Legal History Book Launch
Events
- Annual Update on Constitutional Law: 2024 in Review
- Launch of the Rights-to-Unite Project
- Recognising Refugees: Refugee Admission, Relocation and Recognition Practices in Comparative and Transnational Social Sciences
- International Law and Gaza: Legal Implications of Atrocity Crimes
- A Century of Courts
- John M Kelly Memorial Lecture 2024
- Current issues in Irish Public Law Conference
- Constitutional Law: An Update
- Research Workshop on Legal protection of carbon sinks in the fight against climate change
- UCD and Eversheds Sutherland Conference Friday 10 November 2023
- Recognising Refugees Online Series: Practices and Modes of Recognition
- Complicating Rights of Nature
- PhD and Post-Doctoral Researcher Biannual Workshop
- 2023 Distinguished Guest Lecture in Employment Law
- The Assisted Decision-Making Capacity Act: implications for legal and healthcare professionals
- UCD Human Rights Centre: Research Seminar 'Music Rights as Human Rights?'
- John M Kelly Memorial Lecture
- Seminars on the French Judicial System and Franco-Irish judicial cooperation in the EU context
- Virtual book launch: ‘Changing individual behaviour and culture in financial services’
- HRER/ UCD Conference 12 June 2023: preliminary announcement and Call for Papers (deadline 13.03.23)
- Events 2022
- Events 2021
- Events 2020
- Events 2019
- Events 2018
- Landscape, Law and Spatial justice symposium(in person event)
- Seminar and Book Launch on 27 September
- Guestlist post GDPR
- Capital Punishment Symposium
- Judicial Review Conference
- Law and Religion in Ireland
- Book Launch: Conserving Europe's Wildlife
- VV Giri Lecture
- GDPR Forum
- Legal History Book Launch
- Events 2017
- Events 2016
The Legal History Group
at The UCD Sutherland School of Law
Invite you to celebrate the launch of
Juries in Ireland:Laypersons and Law in the Long Nineteenth Century
by Dr Niamh Howlin
&
Guardian of the Treaty: The Privy Council Appeal and Irish Sovereignty
by Dr Thomas Mohr
with a lecture from Prof Hector MacQueen, Edinburgh Law School
Tuesday January 30th 2018
UCD Sutherland School of Law
5:45pm Registration, Tea & Coffee wil be served
6:15pm Lecture with Prof MacQueen
Reception to Follow
RSVP to Danny.Moran@ucd.ie
(opens in a new window)Hector MacQueen has been a member of the Edinburgh Law School staff since 1979, having also taken his LL.B and Ph.D at Edinburgh. Appointed to the Chair of Private Law in 1994, he was Dean of the Law School 1999-2003, and Dean of Research and Deputy Head of the College of Humanities and Social Science in the University 2004-2008. He was a Scottish Law Commissioner from 2010 until 2017.
Juries in Ireland: Laypersons & Law in the Long Nineteenth Century
In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries a wide range of legal issues were decided, not by professional judges, but by panels of laypersons. This book considers various categories of jury, including the trial jury, the coroner’s jury, the grand jury, the special jury and the manor court jury. It also examines some lesser-known types of jury such as the market jury, the wide-streets jury, the lunacy jury, the jury of matrons and the valuation jury. Who were the men (or women) qualified to serve on these juries, and how could they be compelled to act? What were their experiences of the justice system, and how did they reach their decisions? The book also analyses some of the controversies associated with the Irish jury system during the period, and examines problems facing the jury system, including the intimidation of jurors; bribery and corruption; jurors delivering verdicts against the weight of evidence and jurors refusing to carry out their duties. It evaluates public and legal perceptions of juries and contrasts the role of the nineteenth-century jury with that of the twenty-first-century. Further details (opens in a new window)here.
Niamh Howlin is a lecturer in the Sutherland School of Law at University College Dublin. She has published extensively on the nineteenth-century Irish jury system, as well as on other aspects of criminal justice history and contemporary issues surrounding jury trial.
Guardian of the Treaty: The Privy Council Appeal and Irish Sovereignty
The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council was the final appellate court of the British Empire. In 1935 the Irish Free State was recognized as the first part of the Empire to abolish the appeal to the Privy Council. This book examines the controversial Irish appeal to the Privy Council in the wider context of the history of the British Empire in the early 20th century. In particular, it analyses Irish resistance to the imposition of the appeal in 1922 and the attempts to abolish it at the Imperial conferences of the 1920s and 1930s.
This book also outlines the means by which Irish governments attempted to block Privy Council appeals. It examines the reality of claims that the Privy Council appeal offered a means of safeguarding the rights of the Protestant minority within the Irish Free State. Finally, it reveals British intentions that the Privy Council act as the guardian and enforcer of the settlement embodied in the 1921 Anglo Irish Treaty. The conclusion to this work explains why the Privy Council was unsuccessful in protecting this settlement. Further details (opens in a new window)here.
Thomas Mohr is an Associate Professor at the School of Law, University College Dublin. He is honorary secretary of the Irish Legal History Society.