Jan 2025 MLR is now up! https://t.co/GG4xOJedTW Featuring Nicola Lacey’s Chorley Lecture on interpersonal ideas in law, articles on digital status for EU citizens in the UK, ideology in contemporary constitutional theory,
Case notes cover climate and tort law and AI inventions in patents, with book reviews on new titles on European welfare law, fiduciary law and the criminalisation of violence against women.
The September Issue of the MLR is now available! Articles on UKSC public law restraint, charitable purpose trusts, mid-twentieth century choice of law, guilty plea regimes, European administrative law enforcement and economic imaginaries in environmental regulation.
Book reviews cover new titles on legal aid, polygamy and English marriage laws, EU values at the CJEU, intellectual property and childhood play, and the rights of nature.
We also realised we forgot to spruik our March issue on the 'x platform'. Apologies to our authors and readers. March 2024 is available here https://t.co/UP5LsRQxbR and includes articles on adolescent decisions to refuse medical treatment,
A review essay examines Julia Dickson's Elucidating law, and book reviews cover new titles on the legal history of forests, animal rights and time in international human rights law.
The 2024 Chorley Lecture 'Institutionalising Interpersonal Ideas in Law' delivered by Professor Nicola Lacey is now available online here: https://t.co/0lpVRU81hn
The July Issue of the Modern Law Review is now available, with articles on ‘responsive’ constitutionalism, police face recognition, natural rights theories of constituent power, judging in authoritarian legal systems, family sanctions and judicial review of airport expansion.
Case notes cover new UK decisions on vicarious liability, relational contracts and police self-defence. A review essay examines three new titles on making EU law, and book reviews cover workers rights, music copyright law, AI and the law and suicide.
New on the MLR Forum, Martin Loughlin's 'Some Thoughts on Academic Writing' responding to @ruawall and Daniel Matthews 'Sovereignty and the Persistence of the Aesthetic': https://t.co/w1csf5zVqH