Dublin University Law Journal (DULJ)

Volume 42, Issue 1, 2019

Editors: Dr Patricia Brazil, Dr David Fennelly | ISSN: 0332-3250 | ISBN: 978-911611-43-1 |
Currency: Two Issues Per Year  | Publishing November 2020 | Price Per Issue: €129 + VAT

DULJ 37

 



About

The Dublin University Law Journal is published by Clarus Press on behalf of the School of Law, Trinity College, Dublin. It is a leading peer-reviewed legal journal, publishing authoritative, critical and scholarly analysis on a broad range of legal issues. It provides a forum for important legal academic debate on contemporary Irish law as well as developments from further afield in the common law world, in European and international law, and in legal theory. The journal publishes longer articles providing in-depth analysis of a wide range of legal issues, as well as shorter articles, comments and case-notes providing up-to-date analysis of recent developments and book reviews providing critical assessment of important legal publications. The Dublin University Law Journal thus provides accessible and balanced coverage of a wide spectrum of current and enduring issues in law and legal scholarship. 

The Dublin University Law Journal will now publish twice annually.

Volume 42, issue 1, 2019 contains the following:

Articles


  • Indeterminacy in the Duty of Care Analysis | Justice Russell Brown
  • The Last Holdout: Ireland, the Right to Abortion and the European Federal Human Rights System | Federico Fabbrini
  • Public Policy or Intent: The Rationale Underlying Easements of Necessity | Sarah Hamill
  • A One-Person Supreme Court? The Attorney General, Constitutional Advice to Government, and the Case for Transparency |David Kenny and Conor Casey
  • The Right to Work in Irish Law | Dáire McCormack- George
  • Life after Brexit: Operationalising the Belfast/Good Friday Agreement’s Principle of Consent | CRG Murray and Aoife O’Donoghue

This issue also includes Short Articles and Book Reviews including:

  • Courts, Public Interest Litigation, and Homelessness: A Commentary on Recent Case Law | Conor Casey
  • Patents Granted to Computer Systems? |Peter Charleton, Quentin Laurent and Clara Charleton
  • Law of the European Union | Gerard Hogan
  • Improperly Obtained Evidence in Anglo-American and Continental Law | Liz Heffernan
  • e-Conveyancing and Title Registration in Ireland | Maureen O’Sullivan Criminal Law Reform Now: Proposals and Critique | Christopher Cowley

For subscription information and orders please email info@claruspress.ie

For submissions and other enquiries please email dulj@tcd.ie

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