Considers the extent to which it may be claimed that the Defamation and Malicious Publications (Scotland) Bill is - adopting the language of Professor Alan Watson - a 'failure of the legal imagination' which, if enacted, will unduly and uncritically Anglicise the Scots law of Defamation and Verbal Injury
The Defamation Act 1996 is the first major piece of libel legislation in Britain since the Defamatio...
To triangulate the individual and social interests in reputation and free speech, the common law has...
This article considers Scotland's proposed Apologies Act in the light of experience in other Common ...
The author considers the Defamation and Malicious Publications (Scotland) Bill and the upcoming refo...
Dr Scott's report summarises the responses to a public consultation and proposes possible legislativ...
Lord Gill’s account of Scots Law as a Civilian System begins by accepting that the ‘Scottish romanti...
Lord Gill’s account of Scots Law as a Civilian System begins by accepting that the ‘Scottish romanti...
A public lawyer at the Scottish Bar tells of the first time that they invited the Court of Session t...
This book considers, in a comparative perspective, important trends and issues affecting the law on ...
SINCE her Union with England in 1707 Scotland has in a sense survived as a nation by and through he...
Jonathan Brown is a lecturer in Scots Private Law at the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow. Previ...
This is the first statement of the Scots law of defamation for almost a century, and in that time th...
A published article by a senior Scottish Judge, Lord Kingsburgh (Sir John Macdonald), in 1898, revea...
Comments on the debate concerning English libel law and the calls for reform particularly by those s...
Free speech advocates had long argued that the UK’s common law on defamation was too claimant friend...
The Defamation Act 1996 is the first major piece of libel legislation in Britain since the Defamatio...
To triangulate the individual and social interests in reputation and free speech, the common law has...
This article considers Scotland's proposed Apologies Act in the light of experience in other Common ...
The author considers the Defamation and Malicious Publications (Scotland) Bill and the upcoming refo...
Dr Scott's report summarises the responses to a public consultation and proposes possible legislativ...
Lord Gill’s account of Scots Law as a Civilian System begins by accepting that the ‘Scottish romanti...
Lord Gill’s account of Scots Law as a Civilian System begins by accepting that the ‘Scottish romanti...
A public lawyer at the Scottish Bar tells of the first time that they invited the Court of Session t...
This book considers, in a comparative perspective, important trends and issues affecting the law on ...
SINCE her Union with England in 1707 Scotland has in a sense survived as a nation by and through he...
Jonathan Brown is a lecturer in Scots Private Law at the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow. Previ...
This is the first statement of the Scots law of defamation for almost a century, and in that time th...
A published article by a senior Scottish Judge, Lord Kingsburgh (Sir John Macdonald), in 1898, revea...
Comments on the debate concerning English libel law and the calls for reform particularly by those s...
Free speech advocates had long argued that the UK’s common law on defamation was too claimant friend...
The Defamation Act 1996 is the first major piece of libel legislation in Britain since the Defamatio...
To triangulate the individual and social interests in reputation and free speech, the common law has...
This article considers Scotland's proposed Apologies Act in the light of experience in other Common ...