Realising the Right to Health

Photo by Marcelo Leal

The right to health, or ‘the right to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health’ to give it its full name, is a fundamental human right which extends beyond a right to healthcare to include a range of pre-conditions for a healthy life.

According to the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), ‘every State has ratified at least one international human rights treaty recognizing the right to health. Moreover, States have committed themselves to protecting this right through international declarations, domestic legislation and policies, and at international conferences.’

Yet evidence from around the world suggests States’ commitments to ‘progressively realise’ the right to health are yet to lead to practical progress.

What is required, then, to help States move from treaty signing to practical action?

The challenge

While most countries have signed up to treaties containing binding obligations in relation to the “progressive realisation” of the right to health, a lack of clarity on the scope of the right to health and historical confusion regarding appropriate indicators and benchmarks has created ambiguity, which some have used to sidestep their commitments.

What we did

Drawing on the fields of international human rights law and public health governance, research led by Judith Bueno de Mesquita, from our School of Law and Human Rights Centre, has sought to look at the expectations, or norms, in relation to the right to health, in the context of specific health issues, with a particular focus on sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR).

In a field that has been dominated by discussions of constitutions and legislation, this research focuses on the framework of regulations and policies required at national level, for implementation.

Bueno de Mesquita was appointed as a consultant by the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) to work with two national human rights institutions, the Commissioner for Human Rights, Azerbaijan, and the Ombudsperson Institution of Kosovo. In this consultancy role, she led the research required for national assessments looking at sexual and reproductive health.

These consultancies allowed her to apply her research to country contexts, and assess the degree to which the legislative, regulatory and policy environments were compliant with international human rights standards in the area of SRHR.

What we achieved

In Azerbaijan, the resulting report contributed to the Government taking sexual and reproductive health and rights more seriously, and provided valuable advocacy tools. The report was used to lobby the Azerbaijan Parliament to incorporate sexual and reproductive health issues into the State Program on Demography and Population Development and to develop the National Action Plan on Gender-Based Violence to ensure effective implementation of the 2010 law on domestic violence prevention.

The report was also showcased as a case study in the United Nations Population Fund’s ground-breaking guidance (UNFPA: 2019, pp. 76-78).

In Kosovo, Bueno de Mesquita’s recommendations were contained in the Ombudsperson Institution’s 2016 report, resulting in life-changing impact for rights-holders, including:

  • the provision of free contraceptives to vulnerable groups
  • the supply of low-cost condoms via vending machines
  • a decision to retain contraceptives on the essential drugs list
  • an increase in health inspectorate staffing, with human rights integrated into this organisation’s work
  • steps taken to make maternal death audits consistent with World Health Organisation guidelines
  • and the adoption of a rights-based national HIV action plan.

The impact in Kosovo is ongoing, with the report continuing to inform the next cycle of Azerbaijan’s Reproductive Health Strategy.

In both countries, the research of Judith Bueno de Mesquita has successfully bridged the gap between theory and implementation, supporting significant progress and providing useful examples of how national legislative and policy frameworks can help realise States’ commitments in relation to the progressive realisation of the right to health.

This impact case study was first published on the website of the University of Essex and is shared here with permission and thanks. Read the original story here. You can follow Judith Bueno de Mesquita on Twitter here.

Secure Financing in International Trade

Photo by John Simmons

In August 2021, Dr Anna Mari Antoniou, Lecturer in Maritime and Commercial Law at the University of Essex, published an article on Trade Finance in the Journal of International Banking Law and Regulation.

The article, Bank Security in Letters of Credit: Mere pledgee or something more?, looks at security measures for financial institutions when financing international trade transactions via letters of credit. It examines banks’ security rights as pledgees of shipping documents and potential security rights under The Carriage of Goods by Sea Act 1992.

The article argues that the traditional approach, a bank as pledgee, has limits, and is now superseded by the bank’s position as bill of lading holder under the Act. Though the Act is almost 20 years old, cases concerning the position of banks under it and related issues are still common, for example, The Erin Schulte [2014] EWCA Civ 1382 and Sea Master Shipping Inc v. Arab Bank (Switzerland) Ltd [2018] EWHC 1902 (Comm).

Dr Antoniou argues that pledgee rights are none the less necessary in some circumstances and clarifies how the two positions can work together by proposing a tiered system of rights. The shipping market has been particularly volatile since the 2008 financial crisis and the COVID-19 pandemic has exasperated the situation.

Secure financing is considered a backbone of international trade and the particular financing method, the letter of credit, has often been described as the ‘lifeblood of international commerce’. The combination of this volatility in the market and the importance of the credit in commerce, makes bank security rights a crucial issue to examine.

The proposals in the article provide solutions in practice, enhancing bank efficiency, giving certainty to the parties involved in high value transactions. The proposals also provide a more transparent view of the law, a troublesome area for years, as evidenced by the cases.

Dr Antoniou’s article is available via Westlaw and in print with the full citation: Antoniou, A-M., (2021). Bank Security in Letters of Credit: Mere pledgee or something more?. Journal of International Banking Law and Regulation. 36(9), 367-378.

Making the Right to Housing Real in Newcastle

Photo by Jack Foster

Dr Koldo Casla, Lecturer in Law and Director Human Rights Centre Clinic, Human Rights Local Project Lead

In June 2019, Newcastle City Council and Crisis announced a partnership to end homelessness in the city within ten years. An evidence review took place in 2020 and 2021 to inform the development of such partnership. Based on that evidence review and other documentary sources, I wrote a report to examine how Newcastle City Council can implement the internationally recognised right to adequate housing. The full report is available here.

The evidence review included frontline perceptions of homelessness provision and associated services operating in Newcastle, participatory research with people with lived experience of homelessness, an analysis of current local expenditure, how the local authority collects data, and the impact of national health, housing or social security policies in Newcastle.

On that evidential basis, I looked at Newcastle’s policy and practice on homelessness in light of the right to adequate housing as recognised in international law. The purpose of the report is to analyse what human rights may offer to end homelessness in Newcastle, connecting the evidence with human rights principles and standards.

Adequate housing is recognised as a human right in international law, particularly in Article 25 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and Article 11 of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR).

Housing is more than a roof over one’s head and more than a mere commodity. Housing, as observed by the UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (CESCR), “should be seen as the right to live somewhere in security, peace and dignity.”

The adequacy of adequate housing is determined by seven criteria:

  1. Legal security of tenure, including protection from forced evictions, irrespective of the type of property and tenure (homeownership, lease, informal settlement, etc.);
  2. Availability of services, materials, facilities and infrastructure, including access to natural and common resources, all of which is essential for health, security, comfort and nutrition;
  3. Affordability, including protection from unreasonable rent levels and increases, so as not to compromise or threaten the attainment and satisfaction of other essential needs and rights;
  4. Habitability, in terms of protection from cold, damp, heat, rain, wind and other threats to health and safety;
  5. Accessibility, paying particular attention to the requirements of groups and individuals at greater risk of harm, disadvantage and discrimination;
  6. Location, allowing access to employment, healthcare services, schools, transport and other facilities, bearing environmental conditions in mind; and
  7. Cultural adequacy, using materials and tools that recognise and express appropriately the cultural identity and diversity of the population.

Human rights obligations extend to all branches and all public authorities, national and local. The practical content of human rights obligations, however, depends on the availability of resources. Years of austerity have significantly diminished those resources for local authorities, despite an ever-greater need for social protection.

Public authorities bear the responsibility to prove that they are putting in place the most appropriate policies, allocating all of their available resources in the most strategic way, to fulfil the right to adequate housing.

Newcastle was one of the three cities worst affected by welfare reforms in cumulative terms, alongside Manchester and Central London, with losses of over £2,000 per household in the 2010s. Austerity also materialised in cash-strapped local governance, which resulted in diminishing resources to prevent and tackle homelessness, and to deliver other public services. Newcastle faced an overall budget cut of 32% between 2010-11 and 2018-19.

Despite the UK context of austerity in public spending, the city managed to mobilise available resources to limit the impact and prevalence of homelessness. A comparatively large stock of council homes (around 26,000) provides a structural baseline to prevent and tackle homelessness. During the years of austerity-driven national policies, Newcastle largely avoided cutting public spending on housing and homelessness. With its preventive approach, Newcastle City Council managed to make the most of available resources, which are nonetheless limited considering existing demand, relatively high levels of poverty and destitution, and the cumulative consequences of austerity and Covid-19.

The right to adequate housing includes a requirement on public authorities to ensure that nobody is rendered homeless as a result of an eviction. This means that local authorities must adopt reasonable measures to provide adequate alternative housing solutions.

There was a 75% reduction in the number of evictions from Newcastle’s council housing between 2007 and 2020. Unlike other core cities, Newcastle does not use B&B accommodation as a temporary solution. The city has a single-site purpose-built supported accommodation facility with 720 beds in self-contained units at Cherry Tree View.

The relative low level of homelessness in Newcastle has been attributed to a combination of factors, particularly the preventive approach (before the 56-day target of the Homelessness Reduction Act 2017), the availability of a large stock of council homes (conductive to higher social lettings and lower private rent levels), and a financial commitment from the local authority.

However, interviewees and focus group participants identified hostels, particularly larger hostels, as potentially harmful for the city’s homeless population. In line with international human rights standards, temporary accommodation should only be used exceptionally, it must not put personal safety at risk, cannot become a long-term solution, must not separate family members, and must provide space to respect individual’s privacy.

Families are kept together in Cherry Tree View, where there are no shared rooms, so everyone has their own private space, their own apartment with toilet and kitchen. In other accommodation, these facilities would be shared.

Adequate housing must be accessible for everyone. This means public authorities should take proactive measures to ensure that housing is accessible also for groups and individuals who, due to different reasons, may face particular difficulties in accessing adequate housing.

Housing solutions for people seeking asylum should be culturally adequate, including community support, and proximity of places for worship and shops. This should be a consideration in the general suitable and sustainable homes checklist. Newcastle City Council and the Home Office should explore ways to ensure that the Council receives notice at least 56 days in advance.

Newcastle should also accommodate people who are homeless based on need alone, including people with no recourse to public funds, particularly when children are involved. The local authority should refuse to co-operate with immigration rules that infringe the right of local residents to feel safe at home.

Newcastle should ensure that survivors of domestic abuse are given priority access to a housing alternative should they need it.

The principle of active participation speaks to the spirit of involving everyone in the community in the delivery of the ambitious goal of ending homelessness. Inasmuch as possible, meaningful engagement between public authorities and the voluntary sector should include people with lived experience of homelessness, who should be listened to in the identification of challenges and possible solutions. There is no better way to defend social rights than to hand over a megaphone to the people most affected by inequality, public spending cuts and social exclusion.

Newcastle City Council is demonstrating a high dose of audacity and commitment by embracing a human rights-based approach to housing. Creating the material conditions for the fulfilment of all human rights, including the right to adequate housing, is a collective task that should concern everyone in society. This includes public and private actors, particularly when private actors receive public funds. Years of austerity have resulted in diminishing resources available to local authorities, and Newcastle City Council has been particularly affected. Yet, the evidence shows that Newcastle has achieved remarkable results despite the limitations. To ensure non-retrogression in human rights, Newcastle should maintain its proactive and preventive approach to end homelessness, above and beyond the relief and refer duties of the Homelessness Reduction Act 2017.

Constitutional Pluralism and Loyal Opposition

Image by Udo Pohlmann

Dr. Tom Flynn, Lecturer in Law at the University of Essex, has recently had an article published in the International Journal of Constitutional Law (I•CON) as part of a symposium on last year’s controversial PSPP judgment of the German Federal Constitutional Court (GFCC).

In that judgment, the GFCC for the first time declared a judgment of the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) to be ultra vires. As the symposium in I•CON demonstrates, this decision has come in for sustained attack from many quarters, and defences of it are partial at best.

Most significantly, critics decry the PSPP judgment of the GFCC for giving succour to the authoritarian governments of particular Member States, most notably Hungary and Poland: if Germany can defy the primacy of EU law, then surely every other Member State can too?

In this context, Dr. Flynn analyses PSPP in the light of previous national court decisions (Italian, Danish, Czech, and Hungarian) that challenged the CJEU’s conception of the primacy of EU law, and argues that it cannot, on its own, be used to justify the imposition or adoption of an absolutist conception of the primacy of EU law.

Instead, we can reconceive national court objection to the CJEU’s conception of primacy as a form of ‘loyal opposition’, analogous to the political concept, where mere opposition to the tendencies and policies of the current government must not be regarded as being somehow disloyal or unspeakable.

The theory of constitutional pluralism, which conceptualises the relationship between EU constitutional law and that of the Member States as being heterarchical rather than hierarchical, must therefore not be regarded as being inherently dangerous, or as an expression of some kind of retrograde ‘sovereigntism’.

Rather, we must pay close attention to the reasoning and justification of any given instance of national disapplication of EU law. This is particularly so in the context of a Union that is showing itself increasingly ill-equipped to handle the rise of authoritarianism in the Member States: just as not all expressions of national constitutional primacy are wicked, not all expressions of Union primacy are good.

Dr. Flynn instead proposes a ‘legitimacy test’, whereby we can learn to distinguish principled, reasoned, ‘loyal’ opposition in the EU constitutional space from unprincipled, unreasoned, ‘disloyal’ constitutional backsliding.

The full citation of Dr. Flynn’s new article is: Tom Flynn, Constitutional pluralism and loyal opposition, International Journal of Constitutional Law, Volume 19, Issue 1, January 2021, Pages 241–268, https://doi.org/10.1093/icon/moab035.

Our 2021 Essex Law Research Blog Awards

Photo by Danny Howe

The results for the Essex Law Research Blog Awards are in and the Law School’s Research Visibility Team are delighted to announce the winners for the 2020-21 academic year.

The winners are those whose blog pieces attracted the highest number of views in the 12 months leading up to the Law School’s Research Away Week, which took place in the week commencing 12th July 2021.

Our contributors distinguished themselves in the following three categories.

Congratulations to all!

Throughout the next academic year, the Essex Law Research Blog will continue celebrating the efforts and energy our colleagues in the School of Law put into sharing world-class legal research!

We are taking a short summer break

Photo by Simon Berger

As of Monday, 2nd August 2021, the Essex Law Research Blog will be on a short hiatus.

We will be publishing intermittently over the next month but the full normal service will not resume until September, when we will return to share more research ideas and news from our School.

The Law Research Visibility Team sends all our readers our best wishes for a refreshing summer!

Incendiary Speech Acts, Lawfare and Other Rhetorical Battles Against the Rule of Law

Photo by Chris Brignola

Dr Carla Ferstman, Senior Lecturer in Law, University of Essex

Introduction

The rule of law is embedded in UK law since the Magna Carta. Its importance to the proper functioning of democracies has been affirmed by the Council of Europe’s Venice Commission and the United Nations, among others. As Lord Bingham wrote, at the core of the rule of law is the notion ‘that all persons and authorities within the state, whether public or private, should be bound by and entitled to the benefit of laws publicly made, taking effect (generally) in the future and publicly administered in the courts’. Respect for the rule of law means that even the rights and interests of those who are derided in society are safeguarded in the same way as anyone else. In a society governed by the rule of law, both the government and members of society must accept that from time to time, the outcomes of judicial proceedings may not be to their liking or accord with where they consider justice lies.

Respect for the rule of law has been recognised and affirmed as a defining principle of UK democracy. But at the same time, there is a sense amongst some in government that the rule of law is being used as an arsenal against the Government. The Lord Chancellor has recently stated, ‘I believe it is incumbent upon me to ensure that the rule of law itself cannot be misused to in effect weaponise the courts [what some would term ‘lawfare’], against political decision making.’

But hasn’t the Government’s anti-‘weaponization’ gone too far? What is happening is simply an attempt to limit the power of law over the executive and to shut down those lawyers who represent clients whose claims are perceived to counter government policies. There is no ‘lawfare’ plot being prepared by over-zealous lawyers; to the contrary, what we are seeing is government reticence about the placement of law and lawyers in an effective democracy: it is a problem about respect for the rule of law.

The legislative attack

There is an increasing amount of law – some proposed, some already adopted – which seeks to restrict access to justice, constrain the powers of the courts to decide or award remedies, and/or introduces new arbitrary powers. This has been done by concentrating power in the hands of the executive and simultaneously blocking or severely limiting the role of the judicial and legislative branches of government which traditionally afford key safeguards for the rule of law.

To name a few recent examples, efforts have been made to limit parliamentary scrutiny (in the case of the adoption of the Coronavirus Act 2020) or to avoid parliamentary scrutiny altogether (the attempt to prorogue parliament to fast track the withdrawal from the EU). The government has also sought to reduce access to courts. Significant restrictions on access to legal aid already came into force in 2013, and in this same direction are the efforts to restrict judicial review and to amend or repeal the Human Rights Act ‘to ensure that there is a proper balance between the rights of individuals, our vital national security and effective government’, and to place certain powers and decisions beyond the reach of judicial review. So far, the Independent Review of Administrative Law did not find any real need for reform of judicial review. Whilst the review of the Human Rights act was still pending at the time of writing, the Parliament’s Joint Committee on Human Rights conducted its own review, ultimately concluding that there was no basis to reform the Act.

Planned restrictions are gaining force. The Environment Bill, now in its final stages of review, curbs the power of the courts to afford tangible remedies for breaches of environmental law.  There are more planned restrictions for immigration and refugee law. In its March 2021 policy statement: ‘New Plan for Immigration’, the Government sets out its plan to prevent immigrants and refugees from challenging deportation orders via judicial review. The Overseas Operations (Service Personnel and Veterans) Act puts a time limit on civil and human rights claims that can be brought against the military for alleged abuses committed overseas. The government also sought to curtail prosecutions for overseas military abuses including those amounting to crimes against humanity, war crimes and torture, though most of these measures did not survive parliamentary scrutiny. These curtailments are now resurfacing for Northern Ireland: on 14 July, the Government justified its plan for amnesties related to ‘the Troubles’ by saying: ‘We believe this approach is also important to provide certainty for the vast majority of former soldiers and police officers who put their lives on the line to uphold democracy and the rule of law while acting within the law themselves, and who now just want to live out their retirement without the fear of unfair investigations.’ The government’s characterisation of Troubles investigations as “unfair”, feeds into its unhelpful and incorrect narrative that law is the problem.

Pushbacks against the rule of law, a strong judiciary and an able barare often couched in terms of the improper use of the courts for political objectives. But when one pares back the veneer of the justifications, it is about the majority not wanting to be challenged on its actions and policies; the tyranny of the majority suits the majority just fine.

The attack on the legal profession

The ‘legislative attack’ has been matched with attacks on the legal profession – both against judges and lawyers, and to an extent, their clients. Over the past decade, the Government has used incendiary language with increasing frequency against lawyers and others who have sought to advocate publicly and before the courts against a string of government practices and policies. Incendiary language is never appropriate; it fosters divisiveness, it discourages respect for a plurality of views, can damage reputations and can also put people’s lives at risk.

The Government was criticised for her lacklustre defence of the High Court judges – termed by the Daily Mail as “enemies of the people”, with Lord Thomas subsequently revealing: ‘It is the only time in my career I have had to ask police to give us a measure of advice and protection in relation to the emotions that were being stirred up. … I think that it’s very wrong that judges should feel it.’ Following Priti Patel’s reference to asylum lawyers as ‘activist lawyers’ frustrating the removal of migrants, a man with a knife threatened to kill an immigration solicitor, launching a ‘violent, racist attack’. Prime Minister Boris Johnson has asserted his party’s intent to stop ‘the whole criminal justice system from being hamstrung by what the home secretary would doubtless – and rightly – call the lefty human rights lawyers, and other do-gooders.’

Solicitor and senior partner at law firm Leigh Day, Martyn Day, was called by Jonny Mercer MP, during a Parliamentary hearing, ‘dishonest’ with the work of his firm bringing claims against the Ministry of Defence characterised as ‘entirely the product of deliberate lies, reckless speculation and ingrained hostility’. These statements were made despite Leigh Day having been cleared of any wrongdoing by the Solicitors Regulatory Tribunal.  

The government has referred to claims against the military as “vexatious”, “spurious”, “unpatriotic” and “wholly without merit”. UK law provides a clear meaning for vexatious claims which are those brought without any foundation whatsoever. The Government appears to adopt this language as political rhetoric to admonish those bringing the litigation. Not only is it self-serving, in that the civil claims were brought against the Government, but there is little to suggest that the claims were vexatious in actual fact. To the contrary, it has been made clear that many of the claims regarding military abuses were credible and convincing. As the International Criminal Court prosecutor recently stated:

[…] there is considerable reason to treat with caution the suggestion that the allegations which have been the subject of criminal or civil proceedings in the UK resulted from vexatious claims, or to characterise one of the main solicitor firms involved, Public Interest Lawyers (‘PIL’), and its former principal Phil Shiner, as vexatious litigants. Indeed, your letter provides a more accurate reflection of the situation when you observe that, “we have settled many of the civil claims made by Iraqi nationals against the MOD and we fully engaged with the courts to deal with those cases”.

Fatou Bensouda, ICC Prosecutor

The government is protected in making public statements, which is justified because of the general interest of the public to be kept informed about current debates. The broad privileges given to members of the executive usually insulate them from legal repercussions for statements made on the job. But privileges aren’t absolute; nor should they be used as a license to mislead or to stoke divisive narratives. This point is made by the Joint Committee on Human Rights: ‘It is wrong for public office holders such as Ministers to refer generally to lawyers as “ambulance-chasing lawyers” (or other politically charged and inaccurate terms) when they represent members of the Armed Forces, veterans and civilians in their claims against the MoD—many of which claims have been very well founded claims against the MoD. The calculated and repeated use of such derogatory language by Ministers towards legal professionals is unbecoming and undermines democracy and the rule of law.’

At worst, particularly when the statements relate to ongoing proceedings, (as was the case with some statements about alleged army abuses) they fall foul of the sub judice rule, which prevents officials from commenting on ongoing proceedings. This rule recognises that comment on the (lack of) merits of a case in a public forum without due process of law, may affect the fairness of the proceedings, or the perception of fairness. Conduct, including speech acts, that is calculated to prejudice the proceedings undermines public confidence in the rule of law and will constitute contempt of court. The sub judice rule is well-recognised and well-practiced; frequently, the government has refrained from commenting on ongoing cases.  

Conclusion

One should not underestimate the long-term impact of attacks on the rule of law. The rule of law is there to protect everyone. It is a short-sighted strategy to weaken law and legal structures for quick political gains. Next time around the stakes may be different, with new issues to confront, with different actors promoting new agendas. But all a weakened rule of law will do is make it more difficult to navigate the many complex problems all governments continue to be confronted with.

School of Law and Human Rights Centre Host Workshop on Critical Perspectives on Global Law and the Environment

Photo by Mike Erskine

On 22-23 April 2021, the School of Law and Human Rights Centre (HRC) held a workshop bringing together scholars at an early stage in their careers to support the development of research on critical perspectives on global law and the environment.

The workshop was organised by Emily Jones, Eliana Cusato, Judith Bueno De Mesquita and Birsha Ohdedar (all Lecturers in the School of Law and Human Rights Centre).

The workshop aimed to foster and develop the emerging area of critical scholarship on law and the environment, specifically among early-career researchers. In confronting global challenges such as climate change, biodiversity loss, freshwater scarcity and other symptoms of planetary breakdown, it has been noted that traditional approaches of environmental law have only managed to save “some trees” but failed to keep “the forest” (Bosselmann, 2010). The current environmental crises intertwine with poverty, inequality, and gendered and racial hierarchies that stem from colonial origins and replicate in the postcolonial and neoliberal worlds. Therefore, the challenge laid down for critical scholarship is to interrogate (and re-imagine) the role of law in the unending drive for economic expansion, unbridled exploitation of people and nature, rather than merely attempt to mitigate its excesses (Gonzalez, 2015).

Workshop partipants during the second day of the work-shop

In recent years, an emerging body of work broadly re-examines environmental law from a critical lens. These include perspectives that account for: Third World Approaches to International Law (TWAIL) and Global South-North relations; critical interrogations of human rights and the environment; innovative research methods; new materialism; and climate and environmental justice. This workshop builds on these critical perspectives with the aim of fostering a new generation of scholars.

The workshop had 18 early-career scholars participating, with a cross-section of representation from early-stage PhD researchers to those up to 5 years into their post-PhD academic careers. The virtual workshop meant participants were based across the globe, including from Europe, Canada, Turkey, Brazil, Australia, Barbados, and India, with representation across genders.

Each participant in the workshop produced a paper in advance of the day. The workshop adopted an innovative format by pairing up participants to present on each other’s paper rather than their own. The format resulted in greater engagement, feedback and the development of presenting work that is not their own, concisely and clearly. Each paper was closely discussed with other participants and invited senior discussants, providing an opportunity to gain a range of feedback on their work.

In between the two days of discussion, Prof. Carmen Gonzalez, Professor of Law at Loyola University of Chicago, delivered a keynote address on the topic of racial capitalism and global environmental law.

Keynote speaker Professor Carmen Gonzalez and the organisers of the workshop

A symposium edition of the Asian Journal on International Law is planned for 2022, as a workshop output, which will showcase some of the presented papers.

The workshop complements the work at the School of Law and HRC in this area, including through a research cluster on Human Rights and Environment and recent symposiums on human rights and climate change, albeit bringing a more focussed critical perspective.

Community and Connectedness in Clinical Legal Education: Before, During and After the Covid-19 Pandemic

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Lee Hansen and Liz Fisher-Frank, Lecturers in Law, University of Essex

As the pandemic transformed the way that we connect with others, we have been reflecting on the impact for clinical legal education and the place of community in law clinic activities.

In June 2021, we spoke to the joint conference of the International Journal of Clinical Legal Education and the Global Alliance for Justice Education. We reflected upon the Essex Law Clinic’s sense of community and interconnectedness before, during and after the pandemic. In this blog post, we highlight some of the main points covered in our presentation.

In recent years, the Essex Law Clinic (ELC) had been making significant strides in extending its service into our local community, undertaking a broad range of outreach activities alongside its campus-based clinic. This had improved access to justice for vulnerable and disadvantaged groups across Essex.

Some of this work had already been explored in a presentation we gave to the 2019 conference of the International Journal for Clinical Legal Education in Bratislava on Outreach Clinics in Areas of Deprivation. In that talk we had highlighted the challenges and impacts on community, student learning and wellbeing entailed by this work. Furthermore, we assessed ways to develop our existing outreach work in Jaywick, Colchester and across the Tendring area.

This work was halted upon the arrival of the pandemic. We speedily managed to take our advice service online ensuring many clients were able to benefit from the practical and improved accessibility for some that online advice allowed. However, for groups served in the outreach clinics the move to online delivery may have created barriers to access.

Our presentation drew upon Charles Dicken’s novel, A Christmas Carol, which itself engages with themes of community and isolation. Our reflective process was mapped against the sense of revelation in the novel, where the ghosts of Christmases past, present and future provide Ebenezer Scrooge a window into the strengths and challenges for community around him.   

Reflecting on our pre-pandemic clinic

We looked at where we were two years ago in developing, as we saw it at that time, our community outreach work. Internally, we were focusing on student community, recognising that developing and cementing our law clinic student community was a work-in-progress, needing thought and planning particularly around student teamwork.

Reflecting on our pandemic impacted clinic present

Externally, we recognised the links we have lost in the local community as services were suspended or even shut down due to Covid-19, with many contacts moving on or facing redundancy. Equally, we acknowledged the frustration of not being able to reach the clients we most wanted to due to the barriers faced in accessing the Virtual Law Clinic.

This negative was balanced with an unexpected positive when looking at our internal sense of community. Lockdown, and the enforced isolation experienced by so many students, galvanised us into action. We pushed forward with initiatives to promote our clinic community, to help students engage with the clinic and with each other. We created a newsletter, Clinic Connect. We hosted regular zoom ‘drop-in’s’ for students to chat with us about law, the Clinic and/or anything else. Although, undoubtedly, there was far more that could have been done, the pandemic propelled us into a sharper focus upon student connectivity and engagement with the Clinic.

Reflecting on our potential clinic futures

We are working towards re-establishing our links with external contacts, to ensure our outreach work can resume as soon as it is possible to do so. We are looking at developing new contacts, to change our service in line with the changes other services have had to make during this period of, what we hope to be, ‘recovery.’ It is even more important to us now to rebuild our outreach work and to again, make it a key facet of the Clinic.

We will continue to work on the progress made to date in relation to our student connectivity. Zoom has enabled more effective teamwork to take place, allowing students easy access to meeting up to prepare for cases in advance. We will ensure that when face-to-face returns, this progress too will be replicated. In fact, the dawning of our understanding, due to the pandemic, of the importance of our connectivity both in and outside of the clinic has meant we would like to see this as central concept in all our work in the clinic.

Reflection on the Law Clinic’s relationship with the local community and the development of an internal community of practice in the past, present and our possible futures, in the context of this pandemic, has provided a useful tool for our planning and we can see the transformative potential for the future.

University of Essex 2021 Research and Impact awards

Photo by Jungwoo Hong

As the academic year comes to an end, we want to take a moment to recognise the incredible work and successes of our researchers in the School of Law at the University of Essex.

Colleagues continue making important contributions to the University’s research mission through exceptional performance and we have plenty to celebrate this year.

Staff from across the University were recognised at the 2021 annual Excellence in Research and Impact Awards, which took place on 29 June 2021. The awards showcase some of the best examples of how our University’s research positively influences people’s everyday lives.

The School of Law was strongly represented with three winners and a runner-up, demonstrating the School’s breadth of work and commitment to world-class, transformational research.

School of Law prizes

Dr Haim Abraham won the award for Best Research Impact by an Early Career Researcher for his project Access to Surrogacy in Israel which addressed discrimination in Israel’s surrogacy law. Dr Abraham commented:

‘The nomination and award are a great honour and a privilege. The support of my colleagues in the School of Law and the University for a project aimed at advancing LGBTQ+ rights demonstrates our deep commitment to equality and diversity, and our drive to bring about positive change in the world.’

Judith Bueno de Mesquita received a joint award for Best International Research Impact for her project titled Realising the right to health. Her research examined the expectations (or norms) in relation to the right to health, in the context of specific health issues, with a focus on sexual and reproductive health and rights. The award was shared with Professor Thankom Arun from the Essex Business School. Judith stated:

‘The Human Rights Centre and School of Law are famous for their commitment to and history of engagement in human rights practice, through research-informed partnerships with governments, international organisations and activists. My research is shaped by this tradition and commitment to improve human rights on the ground. I dedicate this award to my outstanding research partners at the national human rights institutions in Azerbaijan and Kosovo and at the UN Population Fund, whose knowledge and commitment was incredible and made change possible.’

Dr Emily Jones was a runner up for the Outstanding Early Career Researcher award for the Faculty of Humanities. Dr Jones’ work spans the areas of feminist approaches to international law, international environmental law, science and technology and international law, gender and conflict and the regulation of contemporary and emerging military technologies. Dr Jones, who was recently elected to Senate (the supreme academic authority of the University) said:

‘The award is a recognition of my contribution to the research environment at Essex, including my work in fostering interdisciplinary links across Departments and Faculties at Essex’.

Dr Alexandros Antoniou won The Conversation Award for the Faculty of Humanities for his article titled The Johnny Depp libel trial explained. His piece looked at the Hollywood actor’s defamation claim against The Sun over the publication of an article characterising him as ‘wife beater’. The Conversation awards go to the writers of the best-read articles over the last 12 months. More than 102,265 readers accessed Dr Antoniou’s article which was published on 3 November 2020.

Congratulations to all! Onwards and upwards!