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09 December 2016 / Athelstane Aamodt
Issue: 7726 / Categories: Features , Media
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​Anti-social media

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Athelstane Aamodt examines the new CPS guidance on cases involving communications sent via social media

 
  • CPS has issued new guidelines for prosecutors on cases involving communications sent via social media.
  • There is an inchoate patchwork of Blasphemy law in the British Isles that is well overdue for reform.

The law has long been concerned with what people can and cannot say publicly. As long ago as 130AD a Praetor’s Edict (a proclamation of Roman law) held that shouting at someone contrary to good morals could be punishable. In 1275 the first statue in England dealing with defamation came into effect, the “Scandalum Magnatum”, which made it a criminal offence to speak ill of the great and the good of the kingdom. The Court of Star Chamber, which was abolished in the 17th century, enforced libel laws without any impunity. The lawyer and polemicist William Prynne (1600-1669) was a notable recipient of Star Chamber justice. Having written a book about stage plays that was deemed to have insulted the queen, he was pilloried and

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Recent allegations surrounding Peter Mandelson and Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor have reignited scrutiny of the ancient common law offence of misconduct in public office. Writing in NLJ this week, Simon Parsons, teaching fellow at Bath Spa University, asks whether their conduct could clear a notoriously high legal hurdle
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A Court of Appeal ruling has drawn a firm line under party autonomy in arbitration. Writing in NLJ this week, Masood Ahmed, associate professor at the University of Leicester, analyses Gluck v Endzweig [2026] EWCA Civ 145, where a clause allowing arbitrators to amend an award ‘at any time’ was held incompatible with the Arbitration Act 1996
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