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  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • 10.1017/s0008197325101116
THE UNFINISHED ARCHITECTURE OF PRIVATE NUISANCE: BRIDGING THE GAP BETWEEN <i>COVENTRY V LAWRENCE</i> AND <i>FEARN V TATE GALLERY</i>
  • Feb 6, 2026
  • The Cambridge Law Journal
  • Chen Chen

Abstract This article argues that the changes to the tort of private nuisance introduced by the Supreme Court in Fearn v Tate Gallery [2023] UKSC 4 necessitate reconsideration of three areas of uncertainty created by its earlier decision in Coventry v Lawrence [2014] UKSC 13: the principles governing the assessment of locality, the status and content of “coming to the nuisance”, and the exercise of remedial discretion. The decision in Fearn v Tate Gallery significantly increases the importance of these unresolved issues to the workability of the tort, thus intensifying the need for clarification. This article concludes by proposing Fearn -compliant paths towards their resolution.

  • Research Article
  • 10.1017/s0008197325101098
BEYOND “BUT-FOR” ONCE MORE – ERRATUM
  • Jan 15, 2026
  • The Cambridge Law Journal
  • Benjamin Teng + 1 more

  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • 10.1017/s0008197325101062
IN DEFENCE OF CLASSICAL ADMINISTRATIVE LAW
  • Dec 16, 2025
  • The Cambridge Law Journal
  • Mark Elliott + 1 more

Abstract The classical account of administrative law, which holds that unlawful administrative acts are void ab initio and that judicial review remedies such as quashing orders are merely declaratory of such acts’ legal status, appears to be placed in doubt by a range of recent legislative developments, judicial pronouncements and academic commentary. However, the classical account is not only capable of withstanding those apparent challenges: it is constitutionally imperative if collateral challenge is to be maintained and the rule of law thereby upheld.

  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • 10.1017/s0008197325100998
ON COMPULSORY LICENSING OF TRADE SECRETS TO SAFEGUARD PUBLIC HEALTH
  • Dec 15, 2025
  • The Cambridge Law Journal
  • Olga Gurgula + 1 more

Abstract In the pharmaceutical sector an increasing number of new medicines are large-molecule products, namely biologics derived from living organisms, rather than small-molecule drugs synthesised from chemicals. Unlike small-molecule medicines, which are relatively easy to manufacture, large-molecule products are less stable and harder to produce. We investigate whether the current UK legal system provides an appropriate balance between the protection provided to technology owners and the public interest in accessing medical technologies, especially in times of emergencies. At present, UK law facilitates compulsory licensing of patents but has no equivalent scheme for trade secrets. Our analysis of the legal constraints on potential reforms suggests that a mechanism for compulsory licensing of trade secrets would be compatible with UK domestic law, the European Convention on Human Rights, the World Trade Organization Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights and other international agreements, provided appropriate safeguards are put in place to balance the rights of intellectual property holders with the public interest. The article contributes a detailed framework for the compulsory licensing of trade secrets, drawing parallels with voluntary technology transfer agreements, including provisions for defining the scope of transfer, maintaining confidentiality, restricting future use, providing fair compensation and ensuring enforceability.

  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • 10.1017/s0008197325101001
THE SUFFRAGETTE MOVEMENT AND CIVIL LIBERTIES
  • Dec 15, 2025
  • The Cambridge Law Journal
  • Conor Gearty

Abstract The extent to which the English common law protected civil liberties in the past is widely debated. Were the judges protectors of core freedoms such as liberty and the right to protest or were they allies of the executive in their hostility towards them? Since at least Dicey, the common law has had a vision of itself as the former, but what does practice reveal? This article explores the many ways in which the advocates of female suffrage in the 10 years or so before the First World War interacted with executive and judicial authority in their effort to use what they saw as their ancient freedoms to protect their campaigning for the vote for women. The suffragette campaign generated a series of conflicts between the judicial and executive branches of the state while also testing the depth of the common law’s commitment to civil liberties.

  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • 10.1017/s0008197325100986
RECONCEIVING TORT LIABILITY FOR “WRONGFUL LIFE”
  • Dec 5, 2025
  • The Cambridge Law Journal
  • Craig Purshouse

ABSTRACT It is widely assumed that English law adopts a restrictive approach towards tort actions for “wrongful life”. This article reveals the true legal position to be much more complex. A broad distinction exists between cases where the wrong occurred before or at conception and those where it occurred during pregnancy, with claims usually being permitted in the former scenario but not in the latter. In this article, I expose this bifurcation as arbitrary before examining potential solutions for remedying it.

  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • 10.1017/s0008197325101025
BUILDING A SPECIAL JURISPRUDENCE FOR AN EMERGENT LEGAL DISCIPLINE: THE CASE OF ENERGY LAW
  • Nov 25, 2025
  • The Cambridge Law Journal
  • Kaisa Huhta

Abstract This article contributes to a growing body of literature on special jurisprudence through a case study of energy law as an emergent area of law that is perceived to lack a clear understanding of its definition, foundations and doctrine. The article has two functions that both seek to integrate the literature on special (as opposed to general) jurisprudence with that on energy law as a legal discipline and an independent area of law. The first is to explain why the lack of a doctrine is a problem for a field like energy law, thus motivating the creation of a special jurisprudence. The second is to outline how the foundations of the discipline could be deliberatively developed in a meaningful and methodologically justified way.

  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • 10.1017/s0008197325100883
CONTRACTUAL TRANSFERS OF TITLE
  • Nov 7, 2025
  • The Cambridge Law Journal
  • Jonas Atmaz Al-Sibaie

ABSTRACT It is well known that, under a contract of sale, title to goods passes when the parties intend, but it is considered unclear whether the same is true of non-sale contracts. This article argues that there is a long line of cases dealing with “vesting clauses” that establishes that title passes when the parties intend under any contract, not just contracts of sale. This has significant implications for how judges should reason through cases dealing with transfers under contracts and how lawyers generally explain various areas of commercial law.

  • Research Article
  • 10.1017/s0008197325100962
EU DATA NULLIFICATION: CONFUSION AND THE RULE OF LAW
  • Nov 3, 2025
  • The Cambridge Law Journal
  • Peter Charleton + 1 more

Abstract Effective justice seeks for the truth and consequently must be founded on an analysis of all relevant evidence. Only where a manifestly greater societal interest intrudes, can there be a privilege against the production of testimony. For the Court of Justice of the EU, however, an activist interpretation of Article 8 of the EU Charter, promoting security of data, has become an elevated privacy right which justifies nullifying crucial information, thus shielding criminals, undermining civil trials and obstructing searches for missing persons. No convincingly apodictic conclusion emerges from the several judgments of the court, while the exceptions identified undermine, rather than support, any articulated core principle.

  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • 10.1017/s0008197325100731
THE DISSOLUTION OF DUALISM
  • Aug 6, 2025
  • The Cambridge Law Journal
  • Roger Masterman + 1 more

Abstract This article argues that the concept of dualism has ceased to operate as a reliable indicator of, or guide to, the relationships between domestic and international laws in the UK’s constitutional order. Dualism, it is argued, provides only a partial account of the complex interactions between domestic and international laws, cannot accommodate the hybrid products of interactions with European legal orders and ignores the post-“incorporation” processes of domestication through which international and domestic norms are reconciled. The connections between domestic and international laws are – in contrast to dualism’s binary simplicity – multi-dimensional and interconnected with the UK’s (recently turbulent) constitutional politics.