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Keith Davies

Professor emeritus (retired)

Keith Davies, professor emeritus (retired), University of Reading

Professor emeritus (retired)

Keith Davies, professor emeritus (retired), University of Reading

ARTICLES BY THIS AUTHOR

Do law books make a lawyer, asks Keith Davies

"This present book, which is a great read for any lawyer, is a collection of 50 stories of notable court cases"

Keith Davies examines the development of the principle of judicial review in English courts

Keith Davies investigates the curious incident of the village green in a harbour

Keith Davies examines the court’s approach to the right to protest on public land

Keith Davies analyses a recent judicial review of plans to erect electricity pylons on green belt land

Keith Davies considers the vexed question of whether prayers should be said at town council meetings

Keith Davies turns the spotlight onto a Thameside Tudor tiff

Show
8
Results
Results
8
Results

MOVERS & SHAKERS

Muckle LLP—Ella Johnson

Muckle LLP—Ella Johnson

Real estate dispute resolution team welcomes newly qualified solicitor

Morr & Co—Dennis Phillips

Morr & Co—Dennis Phillips

International private client team appoints expert in Spanish law

NLJ Career Profile: Stefan Borson, McCarthy Denning

NLJ Career Profile: Stefan Borson, McCarthy Denning

Stefan Borson, football finance expert head of sport at McCarthy Denning, discusses returning to the law digging into the stories behind the scenes

NEWS
Paper cyber-incident plans are useless once ransomware strikes, argues Jack Morris of Epiq in NLJ this week
In this week's NLJ, Robert Hargreaves and Lily Johnston of York St John University examine the Employment Rights Bill 2024–25, which abolishes the two-year qualifying period for unfair-dismissal claims
Writing in NLJ this week, Manvir Kaur Grewal of Corker Binning analyses the collapse of R v Óg Ó hAnnaidh, where a terrorism charge failed because prosecutors lacked statutory consent. The case, she argues, highlights how procedural safeguards—time limits, consent requirements and institutional checks—define lawful state power
Michael Zander KC, emeritus professor at LSE, revisits his long-forgotten Crown Court Study (1993), which surveyed 22,000 participants across 3,000 cases, in the first of a two-part series for NLJ
Getty Images v Stability AI Ltd [2025] EWHC 2863 (Ch) was a landmark test of how UK law applies to AI training—but does it leave key questions unanswered, asks Emma Kennaugh-Gallagher of Mewburn Ellis in NLJ this week
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