Editor’s Note: AI, privacy and policy experts put a number on Ireland’s AI ambition, and a price tag on it. On the main stage early on day one of the Dublin Tech Summit, a law-firm partner, OpenAI’s Irish chief and
Editor’s Note: AI, privacy and policy experts put a number on Ireland’s AI ambition, and a price tag on it. On the main stage early on day one of the Dublin Tech Summit, a law-firm partner, OpenAI’s Irish chief and…
I find it at the same time strange and reassuring that, looking primarily at law publishing within the jurisdictions which make up the British Isles, I seem to note the extent to which law book and periodical publishing, linked…
In a recent post, Suryapratim Roy discusses the Irish fuel price blockades that took place in April. The protests were physically and symbolically dominated by agriculture. Most of its leaders identified themselves as farmers or as farming contractors, and…
Indecency, obscenity immorality, vice, depravity, corruption – it almost seems like a formula for a good party, or a line from Tom Lehrer‘s march for Smut. But, in fact, these six words are the foundations of the Censorship…
Tadgh Quill-Manley is a student at King’s Inns, and can be reached at tadghquillmanley@yahoo.com
The European Union (EU) has made housing a more important part of its social policy in response to problems like rising costs, changing demographics, and economic…
I began my previous post by saying that Melton Enterprises Ltd v Censorship of Publications Board [2003] 3 IR 623, [2004] 1 ILRM 260, [2003] IESC 55 (4 November 2003), is the only case (so far as I know) in…
The Censorship of Publications Acts, 1929, 1946, and 1967 were introduced to deal with the menace of evil literature (lampooned by Gordon Brewster in the adjacent 1928 cartoon). Melton Enterprises Ltd v Censorship of Publications Board [2003] 3…