School of Law: Recent submissions
Now showing items 381-400 of 1297
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Climate change litigation as a means to address intergenerational equity and climate change
(Queen Mary University of London - School of Law, 2021)Over the years human activities have increased the emissions of greenhouse gases resulting in changes in the global climate. Most of the consequences of these changes will be seen in the years to come. Climate change ... -
Transnational Challenges and Desired Ethical Standards in International Arbitration
(Queen Mary University of London - School of Law, 2021)International commercial arbitration adapts to changing market forces and modifies itself according to the needs of end-users as it relies on the established and secure functioning of the Permanent Court of Arbitration ... -
Impunity in Syria & Universal Jurisdiction in Europe: Is a revival of the ‘global enforcer’ approach in order?
(Queen Mary University of London - School of Law, 2021)As the Syrian conflict enters its tenth year, the chief perpetrators of atrocity crimes therein continue to enjoy virtually complete impunity. With no recourse to conventional international criminal justice mechanisms, ... -
Patent evergreening: technological advancement and abusive commercial practices. Availability of essential medicine in the case of access to insulin
(Queen Mary University of London - School of Law, 2021)The article analyses problems caused by patent evergreening in the pharmaceutical industry, with a particular focus on access to insulin. It points out how abusive commercial practices prevent the most vulnerable to ... -
REGULATION & USE OF DNA PROFILING IN INDIA
(Queen Mary University of London - School of Law, 2021)DNA profiling technology has brought about a paradigm shift in crime scene analysis. It has enabled criminal justice to exculpate the innocent and penalize the guilty successfully. However, to ensure the systematic use ... -
Blockchain and the General Data Protection Regulation: an irreconcilable regulatory approach?
(Queen Mary University of London - School of Law, 2021)A blockchain is a class of technology that allows the creation and management of different forms of decentralised and distributed digital ledgers where data are stored, chronologically recorded, transferred and finally ... -
Lessons for the government from Miller I and the Scottish Continuity Bill Case
(Queen Mary University of London - School of Law, 2021)In the United Kingdom (UK), tensions between the executive and the judiciary reignited recently when the government launched a thinly veiled ‘attack’ on the courts in an ‘Independent Review of Administrative Law’ (IRAL). ... -
Going it alone? UK cybersecurity regulation post-Brexit
(2021-04-14) -
Crimes as Public Wrongs
Despite the notion's prominence, scholarship has yet to offer a viable account of the view that crimes constitute public wrongs. Despite numerous attempts, some scholars are now doubting whether a viable account is forthcoming ... -
Towards Sustainability in Trade, Energy and Climate
(Academic Star Publishing Company, 2020-01-20) -
Entangled Rights and Reproductive Temporality: Legal form, continuous improvement of living conditions, and social reproduction
(Hart Publishing, an imprint of Bloomsbury, 2021-10-21)This chapter reads law and time scholarship through social reproduction theory in arguing that the right to the continuous improvement of living conditions (CILC) could work as an entangled legal form that reproduces ... -
Values diversity in the UK Supreme Court: Abandoning the ‘don’t-ask-don’t-tell’ policy
The case for greater judicial diversity has generally been constructed in terms of the need to appoint more women and those from minority ethnic groups. This article shifts the focus from demographic to cognitive diversity. ... -
Blockchain and law: Incompatible codes?
(2018-08) -
Banking in the cloud: Part 3-contractual issues
(2018-06)