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Plymouth Law Review


Volume 11, 2019

Editorial

25th Pilgrim Father’s Lecture:
Sir Terence Etherton, Master of the Rolls,
The Conflicts of Legal Pluralism: Secular Law and Religious Faith in the United Kingdom, 1-21


Staff and Postgraduate Research Articles and Reports

Lisamarie Deblasio, Socio-Legal Research: Looking Beyond Black Letter Law in the Context of Birth Mothers’ Rights in Adoption Proceedings, 46-57

James Gould, A Supreme Matter of Conscience: Lady Hale’s Engagement with Article 9 ECHR, 46-57

Tom Graham, Pitted Against Each Other? Mistaken Transactions in Unjust Enrichment and Equity, 58-72

Rebecca Harris, Conference Report: Obtaining Best Evidence from Child Suspects in Police Custody: Challenges and Opportunities, 73-79


Graduate Articles

Eleanor Rockett, Trashion: An Analysis of Intellectual Property Protection for the Fast Fashion Industry, 80-102

Philip Connor, Brexit... A Lifetime of Purgatory for the UK’s Environmental Laws - Or is there a Stairway to Heaven?, 103-125

George Cass, Alternatives to the Common Fisheries Policy? The Future of the UK's Fisheries Post-Brexit, 126-149

Lucy Hooper, Are Corporations Free to Kill? Rethinking the Law on Corporate Manslaughter to Better Reflect the Artificial Legal Existence of Corporations, 150-180


Student Reports
 
Holly Parker, Reflections on Sir Terence Etherton’s Pilgrim Fathers’ Lecture: The Conflicts of Legal Pluralism: Secular Law and Religious Faith in the United Kingdom, 181-185

Oliver Tuck, Negotiation Competitions Review 2017-18, 186-194

Patrick Prestidge, Transition from the Armed Forces to Studying a Full-Time Law Degree: A Personal Perspective, 195-201

Shannon Tucker and Natasha Owen, It’s Better to Light a Candle than Curse the Darkness’: Our Experience at the Amnesty International Student Conference 2018, 202-206