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17 May 2024
Issue: 8071 / Categories: Features , Procedure & practice , Public
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Civil servants & redaction: identity matters

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The recent case of IAB may have caused a stir among junior civil servants, but they may not need to worry as much, suggests Nick Wrightson
  • Discusses IAB and its effect on junior civil servants, and proposes that there are powerful protections available.

In his leading judgment in Secretary of State for the Home Department and another v R (on the application of IAB & others) [2024] EWCA Civ 66, [2024] All ER (D) 128 (Mar), Lord Justice Bean branded the government’s routine practice of redacting civil servants’ names from documents for disclosure in judicial review proceedings ‘inimical to open government and unsupported by authority’.

Understandably, this finding may have caused a stir among ‘junior’ civil servants. They may well be left anxious that a society tending increasingly towards criticism and vitriol will target them if their names and roles are revealed. On another view, however, redaction was never the right tool for protecting potentially embattled public servants and their expectations have not been adequately managed. It may

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NEWS
The government will aim to pass legislation banning leasehold for new flats and capping ground rent, introducing non-compulsory digital ID and creating a ‘duty of candour’ for public servants (also known as the Hillsborough law) in the next Parliament

An Italian financier has lost his bid to block his Australian wife from filing divorce papers in England on the basis it was no longer her domicile of choice

Reforms to the disclosure regime in the business and property courts have not achieved their objectives, lawyers have warned
The Law Society has urged ministers to hold a public consultation on the use of artificial intelligence (AI) in the justice system as a whole
Ministers have proposed bringing inquest work under a single fee scheme for legal help and advocacy legal aid work
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