[ad_1] In the UK, it is unlawful to treat someone less favourably than someone else at work because of certain protected characteristics, such as their age, sex, disability,
[ad_1] The Court of Appeal has upheld the Upper Tribunal’s decision that those who applied for the wrong type of family permit before the end of the Brexit
[ad_1] In the 1950s people were convicted and hanged on the basis of uncorroborated police evidence. But it took until the early 1980s for the public and parliament
[ad_1] The innovator founder visa is a new immigration route that opened to applicants on 13 April 2023. This replaces the previous innovator and start-up visas, and is
[ad_1] Sonia Lenegan Sonia Lenegan is an experienced immigration, asylum and public law solicitor. She has been practising for over ten years and was previously legal director at
[ad_1] On 14 March 2024 the government published its latest statement of changes to the immigration rules, which included changes to a number of UK immigration categories. The
[ad_1] The low down The number of legal professionals regularly using artificial intelligence has more than doubled since July last year. Against its reputation for conservatism, this puts
[ad_1] The government recently confirmed that the forced mediation plan for separating couples would not be pursued. This option was explored because, despite various attempts to reduce court
[ad_1] Professor Katie Atkinson – University of Liverpool At the University of Liverpool, we have been pioneering research to develop AI for law since the 1980s. Our research