On 4 November 2021, the Global Justice Academy together with the Edinburgh Centre for Global and International Law hosted their first in-person seminar for the…
Comments closedTag: Human Rights
This is the fourth blog in a series written by LLM students on the Human (In)Security course at Edinburgh Law School. This series celebrates…
Comments closedThis is the first blog in a series written by LLM students on the Human (In)Security course at Edinburgh Law School. This series celebrates the…
Comments closedThis post is by Constanza Nuñez, a Ph.D. candidate at University Carlos III of Madrid (Spain). LL.MM in Advanced Human Rights Studies (University Carlos…
Comments closedThis post is 1 of 2 by Dr Kasey McCall-Smith examining the UNCRC (Incorporation) (Scotland) Bill. The first highlights some of the key features of…
Comments closedThis is the third post in a blog series by Dr Kasey McCall-Smith which examines some of the contentious legal issues raised in the US…
Comments closedCan the UK’s Human Rights Act be repealed? What would the process need? Is it even possible? What are the legal implications?
Christine Bell, Professor of Constitutional Law at Edinburgh Law School, Assistant Principal Global Justice and Director of the Global Justice Academy, offers this review of the current debate on repealing the Human Rights Act, and points readers to other available resources.
In the past few days repeal of the Human Rights Act, and in particular its devolution implications have attracted a lot of attention. Today, a new report is launched from a legal expert seminar in April 2015, on the legal implications of repeal of the human rights act (see below). The report provides the full chapter and verse, but here are a few quick points on the devolution implications, with further more detailed and reasoned resources below.
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