In this blogpost, Dr Alexander Orakhelashvili critiques the award by SCC arbitral tribunal in the Green Power case
Author: Alexander Orakhelashvili
The Carceral State vs Indigenous Women’s Lives: Battling Contexts in the Latest Supreme Court of Canada Decision
In this post, Dr Meghan Campbell discusses the Canadian Supreme Court’s decision in R v Sharma and its potential impact on Canadian equality laws
Contract Law: Going, going, gone?
In this blogpost, Dr Catherine Mitchell discusses the modern dynamics of English contract law
Patient safety challenges in the NHS
In this blogpost, John Tingle discusses patient safety challenges in NHS
Do-It-Yourself Diabetes Technology and the Law
This post summarises a paper we published a few months ago in Diabetic Medicine: ‘#WeAreNotWaiting DIY Artificial Pancreas Systems and the Challenges for the Law’*
A few thoughts on Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation
In this post, Dr Peter Coe discusses Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation
Immunity, Derogation and the ILC
In this post, Dr Alexander Orakhelashvili discusses some aspects of the ILC’s Conclusions on Peremptory Norms of General International Law (Jus Cogens)
State Immunity and Statutory Exceptions: the High Court v the International Court?
In this post, Dr Alexander Orakhelashvili discusses the use of statutory exceptions to State immunity in English law, at the example of the recent High Court decision on Al-Masasir v Saudi Arabia
Set up for failure? Reflections on the sustainability of the proposed Statutory Debt Repayment Plan (SDRP) and other long-term debt repayment solutions
In this post, Dr Katharina Möser elaborates on some of the points made in her response to the HM Treasury, Open Consultation August 2022: Statutory Debt Repayment Plan
The Principle of Effectiveness and its Overarching Role in the Interpretation and Application of the ECHR – Part III
The Birmingham Law School Blog is delighted to host a three-part interview with Georgios A. Serghides, a judge of the European Court of Human Rights, discussing his new book The Principle of Effectiveness and its Overarching Role in the Interpretation and Application of the ECHR: The Norm of All Norms and the Method of All Methods (Strasbourg 2022). In this third and final part, Professor Natasa Mavronicola asks about his views on the principle of effectiveness in the case law of the European Court of Human Rights