Featured Legal Events
Burlington House
Piccadilly London W1J 0BA
Across the UK, efforts to reverse declining biodiversity continue to fall short. This reality has prompted some campaigners to call for the adoption of a Rights of Nature approach. Such a shift would fundamentally change how we protect wildlife by recognising natural entities. A river could be granted the right to flow free of pollution, or a forest the right to naturally regenerate. Comparable approaches already exist elsewhere. Ecuador’s 2008 constitution recognises the Rights of Nature, and in Aotearoa New Zealand the Whanganui River was granted legal personhood in 2017.
What could this approach mean in a country as nature depleted and heavily shaped by human activity as the UK? What role should ecology and ecological science play within this movement? And might strengthening and enforcing existing laws for priority habitats and protected species deliver more immediate benefits?
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Saint Margaret Street
London SW1A 0AA
The statue of Millicent Fawcett was commissioned to mark 100 years of women’s suffrage in 2018 and was unveiled in April 2018 by the then prime minster Theresa May. It is the work of sculptress Gillian Wearing. The night will include a panel discussion with arts specialist Jordan Kaplan (Contemporary Arts Society) and architect Tony Dyson (Insall Architects) who guided the commissioning process step by step.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
April 2026
Saint James's
London SE14 6NH
Join us for a panel discussion from legal academics and writers exploring problems and limits in how the law defines subjecthood from psychoanalytic and other critical perspectives.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
This lecture is part of the annual Lord Mayors event. If you're able, make sure to put this in your diary ahead of time.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Grange Road
Cambridge CB3 9DQ
A one day conference to discuss the Wills Bill 2025 and related matters. Registration is free but compulsory.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
67-69 Lincoln's Inn Fields
London WC2A
This open day in fashion law is a great opportunity to meet the fashion law team at Queen Mary University of London School of Law, including our industry collaborators and mentors on the LLM in Fashion Law. The fashion law team will also be on hand to assist you with all your questions about the LLM in Fashion Law, including making applications. Join us for a day filled with fashion law talks, careers panels, brand presentations, and more!
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
At the University of Oxford, a conference on “Assimilated law – the role and future of retained EU law in the UK” will be held on 13 and 14 April 2026. It is jointly organised by Professor Anne Davies and Dr Johannes Ungerer; it is funded by the Institute of European and Comparative Law as part of its 30th anniversary events.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
This paper evaluates existing GCC data protection laws and related regulations to identify gaps and inconsistencies in deceased persons’ RTBF in light of emerging technologies, such as AI-generated content and blockchain, particularly in relation to deceased persons whose digital footprints persist indefinitely, and the inconsistent privacy policies of tech companies
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
In the Anthropocene, the fact that human activity is enmeshed with the existence and actions of every kind of other being is inescapable. As a result, the planetary ecological crisis has brought forth an urgent need to rethink understandings of human action. One response holds that the transformations necessary to tackle today’s crises will emerge from the distinctive capacity of human beings to transcend their environment. Another school of thought calls for seeing action as composite, produced by distributed networks of human and nonhuman agents. Yet the first of these is open to charges of human exceptionalism, while the second, according to its critics, lacks effective political traction.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Kingsbury Road
London
NW9 9HE
Welcome to Kingsbury Library! Join us for a cozy Coffee Morning event where we will discuss the Renters Rights Act. Learn about your rights as a renter and how to advocate for fair treatment.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
40 Northampton Road
London EC1R 0HB
Join Dr Jonah Miller to explore a forgotten episode in the early history of British policing.
One summer night in 1851, a London police officer beat a young man to death in Plumtree Court, a predominantly Irish neighbourhood in the heart of the city. The Court was a notorious slum, attracting the attention of missionaries, sanitary inspectors, poor law officials, architectural reformers, metropolitan railway enthusiasts, and many others besides the police. After the killing, it became the centre of an attempted coverup, a Chartist-led campaign for justice, a public inquiry, and finally a trial.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Bentham House
Endsleigh Gards London WC1H 0EG
The dominant approach to interpretation of the devolution statutes has been to treat them as ordinary statutes, to be interpreted like any other, rather than as “constitutional statutes”. This lecture will discuss the justifications for the ordinary statutes approach, the problems to which it gives rise, and how these problems may be resolved. It will be argued that the difference between the two approaches is less stark than it may appear. The ordinary statutes approach does make assumptions about the constitutional context in which interpretation takes place, but ones which are relatively insensitive to the specific needs and challenges of effective devolved governance.
Online and In-person Ticket price: £8
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
82 Gower Street
London WC1E 6EQ
Join us for an evening discussing international criminal justice and war crimes, discussing Simi?'s a book. The new book by Olivera Simi? - Madam War Criminal: Biljana Plavši?, Serbia’s Iron Lady
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
46-47 Russell Square
London WC1B 4JP
Join us for a panel discussion and networking event in celebration of International Women's Day. This event will follow the format of a panel discussion and Q&A followed by a networking session.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Queen Mary University of London
404 Bancroft Rd London E1 4DH
As part of the 60th Anniversary year of the School of Law at Queen Mary, we are pleased to invite you to the launch of the Queen Mary India Law Centre (QMILC), which will be formally opened by Lord Justice Rabinder Singh.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Russell Square
London WC1B 5DQ
What happens to international law when it is ignored, and regime change is driven by force rather than democracy?
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Sutherland Building
Ellison Place
Newcastle upon Tyne
NE1 8ST
Marital breakdown is not a modern phenomenon. Options available to separating spouses in the English Common Law World were, however, heavily restricted by gender and economic status, with wives occupying a significantly more vulnerable position. Before 1857, full divorce remained the preserve of wealthy men who could navigate the expensive Parliamentary divorce process. The Divorce and Matrimonial Causes Act 1857 transformed this landscape, establishing the Court for Divorce and Matrimonial Causes and making divorce accessible beyond the elite. This legislation influenced divorce law in England and Wales and across the Common Law World well into the twentieth century.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
This seminar marks the launch of Migrating Borders and Citizenship in Law by Professor Devyani Prabhat (University of Bristol), published by University of London Press as part of the Reimagining Law and Justice series.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Join for a day full of seminars around doctoral research. Topics include:
- Law and Humanities and the Law and Humanities Research Hub
- Managing the supervisory relationship
- Theoretical Frameworks an Introduction
- Introduction to Social Legal research
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Fulton A Lecture Theatre
University of Sussex Falmer BN1 9RH
Can neuroscience help us understand addiction as a 'broken brain' condition and should this impact how the legal system assigns blame?
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
This event marks the15th anniversary of the European Law Institute (ELI), highlighting its mission, global strategy, and future ambitions, while strengthening engagement with the judiciary and legal profession in the UK.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
183 Euston Road
London NW1 2BE
Privilege and confidentiality in the world of LLPs and Partnerships...
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
We are delighted to announce that the 15th Annual Cambridge International Law Journal Conference is taking place on 23–24 April 2026 at the Faculty of Law of the University of Cambridge. The theme this year is ‘Reimagining International Law: Critical, Regional, and Trans-Disciplinary Perspectives’.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Learn how to process an unsuccessful result, protect your confidence and choose your next step after a vacation scheme or training contract rejection.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
41 Brunswick Square
London WC1N 1AZ
Join for an in-person panel discussion about representing children in Section 16.4 Private Children law cases.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
28 April 2026 - 29 April 2026, 9:30AM - 5:00PM
This 2-day workshop brings together eight scholars from a range of disciplines – including History, English, Law, and French – who tackle various aspects of comic pleading in legal, religious, poetic, and dramatic texts, and think together about the intersection of law, comedy, and dialogue in the long medieval. The papers discussed will be published in a special issue of Law & Literature.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Rapid changes in information and communication technologies over the last two decades have occasioned a radical transformation in the human experience of time, labor, and sensation. Drawing on historical research in experimental psychology and nearly a decade of collaborative “attention activism” aimed at resisting the extractive violence of Big Tech, D. Graham Burnett will present a critical diagnosis of the contemporary program of relentless “human fracking,” and propose that an emerging politics of attention offers the best hope for emancipatory resistance.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Wood Street
London EC2Y 5BL
This year, Ten Old Square’s Private Client Evening Seminar takes a look at disclosure in the trust and estate context...
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Join Lindsey Thompson for a practical session on how to strengthen your written applications and understand what law firms are really looking for on paper.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
This 60-minute webinar discussion offers advice from academic publishing experts on how to get your work published. Four guest speakers will demystify the publishing process, offer advice on when and how to approach publishers, how to pitch, what publishers are looking for, when open access is the right choice, and how to promote your published work to the world.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
A practical session on how to improve performance at interview and assessment centre stage and understand what stronger candidates do differently under pressure
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Join a trainee working at a law firm who successfully reapplied, for a practical session on how to build a stronger plan for your next application.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Barnard's Inn Hall
Holborn London EC1N 2HH
This lecture examines Israel–Palestine law, cases vs Netanyahu, and how law may support lasting peace, from a human rights perspective.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
May 2026
The International Law and Affairs Group is delighted to welcome Dr Ylli Dautaj, Associate Professor at Durham Law School, and Cem Kalelio?lu, Partner at Pinsent Masons London, to discuss recent developments in international arbitration, with a particular focus on immunity, anti-suit/arbitration injunctions, the law applicable to arbitration, and the disclosure of conflicts by arbitrators.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
The Centre for Justice Reform warmly invites you to attend The Future of Past Trauma, a collaborative event with the Wiener Holocaust Library. The programme will feature two workshops exploring trauma-informed archival practice, participatory archiving, and the ethics of survivor narratives. These will be followed by a concluding public discussion: “The Future of Past Trauma – Institutions, Responsibility and Social Change.”
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
This talk draws from Despoina Mantzari, ‘Regulating FRAND Access to App Stores under the DMA’ (2026) Journal of Competition Law & Economics, forthcoming. The article develops a normative framework for interpreting the Fair, Reasonable and Non-Discriminatory (FRAND) platform-access obligation in Article 6(12) of the Digital Markets Act (DMA), with Apple’s iOS App Store as the central case study.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
The 2026 ICLQ Annual Lecture will be given by Dr Sofia Galani of the Panteio University of Athens, based on her article 'Human Rights Obligations in Maritime Search and Rescue' published in Vol 74(1) ICLQ
The duty to render assistance to persons in distress is well established in the international law of the sea, but none of the instruments which codify the duty contains human rights obligations. However, serious human rights violations may occur during search and rescue (SAR) operations or because of the lack thereof. This article examines the duty of States to render assistance to persons in distress through the lens of international human rights law and advocates for a human rights-oriented approach to SAR. It discusses the due diligence nature of the duty, the scope of jurisdiction in maritime SAR and how States should act to adhere to their human rights obligations from the moment they receive a distress call through to the moment they disembark rescued persons on land.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
67-69 Lincoln's Inn Fields
London WC2A 3JB
The Codification of international commercial law: the case of the ICC Uniform Rules for Demand Guarantees. With Professor Georges Affaki.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Burlington House
Piccadilly London W1J 0BA
Across the UK, efforts to reverse declining biodiversity continue to fall short. This reality has prompted some campaigners to call for the adoption of a Rights of Nature approach. Such a shift would fundamentally change how we protect wildlife by recognising natural entities. A river could be granted the right to flow free of pollution, or a forest the right to naturally regenerate. Comparable approaches already exist elsewhere. Ecuador’s 2008 constitution recognises the Rights of Nature, and in Aotearoa New Zealand the Whanganui River was granted legal personhood in 2017.
What could this approach mean in a country as nature depleted and heavily shaped by human activity as the UK? What role should ecology and ecological science play within this movement? And might strengthening and enforcing existing laws for priority habitats and protected species deliver more immediate benefits?
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Are you an aspiring solicitor looking to take the next step in your legal career?
Join BARBRI for the Future Lawyers Convention 2026 – the popular in-person afternoon event designed to help you plan, build and design your route into the legal profession, with practical insights you can use straight away.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
East Avenue
London E12 6SG
Join in person for the launch of the Newham Community Law Project. You will be joined by the local community who drove the creation of the NCLP, funders, policy makers and more - come and celebrate!
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
67-69 Lincoln's Inn Fields
London WC2A
In this event, Dr Pinar Oruc will introduce her book “Digitising Cultural Heritage: Clashes with Copyright Law”. It is the second book in the Art Law Library, a book series by Hart Publishing and the Institute of Art and Law. It is available Open Access.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Endsleigh Gardens
London WC1H 0EG
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Cruciform Building
Gower Street, London,
London
WC1E 6BT
United Kingdom
Frederick M. Lawrence, Secretary and CEO of the Phi Beta Kappa Society and Distinguished Lecturer, Georgetown University Law Centre, and the former President of Brandeis University, will be in conversation with Professor Larry Kramer, President and Vice-Chancellor of the London School of Economics and Political Science. Together, they will explore the profound political, legal, and cultural pressures reshaping US universities. From academic freedom and campus governance to public trust, funding, and the role of higher education in sustaining democratic values, this discussion will address how higher education institutions are navigating an era of polarisation and constitutional strain. Drawing on their experience leading major research universities on both sides of the Atlantic, they will reflect on what is at stake for higher education as a cornerstone of democratic society. The event will consider how universities can continue to serve as spaces for open inquiry and civic education, and what lessons may be learned for higher education globally.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Endsleigh Gardens
London WC1H 0EG
Information is never neutral: it is produced, mediated, classified, preserved, corrupted, obscured, mis-used, recovered, and re-used. How this is done, and critically, by whom, shapes whose knowledge is recognised, whose histories are archived, and whose futures can be imagined. The Department of Information Studies (DIS) Annual Research Symposium (19 May 2026) is a UCL Faculty Arts and Humanities flagship event that brings together researchers and practitioners across libraries, archives and records management, publishing, digital humanities, data/AI, and information science to explore information power – information as a currency of power and, potentially, empowerment – as a grand challenge of our time. As part of UCL200, we ask what it means to “rediscover” and “reclaim” information: to recover hidden histories, redesign systems of stewardship, and build equitable knowledge infrastructures that serve communities with fairness, integrity, accountability, and care. The symposium invites colleagues from across UCL, the cultural sector, policy, and civil society to engage with our groundbreaking departmental foundations and current emerging research on knowledge justice, information governance, AI ethics, information activism, and future-facing infrastructures.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Bentham House
Endsleigh Gards London WC1H 0EG
This lecture uses the HRJL as a case study in the opportunities and risks of transplanting legislation developed in the UK to smaller jurisdictions. Jersey adopted a statutory scheme closely aligned with the UK’s Human Rights Act, aiming to ‘bring rights home’ while preserving local constitutional arrangements. Drawing on post-legislative evaluation work, I will explore what has worked well and what has not: patterns of litigation and access to justice, the quality of rights-checking in lawmaking, and the wider challenge of building durable ‘rights infrastructure’ in a small polity. The aim is to identify practical lessons for policymakers and legislators working across the Crown Dependencies and other smaller jurisdictions.
Online and In-person Ticket price: £8
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Plato in the fourth century BCE penned an indelible sequence of constitutional decline ending in tyranny, as well as a more complex set of possibilities for mixing different constitutional kinds. Two centuries later, Polybius portrayed constitutional change as cyclical, with an eventual collapse of democracy into ‘ochlocracy’ (mob rule) and then reversion to monarchy. These and other ancient authors proposed that a mixed constitution might prevent unwanted political change – an idea that would influence many later generations of political thinkers.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
June 2026
Northampton Square
London EC1V 0HB
United Kingdom
Join us for our spring Postgraduate Open Evening on Wednesday 3 June 2026 to explore the wide range of postgraduate opportunities available at our Clerkenwell and Moorgate campuses.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Saint Margaret Street
London SW1A 0AA
The statue of Millicent Fawcett was commissioned to mark 100 years of women’s suffrage in 2018 and was unveiled in April 2018 by the then prime minster Theresa May. It is the work of sculptress Gillian Wearing. The night will include a panel discussion with arts specialist Jordan Kaplan (Contemporary Arts Society) and architect Tony Dyson (Insall Architects) who guided the commissioning process step by step.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
The Law Research Centre at the University of Wolverhampton, in collaboration with the UK Intellectual Property Office are organising a two-day, hybrid event, between 8-9 June 2026 (Wolverhampton, UK). The first day is dedicated to feminist research and teaching of IP laws. The second day will see speakers from the IPO, the World Intellectual Property Organization, the UK judiciary and other professionals, discussing the policy and practice in the area. We will focus on women's participation in music and the related gender gap in copyright law; and women's health and the related gap in innovation in this field.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
An enthusiast of the Roman mixed constitution, Cicero was elected consul and in that role dramatically curbed the tyrannical ambitions of Catiline. He would later become fatally embroiled in the shifting politics of later generations of ambitious strongmen, while also writing his own theories of constitutional change. This lecture explores Cicero’s life and death as a way to articulate the crises of the late republic.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
An annual lecture delivered by Britain's leading legal professionals, held in partnership with Gray's Inn.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Endsleigh Gardens
London WC1H 0EG
OR
Online Via Zoom
Justice derives its origin, Hume tells us, from the confined generosity of persons and the scanty provision nature has made for our wants. Expanding our understanding of these facts and their relationship to justice, Rawls envisioned these “circumstances of justice” as those conditions under which social cooperation is both possible and necessary. This idea of circumstances has animated others in exploring the relationship between conditions and concepts, including Waldron’s account of the circumstances of politics. The questions I explore all relate to an underdeveloped idea in the philosophy of law: the circumstances of law. Is there a parallel relationship between conditions for and the concept of law? Does reflection on the conditions for law give us reason to favour one or another conception of law? In turn, do different conceptions of law highlight different conditions for law's possibility and necessity? And do we best understand some lasting contributions to jurisprudence, such as HLA Hart's account of the shift from a pre-legal to a legal society, as themselves participating in the idea of law's circumstances?
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Endsleigh Gardens
London WC1H 0EG
OR
Online Via Zoom
Justice derives its origin, Hume tells us, from the confined generosity of persons and the scanty provision nature has made for our wants. Expanding our understanding of these facts and their relationship to justice, Rawls envisioned these “circumstances of justice” as those conditions under which social cooperation is both possible and necessary. This idea of circumstances has animated others in exploring the relationship between conditions and concepts, including Waldron’s account of the circumstances of politics. The questions I explore all relate to an underdeveloped idea in the philosophy of law: the circumstances of law. Is there a parallel relationship between conditions for and the concept of law? Does reflection on the conditions for law give us reason to favour one or another conception of law? In turn, do different conceptions of law highlight different conditions for law's possibility and necessity? And do we best understand some lasting contributions to jurisprudence, such as HLA Hart's account of the shift from a pre-legal to a legal society, as themselves participating in the idea of law's circumstances?
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
Speaker: Martin Firrell is a public artist who has gently and consistently sought to humanise the times we live in. He uses the poster form to campaign for greater social equality. His bold and simple texts address LGBT+ equality, the women’s movement, feminism and gender equality; and universal human rights. The artist's aim is 'to make the world more humane'. For more than 25 years, Firrell has hijacked advertising’s means to achieve artistic-activist ends. His co-opting of commercial technique and syntax, together with his sustained and wholesale colonisation of advertising’s oldest and boldest medium, the billboard, makes him one of the most apposite and significant artists of the 21st Century.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
October 2026
Gain a better understanding of construction law in England and Wales through free training from the City of London Law Society.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
November 2026
Barnard's Inn Hall
Holborn
London
EC1N 2HH
This lecture explores the legal lessons Professor Stafford-Smith learned from visiting Afghanistan. He argues critical Western rhetoric betrays the country’s liberal majority (80% of its population and leadership), drawing parallels to U.S. involvement in other drawn-out conflicts. He asks: what positives do we see in Afghanistan? What legal lessons should we learn from it, about how we can best support those who share our values? How can we create a world that upholds individual rights and the rule of law?
Find out more on their event details page (external site).
December 2026
London
EC4Y 7HR
On 8th January 2026, Littleton is hosting an information evening in Chambers for prospective pupillage applicants. The event is open to those currently on the GDL or Bar Course with a serious interest in Chambers’ practice areas: employment, commercial and sports law.
The evening will include talks from Members of Chambers about their practices and from Chambers’ most recent pupil, followed by drinks and nibbles.
Find out more on their event details page (external site).