Featured Legal Events
Please join us for the much anticipated final of the Senior Moot to see some excellent mooting and share a drink with the final 4 competitors and our practitioner judges.
Have you ever wondered what mooting is all about? Well, this is an opportunity to see it in practice.
Perhaps you took part in the earlier rounds? If so, come along and see your fellow competitors battle it out!
Our esteemed judging panel will consist of experienced criminal practitioners, as this year’s moot is an intriguing and topical criminal law problem.
This has been a fantastic competition from the start and the final is sure to see some extremely high quality mooting.
There will be soft drinks available from 6pm, with a drinks reception after the Moot.
Please email Andrew Hope or Rosie Longman if you have any questions.
We look forward to seeing you there!
May 2025
This one day symposium brings together academic scholars from City Law School (and Law Schools in the UK, Continental Europe and the United States), legal practitioners, NGO experts and policy makers, to explore opportunities in the proliferation of AI and modern technologies in the criminal process, while drawing particular attention to their human rights implications and investigating solutions about how to confront such implications
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
"Talk of rights permeates philosophical, legal, and everyday discourse. And yet there is surprisingly little agreement about what rights are. This debate has long been dominated by two main accounts of rights – Interest Theory and Will Theory. I argue that the most common counterexamples to both theories are less significant than their detractors generally take them to be. I suggest a different way of evaluating competing accounts of rights, one that is less focused on the search for counterexamples and more focused how the respective theories construe the role of rights in our practical deliberations. I then propose a distinctive account of rights, which I call Action Theory. I argue that Action Theory captures the role of rights in our practical deliberations better than either of its rivals."
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
City Law School will be hosting an one-day symposium on AI and modern technologies in criminal justice: opportunities and human rights implications on May 6th. The symposium brings together academic scholars, NGO experts, human rights and technology experts, and legal practitioners.
Sign up link will be up at a later date, so keep checking back after you've popped this in your calendar.
The concept of ‘safe countries’ has long been used by States to distinguish between and deny protection to asylum claimants on the basis that they have or may have protection in another country. However, there is little analysis from a gender-sensitive perspective within the literature and policy guidance in this area. Join us for this online panel discussion where we will consider this concept in the context of protecting refugee women.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Please join us for the much anticipated final of the Senior Moot to see some excellent mooting and share a drink with the final 4 competitors and our practitioner judges.
Have you ever wondered what mooting is all about? Well, this is an opportunity to see it in practice.
Perhaps you took part in the earlier rounds? If so, come along and see your fellow competitors battle it out!
Our esteemed judging panel will consist of experienced criminal practitioners, as this year’s moot is an intriguing and topical criminal law problem.
This has been a fantastic competition from the start and the final is sure to see some extremely high quality mooting.
There will be soft drinks available from 6pm, with a drinks reception after the Moot.
Please email Andrew Hope or Rosie Longman if you have any questions.
We look forward to seeing you there!
Rosie & Andrew
Please join us for the much anticipated final of the Senior Moot to see some excellent mooting and share a drink with the final 4 competitors and our practitioner judges.
Have you ever wondered what mooting is all about? Well, this is an opportunity to see it in practice.
Perhaps you took part in the earlier rounds? If so, come along and see your fellow competitors battle it out!
Our esteemed judging panel will consist of experienced criminal practitioners, as this year’s moot is an intriguing and topical criminal law problem.
This has been a fantastic competition from the start and the final is sure to see some extremely high quality mooting.
There will be soft drinks available from 6pm, with a drinks reception after the Moot.
Please email Andrew Hope or Rosie Longman if you have any questions.
We look forward to seeing you there!
Gideon Schreier LT
Endsleigh Gardens
London
WC1H 0EG
The innumeracy of wrongful convictions and exonerations:
How probabilistic concepts and epidemiologic data and methods are misused in the prosecution and defense of criminal matters
- A talk by Professor Michael Freeman, Royal College of Physicians
- Chaired by Professor David Ormerod, UCL Laws
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Strand Campus
King's College London
London WC2R 2LS
'How politicians took the EU away from its citizens and how to win it back'.
Discussants
Professor Alberto Alemanno, Jean Monnet Professor of EU Law, at HEC Paris and College of Europe
After seventy years of unprecedented socioeconomic integration, the European Union continues to evolve through processes that largely neglect people’s input. This is by no means new. Yet the problem is only set to worsen. Amid the continent’s epochal transformations, the EU is expected to gain — not lose — power, thus increasing its influence over its citizens without offering them a corresponding expansion of democratic opportunities.
This paper intends first to explore the neglected historical and structural conditions that have hindered democratisation in the EU. It analyzes the role played by national political leaders, showing how they have systematically prevented the emergence of an EU-wide political competition — and genuine European political party system — capable of fostering a genuine transnational space for debate and dialogue across borders rather than within them. Secondly, the paper presents a set of proposals to overcome these structural obstacles to EU democratisation. These intend to restore and revamp the original democratisation dynamics expected from the politicisation of the EU by ensuring that, this time, they may transcend national borders.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
South Africa has one of the world’s most generous Bills of Rights including socio-economic rights that are either immediately enforceable or subject to progressive realisation. Section 172 of the Constitution requires a court, when adjudicating matters of constitutional rights, to declare conduct inconsistent with the Constitution to be invalid to the extent of its inconsistency and to make any order that is just and equitable. Broad those these powers are, they fall to be exercised in a context where the Constitution also recognises and was based upon the separation of powers. The Constitutional Court recognises that this imposes limits on judicial authority, but has not articulated principles to guide courts in not trespassing beyond their authority.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Queen Mary University of London
Mile End Road
London
E1 4NS
Inducing Intimacy traces the development of a range of civil and criminal laws across c. 250 years, showing how using deception to induce intimacy has been legally understood, compensated and punished. It offers an original interpretation of the form and function of these laws by situating them in their social and cultural contexts. It argues that prevailing notions of what makes intimacy valuable, including the role it plays in self-construction, have shaped and constrained the laws' operation. It shows how deceptively induced sex has come to be treated more seriously while the opposite is true of deceptively induced relationships and concludes by presenting a new framework for deciding whether and when deceptively induced intimacy should be regulated by law today.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Let's chat with Tan Sri Dr Nik Norzrul Thani at the Town Hall - get ready for some engaging discussions
This is your chance to engage with Tan Sri Dr Nik Norzrul Thani, Executive Chairman of Zaid Ibrahim & Co, in a town hall setting - Join us for an insightful discussion and Q&A session with the renowned expert. Don't miss this opportunity to learn from one of the leading figures in the field.
Did we mention dinner is included in your free ticket?
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
May 12 · 9:30am - May 13 · 12pm GMT+1
India and China, as two of the world’s most populous and economically influential nations, play critical roles in shaping global environmental regulation and addressing climate change challenges. Recently, both countries have established ambitious Net Zero Goals and are actively increasing their renewable energy generation capacity as a response to the global climate concerns. However, approaches adopted by India and China to addressing contemporary environmental and climate challenges involve considerations unique to their respective legal frameworks and socio-economic contexts. A comparative analysis of environmental and climate law in India and China can shed light on how these legal systems – together, encompassing one-third of the world’s population and greenhouse gas emissions – address ecological and climate-related issues.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Endsleigh Gardens
London
WC1H 0EG
Consent plays a crucial role in our lives. Using someone’s body or property without their consent is typically a serious moral wrong. However, even consensual interactions can be morally problematic in certain ways. This paper explores an underexamined form of defective consent: moot consent. Moot consent occurs when an individual’s consent is given, but it ultimately makes no difference to how others act.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
15 different writers, from chambers to firms and university law clinics, from solicitors and barristers to paralegals and building managers, write about the experiences of their work, class relations, exploitation and organising in their sector. The launches will hear from the editors of the book in conversation with several of the writers of the collection about their contributions, the process of writing their pieces, and what future challenges worker organising in the legal sector faces.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
1 Old Queen Street,
Westminster, London,
SW1H 9JA
Policy Exchange invites you to The Future of Human Rights Law, the launch of a new Policy Exchange workstream.
Speaker include: Joanna Cherry KC, Professor Richar Ekins KC (hon), Lord Faulks KC, Lord Verdirame KC, Marina Wheeler KC
Chaired by Lord Burnetter of Maldon.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
At City, University of London we understand the importance of choosing the right place and course to continue your studies.
Our online events provide the perfect opportunity for you to find out more about our postgraduate courses and what it's like to study with us from the comfort of your own home.
Upcoming online events
Our postgraduate online information sessions are scheduled throughout the year and range from subject/course specific sessions to general advice ones – all designed to give you further guidance about life at City, student experience and support available to you.
Postgraduate Virtual Fair
Hosted over three days, our Postgraduate Virtual Fair is a great way to explore postgraduate study at our University from the comfort of your own home, on your preferred devices.
Across the event, you will have the opportunity to attend online sessions on a range of subjects and courses across our Schools, ask questions and discover all the benefits of studying at City.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
The Capitalist Laws of Social Reproduction in the Planetary Social Factory
Feminist political economy approaches centred on social reproduction provide us with an alternative framework to read the features and processes shaping capitalism and the global development process. Drawing from Social Reproduction Theory (SRT), Early Social Reproduction Approaches (ESRA) and Raced Social Reproduction Accounts of Slavery and Indenture, and inspired by feminist legal approaches to reproductive justice, this talk sketches the contours of a global feminist political economy framework able to capture various key features of contemporary capitalism, including its extractive reproductive architecture, the centrality of reproductive work to all forms of exploitation, and the drive towards the regeneration of multiple surplus populations. The talk reflects on some of the legal implications of this framework, in the realms of social provisions, labour, and reparations.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Richard Hoggart Building (Room RHB137) 8 Lewisham Way London SE14 6NW
The idea that the environment must be protected for future generations has been gaining traction in recent years. This paper argues that the concept of future generations, as deployed in international environmental law is, however, deeply exclusionary, with only some humans being envisaged as future generations, these exclusions being marked by gender, race, class and ableism. It is furthermore argued that the concept is anthropocentric in that it focuses only on human future generations. The paper discusses whether the concept can be recast considering these critiques, deploying queer and decolonial approaches to do so. In particular, Indigenous understandings of future generations are highlighted as offering an alternative framing. The paper concludes by arguing that legal concepts must be carefully designed to ensure the construction of a future whereby climate change and environmental degradation are addressed in an equitable and just way, providing three pathways that can be used to begin to reframe the concept of future generations accordingly.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
The study of cultural techniques explores how infrastructures enable worlds and make actions in the world appear meaningful through operations that process distinctions. In the case of constructs that have a universalistic character, such distinctions produce the figure of the included excluded; in the case of the “international community” or “mankind”, that included excluded is the pirate. The talk sketches the mutations that the enemy of mankind has undergone as his maritime environment has changed from the Oceans of Law in the 17th and 18th centuries to the seas of the big city in the 19th century and to the Seas of Data in the 20th and 21st centuries.
The focus here is on the association of the enemy of mankind with his environment, from which he is becoming increasingly indistinguishable. Does the enemy of all dwell in the discrete, computable continuum of the “digital quagmire” today?
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
OR
Wilberforce Institute for the Study of Slavery and Emancipation
Oriel Chambers 27 High Street Kingston upon Hull HU1 1NE
Wilberforce Institute for the Study of Slavery and Emancipation are delighted to host Professor Chris Evans as part of the Wilberforce Institute's Public Lecture programme, in association with Hull Museums.
This paper being discussed deals with three cousins who found it impossible to disentangle themselves from slavery, despite a family tradition of anti-slavery activism. One cousin was a prominent businessman who became a corporate enslaver in Cuba in the 1830s. Another was a High Church naval chaplain, sailing out of Cape Town in the 1840s, who came to reject the British policy of intercepting slave ships headed for Cuba or Brazil. The third was a ne'er-do-well who embraced Southern nationalism in the 1860s and fought with the Confederate States Army. Their experiences reveal the limitations of Britain’s Age of Emancipation.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Northampton Square London EC1V 0HB
CALA and YLAL are delighted to invite you to an evening panel event designed to provide delegates with an insight in to criminal appeals work. Confirmed speakers so far include:
- Henry Blaxland KC, Garden Court Chambers
- Matt Foot, APPEAL
- Tejal-Roma Williams, City Law School
- Sian Hukin, Young Legal Aid Lawyers
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Food Exchange
New Covent Garden Market
London
SW8 5EL
Chat to Kristy about:
- Commercial contracts (e.g. with suppliers, manufacturers and retailers)
- Food law, including health and nutrition claims and label requirements
- Legal requirements needed to sell food online
- Use and collection of customer data
- Intellectual property
- Advertising and marketing, including the use of social media to promote your business
- How to legally run promotions
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
The Graduate Entry LLB (GE LLB) provides a fast track for non-law graduates to attain a senior status law degree in just two years, as opposed to the typical three. This programme offers a comprehensive exploration of legal foundations and specialised fields, equipping you with essential legal skills such as mooting, research, and debating.
Our The Graduate Entry LLB Online Event is a perfect opportunity to find out if The City Law School is the right choice for you. You will be able to:
- Learn about the GELLB course we offer
- Ask your queries directly to staff teaching on the course
- Get answers to your questions about the course structure, application process, entry criteria, fees and scholarships available.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
8 John Adam Street
WC2N 6EZ
London
Join Taylor Wessing for a morning exploring the interplay between regulation, innovation and business culture. Does regulation kill innovation? Or can an innovative but compliant business culture thrive?
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
In this masterclass, senior associate Kata Szeidovitz and trainee Osama Aslam will provide a detailed introduction of corporate private equity funds (PEF) at Baker McKenzie, while discussing some of the key challenges and issues that they face when working on international PEF projects.
The panellists are:
- Kata Szeidovitz – senior associate, Baker McKenzie
- Osama Aslam – trainee, Baker McKenzie
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
This workshop is on OSCOLA citing and referencing.
It is aimed at those who have an understanding of using OSCOLA but would like a refresher on it in advance of assessments, or further guidance and tips and tricks on how to use it.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
The Law Commissioner for Crime, Penney Lewis, will introduce the Law Commission's wide-ranging proposals to reform all aspects of criminal appeals, with a particular focus on the work of the CCRC. This will be followed by a panel discussion. Contributions from the audience will be very welcome. You can find the consultation paper online.
Programme:
- 17:00 Welcome from Professor Richard Ashcroft (Executive Dean, CLS)
- 17:10 Professor Penney Lewis introduces Law Commission’s proposals on criminal appeals
- 17:30 Panel discussion
- 17:45 Questions from the audience
- 18:00 Drinks and light refreshments in the Foyer
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Bentham House, Endsleigh Gardens
London
WC1H 0EG
This conference will focus on addressing these issues by bringing together academics and practitioners, and will interest contract drafters, legal advisors, litigation lawyers, barristers, judges, and academics. Papers, written by an academic, will be commented upon by a practitioner, and will be distributed before the conference. Panels will be chaired by judges.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
The Birkbeck Law School Annual Law Lecture 2025 will be delivered by Professor Patricia Williams. The title of the lecture is: 'Theatre of the Upside Down: Performative Chaos and the Law'. The lecture will take place on Friday 16 May at 6pm in the Clore Lecture Theatre, followed by a wine reception.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
38-43 Lincoln's Inn Fields London WC2A 3PE
Come join us at The View in The Royal College of Surgeons of England, London for a full day conference created specifically for women barristers, dedicated to inspire and empower success for women at the Bar with support and real-life guidance from practitioners and members of the Bench.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Endsleigh Gardens London WC1H 0EG
This event will introduce habilitationism—an alternative approach to criminal law that argues punishment should enhance an individual's ability to participate in society rather than further exclude them. From this perspective, incarcerated individuals are entitled to societal participation as much as—if not more than—other members of society. To achieve this, access to meaningful work opportunities during incarceration is essential.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
John Creaney QC (1933-2008) was one of the most important figures in the legal system of Northern Ireland during the past four decades – serving as a Senior Prosecuting Council from 1978 until his death. His unique career spanned the gamut of provincial and international terrorism – from the Malvern street murder of 1966 to Ulster's first Al Qaeda trial in 2005.
This series of lectures – held in his memory by Policy Exchange – are devoted to discussion of matters of law, counter-terrorism and national security.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Strand Campus King's College London London WC2R 2LS
The Intersection between Tort and Insurance Law – Insurance Brokers’ Liabilities and Subrogation
Specialist contract law principles govern insurance contracts. Moreover, the actors involved in the insurance arrangements may be subject to tort law liabilities. Often the question becomes how general principles are fed into insurance context. Notably, the English courts have considered such matters in two of their recent decisions which subsequently inspired an idea for this half-day conference.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
This event will invite reflection on both the role that movement plays in the way law operates and is experienced, and the methodological role that movement can play in our study of law.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Is it moral to steal data?
Throughout history, authorities have struggled to manage individuals’ urges to speak out against injustice and malpractice. IT has given us new means to obtain and publish data that others may wish to protect or even conceal. To some, hackers are heroes. To others, they are criminals. This lecture asks, in an era of mass leaks and high-profile whistleblowing, who decides whether data thieves are to be protected or prosecuted? Are the old rules still fit for purpose in the digital age?
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Drawing on novel archival evidence that sheds light on Anglo-Italian diplomatic relations and the French-Italian contest for power in the Adriatic, Constitutional Innovation and Same-Sex Desire in D’Annunzio’s Fiume, 1919–1920 recounts the story of decadent poet Gabriele D’Annunzio’s occupation of Fiume. Determining the fate of this Italian enclave in coastal Croatia had proved impossible at the Paris Peace Conference. In September 1919, D’Annunzio and his ‘legionnaires’ installed themselves in Fiume in a bid to embarrass Italy into declaring its annexation.
In addition to offering the most comprehensive and detailed analysis to date of the Carnaro Charter, the book shows what has eluded all historians of D’Annunzio’s Fiume: that the sublimation and discursive circulation of same-sex desire was integral to shaping and sustaining the political and legal order of the occupation, and that D’Annunzio’s love-lore in Fiume was continuous with broader homoerotic preoccupations in his oeuvre.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
The ELI Dispute Resolution SIG is set to be relaunched under a new chairmanship: Prof Dr Ana Keglevic, Prof Dr Maud Piers and Mr John Gaffney. To celebrate this occasion, they will host a webinar:
Debate 2: ‘Truth on Trial: Deepfakes, the Liar’s Dividend, and the Future of Evidence in Arbitration’.
This session provides an excellent opportunity to explore how digitalisation is reshaping dispute resolution, from AI and blockchain to the evolving role of human judgment in an increasingly technological landscape.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Barnard's Inn Hall
Holborn
London
EC1N 2HH
This looks set to be a highly interesting lecture, as a part of the 'The UK's Unwritten Constitution: Is It Worth the Paper It's (Not) Written On?' series by Gresham College.
The U.S. Constitution had to be formed through debate before it could be ratified. Mirroring this, a British constitution must emerge through debates held by the next generation. This lecture indicates schools are a good environment to foster this. For students, there are many contentious issues that tap into discussions at the heart of writing a constitution. Students being punished for swearing raises questions of limits to free speech. Students wishing to intervene when an unpopular peer is bullied would be empowered by constitutional duty obliging them to do so.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
31-34 Gordon Square London WC1H 0PY
Prof Veronika Fikfak will deliver her inaugural lecture on the topic of "Hope in Human Rights and International Law", followed by a drinks reception. This special event honors her contributions to the fields of international law, human rights, and public law.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Something slightly different for you here! This is a part of the 'Lawgivers in Political Imaginations' series by Professor Melissa Lane at Gresham College.
For many modern thinkers, the lawgiver has been important as a founding figure of civic identity and cultural values. Rousseau analysed the legacies of Solon and Lycurgus, believing in the need for a lawgiver to make a true social contract possible. By contrast, Nietzsche felt it necessary to seek a lawgiver in history who was also a poet and prophet. This lecture uses their perspectives and others to explore how the figure of the lawgiver has encapsulated key debates in modern political philosophy.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
In this public lecture, Professor Leach Scully will present some key ideas from her forthcoming monograph, Incorporated: Ethics and Experience in Transplantation (OUP), which draws upon her own experience as a recipient of a donated liver to offer a fresh examination of the ethical landscape of organ donation and recipientship in the UK. Her account centres a patient experience in a way that challenges many dominant assumptions regarding organ donation. There will be short responses to the lecture from: Professor Havi Carel (Department of Philosophy, University of Bristol), Dr Barny Hole (Bristol Medical School), and Dr Bonnie Venter (Law School, University of Bristol).
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Arrests are fundamental features of most legal systems. They are the basic mechanism by which a person is brought into the criminal (and sometimes civil) legal process. But we know relatively little about them. What makes an arrest different to an assault or a kidnapping? How do arrestees and arrestors understand arrests differently? Is an arrest an event or a process? When does it start, when is it over, and what happens if it fails?
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
June 2025
City, University of London
Northampton Square
London EC1V 0HB
United Kingdom
During our Postgraduate Open Evening you will learn more about our postgraduate courses and discover all the benefits of studying at City, University of London. Our spring Open Evening on Wednesday 4 June 2025 provides you with the perfect opportunity to get a taste of our campus and what it's like to study with us.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Something slightly different for you here! This is a part of the 'Lawgivers in Political Imaginations' series by Professor Melissa Lane at Gresham College.
How have lawgivers featured in modern revolutions? This lecture considers key moments in revolutions, including seventeenth-century Britain, eighteenth-century France and (what would become) the United States, and twentieth-century Iran. The appeal to lawgivers (including ancient ones from many cultures) in revolutionary visions and in consolidating new constitutions is a striking feature of modern politics.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
8 South Square London WC1R 5ET
Join us at The Honourable Society of Gray's Inn for an interactive session that will explore the evolving landscape of diversity at the Bar, highlighting progress made through initiatives such as Bridging the Bar (BTB) and the Griffin Access Programme (GAP), while also addressing the challenges that remain.
The panel will seek to exhibit a moving picture from the perspective of a student to a Judge. This will aim to give attendees an insight into differing experiences of D&I at the Bar and what underrepresentation looks like.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Bentham House
Endsleigh Gards
London
WC1H 0EG
UCL’s Legal History Research Group (LHRG) is pleased to host presentations of recent research in Early Modern English Legal History.
This workshop comprises presentations by: Dr Joanna McCunn (Bristol) and Dr David Foster (UCL).
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Barnard's Inn Hall
Holborn
London
EC1N 2HH
How have lawgivers featured in modern revolutions?
This lecture considers key moments in revolutions, including seventeenth-century Britain, eighteenth-century France and (what would become) the United States, and twentieth-century Iran.
The appeal to lawgivers (including ancient ones from many cultures) in revolutionary visions and in consolidating new constitutions is a striking feature of modern politics.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Endsleigh Gardens
London
WC1H 0EG
What are legal principles? Where do they come from? What is their role in legal argument? What challenges and difficulties do they pose for jurisprudence? A principle may be a norm—a discrete individual norm like a particular rule or standard. It may be a thread that holds several legal positions together, making sense of them as a “principled” whole. A legal principle may be a way of describing or characterizing an entire legal system. It may be the declaration of some grand moral position. Or it may embody a whole theory of government, as when we talk about the principle of the separation of powers.
This lecture series will consider difficulties and complexities of all these various kinds, showing that the bare idea of a legal principle offers much less to jurisprudence than some legal theorists have supposed. Still, it is worth exploring their domain in as much as they help constitute the environment in which other less question-begging forms of legal reasoning are developed.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Royal Holloway
Egham Hill
Egham
TW20 0EX
The ‘rule of law’ has long been a fundamental principal of good government, a tradition in England which largely stems from the Magna Carta in 1215. In an era of volatility, in which shifting societal and geopolitical norms and rapid technological advancement seem to challenge the long-accepted values of democratic societies, politicians and critics from all sides frequently appeal to the ‘rule of law’ as justification for their views and actions.
In this Magna Carta Lecture, former Attorney General for England and Wales, The Rt Hon Victoria Prentis KC, explores why adherence to the ‘rule of law’ still matters when the goalposts feel like they are shifting, and how we can grasp this nebulous concept to ensure that democratic societies emerge stronger from a turbulent period.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Barnard's Inn Hall
Holborn
London
EC1N 2HH
The Gray's Inn Reading is an annual lecture delivered by Britain's leading legal professionals, held in partnership with Gray's Inn. Join Sir Howard Morrison KC for the lecture this summer.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Drawing upon research conducted in the Caribbean, this paper will explore the multitude of ways in which contemporary ID systems, while promoting social and financial inclusion, can also exclude marginalised and vulnerable populations from essential state services, voting rights and healthcare. The talk will explore the concept of ‘statelessness-like experiences’ (Hayes de Kalaf, 2025) to consider how people can experience exclusion in ways that do not always fit comfortably within the legal parameters of citizenship deprivation, yet can have an overwhelmingly detrimental impact on an individual’s wellbeing and legal personhood. The research presented will highlight how, for the people who experience contemporary ID systems, historical forms of racial and ethnic exclusion remain very much embedded within new technological infrastructures and state architectures.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Bentham House Endsleigh Gards London WC1H 0EG
A media history of how the UK and US governments have surveilled citizens by intercepting their private communications.
It may not be Big Brother (yet), but the state is watching you—watching all of us, in fact, systematically intercepting our private communications and putting them to work in its own interests. In Interception, a media genealogy of the surveillance state at its most intimate, Bernard Keenan investigates the emergence of this practice as a governmental power and the secret role it has played in the development of communication systems and law. His book exposes the complex, largely obscure history of a covert and fundamental connection between the secret powers of the state and the means by which we communicate our everyday lives.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Endsleigh Gardens
London
WC1H 0EG
About the Lectures:
What are legal principles? Where do they come from? What is their role in legal argument? What challenges and difficulties do they pose for jurisprudence? A principle may be a norm—a discrete individual norm like a particular rule or standard. It may be a thread that holds several legal positions together, making sense of them as a “principled” whole. A legal principle may be a way of describing or characterizing an entire legal system. It may be the declaration of some grand moral position. Or it may embody a whole theory of government, as when we talk about the principle of the separation of powers.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
11 June 2025 - 12 June 2025, 9:00AM - 5:30PM
The topic for the 2025 Hart Workshop is Regulating the Global Movement of Care. The Workshop will seek to consider the role of law in managing the global movement of care, broadly defined to include healthcare, social care, domestic care, and unpaid care. Immigrant labour has long been the bedrock of the care systems of many countries in the world and law is intimately involved in ordering the movement of care and care workers. The Workshop invites participants to explore the numerous distinct involvements of the law in this process of movement, such as by creating precarity through the imposition of stringent immigration or regulatory requirements, by providing migrant carers and their supporters with a tool to fight oppression, or by defining relationships between migrant carers and their broader kinship networks. The Workshop will be organised around four themes – precarity, advocacy, protection, and kinship networks – and will provide an opportunity to explore the legal regulation of care through the lens of a variety of disciplines, including history, anthropology, politics, sociology, criminology, and creative arts.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Endsleigh Gardens
London
WC1H 0EG
What are legal principles? Where do they come from? What is their role in legal argument? What challenges and difficulties do they pose for jurisprudence? A principle may be a norm—a discrete individual norm like a particular rule or standard. It may be a thread that holds several legal positions together, making sense of them as a “principled” whole. A legal principle may be a way of describing or characterizing an entire legal system. It may be the declaration of some grand moral position. Or it may embody a whole theory of government, as when we talk about the principle of the separation of powers.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
70 Red Lion Street Holborn 68 London WC1R 4NY
Legal Action Group's annual Housing Law Conference on 13th June 2025 promises an exciting and diverse programme covering the latest developments in housing law. Please join us for this one day in-person conference which will be held at BPP University.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
At City, University of London we understand the importance of choosing the right place and course to continue your studies.
Our postgraduate online information sessions are scheduled throughout the year and range from subject/course specific sessions to general advice ones – all designed to give you further guidance about life at City, student experience and support available to you.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
King's College London, Strand Campus 30 Aldwych London WC2B 4BG
Judicial dialogue is a concept that has gained academic and institutional attention for decades. There are various forms of cooperation conducive to judicial dialogue, including judges’ associations, as well as international organisations. Entire systems are premised on such dialogue, such as the European Union, whose preliminary ruling procedure has helped the development of a legal order as well as the socialisation of national judges thereto. Whilst many studies are dedicated to demonstrating the consequences of judicial dialogue, or the way in which judicial dialogue occurs in various fora, there is little systematic inquiry with regards to how to make such judicial dialogue effective for the good development of the law and promoting rule of law values.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
At City, University of London we understand the importance of choosing the right place and course to continue your studies.
Our postgraduate online information sessions are scheduled throughout the year and range from subject/course specific sessions to general advice ones – all designed to give you further guidance about life at City, student experience and support available to you.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Despite frequent calls to integrate the study of law into broader scholarship on the ancient world, the study of law and legality often remains isolated. This seminar series, ‘Performing normativity in the ancient world’, seeks to move away from the traditional, narrow conception of ‘capital-L’ Law and hopes instead to focus on the performance, construction, negotiation, and enforcement of regimes of normativity across various spheres of human action by encouraging participants to explore a wider array of consolidated arrangements of “discourses, norms, practices, and institutions” (Duve, 2023) and their functions within the societies in which they emerged and operated. These spheres might include, but ought not be limited to, magic, religion, politics, theatre, literature, and art.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Debate on legislative expression has long been preserved for the drafting academic and practitioners. But in doing so they have failed the super goal of producing good laws. And they now need to confess that they do not have the answers to everything and collaborate with linguistics to learn from, and borrow, know-how, experience, and resulting successes.
Indeed, there are inherent difficulties in the drafting of legislation. The drafter is not a mere scribe, and drafting is affected by the environment of the Parliamentary (or legislative) process.
If an instrumental position is taken, the background can be seen to include recognition of a problem, determination of objectives, and the choice of means for their achievement.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
July 2025
The law often seeks to keep sound contained and fixed, but sound has a way of leaking out. From the acoustic design of courtrooms to rules of evidence and norms of decorum in trial, the law determines what should be heard and what should not, in legal process as well as in everyday life. Sound can be an evanescent and unruly object, however, evading or penetrating our ears in unexpected ways. As a result, the law applies what I refer to as fictions of hearing – assumptions, ideas, and rules about sound that aim to manage it, but don’t always succeed. Through three examples, I show how such fictions of hearing clash with the human perception of sound. These examples reveal the limitations of legal imagination and understanding of sound and listening.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Endsleigh Gardens London WC1H 0EG
The White House’s effort to jolt the terms of the Fourteenth Amendment’s birthright citizenship provision away from its longstanding status quo raises not just a constitutional law question, but a foundational question, sounding in political morality, as to the scope and nature of our polity. And of course, there is the (hardly minor) matter of whether and why government officials who heap public condemnation on federal judges will comply with those judges’ ordinarily binding orders. This talk offers an overview of these and other changes, and asks: Is this a “real” moment of constitutional change in the United States? And if so, what is the new constitutional dispensation?
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
August 2025
At City, University of London we understand the importance of choosing the right place and course to continue your studies.
Our online events provide the perfect opportunity for you to find out more about our postgraduate courses and what it's like to study with us from the comfort of your own home.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
September 2025
27 Goswell Road
London
EC1M 7AJ
A paid event this time, but tickets for students are only £10. Worth if you are interested!
Please join Leigh Day for an afternoon conference covering topics with our inspiring speakers.
Followed by a drinks reception 5-7pm with guest speaker.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
The National Archives
Kew, Richmond
TW9 4DU
Step inside the hidden world of MI5 and explore the extraordinary stories behind the security of a nation.
For the first time, MI5’s history will go on display to the public in a major new exhibition, made possible through an unprecedented partnership between the Security Service and The National Archives.
Explore the ever-changing world of espionage and security threats through original case files, photographs and papers, alongside the real equipment used by spies and spy-catchers over MI5’s 115-year history.
From counter-espionage and daring double-agents during the world wars, to chilling Cold War confessions and the counter-terrorism of recent times, this historic exhibition will take you behind the scenes of one of Britain’s most iconic institutions.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).