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Round Up 13.04.20 – The work of the courts continues despite the impact of Covid-19…

5144The bandstand on Clapham Common, fenced off while people use the area for daily exercise. Photograph: Guy Bell/REX/Shutterstock. Credit: The Guardian.

Needless to say, the impact of Covid-19 dominated all aspects of life over the past seven days. Given that the week saw the Prime Minister admitted to intensive care with the virus before ultimately being discharged home, this is unlikely to be much of a revelation. The UK Human Rights Blog has published many articles looking in detail at some of the legal challenges posed by Covid-19 and the Government’s response to the pandemic. Of note this week:

The courts however continue to function as best they’re able. Those with an interest in law, and indeed those without but who have exhausted Netflix, can watch live streamed hearings in the Supreme Court taking place by video link. Judgments in the lower courts are currently being emailed to the parties and released to the British and Irish Legal Information Institute for public consideration. It can’t be long before Legal Cheek publishes the first report of an advocate desperately apologising to a judge for turning their back on them when they realised their spouse had drifted semi-naked into their submissions en route to the shower.

Perhaps because writing judgments lends itself relatively well to social distancing (in contrast to say, holding a jury trial), the courts this week continued to hand down judgments with regularity before the Easter weekend:

Lastly, in some (welcome) non-coronavirus material this week, Euan Lynch reports on the Supreme Court’s judgment in the Serco lock change case, whilst on Law Pod UK Roslaind English discusses recent developments in the law of vicarious liability with Robert Kellar QC and Isabel McArdle.

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