On 15th July 2025, the UK Government (UKG) published its response to its review and public consultation on […]
Author: UKCLA
The UKCLA blog will shortly take its annual summer break, running from Monday 28 July to Monday 1 […]
The ‘Executive Summary’ of the report of Brian Leveson’s Independent Review of the Criminal Courts: Part 1 opens […]
Despite the Ministry of Justice releasing some helpful but limited data relating to judicial reviews, it is hard […]
In a series of posts on this blog, the legal historian Sanjit Nagi has outlined both a history […]
How should the state be held to account when it funds and organises essential services—but then denies responsibility […]
On 23 June 2025 the Home Secretary, Yvette Cooper, announced in Parliament that she had “decided to proscribe […]
In September 2024, the Business and Trade Secretary (‘the Secretary of State’)suspended licences authorising the export of items […]
Over the past three decades or so, comparative constitutional law has greatly advanced both as a site of […]
Over the last few weeks criticism of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR/the Convention) and suggestions that […]
