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Yseult Marique, Theodore Konstadinides, Joel Colón-Ríos, Tom Flynn, Giulia Gentile, Esin Küçük, Etienne Durand, and Zhenbin Zuo: Essex Law Scholars’ Contributions to the ICON•S Conference in Madrid 2024

This blog post originally appeared in the Essex Law Research blog on 10 October 2024, and has been reposted here with their kind permission. The main chamber and the sala constitucional of Congreso de los Diputades in Madrid. Credit: Dr Tom Flynn. By Yseult Marique, Theodore Konstadinides, Joel Colón-Ríos, Tom Flynn, Giulia Gentile, Esin Küçük, Etienne Durand, and Zhenbin Zuo Essex Law School made a … Continue reading

CAJI Presents: Diverse Voices in Public Law – A Book Discussion

Essex Constitutional and Administrative Justice Initiative is excited to be welcoming Se-shauna Wheatle and Elizabeth A Loughlin, the editors of Diverse Voices in Public Law, to discuss this recent text, along with the contributors of two chapters, Donal Coffey and Coree Brown Swan. In Diverse Voices in Public Law, Se-shauna Wheatle and Elizabeth O’Loughlin note … Continue reading

Call for submissions: Ombudsmen, Tribunals and Administrative Justice section of the Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law

Lee Marsons, Senior Researcher, Public Law Project I am part of the editorial team at the Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law, specifically organising the Ombudsmen, Tribunals and Administrative Justice section of the Journal. I thank Essex CAJI for allowing me to use this post to invite article submissions for the section. The Journal … Continue reading

Naoise Coakley: “You could be waiting forever”: Managing Autism Assessment Waiting Lists

In 2023, the York Disability Rights Forum announced their intention to bring judicial review proceedings against the Humber and North Yorkshire Integrated Care Board on the basis that its adult autism and ADHD assessment pilot pathway was unlawful. The pilot had been introduced in March 2023 in response to increasing numbers of adults seeking an … Continue reading

Dr Aoife Duffy: State Impunity and the Northern Ireland Conflict 

During the 30-year Northern Ireland conflict, which ended with the 1998 Belfast/Good Friday Agreement, human rights violations were committed by a range of parties, including UK state forces. It has long been suspected that impunity protected this latter category of conflict actors, and that lack of accountability for serious harms, such as torture and killings, … Continue reading