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The CELS Mackenzie-Stuart Lecture Podcast

"Interesting Times" - Chinese Curses, Lawyers' Headaches, Political Nightmares and New Dawns: The 2013 Mackenzie-Stuart Lecture

The CELS Mackenzie-Stuart Lecture Podcast

Faculty of Law, University of Cambridge

Business, News, Government

5.04 Ratings

🗓️ 28 February 2013

⏱️ 61 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The Centre for European Legal Studies (CELS) hosts an annual public lecture in honour of Lord Mackenzie-Stuart, the first British Judge to be President of the Court of Justice. Among the eminent scholars of European legal studies invited to give the lecture are Professor Joseph Weiler, former Judge David Edwards of the European Court of Justice, and Advocate-General Francis Jacobs of the European Court of Justice. The texts of the Mackenzie-Stuart Lectures are published in the Cambridge Yearbook of European Legal Studies. The 2013 Mackenzie-Stuart Lecture was delivered by Judge Nicholas Forwood (General Court of the European Union) on Thursday 28th February 2013, and was entitled ""Interesting Times" - Chinese Curses, Lawyers' Headaches, Political Nightmares and New Dawns". More information about this lecture is available from the Centre for European Legal Studies website at http://www.cels.law.cam.ac.uk/mackenzie_stuart_lectures/ This entry provides an audio source for iTunes U.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Good evening everybody and welcome to this year's annual Mackenzie Stewart lecture.

0:10.0

To remind you, this lecture was created in honour of the memory of Lord Mackenzie Stewart, who was the first Scottish advocate, then a Scottish judge,

0:29.5

and then the first UK judge at the European Court of Justice.

0:35.1

And his achievement was to secure the legal integration of the UK into the EC as it

0:43.3

then was. When the UK joined the EC, a lot of woesayers predicted marrying a common law system

0:53.4

with a civil law system can never work. And with

0:57.3

Jean-Pierre Warner, the first British Advocate General, he had the daunting responsibility of showing

1:03.0

that it could. And between them, they did. And it was accepted by everybody that it was done with complete success to the extent

1:13.9

that McKenzie Stewart became president of the court in 1984, a post he held until his retirement

1:20.9

in 1988. And in an obituary, Lord Cameron of Loch Bruins said his work as a judge of the Court of Justice was marked by his deeply held convictions about the way forward in Europe derived not only from his wartime experiences but also from his sense of a legal and historical communion between the law of Scotland and

1:45.2

the other European systems of law.

1:51.4

He started his life as an engineer and one of his jobs was building bridges during the war time and he's remembered as a bridge

2:05.5

builder in a double sense, a builder of mechanical ones initially and then at a public level

2:12.5

a bridge builder between the UK and Europe and at a private level between himself and his family and their

2:21.8

many friends. And we're very glad to welcome tonight, three members of his family, Judy

2:29.5

Mackenzie Stewart, Amanda Hay and Marianna Hay as representative of the family. Working here, we would

2:38.2

also like to welcome James Weber, representative of Sherman and Sterling, who are generous enough

2:44.3

to sponsor the lecture. And I was looking forward to saying to him, we look forward to eating the dinner you're paying for tonight,

2:53.6

but unfortunately he's had to pull out, so I can't say that.

2:57.6

Our distinguished speaker tonight is Judge Nicholas Forward.

3:04.6

He is a Cambridge man, and like Mackenzie Stewart he started his time as an

3:12.3

engineer reading the fast-track engineering course and then changing to law.

...

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