
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Serving Judge Lord McCluskey gives his fourth Reith lecture from his series entitled 'Law, Justice and Democracy'.
In this lecture, Lord McCluskey counters Lord Denning's exhortation of 'trust the judges' and argues instead for a simplification of the law. He argues that there should be predictable outcomes because the method of adjudication ought, as far as possible, to be the relatively mechanical process. It should apply a precise set of unambiguous rules to the facts and not take a wide-ranging philosophical approach.
4.3
144144 ratings
Serving Judge Lord McCluskey gives his fourth Reith lecture from his series entitled 'Law, Justice and Democracy'.
In this lecture, Lord McCluskey counters Lord Denning's exhortation of 'trust the judges' and argues instead for a simplification of the law. He argues that there should be predictable outcomes because the method of adjudication ought, as far as possible, to be the relatively mechanical process. It should apply a precise set of unambiguous rules to the facts and not take a wide-ranging philosophical approach.
5,412 Listeners
381 Listeners
1,842 Listeners
162 Listeners
7,909 Listeners
400 Listeners
308 Listeners
1,782 Listeners
1,050 Listeners
901 Listeners
1,925 Listeners
1,081 Listeners
248 Listeners
67 Listeners
832 Listeners
403 Listeners
292 Listeners
75 Listeners
4,121 Listeners
2,985 Listeners
32 Listeners
3,289 Listeners
989 Listeners
321 Listeners