Hart Publishing January - July Good Books for Lawyers 2020 Welcome to Our First Ever Bi-Annual Catalogue

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Hart Publishing January - July Good Books for Lawyers 2020 Welcome to Our First Ever Bi-Annual Catalogue Hart Publishing January - July Good Books for Lawyers 2020 Welcome to our first ever bi-annual catalogue This year we mark the coming of spring with our publishing programme for the first half of 2020. Those eagled-eyed readers might notice that titles now appear in different subject categories and new in paperback titles are included in the main catalogue. We would love to hear what you think! But our catalogue is only as good as our authors who once again this year deliver some truly excellent publications. It is a bumper year for Studies in Private International Law with five titles publishing (pg 43). We publish the first volume of the magisterial work Lawyers in 21st-Century Societies edited by Richard L Abel, Ole Hammerslev, Hilary Sommerlad and Ulrike Schultz (pg 47). We are delighted to see new editions of classic textbooks such as Andrew Burrows’ A Casebook on Contract (pg 21) and Louise Gullifer and Jennifer Payne’s Corporate Finance Law (pg 16). Finally, congratulations to Loveday Hodson and Troy Lavers and all the contributors to Feminist Judgments in International Law which has been awarded the 2020 ASIL Certificate of Merit for a Preeminent Contribution to Creative Scholarship. Sinéad Moloney Editorial Director, February 2020 CONTENTS Contact Us ..........................................................................................3 Distribution and Sales Contacts .........................................................4 Hart Publishing Conferences ..............................................................6 Hart Publishing Series.........................................................................7 eBooks ..............................................................................................12 Arbitration and ADR .........................................................................13 Asian Law ..........................................................................................14 Banking and Financial Law ...............................................................15 Charity Law .......................................................................................15 Company, Corporate and Commercial Law .....................................16 Comparative Law ..............................................................................17 Constitutional and Administrative Law .............................................18 Consumer Law ..................................................................................21 Contract, Tort and Restitution Law ...................................................21 Criminal Law .....................................................................................23 Education Law ..................................................................................24 Energy, Environmental and Natural Resources Law �������������������������24 Equity and Trusts ..............................................................................25 European Law ...................................................................................25 Family Law ........................................................................................30 Gender and the Law .........................................................................30 General Law ......................................................................................31 Human Rights ...................................................................................31 Immigration, Asylum, Refugee and Citizenship Law ........................32 Intellectual Property Law ..................................................................33 International and Comparative Criminal Law ...................................34 International Economic and Trade Law ............................................35 IT and Technology Law .....................................................................36 Labour and Discrimination Law ........................................................37 Law and Religion ..............................................................................38 Legal Biography ...............................................................................39 Legal Education and the Legal Profession .......................................39 Legal History .....................................................................................40 Legal Philosophy ..............................................................................40 Maritime and Shipping Law ..............................................................42 Media Law ........................................................................................42 Private International Law ..................................................................43 Property Law .....................................................................................44 Public International Law ...................................................................45 Socio-Legal Studies ..........................................................................47 Tax Law .............................................................................................48 Backlist .............................................................................................49 Index .................................................................................................78 Textbooks ........................................................................................80 UK, Europe and Rest of the World Order Form ...............................81 US Order Form .................................................................................82 1 CH Beck - Hart - Nomos The CH Beck - Hart - Nomos collaboration is a unique joint publishing venture which brings together the very best legal publications from across subjects and jurisdictions. Editors from each publishing house work together to offer commentary and analysis from world-leading scholars and practitioners, distilled into one unique brand. Since its inception in 2014 it has grown to a substantial library of almost 100 titles, many of which have become the leading text in their field. For the international corporate lawyer, international arbitration lawyer or European lawyer, the collection is quite simply essential reading. 2 Contact Us Ordering and customer service enquiries Hart Publishing has 3 distributors worldwide: UK, EU & Rest of World: Macmillan Distribution Ltd USA: Macmillan (MPS) Australia: Bloomsbury Publishing Pty Ltd Please see our distribution and sales information on page (4) for full contact details. Hart Publishing UK Office Hart Publishing, Kemp House, Chawley Park, Cumnor Hill, Oxford, OX2 9PH, UK T +44 (0)1865 598648 E [email protected] www.hartpublishing.co.uk Hart Publishing USA Office Greg Bussy, Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 1385 Broadway, 5th Floor, New York, NY 10018, USA T 646-628-3057 E [email protected] www.bloomsbury.com Sign up for Hart Publishing Email alerts Hart Publishing offers an email alert service. By signing up to our email list you will be notified about new books in your areas of interest, upon publication. As a member of the email list you will be eligible to receive discount on all Hart books. Register through our website: www.bloomsburyprofessional.com/uk/customer/newsletter CONNECT WITH US! HartPublishing2 @hartPublishing Hart Publishing Proposals We are always happy to discuss new ideas with prospective authors and to read and review manuscripts and book proposals. For information on the subject areas that we publish in and a detailed explanation of our processes please visit our website: www.bloomsburyprofessional.com/uk/Hart/Proposals/ If you have an idea for a book then please contact one of our publishing team: Sinéad Moloney [email protected] Roberta Bassi [email protected] Kate Whetter [email protected] Rosemarie Mearns [email protected] Or write to them at our office address shown above. 3 Distribution and Sales Contacts Distribution All Distribution in the UK, EU and All Distribution in USA All Distribution in Australia and New Rest of World Bloomsbury USA Zealand Macmillan Distribution Ltd (MDL) MPS/BUSA Orders Bloomsbury Publishing Pty Ltd Cromwell Place, Hampshire International 16365 James Madison Highway Level 6 Business Park Gordonsville, VA 22942 387 George St Lime Tree Way, Basingstoke USA Sydney 2000 NSW RG24 8YJ, UK T +1 888 330 8477 Australia F +1 800 672 2054 T +61 2 8820 4900 Distribution in the UK E [email protected] E [email protected] T +44 (0)1256 302692 E [email protected] www.bloomsbury.com/au F +44 (0)1256 302581 www.bloomsbury.com/us E [email protected] All Distribution in Canada Distribution in the EU and Rest of Greg Bussy World North American Sales & Marketing T +44 (0)1256 302890 Manager F +44 (0)1256 842084 Bloomsbury Publishing Pty Ltd E [email protected] 1385 Broadway, 5th Floor, New York, NY 10018 USA T +1 646 628 3057 E [email protected] Sales Representatives Bloomsbury Publishing Plc International Sales Central and Eastern Europe 50 Bedford Square Jacek Lewinson London WC1B 3DP Matthew Emery Poland T +44 (0)207 631 5600 Head of Academic Sales, UK & Export T +48 502603290 F +44 (0)207 631 5800 Bloomsbury Publishing Plc E [email protected] E [email protected] M +44 (0)7979 524704 E [email protected] Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway UK and Sweden Jasmin Atkins Colin Flint Ltd Sarah Ailsby Sales Assistant (International & UK 26 Harvey Goodwin Avenue Academic & Professional Sales Manager Academic)
Recommended publications
  • Volume 25, 2016 D Nott-Law Jnl25 Cover Nott-Law Cv 25/07/2016 13:18 Page 2
    d_Nott-law jnl25_cover_Nott-Law_cv 25/07/2016 13:18 Page 1 N O T T I N In this issue: G H A M L Helen O’Nions A EDITORIAL W J O U R N A ARTICLES L How Many Contracts in an Auction Sale? James Brown and Mark Pawlowski NOTTINGHAM LAW JOURNAL The Legal Prospective Force of Constitutional Courts Decisions: Reflections from the Constitutional Jurisprudence of Kosovo and Beyond Visar Morina Journal of Nottingham Law School Don’t Take Away My Break-Away: Balancing Regulatory and Commercial Interests in Sport Simon Boyes The Creative Identity and Intellectual Property Janice Denoncourt THEMATIC ARTICLES: PERSPECTIVES ON THE ISLAMIC FACE VEIL Introduction Tom Lewis Articles S.A.S v France : A Reality Check Eva Brems Human Rights, Identity and the Legal Regulation of Dress Jill Marshall No Face Veils in Court Felicity Gerry QC Face Veils and the Law: A Critical Reflection Samantha Knights The Veiled Lodger – A Reflection on the Status of R v D Jeremy Robson Why the Veil Should be Repudiated* Yasmin Alibhai-Brown 2 0 1 6 *Extract from Refusing the Veil, 2014. Published with kind permission of Biteback V Publishing, London. O L U Continued on inside back cover M E T W E N Nottingham Law School T The Nottingham Trent University Y Burton Street F I V Nottingham E NG1 4BU England £30.00 Volume 25, 2016 d_Nott-law jnl25_cover_Nott-Law_cv 25/07/2016 13:18 Page 2 Continued from outside back cover Book Reviews E Brems (ed.) The Experiences of Face Veil Wearers in Europe and the Law Cambridge University Press, 2014 Amal Ali Jill Marshall Human Rights Law and Personal Identity Routledge, 2014 Tom Lewis CASE NOTES AND COMMENTARY Killing the Parasite in R v Jogee Catarina Sjolin-Knight Disputing the Indisputable: Genocide Denial and Freedom of Expression in Perinçek v Switzerland Luigi Daniele Innocent Dissemination: The Type of Knowledge Concerned in Shen, Solina Holly v SEEC Media Group Limited S.H.
    [Show full text]
  • The Supreme Court; Annual Report and Accounts 2013–2014 HC 36
    The Supreme Court Annual Report and Accounts 2015–2016 The Supreme Court Annual Report and Accounts 2015–2016 Annual Report presented to Parliament pursuant to Section 54(1) of the Constitutional Reform Act 2005. Accounts presented to the House of Commons pursuant to Section 6(4) of the Government Resources and Accounts Act 2000. Accounts presented to the House of Lords by Command of Her Majesty. Ordered by the House of Commons to be printed on 4 July 2016. HC 32 © Crown Copyright 2016 This publication is licensed under the terms of the Open Government Licence v3.0 except where otherwise stated. To view this licence, visit nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3 or write to the Information Policy Team, The National Archives, Kew, London TW9 4DU, or email: psi@ nationalarchives.gsi.gov.uk. Where we have identified any third party copyright information you will need to obtain permission from the copyright holders concerned. This publication is available at www.gov.uk/government/publications Any enquiries regarding this publication should be sent to us at: [email protected] You can download this publication from www.supremecourt.uk Print ISBN 9781474132770 Web ISBN 9781474132787 ID 11051611 06/16 Printed on paper containing 75% recycled fibre content minimum Printed in the UK by the Williams Lea Group on behalf of the Controller of Her Majesty’s Stationery Office Front cover image © Kevin Leighton The Supreme Court Annual Report and Accounts 2015–2016 4 contents one two three four FOREWORD AND OVERVIEW: OBJECTIVES
    [Show full text]
  • The Judicial Individuality of Lord Sum Tion I Introduction
    2 UNSW Law Journal Volume 40(2) 16 THE JUDICIAL INDIVIDUALITY OF LORD SUMTION JAMES LEE Brian: Look, youve got it all wrong You dont need to follow me you dont need to follow anybody Youve got to think for yourselves Youre all individuals Te Crod: Yes Were all individuals Brian: Youre all different Te Crod: Yes We are all different Man in te Crod: Im not. Te Crod: Ssssssh Monty Python’s Life of Brian1 I INTRODUCTION This article offers a perspective from the United Kingdom (‘UK’) on the position of an individual judge, in order to illuminate the dynamics of judging on a final court of appeal. My aim is to examine the jurisprudence of Lord Sumption, a Justice of the United Kingdom Supreme Court (‘UKSC’). We shall see that, on precedent, Lord Sumption JSC’s view is essentially a conservative one, which perhaps ties into his Lordship’s views on judicial self-restraint more broadly. By ‘conservative’ in this context, I mean cautious about change, rather than any grander political claim. Professor Alan Paterson, in his seminal book Final Judgment, observed that, after two years on the Court, ‘Lord Sumption in some respects had begun to take on the mantle of Lord Hoffmann for his speed of thought and writing and the clarity of his vision’.2 His Lordship has Senior Lecturer in Private Law, The Dickson Poon School of Law, King’s College London, and Associate Academic Fellow of the Honourable Society of the Inner Temple. Aspects of the themes developed in this paper have been presented variously at the Cambridge Private Law Centre, the Obligations VII Conference at the University of Hong Kong, the University of Edinburgh and the University of New South Wales.
    [Show full text]
  • Judicial Colloquium, Vancouver 2017 JOINT CRIMINAL ENTERPRISE LIABILITY Mr Justice Robert Ribeiro1 in R V Jogee,2 Decided In
    Judicial Colloquium, Vancouver 2017 JOINT CRIMINAL ENTERPRISE LIABILITY Mr Justice Robert Ribeiro1 In R v Jogee,2 decided in 2016, the UK Supreme Court abolished the common law doctrine which holds participants in a joint criminal enterprise liable for the criminal acts of the perpetrator of the primary offence committed in the course of the joint venture. It decided that liability for criminal complicity should be confined to traditional accessorial liability principles, assigning culpability on the basis of the secondary party’s intentional aiding, abetting, counselling or procuring of a principal offence. Prior to Jogee, the joint enterprise doctrine, as laid down by the Privy Council in Chan Wing Siu v R,3 was accepted and applied in the highest courts of England and Wales,4 Australia5 and Hong Kong.6 The doctrine, with various modifications, also informs code and statutory provisions in 1 Permanent Judge of the Hong Kong Court of Final Appeal. I would like to express my thanks to Judicial Assistants Amanda XI Yuan and HUI Sui Hang for their help in preparing this paper. 2 [2016] 2 WLR 681, decided simultaneously with Ruddock v The Queen, an appeal to the Privy Council from Jamaica. 3 [1985] 1 AC 168. 4 Eg, R v Ward (1987) 85 Cr App R 71; R v Slack [1989] QB 775; R v Hyde [1991] 1 QB 134; R v Powell (Anthony) [1999] 1 AC 1 (HL); R v Rook [1993] 1 WLR 1005; R v Rahman [2009] 1 AC 129. 5 McAuliffe v The Queen (1995) 183 CLR 108; Osland v The Queen (1998) 197 CLR 316; Gillard v The Queen (2003) 219 CLR 1; Clayton v The Queen (2006) 81 ALJR 439.
    [Show full text]
  • 1. This Is a Petition to the Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice the Rt
    TO THE LORD CHANCELLOR AND SECRETARY OF STATE OF ENGLAND AND WALES THE RT. HON ROBERT BUCKLAND QC. PETITION FOR MERCY IN THE MATTER OF ALEX HENRY 1. This is a petition to the Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice the Rt. Hon Robert Buckland QC to recommend to Her Majesty the Queen the exercise of the Royal Prerogative of Mercy to grant a Pardon for Alex Henry (born 3rd December 1992), hereafter referred to as Alex. 2. The exercise of the Royal Prerogative of Mercy may currently take one of three forms:1 a. The grant of a Free Pardon; b. The grant of a Conditional Pardon; c. Remission of all or part of a penalty by either a) a pledge of public faith, which most commonly occurs when an offender's release dates are incorrectly calculated or b) for meritorious conduct, such as saving the life of another offender/member of staff or coming to the aid of a member of staff. 3. By constitutional convention, the Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice (in succession to the Home Secretary) is responsible, in England and Wales (and the Channel Islands), for recommending to Her Majesty the Queen the exercise of the prerogative of mercy to grant a Royal Pardon. 4. For the reasons set out below, Alex seeks the grant of a conditional Pardon to enable his immediate release. He is currently serving a sentence of life imprisonment with a non- parole period of 19 years for a murder that he did not physically commit.
    [Show full text]
  • JOINT ENTERPRISE: RIGHTING a WRONG TURN? Report of an Exploratory Study
    joint enterprise.qxp_joint enterprise 01/07/2016 12:01 Page 1 JOINT ENTERPRISE: RIGHTING A WRONG TURN? Report of an exploratory study Jessica Jacobson, Amy Kirby, Gillian Hunter Institute for Criminal Policy Research, Birkbeck, University of London joint enterprise.qxp_joint enterprise 01/07/2016 12:01 Page 2 The Prison Reform Trust works to create a just, humane and effective penal system. We do this by inquiring into the workings of the system; informing prisoners, staff and the wider public; and by influencing Parliament, government, and officials towards reform: http://www.prisonreformtrust.org.uk © 2016 the authors and Prison Reform trust ISBN: 978-1-908504-86-9 Cover image: Tony Callaghan joint enterprise.qxp_joint enterprise 01/07/2016 12:01 Page 3 Contents Acknowledgments ii Summary iii 1. Introduction 1 1.1 Background 1 1.2 The study 4 2. Joint enterprise: law and policy 7 2.1 Dimensions of joint enterprise 7 2.2 General and parasitic accessorial liability 9 2.3 The Supreme Court judgment – Jogee and Ruddock 12 2.4 Policy pressures and contradictions 14 3. Joint enterprise in practice 17 3.1 The cases 17 3.2 Asserting joint enterprise liability 22 3.3 Terminology of joint enterprise 27 4. Promoting clarity and transparency 31 4.1 Looking ahead 31 4.2 Recommendations for enhancing clarity and transparency 33 5. Case studies 37 References 45 Glossary 47 Appendix: Advisory group membership 49 joint enterprise.qxp_joint enterprise 01/07/2016 12:01 Page ii Acknowledgments This project was initiated and carried out as a partnership between the Prison Reform Trust and the Institute for Criminal Policy Research (ICPR) at Birkbeck, University of London.
    [Show full text]
  • Intimate Images Consultation Paper
    Intimate Image Abuse A consultation paper Consultation Paper 253 Law Commission Consultation Paper No 253 Intimate Image Abuse A consultation paper 26 February 2021 i © Crown copyright 2021 This publication is licensed under the terms of the Open Government Licence v3.0 except where otherwise stated. To view this licence, visit nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3. Where we have identified any third party copyright information you will need to obtain permission from the copyright holders concerned. This publication is available at https://www.lawcom.gov.uk/project/taking-making- and-sharing-intimate-images-without-consent/. ii THE LAW COMMISSION – HOW WE CONSULT About the Law Commission: The Law Commission was set up by section 1 of the Law Commissions Act 1965 for the purpose of promoting the reform of the law. The Law Commissioners are: The Rt Hon Lord Justice Green, Chair, Professor Sarah Green, Professor Nicholas Hopkins, Professor Penney Lewis, and Nicholas Paines QC. The Chief Executive is Phillip Golding. Topic of this consultation: We are conducting a review of the existing criminal law as it relates to taking, making and sharing intimate images without consent. In particular we look at the current range of offences which apply in this area and identify the gaps in the scope of protection currently offered, making provisional proposals in an effort to ensure that the criminal law provides consistent and effective protection against the creation and sharing of intimate images without consent. Geographical scope: This consultation applies to the law of England and Wales. Duration of the consultation: We invite responses from 26 February 2021 to 27 May 2021.
    [Show full text]
  • Voodoo Liability: Joint Enterprise Prosecution As an Aspect of Intensified Criminalisation
    Oñati Socio-legal Series, v. 6, n. 4 (2016) – The Politics and Jurisprudence of Group Offending ISSN: 2079-5971 Voodoo Liability: Joint Enterprise Prosecution as an Aspect of Intensified Criminalisation PETER SQUIRES∗ Squires, P., 2016. Voodoo Liability: Joint Enterprise Prosecution as an Aspect of Intensified Criminalisation. Oñati Socio-legal Series [online], 6 (4), 937-956. Available from: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2871266 Abstract Following the collapse of a number of 'gang-related' prosecutions in England and Wales from the late 1990s, the police and Crown Prosecution Service revived a practice of 'joint enterprise' prosecution. Joint enterprise was a historic common law principle holding co-defendants equally responsible for offences which appeared to evince a common collective purpose. Unfortunately, over time, a combination of (apparently 'wayward') judicial interpretation, and police and prosecutorial practice contributed to a lowering of the threshold of 'joint liability' such that involvement in a gang, and 'bad character' evidence admitted at trial were taken to imply the 'foreseeability' of violent offences. The apparent tendency of the police to over- define criminal activity by young black males as 'gang-related' has led to the construction of a spurious and 'voodoo criminal liability' leading to the intensified criminalisation (over-prosecution and over-incarceration) of young black men. Between the first presentations of the paper and the written version which follows, the law was amended (R v Jogee 2016) but, as will be argued, not in a way which fundamentally changes the construction of 'joint liability' discussed here. Key words Over-criminalisation; gang related; prosecution; foresight; joint liability Resumen Después del colapso de una serie de procesos relacionados con bandas criminales en Inglaterra y Gales desde finales de los años 90, la policía y el Servicio de Fiscales de la Corona retomaron la práctica de los procesos de "asociaciones criminales".
    [Show full text]
  • A Right Turn in the English Criminal Law: No More Anomalous Forms of Complicity
    LORENZO PASCULLI Senior Lecturer in Law at Kingston University* A RIGHT TURN IN THE ENGLISH CRIMINAL LAW: NO MORE ANOMALOUS FORMS OF COMPLICITY. AN IMPORTANT LESSON FROM THE UK SUPREME COURT PAROLE CHIAVE Concorso di persone nel reato – concorso anomalo (reato diverso da quello voluto da taluno dei concorrenti) – previsione, prevedibilità e intenzione – omicidio volontario e colposo KEY-WORDS Complicity – parasitic accessory liability – foresight, foreseeability and intention – murder and manslaughter ABSTRACT Per oltre trent’anni il diritto inglese ha previsto che laddove due concorrenti avessero la comune intenzione di commettere un certo reato ma uno di essi commettesse un reato diverso, l’altro rispondesse penalmente per i fatti commessi dal primo laddove avesse previsto la possibilità che questi avrebbe potuto agire come di fatto ha agito. Il principio si basava sull’equazione fra previsione e intenzione. La recente decisione della Corte Suprema del Regno Unito nei casi congiunti Jogee e Ruddock cambia il diritto riaffermando il più antico principio per cui l’elemento soggettivo richiesto per il concorrente secondario è pur sempre il dolo di assistere o incoraggiare il concorrente primario nella commissione del reato. Previsione non equivale ad autorizzazione. La decisione ha l’effetto di ricondurre l’elemento soggettivo del concorrente secondario a parità con quello richiesto per il concorrente primario e di restringere l’ambito della punibilità. Inoltre, può essere di stimolo per i giuristi e il legislatore italiano per intraprendere un profondo ripensamento della disciplina del tanto dibattuto concorso anomalo. For more than thirty years the English law established that whenever two defendants had a common intention to commit a particular crime, but one of them committed another crime, the other party was criminally liable for the acts by the primary offender if he had foreseen the possibility that he might have acted as he did.
    [Show full text]
  • An Essay on Common Law Constitutional Rights
    THE NUANCED CONSTITUTION: AN ESSAY ON COMMON LAW CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS Candidate: Eva Christina Lienen Institution: UCL Degree: PhD 1 DECLARATION OF AUTHENTICITY ‘I, Eva Christina Lienen, confirm that the work presented in this thesis is my own. Where information has been derived from other sources, I confirm that this has been indicated in the thesis.' Signed: Dated: 2 ABSTRACT This thesis argues that the examination of judicial reasoning in public law cases shows that the UK constitution is best described as ‘nuanced’, rather than by reference to either political or common law constitutionalism. One manifestation of the nuanced constitution is the concept of common law constitutional rights, i.e. human rights under the English common law, which have recently been revived by the UK Supreme Court in cases such as UNISON v Lord Chancellor. I examine these rights with a view to portraying the inner workings of the nuanced constitution as well as its shortcomings. Drawing on the historical development and the contemporary characteristics of common law constitutional rights, I contend that the latter have been negatively impacted by the ambiguities underlying the wider constitutional framework. As the Privacy International litigation shows, the senior Judiciary is in significant disagreement about some of the core aspects of the UK constitution. Indeed, we cannot detect a principled constitutional philosophy guiding decision-making; the nuanced constitution is torn between the irreconcilable tenets of political and legal constitutionalism. Due to this tension the range and scope of common law constitutional rights remains unclear, and their legitimacy contested. Furthermore, given the continued role of Parliamentary Sovereignty, common law constitutional rights are at constant risk of being abrogated by clear statutory language.
    [Show full text]
  • Student Law Journal, Volume VIII (2016) (PDF)
    GRAY’S INN STUDENT LAW JOURNAL VOLUME VIII EDITED BY EDWARD DEAN Association of Gray’s Inn Students LONDON · 2016 CONTENTS Foreword To what extent have our courts adopted a coherent approach to proportionality? Thomas Phillips (Winner of the Michael Beloff Essay Prize) 1 Does the criminal law of joint enterprise cause injustice? Henry Moore (Winner of the Lee Essay Prize) 11 Burying the bomb: the wider lessons that can be drawn from the 2015 Iranian nuclear deal on the law on the non-proliferation of nuclear weapons John Churchill 35 The jury system in modern rational law: is the jury system an absurd institution whose only claim to legitimacy is its archaic root? George Mavrantonis 43 The evolution of procedural exclusivity: Is it time to Strike out the rule in O’Reilly v Mackman? Siân McGibbon 52 Presumed consent: the Human Transplantation (Wales) Act 2013 Michael O’Reilly 60 A principled reform of the Lord Chancellorship Fraser Peh 75 The demise of ‘doctor-knows-best’: development of the law of consent from Sidaway to Montgomery Charley Turton 88 Should the penalty rule be abolished? Phoebe Whitlock 99 A critical assessment of the law on assisted reproduction and legal parentage 108 Grace Wright Should torture be permissible when there is a ticking time bomb? 116 Dilan Yaslak Case notes Davies v Davies [2015] EWHC 015 (Ch) Luke Tattersall 126 FOREWORD Edward Dean I have enjoyed editing and compiling this year’s volume of the Student Law Journal. Given the incredible number of submissions received, I have had to be particularly judicious in deciding which would make the cut.
    [Show full text]