Brief overview of the work of the Modernising Civil Courts and Crown Court Programmes in England and Wales aiming to continue efforts to focus attention on the real issues in a dispute at an early stage. Comment by Sir Henry Brooke (Appeal court judge and representative of the judiciary on the Court Service’s Modernising Civil Courts and Crown Court Programme Boards), published in the First Page feature of Amicus Curiae - Journal of the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies and its Society for Advanced Legal Studies. The Journal is produced by the Society for Advanced Legal Studies at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, University of London
It is highly likely that by the end of 1989, legislation proposing the most dramatic changes in the ...
The fundamental ideal to which we aspire in the field of civil procedure is the perfect balance betw...
The purpose of this Comment is to explore briefly the fundamentals of what Prof. H. L. A. Hart has c...
Article by Lord Justice Brooke, Vice-President of the Court of Appeal (Civil Division), presented as...
Brief commentary by Peter Susman QC on the need for funds raised by central government to be investe...
Dr Kate Malleson (Department of Law, London School of Economics) assesses the need and tasks involve...
Lord Justice Keene considers the role of Judges and the judiciary and public confidence in their wor...
The Constitutional Reform Act 2005 (CRA) has altered the channels of communication between the judic...
The author discusses her publication "Legal Foundations of Tribunals in Nineteenth Century England" ...
The author suggests that a Scottish takeover of English law in matters of Convention rights has seen...
This paper considers the initial impact of the Cvid-19 pandemic on the administration of the courts ...
Brief overview of the issues and options involved in establishing the UK Supreme Court. Article by P...
For most of the 20th Century, the constitution of the United Kingdom was seen as essentially settled...
An editorial by Julian Harris (Deputy General Editor, Amicus Curiae) looking back at what the journa...
Nick Johnson of the Oxford Institute of Legal Practice gives an overview of developments in legal ed...
It is highly likely that by the end of 1989, legislation proposing the most dramatic changes in the ...
The fundamental ideal to which we aspire in the field of civil procedure is the perfect balance betw...
The purpose of this Comment is to explore briefly the fundamentals of what Prof. H. L. A. Hart has c...
Article by Lord Justice Brooke, Vice-President of the Court of Appeal (Civil Division), presented as...
Brief commentary by Peter Susman QC on the need for funds raised by central government to be investe...
Dr Kate Malleson (Department of Law, London School of Economics) assesses the need and tasks involve...
Lord Justice Keene considers the role of Judges and the judiciary and public confidence in their wor...
The Constitutional Reform Act 2005 (CRA) has altered the channels of communication between the judic...
The author discusses her publication "Legal Foundations of Tribunals in Nineteenth Century England" ...
The author suggests that a Scottish takeover of English law in matters of Convention rights has seen...
This paper considers the initial impact of the Cvid-19 pandemic on the administration of the courts ...
Brief overview of the issues and options involved in establishing the UK Supreme Court. Article by P...
For most of the 20th Century, the constitution of the United Kingdom was seen as essentially settled...
An editorial by Julian Harris (Deputy General Editor, Amicus Curiae) looking back at what the journa...
Nick Johnson of the Oxford Institute of Legal Practice gives an overview of developments in legal ed...
It is highly likely that by the end of 1989, legislation proposing the most dramatic changes in the ...
The fundamental ideal to which we aspire in the field of civil procedure is the perfect balance betw...
The purpose of this Comment is to explore briefly the fundamentals of what Prof. H. L. A. Hart has c...