Set in a dystopian near-future, where environmental disaster causes escalating infertility in society, the few remaining fertile women are forcibly assigned to produce children for […]
Author: Mark
Hungary: Farewell to constitutional democracy and to one of its designers, by Gabor Halmai
László Sólyom (1942-2023), the founding President of the Hungarian Constitutional Court, later also the President of the Republic of Hungary (2005-2010), died on 8 October […]
Braverman’s ‘crisis’, LGBTQIA+ refugees, and the mischaracterisation of law, by Raawiyah Rifath
The UK Home Secretary’s recent narrative relating to asylum seekers is harmful, concerning, and could be another attempt (following the Illegal Migration Act 2023 (IMA […]
Legal sex status: the attitudes of non-binary people towards reform in England and Wales, by Mollie Gascoigne
Human rights actors are increasingly highlighting the negative impact that legal non-recognition has on non-binary communities. However, the possibilities for, and implications of, various reform […]
What does it mean to be human in a legal context? by Catherine Dupre (The Guardian, March 2011)
Everyone wants their dignity respected and protected. We understand this concept intuitively. But what does dignity mean for law and human rights? In The Guardian, […]