Jill Marshall

Jill Marshall is a Professor of Law at the University of Leicester. Her research is in Human Rights and Political and Legal Theory, particularly Feminist Jurisprudence. She is the sole author of three books including Human Rights Law and Personal Identity (Routledge 2014). This ongoing project investigates the role human rights law plays in understanding personal identity, including how we are created, developed and become the people we are in society. It also analyses protections given to identity rights such as one's origins, sex, religion, culture and appearance. Before becoming an academic in 2001, Jill was a practising international litigation solicitor in the City of London and she retains her practising certificate. Comments are welcome: to jill.marshall@le.ac.uk|Jill Marshall is a Professor of Law at the University of Leicester. Her research is in Human Rights and Political and Legal Theory, particularly Feminist Jurisprudence. She is the sole author of three books including Human Rights Law and Personal Identity (Routledge 2014). This ongoing project investigates the role human rights law plays in understanding personal identity, including how we are created, developed and become the people we are in society. It also analyses protections given to identity rights such as one's origins, sex, religion, culture and appearance. Before becoming an academic in 2001, Jill was a practising international litigation solicitor in the City of London and she retains her practising certificate. Comments are welcome: to jill.marshall@le.ac.uk|Jill Marshall is a Professor of Law at the University of Leicester. Her research is in Human Rights and Political and Legal Theory, particularly Feminist Jurisprudence. She is the sole author of three books including Human Rights Law and Personal Identity (Routledge 2014). This ongoing project investigates the role human rights law plays in understanding personal identity, including how we are created, developed and become the people we are in society. It also analyses protections given to identity rights such as one's origins, sex, religion, culture and appearance. Before becoming an academic in 2001, Jill was a practising international litigation solicitor in the City of London and she retains her practising certificate. Comments are welcome: to jill.marshall@le.ac.uk

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S.A.S v France: Controlling Identities in European Liberal Democracies

S.A.S v France: Controlling Identities in European Liberal Democracies

As discussed in previous posts, the ECtHR decided in S.A.S v France that the French criminal law ban on face coverings in all public places does not violate European human rights law. I want to look at this judgment through a ...