News

Challenge to export of military parts that might be used by Israel fails in the High Court: military decisions like this not ...
By guest contributor Saira Turner In U3 (AP) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2025] UKSC 19, the Supreme Court has unanimously dismissed an appeal against a decision taken by the Special ...
Law Pod UK latest: the role of the Attorney General in upholding the rule of law; parliamentary sovereignty v international ...
In ALR and others v Chancellor of the Exchequer [2025] EWHC 1467 (Admin), the High Court has dismissed a challenge against the government’s manifesto policy of adding VAT to private school fees. The ...
This was an application for judicial review brought by an animal welfare charity challenging North East Lincolnshire Council’s decision to grant planning permission for the UK’s first full commercial ...
Cheshire West rides again: no power for a local authority with parental responsibility to consent to detention 20 May 2025 by Anogika Souresh J v Bath and North East Somerset Council & M [2025] EWCA ...
The High Court has handed down its judgment in Chief Constable of Humberside Police v Kelly Morgan [2024] EWHC 2859 (Admin). This is a significant human rights case which concerns whether the Crown ...
Prismall v Google UK Ltd [2024] EWCA Civ 1516 This was not a class action but a representative action, pursuant to what is now Civil Procedure Rule (CPR) 19.8, for the tort of misuse of private ...
No Recourse to Public Funds and Article 3: Proving Systems Duty Breaches 4 December 2024 by Matthew Leitch Background In SAG & Ors v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2024] EWHC 2984 (Admin) ...
Cheshire West consisted of two conjoined cases. One involved two sisters, MIG and MEG, who both had learning disabilities. MEG lived in a specialist NHS facility following the breakdown of a foster ...
No, legislating to allow euthanasia would not breach the European Convention on Human Rights 7 November 2024 by anuragdeb Anurag Deb and Lewis Graham Introduction There are many well-tuned arguments ...
In this guest post, Rajiv Shah argues that the provision of assisted suicide in the England and Wales via the NHS would constitute a substantive breach of the negative obligation imposed on the State ...