Sonderfolgen-Alarm! In einem Gespräch mit Josephine Ballon, der Geschäftsführerin/CEO von HateAid, erfahren wir, wie die NGO mithilfe von Technologie die Rechte von Opfern
von Online-Hass stärkt. [...]
Sonderfolgen-Alarm! In einem Gespräch mit Josephine Ballon, der Geschäftsführerin/CEO von HateAid, erfahren wir, wie die NGO mithilfe von Technologie die Rechte von Opfern
von Online-Hass stärkt. [...]
What was media like? How has media changed? In this episode, we talk to Princeton Professor Markus Prior about the architecture of public media, over the period of what he
calls "broadcast democracy," and in the period we're living within today. How does that architecture affect the politics that is possible? [...]
On this Episode of A Hard Look, ALR Senior Technology Editor Bennett J. Nuss interviews Professor Hilary J. Allen regarding the current status of federal banking regulation
in light of the four bank failures in the United States earlier this year. The discussion ranges from the circumstances surrounding the failure of the Silicon Valley [...]
Dr Tom Hickman KC, who represented Gina Miller in both Miller cases and the Lord Advocate in the recent Scottish Independence Referendum reference, was joined by Dr Stefan
Theil (professor in Public Law) to delve deeply into the current constitutional status of Parliamentary Sovereignty. [...]
There was a time when the presumption of democracy — that the people were rational and guided our democracy to reasoned conclusions — was true. Or tru-ish. In this episode,
we speak with the authors of one of the most important work studying this relatively healthy period, Ben Page and Robert Shapiro. [...]
On 21 November 2023 Professor Rebecca Probert (University of Exeter Law School) delivered the CELH annual lecture on the topic 'Women and the Crime of Bigamy in English Law,
1603-2023'. The Centre for English Legal History (CELH) was formally established in 2016 to provide a hub for researchers working in legal history across the University [...]
Dr Tom Hickman KC, who represented Gina Miller in both Miller cases and the Lord Advocate in the recent Scottish Independence Referendum reference, was joined by Dr Stefan
Theil (professor in Public Law) to delve deeply into the current constitutional status of Parliamentary Sovereignty. [...]
On 21 November 2023 Professor Rebecca Probert (University of Exeter Law School) delivered the CELH annual lecture on the topic 'Women and the Crime of Bigamy in English Law,
1603-2023'. The Centre for English Legal History (CELH) was formally established in 2016 to provide a hub for researchers working in legal history across the University [...]
On the 15 November the UK Supreme Court decided that the United Kingdom's policy of sending asylum seekers to Rwanda was unlawful. In this short video Dr Kirsty Hughes explains
the Court's reasoning, and considers the Government's response and possible next steps. [...]
On the 15 November the UK Supreme Court decided that the United Kingdom's policy of sending asylum seekers to Rwanda was unlawful. In this short video Dr Kirsty Hughes explains
the Court's reasoning, and considers the Government's response and possible next steps. [...]