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Making the right move

28 October 2011 / Stephen Levinson
Issue: 7487 / Categories: Opinion
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Is it time for a law-making revolution, asks Stephen Levinson

“Good regulation is a good thing” is the trite introduction to the government’s red tape challenge, before saying we have too much of the other sort. The proposition is that reducing the quantity of regulation is the answer. This is myopic because if quantity is one possible burden on business, so is poor quality law. Poor quality is not about political or policy disagreements, but simply the production of badly-drafted law that is difficult to understand, because it is too complex or simply unclear.

Employment law will be used to demonstrate the problem because it is now under the microscope but the principles discussed apply across the legislative spectrum.

The best example of poor quality law is the discipline and grievance procedures introduced in 2004. They caused so much litigation havoc over the meaning of a “grievance” and so many problems in practice they became entirely discredited and were repealed in 2009. Maternity and paternity rules have become increasingly complex because of continuous accretion,

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Writing in NLJ this week, Sophie Ashcroft and Miranda Joseph of Stevens & Bolton dissect the Privy Council’s landmark ruling in Jardine Strategic Ltd v Oasis Investments II Master Fund Ltd (No 2), which abolishes the long-standing 'shareholder rule'
In NLJ this week, Sailesh Mehta and Theo Burges of Red Lion Chambers examine the government’s first-ever 'Afghan leak' super-injunction—used to block reporting of data exposing Afghans who aided UK forces and over 100 British officials. Unlike celebrity privacy cases, this injunction centred on national security. Its use, the authors argue, signals the rise of a vast new body of national security law spanning civil, criminal, and media domains
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