Browsing School of Law by Title
Now showing items 656-675 of 1301
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Judging in lower courts: Conventional, procedural, therapeutic and feminist approaches
Recent theorising about feminist judging has concentrated on appellate courts and their judgments. This article develops a conceptualisation of feminist judging in lower, first instance courts, which are dominated by high ... -
Judging Muslims
(Cambridge University Press, 2013-04) -
Judicial Diversity and the 'New' Judge
(Hart Publishing, 2015-02-01) -
Judicial Leadership on the UK Supreme Court
(Wiley, 2018-06-01)This article examines judicial leadership on the UK Supreme Court. It does not confine itself to the formal roles of the President and Deputy President. Rather building on existing categories of judicial leadership, including ... -
The Judicial Solution to the Arbitrator’s Dilemma: Does the ‘Extension’ of the Arbitration Agreement to Non-Signatories Threaten the Enforcement of the Award?
(Kluwer Law International, 2022-06-01) -
Juggling More Than Three Balls At Once: Multi-level Jurisdictional Challenges in EU Data Protection Regulation
(Oxford University Press (OUP), 2019-05-09)This Article analyses the rules on regulatory competence, jurisdiction and applicable in EU data protection law in the light of recent case law of the Court of Justice of the EU and national courts and in the light of the ... -
Juries Can Quick Look Too
(Seton Hall Law School, 2014-05-12) -
Jurisprudence and Socio-Legal Studies Intersecting Fields
(Routledge, 2024-03-12)This book presents a set of related studies aimed at showing key points of intersection and common interest between jurisprudence and socio-legal studies, which are otherwise typically considered distinct fields. -
The Jurisprudence of Artisanal Fishing Rights Revisited
(2019)However, despite this, claims advanced by indigenous peoples relating to rights to marine spaces have been met with marked lack of receptiveness. This book offers the first sustained study of these rights and their reception. -
Justice as Justifiability: Mandatory Minimum Sentences, Section 12, and Deliberative Democracy
Mandatory minimum sentences present a host of issues for criminal law and policy. The most fundamental of these is that they preclude judges from delivering just sentences in light of case-specific factors. In Canada, the ... -
Justice Betty King: A Study of Feminist Judging in Action
(University of New South Wales, 2017-05-29)