External Human Rights Events
- 1st Annual Sakharov Debate on Human Rights
- The inaugural ERIS Annual Democracy Lecture
- Domestic Judges and The European Court of Human Rights: Conflict or Consensus?
- What Should We Expect from a Progressive Equality Jurisprudence? The Case of South Africa
- Mexico and the Inter-American Human Rights System In comparative perspective with the European Court of Human Rights
- The Triumph of Human Rights: Dream or Nightmare?
- Citizens' Privileges or Human Rights? The Great Bill of Rights Swindle
- Migration, Human Rights and Security in Europe
- Advancing Sexual Rights in the “Developing World”: The Politics of Human Rights Interventionism
- Negotiating Religion IV - Legal Frameworks: Schools and Religious Freedom
- Human Rights Thought and Practice in the Contemporary World
- LLAKES Research Seminar - Method Matters: Social Science, Human Rights and Phronesis
- UCL Laws Symposium - The Eweida Decision
- Inaugural Lecture Human Rights and the Autonomy of EU Law: Pluralism or Integration?
- UCL Legal & Social Philosophy Colloquium Proportionality: Diagnostic, not Constitutive
- The Future of the UK Bill of Rights
- Human Rights Collegium Launch and Inaugural Lecture - Confessions of a Judicial Activist
- Negotiating Religion: Inquiries into the History and Present of Religious Accommodation
- Forced Migration: Global Perspectives and Practices
- The Melloni and Åkerberg Fransson judgments: The incoming tide of the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights?
UCL Laws Symposium - The Eweida Decision
20 February 2013
Date: Tuesday 12 March 2013, 6 - 8pm
Location: UCL Faculty of Laws, Bentham House, Endsleigh Gardens, London, WC1H 0EG
Speakers: Professor Mark Hill QC (Cardiff University), Dr Ronan McCrea (UCL), Professor Aileen McColgan (King's College London), Professor Christopher McCrudden (Queen's University Belfast)
Admission: £15 for practicing lawyers, free for students and the unwaged.
About this Event:The Eweida decision heralded significant changes in the law on freedom of religion in the workplace and its relationship to other rights. It is likely to have a major importance for the development of European and domestic law on anti-discrimination and on workplace regulation of religious clothing and conduct. The symposium brings together four speakers all of whom are both academics and barristers and all of whom acted for parties or interveners in this case. It will take the form of a presentation by each speaker on the judgement and its importance. This will be followed by a general discussion with the audience.
Page last modified on 20 feb 13 12:19

