All by Guest Author

Becoming human: The political modalities of rights within the Moroccan feminist movement

In this article, Joel Platt explores the successful embrace and adaptation of international human rights norms by the Moroccan feminist movement. This is a particularly interesting and under-researched topic because Morocco is an overwhelmingly Muslim country and Islam is widely posited as incompatible with women’s human rights. Therefore, the tactical approach of the Moroccan feminist movement may offer guidance and inspiration to similar movements across the Islamic world.

A Critical Analysis of the Current Status of the Doctrine of Adverse Possession in light of the UK Housing Crisis

In this article, Rian Dhillon explores the doctrine of adverse possession in the context of the housing shortage. The first chapter sets out the current problems with housing and the ways in which land law enables absenteeism. The discussion of the doctrine itself in the second chapter focuses on the place of adverse possession within the LRA 2002 framework. The interesting part of the dissertation is the way in which it demonstrates how current practice on adverse possession is rooted in deeper land law concepts and how justifications for reform could be similarly rooted in existing principles. In summation, the dissertation provides an account of the current ideologies of adverse possession and proposes ways in which this could be redressed by drawing on international examples.

An exercise in putting children first in a digital age: Should the law restrict children under a certain age from using social networking sites?

In this article, Christy O’Neil explores the use of Social Networking Sites (SNS) by children under thirteen through a constructivist lens, which will facilitate a child-centric evaluation of the impact of such platforms. This article will provide a fresh insight into the existing debate on the impact of SNSs, and, in answer to the question of whether the law should restrict children from using SNSs, demonstrate how the impact on children under thirteen is sufficiently alarming as to trigger the need for a restrictive legislative framework in England and Wales.