The lady chief justice, Baroness Carr of Walton-on-the-Hill on her priorities and concerns
Published on Tuesday, 26th March 2024.
The Court of Appeal limits the use of a defence used by climate change protesters.
Published on Tuesday, 19th March 2024.
Knife Crime: how can we save lives and keep young people out of prison?
Published on Tuesday, 12th March 2024.
What part did lawyers play in the Post Office miscarriage of justice?
Published on Tuesday, 5th March 2024.
Juries and conscience, liability in outer space and Scottish Treasure Trove.
Published on Tuesday, 14th November 2023.
What are your rights if your voice is faked? Forensic science about speech, and in court.
Published on Tuesday, 7th November 2023.
The length of prison sentences; the state of prisons; US gun laws; new Scots human rights.
Published on Tuesday, 31st October 2023.
Can exporting prisoners work? Are Joint Enterprise cases racist? And Israel-Gaza: the law.
Published on Tuesday, 24th October 2023.
The Justice secretary's plans and challenges; judicial diversity; working with Parkinson's
Published on Tuesday, 13th June 2023.
The Parole Board's record of public protection; spouses abandoned overseas; AI and the law
Published on Tuesday, 6th June 2023.
The legal challenges of climate change: human rights law, fossil fuel investments, ethics
Published on Tuesday, 30th May 2023.
How the Law Commission and the Scottish government hope to change rape trials for victims
Published on Tuesday, 23rd May 2023.
On the 25th anniversary of the Northern Ireland peace deal, what challenges remain?
Published on Tuesday, 28th March 2023.
Rape convictions; forensic science; Director of Public Prosecutions; intimidating lawyers.
Published on Tuesday, 21st March 2023.
A law to minimise strike impacts; legal advisors helping patients' families; AI copyright.
Published on Tuesday, 14th March 2023.
Could a special international tribunal put Russian leaders on trial?
Published on Tuesday, 7th March 2023.
Ex-president of the European Court of Human Rights Robert Spano talks to Joshua Rozenberg
Published on Friday, 18th November 2022.
The UK and the ECHR: trouble ahead? Do cohabiting couples have rights? Ownership disputes.
Published on Tuesday, 15th November 2022.
Reforming protest law; rap lyrics in court; a public law clinic at a Liverpool university.
Published on Tuesday, 8th November 2022.
Which EU-retained laws to keep; young people and the criminal law; crime-solving podcasts.
Published on Tuesday, 1st November 2022.
Why some court hearings are secret. Is most UK chicken illegal? And indefinite sentences.
Published on Tuesday, 25th October 2022.
Prison education is 'chaotic', often 'inadequate'. How could it cut reoffending better?
Published on Tuesday, 5th July 2022.
Can the UK Bill of Rights be compatible with international law?
Published on Tuesday, 28th June 2022.
Explaining the barriers to conviction at every stage of the criminal justice system.
Published on Tuesday, 21st June 2022.
ICC prosecutor Karim Khan QC speaks about the challenges facing investigators in Ukraine.
Published on Tuesday, 14th June 2022.
Dominic Raab and legal aid. And do we need more diversity among senior judges?
Published on Tuesday, 22nd March 2022.
Has silencing journalists with libel claims now become harder? And: new UK class actions.
Published on Tuesday, 15th March 2022.
Is Scotland's Gender Recognition bill a progressive step forward, or a threat to women?
Published on Tuesday, 8th March 2022.
How does international criminal law regard Russia's invasion of Ukraine?
Published on Tuesday, 1st March 2022.
Joshua Rozenberg examines a lawsuit that‘s rocked the sport of rugby.
Published on Tuesday, 16th November 2021.
Tracking down trolls; how to be an advocate; and a lawyer behind bars.
Published on Tuesday, 9th November 2021.
Does the phenomenon of false memory challenge the justice system?
Published on Tuesday, 2nd November 2021.
Joshua Rozenberg speaks to Afghan women judges at risk since the Taliban came to power.
Published on Tuesday, 26th October 2021.
Fighting knife crime before it happens; Scotland's "not proven" verdicts; automated cars.
Published on Thursday, 8th July 2021.
What's legal for e-scooters; space law; university freedom of speech and a DJ barrister.
Published on Tuesday, 22nd June 2021.
Unfair Covid fines, online justice, diversity in the profession, and private prosecutions.
Published on Tuesday, 15th June 2021.
Brain injury is related to crime and is common among prisoners. But how to deal with it?
Published on Tuesday, 8th June 2021.
Does the government's response to Lord Faulks's report on Judicial Review go too far?
Published on Friday, 23rd April 2021.
As governments and fossil fuel companies are being sued, can the law fight climate change?
Published on Tuesday, 16th March 2021.
Amy Jeffress, the US lawyer of Anne Sacoolas, speaks exclusively to Joshua Rozenberg.
Published on Tuesday, 9th March 2021.
The civil claim in the Anne Sacoolas case, and how is the pandemic affecting jury trials?
Published on Tuesday, 2nd March 2021.
Remembering Jack Merritt, murdered in the London Bridge attack a year ago.
Published on Tuesday, 17th November 2020.
How the UK’s first law centre still provides free legal advice, 50 years after its birth.
Published on Tuesday, 10th November 2020.
What can the Great Fire of London teach us about dealing with our current pandemic?
Published on Tuesday, 3rd November 2020.
Is the International Criminal Court beset by incompetence, or a lifeline for victims?
Published on Tuesday, 27th October 2020.
Joshua Rozenberg asks if new ways of working can deliver justice at a time of crisis.
Published on Tuesday, 16th June 2020.
How a case about a £7.7 million win at baccarat changed the legal test of dishonesty.
Published on Tuesday, 9th June 2020.
Can virtual courts deliver justice? Joshua Rozenberg reports.
Published on Tuesday, 2nd June 2020.
How good are employment tribunals at resolving disputes between employers and staff?
Published on Wednesday, 27th May 2020.
Why is large-scale fraud so hard to prosecute? Joshua Rozenberg investigates.
A look inside the commercial court, one of the UK’s most successful invisible exports.
Published on Wednesday, 11th March 2020.
The unique sensory room designed to put child witnesses with autism at their ease.
Published on Tuesday, 3rd March 2020.
How effective is the Parole Board at predicting whether a criminal will reoffend?
Published on Tuesday, 25th February 2020.
The secrets of life behind bars, revealed in a new podcast series.
Published on Tuesday, 19th November 2019.
Should parents with a history of domestic abuse be allowed to see their children?
Published on Tuesday, 12th November 2019.
A look at a scheme to help vulnerable witnesses by letting them give pre-recorded evidence
Published on Tuesday, 5th November 2019.
Joshua Rozenberg asks what we can learn about the law and the constitution from Brexit.
Published on Tuesday, 29th October 2019.
Do juries believe in rape myths? An update on new research into what jurors really think.
Published on Tuesday, 25th June 2019.
US prosecutors want Julian Assange extradited - what are their chances of success?
Published on Tuesday, 18th June 2019.
Should a non-traditional background be a bar to joining the Bar?
Published on Tuesday, 11th June 2019.
What will happen to the European Union judiciary after Brexit?
Published on Tuesday, 4th June 2019.
Inside the prison where inmates study alongside law students.
Published on Friday, 24th May 2019.
Is our legal system failing victims of online abuse?
Published on Tuesday, 19th March 2019.
How a court in Coventry tries to solve social problems via the law.
Published on Tuesday, 5th March 2019.
Behind the scenes at the UK's top court
Published on Tuesday, 26th February 2019.
Can justice based on ancient tradition work better than a criminal court?
Published on Tuesday, 20th November 2018.
The extraordinary case that rewrote the way America is governed
Published on Tuesday, 13th November 2018.
Are the tech giants anti-competitive? And should having a past block a child's future?
Published on Tuesday, 6th November 2018.
Should serious crimes be tried by a judge alone? And bias against female lawyers in the US
Published on Tuesday, 30th October 2018.
Is face mapping a valuable tool in the fight against crime or a threat to civil liberties?
Published on Tuesday, 26th June 2018.
Does social media pose a threat to criminal justice and how can fair trials be ensured?
Published on Tuesday, 19th June 2018.
Are online courts a good idea? Joshua Rozenberg reports from Vancouver.
Published on Tuesday, 12th June 2018.
Should it be easier to end a marriage? Joshua Rozenberg investigates.
Published on Tuesday, 5th June 2018.
Lord chancellor and secretary of state for justice David Gauke speaks to Joshua Rozenberg.
Published on Tuesday, 20th March 2018.
If a driverless car has a crash, who is responsible - the owner or the manufacturer?
Published on Tuesday, 13th March 2018.
Does the law regarding sex discrimination in the workplace need to be reformed?
Published on Tuesday, 6th March 2018.
Director of Public Prosecutions Alison Saunders speaks on recent disclosure failings.
Published on Tuesday, 27th February 2018.
Joshua Rozenberg explains the role of special counsel in the US legal system
Published on Wednesday, 7th February 2018.
Joshua Rozenberg talks to Sir Ian Burnett for his first interview since taking office.
Published on Tuesday, 21st November 2017.
Joshua Rozenberg asks what's the point of investigating the dead over allegations of abuse
Published on Tuesday, 14th November 2017.
Proposals for new acid and corrosive offences.
Published on Tuesday, 7th November 2017.
Joshua Rozenberg talks to the director for legal affairs at the intelligence agency GCHQ
Published on Tuesday, 31st October 2017.
The agenda for the new justice secretary, the law and holograms, and ageing sex offenders.
Published on Tuesday, 27th June 2017.
In a special live edition, Joshua Rozenberg considers what the election means for the law.
Published on Tuesday, 13th June 2017.
Vacancies for senior Judges and circuit Judges are now at an all-time high - why?
Published on Thursday, 16th March 2017.
Why did the Court of Appeal reject challenges to Joint Enterprise murder convictions?
Published on Tuesday, 15th November 2016.
What are the legal ramifications of the High Court ruling on the Brexit legal challenge?
Published on Tuesday, 8th November 2016.
Interview with David Anderson QC - the Independent Reviewer of terrorism legislation.
Published on Tuesday, 1st November 2016.
The director of Public Prosecutions Alison Saunders speaks to Joshua Rozenberg.
Published on Tuesday, 25th October 2016.