Does Sustainability Tell Courts How to Decide? – City Law Forum

Posted July 15th, 2026 in news by michael

‘Sustainability is everywhere now. It turns up in all-staff emails and new module titles, in strategy documents and calls for papers, and mostly we let it pass without asking what it commits us to. The familiar objection is that the concept is anthropocentric, that it manages nature for human benefit rather than valuing it in its own right. That objection is real, but it is also well worn, and a narrower question seems to me more revealing. When a statute or a treaty commits us to sustainable development and a dispute reaches court, does the concept help the judge decide the case? The suggestion here is that it does very little, because sustainability lacks what might be called an adjudicative architecture: the machinery a claim needs before a court can act on it, an account of who may sue, of what counts as harm, and of what a court may order. Constitutional rights supply that machinery, and the rights of nature increasingly do too. Sustainability does not.’

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City Law Forum, 15th July 2026

Source: blogs.city.ac.uk

Teen catfish victim wins £10k court payout after identity stolen by girl in her town – The Independent

Posted July 15th, 2026 in news by michael

‘A teenage student subjected to a four-year “catfishing” nightmare after her identity was stolen by another teenage girl in her town has won a £10,000 High Court damages payout.’

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The Independent, 15th July 2026

Source: www.independent.co.uk

Commercial Court clarifies test for restricting document access under transparency pilot – OUT-LAW.com

Posted July 15th, 2026 in news by michael

‘The Commercial Court of England and Wales has given guidance on what factors courts should consider when deciding whether to make a filing modification order (FMO) under a new document access pilot.’

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OUT-LAW.com, 14th July 2026

Source: www.pinsentmasons.com

Bhavya Johari – The Political Constitution’s Broken Promise: Arms, Sanctions and Accountability after Al-Haq – UK Constitutional Law Association

Posted July 15th, 2026 in news by michael

‘In September 2024, the Government suspended around thirty arms export licences to Israel, having found a clear risk that United Kingdom equipment might be used to commit serious violations of international humanitarian law. It exempted one category, creating a carve-out for components made in the United Kingdom for the F-35 combat aircraft, which continued to reach Israel through the global spares pool. When that carve-out was challenged, the Divisional Court in R (Al-Haq) v Secretary of State for Business and Trade (30 June 2025) accepted that the clear-risk finding was, in the Foreign Secretary’s own view, the only conclusion available to him at [36]. It nonetheless held that whether the continued supply complied with the United Kingdom’s international obligations was not a question a domestic court could decide.’

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UK Constitutional Law Association, 15th July 2026

Source: ukconstitutionallaw.org

Solicitor posed as police officer to get CCTV footage from Nando’s – Legal Futures

Posted July 15th, 2026 in news by michael

‘A motoring solicitor from Cheshire has been found guilty of impersonating a police officer after trying to get CCTV footage from a Nando’s restaurant.’

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Legal Futures, 15th July 2026

Source: www.legalfutures.co.uk

CAT hits out at “unhelpful and misleading” Pogust Goodhead – Legal Futures

Posted July 15th, 2026 in news by michael

‘Class action firm Pogust Goodhead (PG) was “unhelpful, uncooperative, deliberately obfuscatory and misleading” by not revealing its client’s litigation funding problems for three years, the Competition Appeal Tribunal has ruled.’

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Legal Futures, 15th July 2026

Source: www.legalfutures.co.uk

Learning About Cohabitation Law from Sabrina Carpenter – Financial Remedies Journal

Posted July 15th, 2026 in news by michael

‘Sabrina Carpenter’s song ‘House Tour’, which has been topping the charts across the country, is a helpful albeit unconventional springboard to consider the law for unmarried cohabitants as it stands, and comment on how proposed reform might better protect families in England and Wales today.’

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Financial Remedies Journal, 15th July 2026

Source: financialremediesjournal.com

Councillor loses bitter neighbour court war over dog fence boundary at £1.2m country home – The Independent

Posted July 15th, 2026 in news by michael

‘A Labrador-loving parish councillor has lost a four-year court fight after his neighbour started tearing out the “dog-proof fence” around his £1.2m country home during a boundary row.’

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The Independent, 15th July 2026

Source: www.independent.co.uk

Young cybercriminals facing jail over TfL hack that cost millions – The Independent

Posted July 15th, 2026 in news by michael

‘Two young members of a criminal hacking group who carried out a cyber attack on Transport for London (TfL) that cost the organisation millions of pounds are facing jail.’

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The Independent, 15th July 2026

Source: www.independent.co.uk

UK and EU sign new Gibraltar treaty to ease border delays with Spain – The Independent

Posted July 15th, 2026 in news by michael

‘A new treaty governing the future of Gibraltar has been formally signed by the UK and the European Union, aiming to alleviate border crossing complexities and resolve long-standing uncertainty regarding [the UK’s] relationship with Spain.’

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The Independent, 14th July 2026

Source: www.independent.co.uk

UK to continue sending potential trafficking victims to France despite court ruling – The Guardian

Posted July 15th, 2026 in news by michael

‘The Home Office is set to ignore a high court ruling and continue sending asylum seekers to France without looking into claims they have been trafficked, which last week was found to be unlawful.’

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The Guardian, 14th July 2026

Source: www.theguardian.com

Man who staged wife’s suicide jailed for murder – BBC News

Posted July 15th, 2026 in news by michael

‘A man has been jailed for life after being found guilty of the rape and murder of his estranged wife and staging a scene to make her death look like suicide.’

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BBC News, 14th July 2026

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

South East Water must pay £30.5m for supply failures – BBC News

Posted July 14th, 2026 in news by michael

‘Water regulator Ofwat said this follows the conclusion of three investigations into the company’s repeated failures.’

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BBC News, 14th July 2026

Source: www.bbc.co.uk

“Net zero”, church heating, and the consistory courts – VI – Law & Religion UK

Posted July 14th, 2026 in news by michael

‘Following the General Synod decision in February 2020, new provisions on carbon reduction were introduced under the Faculty Jurisdiction (Amendment) Rules 2022 (“the new provisions”) came into force 1 July 2022. This is the sixth in the series of posts which update the list of determinations under the revised provisions.’

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Law & Religion UK, 13th July 2026

Source: lawandreligionuk.com

Does the Lloyd review mark the end of the Legal Services Act? – Legal Futures

Posted July 14th, 2026 in news by michael

‘Reading between the lines of Richard Lloyd’s independent review of the LSB published yesterday – an impressively rapid achievement, as these things go, given the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) only formally commissioned him in February – I sense the ‘stakeholders’ he spoke to rather enjoyed putting the boot in.’

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Legal Futures, 14th July 2026

Source: www.legalfutures.co.uk

Section 25(2)(g): Consign It to the Past So Survivors Can Start Their Future – Financial Remedies Journal

Posted July 14th, 2026 in news by michael

‘The 2026 judgments of Cusworth J reported as LP v MP [2025] EWFC 473 and Wei Lyn Loh and Ardal Loh-Granger [2025] EWFC 483 have dusted off s 25(2)(g) Matrimonial Causes Act 1973. Limited to use in only the most serious instances, this factor should be consigned to the history books rather than being hailed as a path to victim recompense.’

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Financial Remedies Journal, 13th July 2026

Source: financialremediesjournal.com

New Audit Wales code strengthens guidance on AI – Local Government Lawyer

Posted July 14th, 2026 in news by michael

‘Published on Thursday (9 July), the new code replaces the 2020 Code and takes into account the rise of artificial intelligence, legislative changes, and current resource constraints affecting the public sector.’

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Local Government Lawyer, 13th July 2026

Source: www.localgovernmentlawyer.co.uk

C of E’s £100m plan to address historical links to slavery faces legal challenge – The Guardian

Posted July 14th, 2026 in news by michael

‘The Church of England is facing a legal challenge over Project Spire, its £100m plan to further reparative justice for historical links to enslavement, as staff come under “vile abuse” from critics.’

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The Guardian, 13th July 2026

Source: www.theguardian.com

Landlords must address excess heat issues under new rules after boy’s death – The Independent

Posted July 14th, 2026 in news by michael

‘Under the new rules from November 30, brought in under Awaab’s Law, social housing tenants will have strengthened rights to have serious problems addressed faster.’

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The Independent, 13th July 2026

Source: www.independent.co.uk

UK bans support for Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps – The Guardian

Posted July 14th, 2026 in news by michael

‘The prime minister announced his government would designate the branch of the Iranian military under a new National Security Act, enabling law enforcement to take action against anyone deemed to be providing it with support.’

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The Guardian, 13th July 2026

Source: www.theguardian.com