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Mixing it up

15 March 2013 / Roger Smith
Issue: 7552 / Categories: Opinion , Human rights
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Diversity has been a popular topic with the profession, notes Roger Smith

No doubt as to the legal theme of the last month: diversity and difference were to the fore.

Hale & in great heart

Lady Hale did not reach her position as the sole woman at the top of the judicial tree without a degree of steel in her soul. So, no surprise that she let a fellow justice of the Supreme Court have it with both barrels in her Kuttan Menon Lecture. Lord Sumption had argued in his Bar Council lecture of November last year that the gender imbalance of the superior courts would be corrected only by the effluxion of time. He conceded that this was not ideal but it was inevitable, given the overwhelming requirement to appoint “on merit” (the statutory requirement) and the scarcity of suitably qualified women candidates.

Lord Sumption accepted, interestingly enough, that women have a unique experience of the world that would be useful in judicial determination. However, it was wrong to argue “because

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NEWS
Writing in NLJ this week, Ceri Morgan analyses the Supreme Court’s landmark ruling in Johnson v FirstRand Bank
Tech companies will be legally required to prevent material that encourages or assists serious self-harm appearing on their platforms, under Online Safety Act 2023 regulations due to come into force in the autumn
Commercial leasehold, the defence of insanity and ‘consent’ in the criminal law are among the next tranche of projects for the Law Commission
In this month's update, employment guru Ian Smith reveals the Employment Appeal Tribunal’s pivotal role in the ongoing supermarket equal pay litigation, upholding most findings and confirming that detailed training materials are valid evidence of actual work
County court cases are speeding up, with the median time from claim to hearing 62 weeks for fast, intermediate and multi-track claims—5.4 weeks faster than last year
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