94 research outputs found

    William David Hamilton Sellar, MVO, BA, LLB, LLD, FRHistS, FSAScot:A memoir

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    Pleadable brieves and jurisdiction in heritage in later medieval Scotland.

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    Despite the scarcity of source material and the difficulty of interpreting such evidence as exists, it is clear that the development of royal justice led to the emergence of a unified common law in medieval Scotland. This was achieved although no structure of central courts like that of England emerged until the fifteenth century. Instead royal justice was administered by courts based in the localities such as those of the sheriff and the burghs, or by courts such as those of the justiciar which went on circuit through the kingdom. Within this structure there operated from the thirteenth century a rule that actions concerning the recovery of land from intruders had to be raised by pleadable brieves. There were various types of such writs; the relevant ones were the brieves of dissasine and mortancestor, pleadable in the justiciar's court, and the brieve of right, pleadable in the sheriff and burgh courts. It appears that round these brieves there developed a considerable body of law, and at least some of them remained in use until the sixteenth century. It is against this background that the exclusion of the developing 'central' courts of the fifteenth century from cases concerning fee and heritage, or landownership, must be considered. These courts developed as a method of handling the judicial functions of parliament and the king's council. To begin with these functions were confined to the supervision and correction of the ordinary courts of the common law, but by the mid-fifteenth century the jurisdiction of council in particular as an alternative forum was established in most areas other than that of fee and heritage. This limitation, it is argued, continued because the common.law still required that pleadable brieves (which were not addressed to either parliament or council) be used to commence actions of that kind. Only when the pleadable brieves had fallen into desuetude in the first half of the sixteenth century did the council come to have jurisdiction in fee and heritage

    Protecting Privacy:<em>Campbell v MGN Newspapers</em>

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    Delict, Contract, and the Bill of Rights: A Perspective from the United Kingdom

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    Work carried out at the AHRC Research Centre for Studies in Intellectual Property and Technology LawThe article offers a comparative approach to the impact of South Africa's Bill of Rights on the law of delict and contract in the United Kingdom

    Searching for Privacy in a Mixed Jurisdiction

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    The article examines the individual’s right to privacy, with particular reference to its protection against actors other than the State. The English model is provided by the Common Law on breach of confidence; the Civilian one by the development of the actio iniuriarum in line with its development in other mixed jurisdictions such as South Africa and, less prominently, Louisiana. Of critical importance is the stimulus to legal development provided by human rights jurisprudence, lately made directly relevant to Scots law by the Human Rights Act 1998 (HRA)

    Intellectual Property in a Peripheral Jurisdiction: A Matter of Policy?

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    A book chapter examining the impact of intellectual property law and intellectual property rights in Scotland as the "peripheral jurisdiction". The chapter is written from a socio-legal perspective

    From Napster to Grokster

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    Work carried out at the AHRC Research Centre for Studies in Intellectual Property and Technology LawAn article examining the free exchange and file sharing of copyright music, films and other digital media over the Internet

    Reform of archival legislation: a Scots perspective 2006

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    A comparative approach of archival legislation between Scotland and Ireland

    Madster and Madster: File-sharing and Copyright Infringement Again

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    The article examines file-sharing across the internet
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