Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

All Outputs (1895)

Understanding the Implications of Article 2 of the Northern Ireland Protocol in the Context of EU Case Law Developments (2022)
Journal Article
Frantziou, E., & Craig, S. (2022). Understanding the Implications of Article 2 of the Northern Ireland Protocol in the Context of EU Case Law Developments. Northern Ireland Legal Quarterly, 73(S2), 65-88. https://doi.org/10.53386/nilq.v73is2.1059

Conscious of the careful balance stemming from the Rights, Safeguards and Equality of Opportunity provisions of the Belfast/Good Friday Agreement 1998, it was clear that human rights guarantees underpinned by EU law would be a pivotal aspect of the P... Read More about Understanding the Implications of Article 2 of the Northern Ireland Protocol in the Context of EU Case Law Developments.

Law and governance in the Anthropocene (2022)
Journal Article
Woolley, O., & Harrington, C. (2022). Law and governance in the Anthropocene. Global Policy, 13(S3), 5-10. https://doi.org/10.1111/1758-5899.13168

This special issue on ‘Law and Governance in the Anthropocene’ brings together scholars from the disciplines of law and international relations to examine the ramifications of the Anthropocene for global governance and international law. The predomin... Read More about Law and governance in the Anthropocene.

Faces of Hunger: An Intersectional Approach to Children's Right to Food in the UK (2022)
Journal Article
Morris, K. (2022). Faces of Hunger: An Intersectional Approach to Children's Right to Food in the UK. Journal of Law and Society, 49(4), 726-752. https://doi.org/10.1111/jols.12397

This article explores the extent to which the right to food is currently enjoyed by children within the United Kingdom (UK) using image analysis of the food parcels received by children eligible for free school meals during the COVID-19 pandemic. It... Read More about Faces of Hunger: An Intersectional Approach to Children's Right to Food in the UK.

Statutory Interpretation after Brexit: Implications from a Case Study of VAT (2022)
Journal Article
Zu, Y. (2023). Statutory Interpretation after Brexit: Implications from a Case Study of VAT. Legal Studies, 43(2), 295-311. https://doi.org/10.1017/lst.2022.41

As the UK leaves the European Union, a new body of UK law, labelled ‘retained EU law’, was introduced to save and convert certain parts of EU law into UK statutes. This article explores the impact of Brexit on statutory interpretation in the UK in th... Read More about Statutory Interpretation after Brexit: Implications from a Case Study of VAT.

Taking the Current When it Serves: Prospects and Challenges for an ITLOS Advisory Opinion on Oceans and Climate Change (2022)
Journal Article
Roland Holst, R. J. (2023). Taking the Current When it Serves: Prospects and Challenges for an ITLOS Advisory Opinion on Oceans and Climate Change. Review of European, Comparative & International Environmental Law, 32(2), 217-225. https://doi.org/10.1111/reel.12481

The 2021 Agreement for the Establishment of the Commission of Small Island States on Climate Change and International Law has brought the prospect of an advisory opinion on climate change from the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (ITLOS)... Read More about Taking the Current When it Serves: Prospects and Challenges for an ITLOS Advisory Opinion on Oceans and Climate Change.

Labour/Data Justice: A New Framework For Labour/Regulatory Datafication (2022)
Journal Article
McCann, D., & Cruz-Santiago, A. (2022). Labour/Data Justice: A New Framework For Labour/Regulatory Datafication. Journal of Law and Society, 49(4), 658-680. https://doi.org/10.1111/jols.12392

Labour datafication – the accelerating quantification of working life encompassing data-use that extracts additional value from workers – is increasingly recognised as a dimension of the future of work. This article proposes a notion of ‘labour/data... Read More about Labour/Data Justice: A New Framework For Labour/Regulatory Datafication.

Moving in a State of Fear: Ambiguity, Gendered Temporality and the Phenomenology of Anticipating Violence (2022)
Journal Article
Twemlow, J., Turner, C., & Swaine, A. (2022). Moving in a State of Fear: Ambiguity, Gendered Temporality and the Phenomenology of Anticipating Violence. Australian Feminist Law Journal, 48(1), 87-111. https://doi.org/10.1080/13200968.2022.2138185

This article adopts a feminist phenomenological method to flesh out the way in which gendered norms position the experience of anticipating violence. While women’s everyday lives are frequently polluted with an atmosphere laden with potential threats... Read More about Moving in a State of Fear: Ambiguity, Gendered Temporality and the Phenomenology of Anticipating Violence.

Ethical, Translational, and Legal Issues Surrounding the Novel Adoption of Ectogestative Technologies (2022)
Journal Article
Segers, S., & Romanis, E. C. (2022). Ethical, Translational, and Legal Issues Surrounding the Novel Adoption of Ectogestative Technologies. Risk Management and Healthcare Policy, 15, 2207-2220. https://doi.org/10.2147/rmhp.s358553

Increasing numbers of research teams are investigating the feasibility of developing artificial amnion and placenta technology (AAPT), commonly referred to as “artificial womb technology”. This technology, aimed at supporting ex vivo gestation, has n... Read More about Ethical, Translational, and Legal Issues Surrounding the Novel Adoption of Ectogestative Technologies.

Sustainable Finance and Sovereign Debt: The Illusion to Govern by Contract (2022)
Journal Article
Lupo-Pasini, F. (2022). Sustainable Finance and Sovereign Debt: The Illusion to Govern by Contract. Journal of International Economic Law, 25(4), 1-19. https://doi.org/10.1093/jiel/jgac047

Sovereign debt markets are rapidly venturing into the world of sustainable finance. Sovereign and sub-sovereign borrowers increasingly use ‘green’, ‘social’, and ‘sustainability’ bonds and loans to finance their domestic sustainability agenda. The ra... Read More about Sustainable Finance and Sovereign Debt: The Illusion to Govern by Contract.

Towards an EU criminal law on violence against women: The ambitions and limitations of the Commission’s proposal to criminalise image-based sexual abuse (2022)
Journal Article
Rigotti, C., & McGlynn, C. (2022). Towards an EU criminal law on violence against women: The ambitions and limitations of the Commission’s proposal to criminalise image-based sexual abuse. New Journal of European Criminal Law, 13(4), 452-477. https://doi.org/10.1177/20322844221140713

In March 2022, the European Commission proposed a new landmark Directive on combating violence against women and domestic violence which includes measures on the non-consensual distribution of intimate and manipulated images. We refer to this form of... Read More about Towards an EU criminal law on violence against women: The ambitions and limitations of the Commission’s proposal to criminalise image-based sexual abuse.

Teaching for social change: introducing ‘scrapbooking’ as a pedagogic approach towards ending gender-based violence (2022)
Journal Article
Walling-Wefelmeyer, R., Johnson, K., Westmarland, N., Dhir, A., & Lyons Sumroy, A. (2023). Teaching for social change: introducing ‘scrapbooking’ as a pedagogic approach towards ending gender-based violence. Journal of Gender-Based Violence, 7(1), 128-145. https://doi.org/10.1332/239868021x16661126604534

This article introduces and evaluates ‘scrapbooking’ as a critical pedagogic approach to gender-based violence (GBV). This approach is inspired by the rapid development of conceptual and methodological tools for researching violence and abuse and the... Read More about Teaching for social change: introducing ‘scrapbooking’ as a pedagogic approach towards ending gender-based violence.

Revisiting property transfer theory: English law and Chinese law compared (2022)
Journal Article
Wu, Z., & Chen, L. (2023). Revisiting property transfer theory: English law and Chinese law compared. Legal Studies, 43(2), 259-277. https://doi.org/10.1017/lst.2022.36

The relationship between a conveyance’s validity and its underlying contract has been a classic but unsettled topic for comparative private lawyers over the past three decades. This paper attempts to add positivist and normative observations drawn fr... Read More about Revisiting property transfer theory: English law and Chinese law compared.

‘Climate Change isn’t Optional’: Climate Change in the Core Law Curriculum (2022)
Journal Article
Bouwer, K., John, E., Luke, O., & Rozhan, N. A. (2023). ‘Climate Change isn’t Optional’: Climate Change in the Core Law Curriculum. Legal Studies, 43(2), 240 - 258. https://doi.org/10.1017/lst.2022.35

This paper makes a case for the integration of compulsory climate change topics across the core law curriculum. It argues that the most persuasive rationale for this is based in climate legal obligations and institutions, and a clear-eyed perception... Read More about ‘Climate Change isn’t Optional’: Climate Change in the Core Law Curriculum.