Reviews

News, analysis, comment and updates from ICLR's case law and UK legislation platform

Victims or Villains – is the freedom of the press under threat?
Book review: Evidence in Family Proceedings by David Burrows
Book review: Mr Justice McCardie (1869-1933) – Rebel,  Reformer, and Rogue Judge

Book review: Mr Justice McCardie (1869-1933) – Rebel, Reformer, and Rogue Judge

Antony Lentin’s life of Henry Alfred McCardie, published in the centenary year of his appointment to the High Court Bench, offers a fascinating portrait of a judicial figure whose reforming judgments have stood the test of time rather better than some of the public pronouncements that brought him fame and notoriety in his own day. Continue reading about Book review: Mr Justice McCardie (1869-1933) – Rebel, Reformer, and Rogue Judge

Justice Online: just as good? Joshua Rozenberg on the online court

Justice Online: just as good? Joshua Rozenberg on the online court

Giving the first of three annual talks on the creation of the online court, Joshua Rozenberg painted an optimistic vision of a future in which civil litigation would become fast, efficient and affordable to all. Surveying the chequered history of courts modernisation over the last 30 years, he explained why it was hoped this particular Continue reading about Justice Online: just as good? Joshua Rozenberg on the online court

Book review: The Modern Judge by Sir Mark Hedley
Brexit: what the hell happens now? Book review
Rillington Place — Psycho-Pathé News meets Dr Stranglelove

Rillington Place — Psycho-Pathé News meets Dr Stranglelove

The BBC’s three-part dramatisation of the tale of one of Britain’s most notorious serial killers was creepily authentic in its characterisation and atmosphere, but the mini-series left more questions than answers, says Paul Magrath in this review. Here’s something a bit spooky. Some years ago, a friend of mine who lives in Notting Hill attempted Continue reading about Rillington Place — Psycho-Pathé News meets Dr Stranglelove

Book review: The Heirs of Owain Glyndŵr by Peter Murphy

Book review: The Heirs of Owain Glyndŵr by Peter Murphy

Paul Magrath reviews a mesmerising new courtroom thriller in which Peter Murphy’s ambitious barrister hero Ben Schroeder takes on a challenging case involving a Welsh nationalist bomb plot. All the details of barristerial life, the rules of ethics and evidence, and the courtroom procedure appropriate for the 1960s period setting are pitch perfect. Yet is Continue reading about Book review: The Heirs of Owain Glyndŵr by Peter Murphy

Law Podcasts: a selection

Law Podcasts: a selection

Podcasts are a great way of keeping up to date with radio programmes about law, but they can also deliver a series of instalments of a longer, more detailed or complex narrative. They’re easy to download and store on a smartphone or other device, using one of the dedicated apps. (I use the Podcasts app Continue reading about Law Podcasts: a selection

If music be the food of law, plead on…