A new problem-solving court aimed at tackling drug and alcohol problems is set to be piloted in Newry within the next few months. The Family Drug and Alcohol Court (FDAC) will be trialled at Newry Family Proceedings Court by the Department of Justice and the Department of Health in cases where a chi
Search:
Allen & Overy is recruiting up to 50 new staff members to Belfast teams that underpin its global IT services, the Belfast Telegraph reports. The international law firm is hosting a recruitment evening at its Belfast office next Thursday as it seeks 30 new IT staff and 20 workers in HR, marketing
Pictured (l-r): Bridget Howard, Niamh Shanahan, Dr Norah Burns, Pat McInerney, Jack Nicholas BL, Meredith Philips and Isaac Freckleton Students from University of Limerick and University of Cambridge competed in a mooting competition organised by UL Law Society in conjunction with UL School of Law a
A former coroner has warned official statistics are underestimating the number of suicides because deaths from suicide are being recorded with open or undetermined verdicts, The Irish Times reports. Dr Brian Farrell, a trained barrister and pathologist who now works as a consultant coroner, made the
Professor Phil Scraton, the academic at Queen's University Belfast who sat on the Hillsborough inquiry, has emphasised the need for the Grenfell Tower inquiry to be independent. Speaking during an appearance on BBC Radio 4's Desert Island Discs, he said the ongoing inquiry needed to "have the full c
The Law Society of England and Wales has said courts should be allowed to recognise informal wills as an expression of people's final wishes. The Society has made the proposal in a submission to the Law Commission, which is currently concluding a consultation on will reform, the Law Society Gazette
Lord Kerr of Kinlochard The author of Article 50 is to make a speech today accusing the Prime Minister of misleading the British public over whether or not Brexit may be reversed.
A significantly flawed bill to legalise cannabis for medicinal purposes remains on the Dáil agenda, The Irish Times reports. The Cannabis for Medicinal Use Regulation Bill, proposed by People Before Profit TDs Gino Kenny and Richard Boyd Barrett, has been stalled since it went to committee stage.
Michael Creed New regulations signed today will ban the use of wild animals in circuses in Ireland from 1 January 2018.
More than 60 members of the Egyptian Parliament have proposed a law that will criminalise same-sex sexual activity in the country for the first time. The draft law, the latest development since the Egyptian authorities launched an LGBTI-related crackdown after a rainbow flag was displayed at a conce
The taxi company Uber has failed in an appeal against a ruling that its drivers should be treated as workers rather than self-employed. The Employment Tribunal determined last year that drivers James Farrar and Yaseen Aslam were staff of the company and therefore entitled to holiday pay as well as b
Crossing the Threshold tells the inside story of the marriage equality movement by way of a compilation of 23 testaments from the activists who helped lead the campaign to victory in the summer of 2015. It is an important book of record which documents the internal workings of the movement; in that
The Pope has banned the sale of cigarettes at the Vatican because it is not "legitimate" to profit from something that harms public health. In a statement, the Vatican said Pope Francis had "decided that the Vatican will cease to sell cigarettes to employees as of 2018".
The Law Society of Ireland gave a warm welcome to a delegation from China Law Society that visited Blackhall Place yesterday.
A “disaffected” former member of the Church of Scientology has successfully had a perpetual injunction against him dissolved in the High Court. Considering Szabo, Justice Noonan held that the man’s behaviour did not amount to a substantial risk – and that in any event, the plaintiff was not



