview of tribunals in the United Kingdom before considering potential future developments for these core institutions of administrative justice. These blog contributions are drawn from a paper delivered at a...
Oct 27, 2015 | Adminstrative Justice, Blog, Law, Public Law, Regulation
In his two part blog Professor Robert Thomas provides an overview of tribunals in the United Kingdom before considering potential future developments for these core institutions of administrative justice. These blog contributions are drawn from a paper delivered at a...
Oct 7, 2015 | Bioethics, Blog, EU Law, Family Law, Law, Regulation
Ruth Lamont & Claire Fenton-Glynn on practical issues of cooperation in cross-national care proceedings and an upcoming workshop. Taking a child into the public care of a Local Authority is one of the most severe forms of state interference in family life, but...
Jul 16, 2015 | Bioethics, Environment, Healthcare Law and Ethics, Regulation
Professor Søren Holm invites us to consider the ethical challenges facing the Danish public health authorities in tackling MRSA Stigmatising somebody is a bad thing to do. It marks them out as ‘other’ and links them to negative stereotypes and characteristics, and may...
Recent Comments