Monday 9 March 202
Dr Andy Hayward (Assoc Prof, Durham University Law School, & Academic Fellow)
Introduced by The Reader, Her Honour Judge Deborah Taylor
Education
- Call to the Bar
 - Education & Training Policies
 - Professor The Hon George Hampel AM KC
 - International Practice Panel
 - Munich – Why?
 - 1500-2023 - Snapshots of The Inner Temple Library
 - The Appeal Court of the Archbishop of Canterbury - The Court of Arches: Ancient and Modern
 - Dr Ivy Williams, An Enduring Inspiration to Women Lawyers
 - Gilds and Things
 - The History of The Inner Temple through its Treasures
 - Human Rights in Britain and France: From Thomas Becket to the French Revolution
 - Law in a Time of Plague - Was the Law a Good Doctor
 - Lawyers and Diplomats
 - Paradise Lost and Found
 - Religious Disputes and the Custody of Children: Dr Barnardo in the House of Lords
 - The Selden Society: “A Scotsman caught young” – The influences which shaped Lord Mansfield
 - The Selden Society: John Selden and Legal History
 - The Selden Society: The Fire Courts
 - The Smirkes and The Inner Temple
 - Sub-Treasurers of The Inner Temple
 - Treasures from the Library
 - William Crashawe's Library
 - The Winding Stair: Inside the bitter rivalry of Edward Coke and Francis Bacon
 
- Master H Meets...Again
 - Have We "Had Enough of Experts"?
 - Race and the Legal Profession
 - The Absolute Ban on Assisted Dying and Lessons from Canada
 - Assumptions of Responsibility
 - Brain Imaging as Evidence
 - Calling It Out: Professionals, their Regulators, Equity and Fairness
 - The Bar of Ireland, Brexit and the Common Law
 - The English Approach to Deciding Commercial Cases
 - The Executive and the Courts in the Constitution
 - Experts: Love or Loath? The Involvement of Experts in Legal Proceedings
 - Forensic Document Examination - The Science Today
 - Forensic Identification from the Hand
 - The Future for Regulation of the UK Public Markets
 - Giving Judges a Voice in Democracies
 - The History of the Law Officers
 - How the Law Should Respond to External Crises Such as COVID-19
 - Lawyer or Politician: What is the Attorney General?
 - The Limits of Fiduciary Rules
 - Memory as Evidence
 - Politics and the Law
 - The Predicament and Agency of Refugees
 - Previous Lecture Series and Speakers
 - Proof in International Criminal Trials
 - Reforming the Law of Contempt of Court
 - A Public Health Approach to Equality Law
 - The Role of the Medical Examiner
 - 'Sales' on Retention of Title Terms
 - Show me the money!
 - Sport - Law and Ethics
 - The Wild and Ridiculous Doctrine of Equality
 - What Does It Mean to Be Anti-Racist in a Profession Full of Privileged People?
 - The Work of UNIDROIT and the Future for the International Harmonisation of Commercial Law
 
- Perverse Not Guilty Verdicts Should Remain Final
 - AI: Risks and Benefits
 - Assisted Dying
 - Asylum and Immigration: Do Sovereign Island Nations have a Duty to Provide Refuge?
 - Britain's Unwritten Constitution
 - The Crime of Ecocide
 - Do Magnitsky Type Sanctions Develop the Rule of Law?
 - Does the Bar Need to Communicate and Market Itself More in the Modern World?
 - Environmental Law: Regulation and the Right to Protest
 - Global Responses to the Forcibly Displaced
 - Handing Back the Past: Cultural Repatriation
 - Is Anything More Needed to Ensure Freedom of Speech?
 - Is the Presumption of Innocence Alive and Well?
 - Is There a Case for Anonymity in Social Media?
 - Is Our Adversarial System Fit for Purpose?
 - Is it Better to Review or Monitor Terror Laws? The UK and Australian Positions Compared
 - Peace vs Justice
 - Prison Reform
 - The Rule of Law in Times of International Conflict
 - Should UK Judges and ex-Judges Be Sitting in Hong Kong?
 - Should our Constitution Protect Against Party Elected Leaders?
 - Ukraine War: Peace-making Ahead – Traditional Methods of Accountability or New Solutions?
 
- Special Gandhi Lecture
 - What Does a Master of the Bench Do?
 
- Frequently asked questions
 
Home › Education › Education Resources › Reader’s Lecture Series › The Wild and Ridiculous Doctrine of Equality
The Wild and Ridiculous Doctrine of Equality: Matrimonial Property and the Legacy of the Married Women's Property Act 1882
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