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 | Rabinder Singh QC | |
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| Iraq and the law: what went wrong? | |
| On Wednesday 14th 2007 Rabinder Singh QC gave a talk at the LSE entitled 'Iraq and the law: what went wrong?'. This talk is available as a Podcast. |
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| The Use of International Law in the Domestic Courts of the United Kingdom | |
| The article, originally delivered as the MacDermott Lecture 2005, analyses the position of international law within the domestic legal system. It considers issues of justiciability and looks at the future of international law in the domestic courts of the United Kingdom. |
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| Equality: The Neglected Virtue | |
| The article analyses the principle of equality on both the ordinary and the constitutional level. It explores equality under judicial review principles and under the Human Rights Act 1998. Written by Rabinder Singh QC, the article was cited with approval by Lord Steyn in the case of R (European Roma Rights Centre) v Immigration Officer at Prague Airport. |
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| The Right to Privacy in English Law | |
| The article analyses the law of privacy in its historical context and addresses how freedom of expression should be balanced with the right to privacy within the setting of the Human Rights Act 1998. Published in the European Human Rights Law Review, the article is written by Rabinder Singh QC and James Strachan. |
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| The Human Rights Act Implications of a Ban on Hunting with Dogs | |
| The article considers the compatibility of human rights with a ban on hunting with dogs. The authors consider whether hunting falls within the scope of private life as set out in Article 8 ECHR and analyse the history of government policy on the issue of hunting. The article is written by Rabinder Singh QC and David Thomas. |
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| Privacy Postponed? | |
| The article, co-written with James Strachan and published in EHRLR, analyses the development of the right to privacy. It is argued that the future of the right to privacy depends on whether the common law embraces it or neglects it. The authors emphasise that the right to privacy has to be recognised for English law to be in compliance with the ECHR. |
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