"intelligent and useful posts on many of the key legal issues"

- Adam Wagner, UK Human Rights Blog

Thursday, 20 January 2011

Pastor Terry Jones' proposed visit to the UK

I don't have time to write a full piece for HLE or anywhere else at the moment, so have commented under the UK Human Rights Blog's entry on the subject instead.

Climate protests

Short piece for Halsbury's Law Exchange, published here.  I might write a longer version for CL&J for later this year.

Environmental protests have received many headlines recently, with trespass and criminal damage being committed at a number of power stations in an attempt to interrupt their operation or shut them down altogether.

The protestors have often sought to argue that they were acting to prevent the greater wrong of the carbon emissions of the stations in question.  Surprisingly, on at least one occasion (the Kingsnorth protestors in Kent) this argument has earned them an acquittal.  Perhaps equally surprisingly some lawyers have written in support of this (see eg this entry on the respected UK Human Rights Blog) as well as making other radical suggestions such as expanding the law of tort to include the whole planet as a ‘neighbour’ and so on.

Two points should be made in response.  First, as to the protestors, in a country with freedom of speech, freedom of association, a wide scope for lawful protest and, most of all, the ballot box, unlawful resistance can rarely be justified.

Secondly, it is laudable that lawyers follow and wish to act on environmental concerns.  It should be obvious, though, that issues such as whether or not any particular power station should continue in operation need to be decided as part of the national energy policy.  Formulating that policy involves highly complex questions requiring primarily engineering, chemical, economic and physical science expertise – how much power is needed, how much it is possible to generate and by what means, how much each option will cost, and what environmental effects will follow.  To be blunt, lawyers and judges are not particularly qualified to answer any of those questions – any more than scientists and economists are best placed to determine technical legal points.

Tuesday, 11 January 2011

Witchcraft during Wartime: the trial of Helen Duncan

Published in Criminal Law & Justice Weekly, (2011) Vol 175, No. 03, p 27. 

In earlier columns I have written about wartime cases to reflect on present-day problems. Such cases are often the most instructive, because it is during wartime that a legal system is under the greatest strain, and how it reacts to that strain says a great deal about the system. Previously I have considered cases where the law reached the right conclusion. This month, however, I am concerned with a case which should never have been brought at all: that of Helen Duncan, often (incorrectly) said to be the last person in Britain to be tried for witchcraft.


Continue reading at the above link.