Featured Legal Events
The Art Not Evidence campaign launched at the end of 2023 to advocate for a restriction on the use of creative expression as evidence in criminal trials. The campaign addresses the criminalisation of rap music, including the increasing use of lyrics and music videos as evidence against young people accused of crime. By disregarding the culture and conventions of the genre, and by asking courts and juries to take the music literally, police and prosecutors not only undermine the positive aspects of rap, denying its status as an art form and stifling creativity, but also perpetuate harmful racist stereotypes and create a risk of wrongful conviction.
Across two sessions, we will hear from experts on the cultural significance of rap music and the issues and implications of prosecuting rap, including: colonial legacies in the criminalisation of drill music; use of drill music in ‘joint enterprise’ trials and to construct gang narratives; the need to instruct expert witnesses; Criminal Behaviour Orders to restrict the creation of music; and the implications for freedom of expression.
The event will provide information and insight for anyone interested in the criminal justice response to rap and popular culture, and the current efforts for legal reform. It will also provide practical information and tools for those who work in the criminal legal system, music industry, or who create (or support those who create) music.
A drinks reception will follow this Event.
We’re thrilled to have you join us for our upcoming event! We encourage all participants to fully immerse themselves in the experience by attending both sessions. To ensure you don’t miss out on any valuable content, please remember to register for both sessions.
However, If you’re unable to commit to both sessions, you’re still welcome to register for just one.
Session 1 has sold out and there are few tickets remaining for Session 2. If you would like to attend, please join the waiting lists by following the registration links below. Please note, you will need to join the waiting list for each session you wish to attend.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
City, University of London is hosting a day conference on the subject of ‘Deepfakes and the Law’ on Monday 20 May 2024 at its Northampton Square campus, London. The conference is part-funded by the Society of Legal Scholars. A blog post about the conference may be found here.
The theme of the conference is to explore the existing and potential relationships between Deepfake technology and the law. These relationships will cut across a range of existing legal fields of inquiry, and it is intended that the conference will draw on expertise both legal and non-legal in an interdisciplinary fashion. As such, we particularly welcome submissions from those with an interdisciplinary background in (e.g.) the arts, social sciences, history and/or information technology.
We will have themed panels on “Deepfakes, Image-Based Abuse & Consent”, “Deepfakes, Disinformation & Truth”, and two “open” panels. There will also be a round-table discussion session open to post-graduate or early-career researchers, which will also be on an “open” theme.
More info to come...
The Art Not Evidence campaign launched at the end of 2023 to advocate for a restriction on the use of creative expression as evidence in criminal trials. The campaign addresses the criminalisation of rap music, including the increasing use of lyrics and music videos as evidence against young people accused of crime. By disregarding the culture and conventions of the genre, and by asking courts and juries to take the music literally, police and prosecutors not only undermine the positive aspects of rap, denying its status as an art form and stifling creativity, but also perpetuate harmful racist stereotypes and create a risk of wrongful conviction.
Across two sessions, we will hear from experts on the cultural significance of rap music and the issues and implications of prosecuting rap, including: colonial legacies in the criminalisation of drill music; use of drill music in ‘joint enterprise’ trials and to construct gang narratives; the need to instruct expert witnesses; Criminal Behaviour Orders to restrict the creation of music; and the implications for freedom of expression.
The event will provide information and insight for anyone interested in the criminal justice response to rap and popular culture, and the current efforts for legal reform. It will also provide practical information and tools for those who work in the criminal legal system, music industry, or who create (or support those who create) music.
A drinks reception will follow this Event.
We’re thrilled to have you join us for our upcoming event! We encourage all participants to fully immerse themselves in the experience by attending both sessions. To ensure you don’t miss out on any valuable content, please remember to register for both sessions.
However, If you’re unable to commit to both sessions, you’re still welcome to register for just one.
Session 1 has sold out and there are few tickets remaining for Session 2. If you would like to attend, please join the waiting lists by following the registration links below. Please note, you will need to join the waiting list for each session you wish to attend.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
DJAM Lecture Theatre [DLT] 10 Thornhaugh Street London WC1H 0XG
Is criticism of Israel anti-Semitic? How far does equating anti-Semitism with anti-Zionism distract from tackling anti-Semitism in Britain? How do diverse ethnic groups within the Jewish diaspora in Britain experience anti-Jewish discrimination differently? Join our expert panel to discuss these questions and more.
Speakers:
Naomi Wimborne-Idrissi, Jewish Voice for Labour founder
Prof. Adam Sutcliffe, Professor of European History, King's College London
Barnaby Raine, Historian and activist
Chair: Prof. Alison Scott-Baumann Professor of Society and Belief, SOAS
Tues 30 April | 6:30PM - 8:00PM
SOAS University | Djam Lecture Theatre (DLT)
**DLT is located inside the main building. Turn left upon entering the building.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
We've got a City University event for you here! Organised by the Institute for the Study of European Law and the City Law School, don't say we never do anything for you.
The talk will be based on the recently published book chapter: Irene Wieczorek and Qianyu Wang, ‘Teaching EU Law Outside the EU: An Explorative Analysis of Eight Case Studies in Asia’ in Maria Stoicheva, S. G. Sreejith, Indranath Gupta (eds), Relevance of European Studies in Asia (Springer 2023)
This chapter investigates the state of EU law teaching in Asia. It chooses eight countries/regions as case studies (mainland China, Macau, Hong Kong, South Korea, Japan, India, Pakistan, Singapore) based on their capacity to represent different regions in Asia (East Asia, South Asia, South East Asia) and to include both countries/regions with a colonial past with the EU and without.
Given the limited and dated nature of the literature on the topic, which accounts for the originality of this study, the research relies on primary sources for data collection, namely websites and syllabi and elite interviews with EU law professors.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Some of you may have been following this case on the news - it has been an incredibly interesting affair. If you're interested in human rights and climate change, this is definetely one to attend.
What the Court Really Said and what it means for Climate Change Litigation An analysis by UCL experts
About the talk
On the 9th of April the Grand Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights delivered its much-anticipated judgment in three climate change cases. In one of them, Verein KlimaSeniorinnen Schweiz v Switzerland, the Strasbourg Court found for the first time a violation of the right to protection from the adverse effects of climate change. The case was brought by individuals, as well as a non-profit Swiss association aimed at promoting effective protection from climate change. The Court held that only the association had standing to complain and ruled a violation of article 8 ECHR (right to private life) and article 6 ECHR (right of access to court). It found that Switzerland was in breach of its positive obligation to adopt, and implement, measures capable of mitigating the adverse effects of climate change.
The KlimaSeniorinnen judgment is hailed as breaking new ground in climate change litigation by many but criticised as illegitimate judicial activism on the part of the European Court by some. UCL experts will analyse the reasoning of the Court and discuss what the judgment means for the future of climate change litigation and for European environmental policy. It will be followed by a Q & A session.
UCL Speakers:
- Dr Veronika Fikfak
- Ms Sonam Gordhan
- Professor Maria Lee
- Professor George Letsas
- Professor Lisa Vanhala
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
The Dickson Poon School of Law is proud to present our Inaugural Lecture Series. Inaugural Lectures are a celebration of our Professors, as they present an overview of their contribution to their field, as well as highlight its latest developments. The lecture is open to both members of the university community and the wider public, and is followed by a reception in the Great Hall.
Professor Paul James Cardwell: A Tale of two Europes: the External Relations of the EU
Paul James Cardwell joined King’s College London as Professor of Law and Vice Dean (Education) in February 2022. He previously held Chairs at the University of Strathclyde and City, University of London and was a Lecturer and Reader at the University of Sheffield. His research focusses on the European Union’s external relations, particularly in the areas of migration and sanctions, with over 100 publications to date. He is the editor of the JCMS: Journal of Common Market Studies, the leading interdisciplinary journal in his field. He is a Principal Fellow of the Higher Education Academy and has particular interests in the internationalisation of higher education, Erasmus+ and studying abroad.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
The dominant legal form for governing work relations in the UK, the standard employment relationship, provides a historically specific mode of capturing social and economic relations of labour within market economy. However, these economic relations can only be ‘seen’ by law when they take the form of legal relations between individual subjects, in this case, the contract of employment governing a bilateral relationship between worker and employing entity. Much else – the inequality of bargaining power between the parties, the broader structures within which the bilateral relationship exists, the unpaid work of social reproduction, the colonial extraction which makes the paid work possible – is invisible for the purposes of legal form. Thus, the gendered and racialised origin of the labour contract is erased, and the legal form itself systematically excludes certain groups from the scope of labour law.
This lecture tracks the continuing effects of linking employment protection rights, collectively bargained standards, and entitlements within the Keynesian welfare state to the standard employment relationship which co-evolved alongside vertically integrated firms, industrial trade unions and the welfare state. It contributes to critical analysis of legal forms adopted within racial capitalism, as well as to the empirical study of social relations of work.
Workers who are perhaps most in need of social and labour law protection are most likely to be excluded from its scope: those subject to non-standard arrangements which lack the ongoing promise of future work (e.g. ‘zero hours’ contracts); or which are mediated via a third party (e.g. agency work); or which take place within the ‘household workplace’. There is a racialised ‘clustering’ in contemporary labour markets, with Black and minority ethnic workers and those of migrant origin increasingly subject to precariatisation, dominating the occupational periphery even when located in the geographic core. This lecture explores how, for racialised and migrant workers, this exclusion from the standard employment relationship mirrors the history of racialised exclusion from institutions of social citizenship, tracing contemporary continuities with colonial and postcolonial legal forms.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Hill Street Birmingham B5 4EW
A one-day workshop to explore the proposed reform of posthumous conception and consent under the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 1990.
This one-day workshop, which is hosted by Lisa Cherkassky, Senior Lecturer in medical law at the University of Exeter, is open to scholars and PGR students with an interest in fertility law (particularly posthumous conception), reproductive rights, and ethics.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
The ‘legal turn’ in social, political, and literary history has shown the fundamentality of law to ways of being, knowing, and making in the early modern world. Across intensely legalistic and interconnected cultures, the practice and forms of law structured and reflected gender, power, race, and status relations, as well as systemic forms of subjugation, inequity, and enslavement. These relations are refracted in different ways when situated in different social, cultural, political, and, crucially, disciplinary contexts, and they pose urgent questions for our understanding of and engagements with the early modern past. This colloquium will bring people together from different fields to think critically and collaboratively about law not just at but as a disciplinary juncture. In particular, we ask what intersectional, inclusive, and explicitly interdisciplinary thinking can tell us about the nexus of law, language, and power in the making and experience of the early modern world.
Conveners: Laura Gowing (KCL) & Jonathan Powell (Leiden)
Speakers: Holly Brewer (Maryland), Nandini Chatterjee (Exeter), Lucy Clarke (Sheffield), Clare Egan (Lancaster), Lenny Hodges (Birkbeck), Rachel E. Holmes (Cambridge), Lorna Hutson (Oxford), Chloë Ingersent (Oxford), Joanna McCunn (Bristol), Subha Mukherji (Cambridge), Tim Stretton (Saint Mary's, CA), Ian Williams (UCL)
Hosted by the Centre for Early Modern Studies at King's College London (CEMS KCL)
Thanks to the support of the Society for Renaissance Studies, we're delighted to be able to offer a small number of travel bursaries to postgraduate and/or early career researchers to attend the colloquium. These will be awarded to eligible researchers on a first-come-first-served basis. To apply, please send a paragraph (max. 200 words) to cems@kcl.ac.uk with a short summary of your research interests.
The event will be held in-person at King's. Hybrid attendance will therefore not be possible.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
The Institute of Advanced Legal Studies welcomes students enrolled for an MPhil / PhD in Law from across the UK to this specially tailored day of presentations, library tours and networking opportunities.
How to get a PhD in Law
Researching, disseminating and publishing
Facilitated via Zoom
PROGRAMME
9.45-10.00 Registration
10.00-10.45 Handling the supervision relationship
Professor Carl Stychin, IALS Director and Professor Sally Wheeler, OBE, Vice-Chancellor at Birkbeck University of London (from January 2024)
10.45-11.30 Legal writing
Professor Lisa Webley, Chair in Legal Education and Research and Head of Birmingham Law School, University of Birmingham
11.30-12.00 Coffee break
12.00-13.00 Disseminating your legal research
Dr Nóra Ni Loideain, Director and Senior Lecturer in Law, Information Law & Policy Centre, Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, University of London
13.00-14.00 Lunch
14.00-14.30 Getting your research published in journals
Susan Breau, Interim Director of Postgraduate Research, Institute of Advanced Legal Studies
14.30-15.00 What books are law publishers looking to publish?
Sinead Moloney, Editorial Director, Hart Publishing, Oxford
15.00-15.30 Coffee break
15.30-16.00 Open Access Publishing
Dr Emma Gallon, University of London Press
16.00-16.30 Tips on keeping up-to-date with your topic after completion
Alice Tyson, Access Librarian, IALS Library
16.30 Close
Although tailored specifically for PhD in Law students, this training programme does contain some material which repeats and reinforces generic training suitable for all PhD students.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Research Handbook on EU Law and Global Challenges (edited by Jed Odermatt and Ramses A Wessel) explores the multifaceted ways in which the European Union addresses global challenges at the international and EU level.
The EU’s commitment to international law, multilateralism and addressing global challenges is enshrined in the EU Treaties.
The EU is also committed to delivering the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in the Union and beyond.
It addresses these challenges in different ways. In some circumstances, the Union does so primarily through internal legislation and policy.
The EU’s internal action may then set a benchmark for action by other states.
In other fields, the EU seeks to address global challenges by being active on the international level, such as by influencing the developments in international organizations or through the negotiation of multilateral treaties.
In this online writers’ workshop, authors will present and discuss their draft chapters.
Workshop outline
Introduction
Part 1: Global Challenges
Part 2: Climate Change and Environmental Sustainability Challenges
Part 3: Technology and Digitalization Challenges
Part 4: Security and Defence Challenges
Part 5: Rule of Law and Human Rights Challenges
Part 5: Economic, Social and Cultural Challenges
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
University of Business and Economics Vienna
Considering a career in legal tech? Haven't treated yourself in a while? Why don't you book a trip to Vienna and attend the Euopean Scientific Legal Tech Summit this May?
We are delighted to invite you to the European Scientific Legal Tech Summit, hosted by the WU Legal Tech Center, taking place on May 23, 2024, at WU Vienna.
The European Scientific Legal Tech Summit aims to establish an international forum for interdisciplinary and international research on the application and enforcement of law supported by technology. Under the theme of "Automating the Rule of Law", the Summit will bring together distinguished experts in legal tech, artificial intelligence (AI), and the rule of law to explore innovative approaches and challenges in this dynamic field.
The Summit will feature a comprehensive program structured into three parts, covering topics such as accessibility, inclusivity, efficiency, proportionality, equality, accountability, and the automation of the rule of law. Further details of the program can be found in the attached PDF and on our website wu.at/lts24.
Registration is possible here. We would be delighted to welcome members of your university to Vienna in May!
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
On Friday 17 May 2024, City, University of London (in collaboration with University of Leeds) will host an online-only mini-conference entitled ‘Deepfakes and the Law: Global Perspectives’. It will run from 14:00–17:00 GMT. This online event will draw together a range of academics from across the world to discuss the regulatory challenges and opportunities posed by deepfake technology. It will feature two panels, the first entitled ‘Deepfakes, International Human Rights & Warfare’, and the second concerning ‘Deepfake Impacts and Solutions’.
Please note that this online-only ‘warm-up’ event is designed to complement the main ‘Deepfakes & the Law’ hybrid conference to be held at City University, London on Monday 20th May 2023. Information and registration for the separate main event is accessible via: https://www.city.ac.uk/news-and-events/events/2024/may/deepfakes-and-the-law
This online mini-conference is organised and managed by Dr Thomas Bennett (City) and Rebecca Moosavian (University of Leeds).
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
City, University of London is hosting a day conference on the subject of ‘Deepfakes and the Law’ on Monday 20 May 2024 at its Northampton Square campus, London. The conference is part-funded by the Society of Legal Scholars. A blog post about the conference may be found here.
The theme of the conference is to explore the existing and potential relationships between Deepfake technology and the law. These relationships will cut across a range of existing legal fields of inquiry, and it is intended that the conference will draw on expertise both legal and non-legal in an interdisciplinary fashion. As such, we particularly welcome submissions from those with an interdisciplinary background in (e.g.) the arts, social sciences, history and/or information technology.
We will have themed panels on “Deepfakes, Image-Based Abuse & Consent”, “Deepfakes, Disinformation & Truth”, and two “open” panels. There will also be a round-table discussion session open to post-graduate or early-career researchers, which will also be on an “open” theme.
More info to come...
The Royal Society
6-9 Carlton House Terrace
London
SW1Y 5AG
NCRM Annual Lecture 2024
Join NCRM for its 2024 annual lecture on Tuesday, 21 May. This prestigious event will bring together researchers from across the UK to discuss some of the latest advances in research methods.
Our keynote speaker for the evening will be Professor Noortje Marres of the University of Warwick, who will explore the new challenges that AI poses to the sciences of society.
The free lecture, which is part of NCRM's 20th anniversary celebrations, takes place in the magnificent surroundings of The Royal Society in central London. It will also be streamed online.
Researchers from any discipline and sector are welcome to attend. More details about the programme and speakers are available below.
The lecture
In her presentation, Professor Marres will discuss the debates surrounding the use of AI in social research and argue that the new tools challenge the ability of the social sciences to engage with contexts and communities in society.
Professor Marres will present a new set of methods and strategies that social researchers across disciplines have developed to address these challenges: situational mapping.
Drawing on recent research, she will show how this approach can be used to explore the ways that AI affects particular people and places.
Professor Marres will explain how interdisciplinary methods can enable researchers to negotiate conflicting requirements that automation and participation place on social research.
The lecture, After the Automation of Methods: the Case for Situational Analytics, will conclude with reflections on the consequences of the rise of generative AI for relations between social science and society.
The full abstract for the lecture and more details about our speakers are available below.
Registration
The lecture is free to attend, but registration is required.
Register for the NCRM Annual Lecture 2024
Programme
The event will begin with a reception and light refreshments in The Royal Society’s spectacular Marble Hall, before a welcome from NCRM’s Director and the lecture itself. Below is the schedule for the evening:
18:00 - Reception
18:55 - Welcome from Professor Gabriele Durrant, Director of NCRM
19:00 - Lecture: Professor Noortje Marres
19:45 - Discussants: Dr Carrie Friese and Rachel Coldicutt
20:00 - Questions
20:30 - Close
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
We highly reccomend this event to those of you interested in the rising use of AI in law, or even for those who want the chance to visit The Honourable Society of Lincolns Inn.
We are delighted to announce the details of the 25th Peter Taylor Memorial Address and thrilled that The Right Hon Sir Geoffrey Vos, Master of the Rolls, will be giving the address on Wednesday 22nd May in the Lecture Theatre at the Ashworth Centre in Lincoln’s Inn.
We expect that places will fill up quickly and encourage you to book yours now.
The Right Hon. Sir Geoffrey Vos, Master of the Rolls
“Damned if you do and damned if you don’t: is using AI a brave new world for professional negligence?”
This Address is open to all, members and non-members are welcome
Pupils are encouraged to attend.
The Address will be followed by a drinks reception in the Ashworth Centre
To reserve your place please email the administration.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Using evidence from computational analysis of the digitised Old Bailey Proceedings, this paper examines the major transformations in courtroom practices which took place in this influential court in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. It examines the changing roles played by courtroom participants (focusing on victims, juries and witnesses, but also with attention to defendants, counsel and judges), the evolution of the physical design of the courtroom, and changing trial outcomes (verdicts, punishments) to argue that historians have overemphasised the role of judges and counsel and the development of the written law in their accounts of the history of the criminal trial. Changes in the courtroom roles of other trial participants, only detectable through analysis of actual trial proceedings and associated evidence, were at least as important in shaping the development of the modern criminal trial.
Professor Hitchcock and Professor Shoemaker are world leading legal historians in the common law world. Their work is particularly interesting and important not only for its content but also for the uses to which they have put this content. These include the Old Bailey Online and the Digital Panopticon: their projects have worked to digitise and provide direct access online to billions of primary source material. This enables historians easy access to those sources which enable the writing of a new ‘history from below’.
Their work is inherently cross-disciplinary, combining and enabling research in both law and history. It is also of importance in research training. This research has national and international appeal. It is important that the Institute for Advanced Legal Studies hosts this lecture for all of these reasons.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Already dreaming of the summer? Here is an event for the calendar to look forward to!
About the book
As the ongoing situations in Afghanistan, Myanmar and Venezuela show, it is not uncommon for the identity of a state’s government to be contested or otherwise unclear. Such uncertainty can create difficulties for virtually every matter to which the representation of a state is relevant, such as the denunciation of a treaty, access to state assets situated abroad, and consent to foreign military presence.
While the importance of the international legal rules concerning the identity of the governments of states is apparent, there exist several unresolved questions in this regard. For example, on what basis is a claimant to be treated as the government of a state for the purposes of international law? What are the legal consequences of a state recognizing the ‘wrong’ government? In dealing with matters of state representation, to what extent must international organizations strictly follow the position under customary international law on the identity of governments?
To discuss such matters, this event brings together a distinguished panel with the author of the recently published book The Identity of Governments in International Law (Oxford University Press), which offers a distinctive and comprehensive account of the regulation of governmental status in international law. Drawing on their academic and practical expertise, the speakers will consider, among other things, recent state and organizational practice as well as conceptual and other legal questions with a view to better understanding the international legal framework regulating the identity of the governments of states.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
As the ongoing situations in Afghanistan, Myanmar and Venezuela show, it is not uncommon for the identity of a state’s government to be contested or otherwise unclear. Such uncertainty can create difficulties for virtually every matter to which the representation of a state is relevant, such as the denunciation of a treaty, access to state assets situated abroad, and consent to foreign military presence.
While the importance of the international legal rules concerning the identity of the governments of states is apparent, there exist several unresolved questions in this regard. For example, on what basis is a claimant to be treated as the government of a state for the purposes of international law? What are the legal consequences of a state recognizing the ‘wrong’ government? In dealing with matters of state representation, to what extent must international organizations strictly follow the position under customary international law on the identity of governments?
To discuss such matters, this event brings together a distinguished panel with the author of the recently published book The Identity of Governments in International Law (Oxford University Press), which offers a distinctive and comprehensive account of the regulation of governmental status in international law. Drawing on their academic and practical expertise, the speakers will consider, among other things, recent state and organizational practice as well as conceptual and other legal questions with a view to better understanding the international legal framework regulating the identity of the governments of states.
The panel
Dr Niko Pavlopoulos (Associate Legal Officer, International Court of Justice) - Author
Panellists:
- Sir Michael Wood KC (Twenty Essex)
- Professor Roger O’Keefe (Bocconi University)
- Dr Federica Paddeu (Queen’s College, Cambridge)
- Belinda McRae (Twenty Essex)
The event will be chaired by Professor Alex Mills (UCL)
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Press Freedom and Regulation in a Digital Era: A Comparative Study assesses the extent to which the emergent regulatory model for online news media is shaped by analogies from the past, or rather by a newly prevalent culture of control. By interweaving two distinct strands of analysis - the concepts of press freedom and regulation, and the phenomena of convergence and digitalization - this book examines the challenges for press freedom in the nascent digital news ecosystem. Drawing upon decisions of the European Court of Human Rights and the Court of Justice of the European Union, as well as from German, UK and US case law, this comparative work explores the regulation of the press in the digital era and the impact of the proliferating media laws, policies, and jurisprudence on press freedom.
Part of the book was written while the author was an ILPC Research Associate. The book launch and panel discussion should be of interest beyond the academy, namely for lawyers and policymakers working in government departments and/or involved with media regulation as well as for campaigners defending press freedom and/or advocating for greater press accountability. The book launch will also be an opportunity for collaboration between the ILPC and CFOM.
Speakers: TBC
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Legal Cheek’s next Virtual Law Fair takes place on Wednesday 12 June 2024 from 2-4pm as part of our Summer Virtual Vacation Scheme.
There are multiple firms participating who are will actively recruiting for Training Contracts and Vacation Schemes.
Further Legal Cheek Virtual Law Fairs take place September, October and November 2024 (all standalone Virtual Fairs).
Drawing on Legal Cheek’s unrivalled law student subscriber and follower base, as well as its extensive campus ambassador network, the Fairs give students from all parts of the UK the opportunity to meet the nation’s leading law firms from their laptops.
Key info
- Over 65,000 students from over 120 different UK universities have participated in our virtual fairs since their launch in four years agao.
- The only Fairs that all the leading law firms attend, with over 90 firms exhibiting this year.
- Each of the 2023 Fairs had over 5,000 students sign up, making them the largest legal careers events in the UK.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
This event is organised by Elaine Fahey, Professor of Law & Jean Monnet Chair, City Law School, and the Institute for the Study of European Law (ISEL).
Digital partnerships and soft law frameworks in lieu of trade agreements are increasingly common led by the EU, Asia, US and UK.
The EU-US Trade and Technology (TTC) and an EU-India TTC are part of the EU’s pivot to multiple ‘soft law’ instruments in trade and technical, ie non-binding Digital Partnerships with key Asian partners, mainly leading developed economies originally part of the EU’s post-Lisbon pivot to Asia.
TTCs nowadays - similar to Digital Partnerships - have soft law structures, executive to executive set-up and wide-ranging emphasis on international law-making goals as to the digital economy.
It reflects upon its putative exclusion of parliaments through the adoption of frameworks outside of the EU treaties.
Are TTCs meaningfully evolving? Are trade and technology increasingly incompatible within trade agreements? Who is gaining and losing? Is EU leadership of global law-making issues arising from its data privacy first-mover regulation imperilled by a shift to soft law? How do other institutional actors get affected by a shift towards soft law in the EU? Are developments as to ‘EPLO’ creation evolving these issues?
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Event Date:June 26-28, 2024
London, Livable Cities: A Conference on Issues Affecting Life in Cities
Today, the societies, cultures, and the places in which we live and work are increasingly intricate phenomena. Globalization eradicates spatial boundaries to business. Gentrification involves social and political pressure. Pandemics are never site specific or confined to the past. Architecture and urban design are global endeavors. Sustainability requires material and political action. Patterns of criminality are not place bound. Similarly, the need for education and housing are universal and land rights are essential legal tools for First Nations and communities everywhere.
Sounds Interesting? This Conference might be for you!
Reflecting this positioning, the themes of Livable Cities – London are diverse and are intended to encourage overlap and cross disciplinary discussion. They include but are not limited to:
Design & Planning | Resilience & Sustainability | Urban Development and City Economies | Technology, Media & Smart Cities | Social Justice & the Right to the City | Cultural Cities & the Arts | Healthy Cities & Public Wellbeing | Infrastructure & Transport.
Formats
- In-person: Delegates can visit London and present live at the conference venue.
- Zoom: Live presentations via Zoom.
- Pre-recorded: Pre-recorded presentations or films will be available permanently on the AMPS Academic YouTube channel.
- Written papers: In all cases, delegates can present full written papers for inclusion in all associated conference publications.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
As the days start getting longer, its time to start thinking ahead to how you'll be spending the summer months. Here is an event you might be interested in:
Join us in July for the Summer Showcase, the British Academy’s annual free festival of ideas. The Showcase will return from 12-13 July 2024, giving visitors a chance to preview the Academy’s brand-new public events programme set to be unveiled later this year.
Featuring interactive exhibits, workshops, screenings and performances and talks – including headline events with Professor Gary Younge Hon FBA and Zeinab Badawi – the Summer Showcase invites you to engage with the social sciences and humanities research that is shaping our world. From a relaxed Late on Friday 12 July to the family-friendly Showcase on Saturday 13 July, there is something for everyone.
Experience a taster of the British Academy's brand-new public events programme, starting in September 2024 and set to be unveiled at the Showcase. The programme will feature leading thinkers, researchers and artists, showcasing the best of the best of the humanities and social sciences.
Register for your free space and sign up for Summer Showcase newsletter.
#ForCuriousMinds
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
For those interested in how the ever increasing functions of technology will impact law in the UK, this promises to be an interesting webinar.
Dr Sally Penni MBE, Barrister at Law and Olivia Dhein, Knowledge Lawyer, RPC bring you an Introduction to AI and Fraud, a webiar dicussing AI, Fraud and Women in the Law UK.
There is plenty of time until this event, but to secure your spot I reccomend registering sooner rather than later!
Find out more on their event details page (external site).