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All Outputs (377)

Digital Native First Year Law Students and their Reading Skills in a Post Reading World (2018)
Journal Article
Emmerich, F., & Murphy, A. (2018). Digital Native First Year Law Students and their Reading Skills in a Post Reading World. The Journal of Academic Development and Education, https://doi.org/10.21252/KEELE-0000034

In this paper we draw on our reflective experiences of introducing and facilitating reading development exercises in a first year Administrative Law module. We argue that students of 2018 can be understood as digital natives who display an almost exc... Read More about Digital Native First Year Law Students and their Reading Skills in a Post Reading World.

Once More With Feeling: Queer Activist Legal Scholarship and Jurisprudence (2018)
Journal Article
(2018). Once More With Feeling: Queer Activist Legal Scholarship and Jurisprudence. International Journal of Human Rights, 62-79. https://doi.org/10.1080/13642987.2018.1513402

Scholars and activists concerned with eliminating violence and discrimination against lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and intersex (LGBTI) people have generated passionate conversations about pursuing law reform to make injuries, intimacies, and... Read More about Once More With Feeling: Queer Activist Legal Scholarship and Jurisprudence.

High-conflict divorce involving children: Parents’ meaning-making and agency (2018)
Journal Article
(2018). High-conflict divorce involving children: Parents’ meaning-making and agency. Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law, 340 -361. https://doi.org/10.1080/09649069.2018.1493652

Most research, policy discussion and intervention is based on outsider-expert understandings that categorise divorces as well as parents enmeshed in ‘high-conflict’ disputes in polarised and individualised terms. Little, however, is known about paren... Read More about High-conflict divorce involving children: Parents’ meaning-making and agency.

Encountering offenders in community palliative care settings: challenges for care provision. (2018)
Journal Article
Lillie, A., Corcoran, M., Wrigley, A., & Read, S. (2018). Encountering offenders in community palliative care settings: challenges for care provision. International Journal of Palliative Nursing, 368 - 375. https://doi.org/10.12968/ijpn.2018.24.8.368

BACKGROUND: There is very little research into the way that offender management strategies impinge on the practices and decision-making of palliative care personnel in community settings. AIMS: To improve understanding of the challenges that communit... Read More about Encountering offenders in community palliative care settings: challenges for care provision..

A Federal Question Doctrine for EU Fundamental Rights Law: Making Sense of Articles 51 and 53 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights (2018)
Journal Article
(2018). A Federal Question Doctrine for EU Fundamental Rights Law: Making Sense of Articles 51 and 53 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights. European Law Review, 511-533. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3502091

The EU Fundamental Rights Charter should be understood as acknowledging that fundamental rights are the foundation of European democracies and thus underlying EU integration, and that the division of powers between the EU and its Member States is ult... Read More about A Federal Question Doctrine for EU Fundamental Rights Law: Making Sense of Articles 51 and 53 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights.

Ensuring appropriate assessment of deemed consent in Wales. (2018)
Journal Article
Parsons. (2018). Ensuring appropriate assessment of deemed consent in Wales. Journal of Medical Ethics, 210 - ?. https://doi.org/10.1136/medethics-2018-104935

Albertsen, in his recent article, offers an assessment of the recently introduced opt-out system for organ donation in Wales. However, he focuses on whether concerns raised prior to the enactment of the new system have been realised, rather than any... Read More about Ensuring appropriate assessment of deemed consent in Wales..

Custodian Legal Culture - Enabling Multi-Stakeholder Research Collaborations Between Academia and Government in the UK (2018)
Journal Article
Aidinlis. (2018). Custodian Legal Culture - Enabling Multi-Stakeholder Research Collaborations Between Academia and Government in the UK. International Journal of Population Data Science, 3(2), https://doi.org/10.23889/ijpds.v3i2.476

BackgroundEmpirical studies suggest that some public bodies in England are very reluctant to grant access to administrative data for various purposes. This poster presents the conclusions drawn in my so-far research on the driving forces of administr... Read More about Custodian Legal Culture - Enabling Multi-Stakeholder Research Collaborations Between Academia and Government in the UK.

The Victim, the Villain and the Rescuer: the trafficking of women and contemporary abolition (2018)
Journal Article
Faulkner. (2018). The Victim, the Villain and the Rescuer: the trafficking of women and contemporary abolition. https://doi.org/10.31273/LGD.2018.2101

A term as morally and politically loaded as ‘modern day slave trade’ inevitably provokes strong and emotive responses. From the current Secretary General of the United Nations (UN) (António Guterres) to the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (There... Read More about The Victim, the Villain and the Rescuer: the trafficking of women and contemporary abolition.

Asset-based approaches, older people and social care: an analysis and critique (2018)
Journal Article
(2018). Asset-based approaches, older people and social care: an analysis and critique. Ageing and society, 1087-1099. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0144686x17000071

Asset-based thinking is increasingly prevalent in health policy and is to be found also in discourses on social care. This article explores and critiques the applicability of asset-based approaches to social care for older people, using Carol Bacchi’... Read More about Asset-based approaches, older people and social care: an analysis and critique.

The Foundations of Conscientious Objection: Against Freedom and Autonomy (2018)
Journal Article
Nehushtan, Y., & Danaher, J. (2018). The Foundations of Conscientious Objection: Against Freedom and Autonomy. Jurisprudence, 541-565. https://doi.org/10.1080/20403313.2018.1454031

According to the common view, conscientious objection is grounded in autonomy or in ‘freedom of conscience’ and is tolerated out of respect for the objector's autonomy. Emphasising freedom of conscience or autonomy as a central concept within the iss... Read More about The Foundations of Conscientious Objection: Against Freedom and Autonomy.

It Is not Just About Investor-State Arbitration: A Look at Case C-284/16, Achmea BV (2018)
Journal Article
(2018). It Is not Just About Investor-State Arbitration: A Look at Case C-284/16, Achmea BV

In the much-awaited Achmea judgment (of 6 March 2018, case C-284/16 [GC]), the Court of Justice held that investor-state tribunals (ISTs), “such as” the one under the Netherlands-Slovakia intra-EU bilateral investment treaty (BIT) are incompatible wi... Read More about It Is not Just About Investor-State Arbitration: A Look at Case C-284/16, Achmea BV.

Supported Decision-Making from Theory to Practice: Implementing the Right to Enjoy Legal Capacity (2018)
Journal Article
Harding, R., & Tascioglu, E. (2018). Supported Decision-Making from Theory to Practice: Implementing the Right to Enjoy Legal Capacity. Societies, 25 - 25. https://doi.org/10.3390/soc8020025

The right to equal recognition before the law, protected by Article 12 of the United Nations (UN) Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD), mandates the use of supported decision-making practices to enable disabled people, particu... Read More about Supported Decision-Making from Theory to Practice: Implementing the Right to Enjoy Legal Capacity.

Compensating injury to autonomy in English negligence law: Inconsistent recognition (2018)
Journal Article
Keren-Paz, T. (2018). Compensating injury to autonomy in English negligence law: Inconsistent recognition. Medical Law Review, 26(4), 585-609. https://doi.org/10.1093/medlaw/fwy009

Recently in Shaw v Kovac, the Court of Appeal seemed to have rejected a standalone injury to autonomy (ITA) as actionable in negligence, in an informed consent case. In this article, I argue that Shaw can be explained away, and that English law recog... Read More about Compensating injury to autonomy in English negligence law: Inconsistent recognition.

Are ‘pseudonymised’ data always personal data? Implications of the GDPR for administrative data research in the UK (2018)
Journal Article
Aidinlis. (2018). Are ‘pseudonymised’ data always personal data? Implications of the GDPR for administrative data research in the UK. Computer Law and Security Review, 222 - 233. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clsr.2018.01.002

There has naturally been a good deal of discussion of the forthcoming General Data Protection Regulation. One issue of interest to all data controllers, and of particular concern for researchers, is whether the GDPR expands the scope of personal data... Read More about Are ‘pseudonymised’ data always personal data? Implications of the GDPR for administrative data research in the UK.

Operationalizing the Right to Health through the Pandemic Influenza Preparedness Framework (2018)
Journal Article
(2018). Operationalizing the Right to Health through the Pandemic Influenza Preparedness Framework

Developing states lack access to pandemic influenza vaccines. The provision of ‘essential’ medicines is a core, non-derogable obligation of the right to health in the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR), which stat... Read More about Operationalizing the Right to Health through the Pandemic Influenza Preparedness Framework.