With the Government's flagship policy in legal disarray, will the Conservative leadership finally stand up for the rule of law or continue stoking their culture wars?
courts
The Duke of Sussex's testimony is the first to be given by a senior royal to a civil court in more than 130 years
A prince of the realm taking on Britain's biggest newspapers is surely newsworthy? Not if you're a reader of one of these titles, writes Liz Gerard
The phoney war is over – Prince Harry’s phone-hacking wars have begun, reports Dan Evans
A number of barristers are speaking out against the 'cab rank' rule, under which advocates have to accept any case that lands on their desks, faced with their concerns about the climate emergency
Law Society says solicitors in England and Wales can ‘take into account the likely impact’ of their work upon the climate crisis when taking on new clients
The Home Secretary's comments about British Pakistanis and grooming gangs are contradicted by evidence uncovered by her own Department, reports Adam Bienkov
Witness statements on behalf of the claimants against Associated News plunge us straight back into what Gordon Brown once described as the ‘criminal media nexus’
Per person, the ECHR dealt with fewer human rights challenges concerning the UK than anywhere else in 2022, Josiah Mortimer reports
Barrister Gareth Roberts explains how the European Convention on Human Rights affects the lives of British citizens