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  • Cameron’s sovereignty plan: what to hope for, and what to fear

    Carl Gardner
    February 21, 2016

    Cameron on MarrDavid Cameron’s EU deal has been published. But there’s a missing piece of his jigsaw: a “sovereignty plan” that he hoped would reassure waverers like Boris Johnson. On […]

  • The UN working group’s Assange opinion

    Carl Gardner
    February 5, 2016

    Here’s the opinion of the UN working group on arbitrary detention, which has concluded that Britain and Sweden have arbitrarily detained Julian Assange. It calls on both countries to release him, and pay him compensation.

    Tags: assange, crime, extradition, human rights, international
  • Julian Assange’s submission to the UN working group

    Carl Gardner
    February 4, 2016

    We awoke to the extraordinary news that Julian Assange had announced he’d leave the Ecuadorian embassy in London tomorrow and submit to arrest if the UN working group on arbitrary detention turned down his complaint to […]

    Tags: assange, bail, counter-terrorism bill, crime, extradition, human rights, international
  • Miranda: the Court of Appeal’s interpretation of “terrorism”

    Carl Gardner
    January 19, 2016

    I’ve already criticised what I think is a fundamental contradiction undermining the Court of Appeal’s judgment in the Miranda case. But there’s another aspect of the judgment that I must mention, which may well be of more lasting […]

    Tags: Court of Appeal, freedom of expression, human rights, interpretation, judicial review, terrorism
  • The self-contradictory Miranda appeal ruling

    Carl Gardner
    January 19, 2016

    I’ve been following for some time David Miranda’s challenge to the lawfulness of his questioning at Heathrow airport in 2013. I wrote shortly after his detention; I covered his application for an injunction;

    Tags: Court of Appeal, freedom of expression, human rights, judicial review, terrorism
  • The strange, slow death of the criminal courts charge

    Carl Gardner
    December 7, 2015

    The criminal courts charge is, or was, one of the less well thought-through criminal justice reforms of recent years. Since April this year, courts have had a duty under section 21A of the Prosecution of Offences Act 1985 […]

    Tags: crime, government, legislation, parliament
  • Summary judgment: what the Supreme Court held in Sharland

    Carl Gardner
    October 14, 2015

    In Sharland v Sharland, the Supreme Court today granted the appeal of a woman who wanted to reopen her divorce settlement on the grounds of her husband’s fraud. Here’s my technical legal analysis, in a […]

    Tags: divorce, family, fraud, UK Supreme Court
  • Fraud unravels all: the Supreme Court divorce judgments in Sharland and Gohil

    Carl Gardner
    October 14, 2015


    The Supreme Court has today given two judgments (Sharland v Sharland, and Gohil v Gohil) about re-opening divorce settlements on the grounds of fraud. Sharland lays down a new test in […]

    Tags: divorce, family, fraud, UK Supreme Court
  • Pannick on the Reyaad Khan drone strike

    Carl Gardner
    September 17, 2015

    In the Times today Lord Pannick QC discusses the recently announced RAF drone strike that killed Reyaad Khan and another British “Islamic State” fighter.

    He agrees with me that article 51 of the UN Charter permits defence […]

    Tags: defence, government, international, judiciary, lord pannick, terrorism
  • Stop the redestruction of Inner Temple Library!

    Carl Gardner
    September 16, 2015

    Photo published with permission of Inner Temple LibraryThe last time Inner Temple’s library was wrecked, it was Hitler’s bombs that did it. On […]

    Tags: inns of court
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