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Our client, who wishes to remain anonymous, has been granted permission and costs protection, in her judicial review challenge of her local Council’s policy on how strip clubs should be licensed. After a successful judicial review of Sheffield City Council by our client last year,...
In a judgment handed down today, the High Court has found that the Home Office’s treatment of Windrush Citizenship Applications has been irrational, by continuing to impose a restrictive “good character” requirement that denied members of the Windrush generation citizenship status. The “good character” requirement...
We don’t want to buy into a concept created by an enthusiastic proponent of the racist hostile environment, but Stephen Lawrence day will no doubt quite rightly be of real importance to the Lawrence family, Duwayne Brooks, and those close to them. We all have...
DPG clients Operation Black Vote, the Runnymede Trust and Voice4Change UK have been given permission to intervene in the Supreme Court case of Coughlan v Minister for the Cabinet Office, challenging the imposition of voter ID requirements in UK local elections.
The Guardian has reported today that reforms will be introduced to the British Nationality Act 1981, which will give the Home Secretary and her agents discretion to waive residence requirements that have led to Windrush migrants like our client, Trevor Donald, being refused citizenship. This...
Polly Glynn spoke to the BBC Radio documentary programme, File on 4, about the problems with the UK’s system of asylum support. You can listen to the programme here. DPG’s migrant support work includes our innovative PAP scheme, which you can read more about here.
Permission to apply for judicial review has been granted to our client to challenge the Crown Prosecution Service’s decision not to prosecute her trafficker who exploited her by making her work excessive hours for very little pay. Our client was recognised as a victim of...
Our client, Trevor Donald, is a Windrush migrant who arrived in the UK lawfully in 1967 and lived in the UK continuously from his arrival until 2010. On 1 January 1973, the Immigration Act 1971 came into force. The effect of the Act was that...
Deighton Pierce Glynn have responded to the government’s review of the Human Rights Act . This is an important piece of legislation that has helped many thousands of people to get justice. It is important to note that the government is not proposing abolishing the...
On 19 February 2020, the Court dismissed a claim for Judicial Review brought by disability campaigner and DPG client, Esther Leighton, to reform the legal system to ensure victims of discrimination are not put at risk of enormous adverse costs orders. The case sought to...
Following a split decision in the Court of Appeal, our clients intend to continue their legal fight to open up civil partnership to mixed-sex couples.
Six asylum seekers who brought claims against the Home Secretary after being accommodated at the controversial Napier Barracks have today been granted permission to proceed with their claims to trial. The Claimants challenge the use of Napier Barracks to house asylum seekers on five grounds,...