Talk:Richard Macrory

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by BOZ (talk | contribs) at 04:14, 29 April 2024 (→‎Sources: new section). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

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Sources

@LinacreAlumni thank you for starting this draft. I had some help to find some sources since this had almost no citations to it. I'm far from an expert on this sort of topic, so I'm just adding these sources here for anyone who wants to further develop this article.

  1. "Man-Eater". Owl & Weasel. No. 19. October 1976. p. 11. Retrieved 2024-04-28 – via Internet Archive.

    The article notes: "A rather belated attempt to cash in on the recent Jaws-mania comes from a 26-year-old London barrister, Richard Macrory, inventor of a new game called "Man-Eater" in which players must swim for shore whilst being harassed by a plastic shark. The swimmers, too, are plastic and have detatchable legs—these are removed as the shark attacks!"

  2. "Man-Eater!". Games & Puzzles. 1978. p. 17. Retrieved 2024-04-28 – via Google Books.

    The article notes: "Man-Eater! Chase game (Footloose Productions - £ 3.99) Inventors : Richard Macrory & Nick Young Age : 8 - family Players : 2-3 Playing time : 30 mins JAWS Another spin -off of the Jaws cult, Man-Eater! is a very attractively presented chase game where one player takes on the role of a man-eating killer shark attempting to devour the four swimmers which are moved by the other player / players whose objective is to reach the shore in as much of one piece as possible. Movement is on a colourful board depicting a rocky coastline and divided into 227 numbered hexagons. At each turn, the player controlling the shark secretly writes down the number of the hex to which he intends to move (this may be the same hex as he is currently on or it may be up to four hexes away), the player or players controlling the swimmers moves them each a distance of up to 2 hexes , and the player controlling the shark reveals his move and places the shark piece accordingly. If the shark lands on the same hex as a swimmer, the swimmer is swallowed whole. If the shark lands on a hex adjacent to that of a swimmer, the swimmer loses a leg and continues to move only one hex per turn. Swimmers losing both legs merely drift one hex in the direction of the shore. Dice are used if a swimmer lands on a hex depicting a Red Herring which offers one of twelve instructions, half of which are favourable and half unfavourable."

  3. Milne, Roger (1992-05-30). "From green to academe: Richard Macrory, a former campaigner with Friends of the Earth, has become Britain's first professor of environmental law. Is this a natural progression or a clever change of tack?". New Scientist. Archived from the original on 2024-04-28. Retrieved 2024-04-28.

    The article notes: "Fifteen years ago Richard Macrory was an impecunious young lawyer working for Friends of the Earth, then embroiled in what was Britain’s longest-running public inquiry. The 77-day hearing, a clash between the nuclear industry and the fledgling environmental movement, was about plans to build a reprocessing plant at Windscale, now called Sellafield. Earlier this year, as construction of the Sellafield plant finished, the same affable and engagingly boyish figure was appointed Britain’s first professor of environmental law, a matter of undisguised professional pride."

  4. Ivory, James (1993-07-07). "Obituary: Sir Patrick Macrory". The Independent. Archived from the original on 2022-07-09. Retrieved 2024-04-28.

    The article notes: "Richard Macrory has now followed Sir Patrick as Merchant Ivory's Chairman - has inherited us, one might say. I am happy to state the son has also inherited his father's business acumen, taste for scholarship, and - dare I be so rash as to write this in 1993? - proper English gentlemanliness."

  5. Laville, Sandra (2017-07-03). "Lawyers plan to stop UK dropping EU rules on environment after Brexit: Taskforce head says complexity, scale and political resistance mean key protections could be lost during rollover into law". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 2024-04-28. Retrieved 2024-04-28.

    The article notes: "A taskforce of environmental lawyers is drawing up plans to stop thousands of EU rules protecting rivers, wildlife, coastlines and air quality from being dropped by the government after Brexit. ... Richard Macrory, professor of environmental law at University College London, is leading the taskforce of lawyers."

  6. Eaglesham, Jean (2006-01-04). "Watchdogs told to clean up their act on regulation". Financial Times. Archived from the original on 2024-04-28. Retrieved 2024-04-28.

    The article notes: "New powers for regulators to inflict harsher punishments on the worst transgressors will be given only to watchdogs who stop "box ticking" and agree to police business on a risk-based approach, the head of a government-commissioned review of regulatory sanctions has said. In his first interview since being appointed to chair the penalties review, Richard Macrory told the Financial Times there would be"

  7. Sherriff, Richard; McGinn, Dan (2006-06-09). "Newsletter: Campaign seeks agency to protect the environment". News Letter. Archived from the original on 2024-04-28. Retrieved 2024-04-28.

    The article notes: "The coalition announced plans for a public meeting next week involving Professor Richard Macrory, whose report into the work of agencies in the UK has fuelled the campaign for one in Northern Ireland."

  8. Willman, John (2007-07-12). "Burden eased on business as rogue traders targeted". Financial Times. Archived from the original on 2024-04-28. Retrieved 2024-04-28.

    The article notes: "The bill includes some of the recommendations of the 2006 report on regulatory sanctions carried out by Professor Richard Macrory, of University College London. This found that current fines were not high enough to deter businesses from breaking regulations - for example, the penalty incurred for dumping dangerous chemicals or failing to protect workers may be lower than the savings made by cutting corners on safety practices. Prof Macrory recommended standardised sentencing guidelines for convictions when offences came to court, statutory notices requiring businesses to comply with the law and a proportionate range of penalties."

  9. Willman, John (2007-05-15). "Rogue businesses could face unlimited new fines". Financial Times. Archived from the original on 2024-04-28. Retrieved 2024-04-28.

    The article notes: "The measures will be part of the regulatory, enforcement and sanctions bill to be laid before parliament today for consultation. It implements recommendations in the 2005 report on reducing administrative burdens by Sir Philip Hampton, now chairman of J Sainsbury, and the 2006 review of penalties for breaking regulations by Professor Richard Macrory of University College, London."

  10. Ranscombe, Peter (2007-04-13). "New office aims for better regulation and enforcement at a local authority level". The Scotsman. Archived from the original on 2024-04-28. Retrieved 2024-04-28.

    The article notes: "Some of the first tasks facing the new LBRO will be leading the implementation of the changes suggested in two recent reports, by Peter Rogers, the chief executive of Westminster City Council, and Professor Richard Macrory of University College London. ... The Macrory Review looked at regulatory penalties to ensure they were proportionate."

  11. "Richard Macrory". Baker & Taylor Author Biographies. Baker & Taylor. 2000-01-02. EBSCOhost 49278432.

    The entry notes: "Richard Macrory is the Director of the IBM Environmental Change Unit in the University of Oxford and is a Fellow of Linacre College."

  12. Skinner, Ian (2006-11-27). "Reflections on 30 Years of EU Environmental Law: A High Level of Protection? edited by Richard Macrory". Review of European Community & International Environmental Law. 15 (3): 347–349. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9388.2006.00521_4.x.

    The review notes: "I was really looking forward to reading this book and, on balance, it did not disappoint. I was particularly interested as to what the authors would conclude in relation to the book’s sub-title: Does EU environmental law provide the EU’s citizens with a high level of protection? ... As noted above, at times I felt that some of the chapters were overoptimistic. However, the final chapter, from Ludwig Krämer himself, is enough to sober even the most optimistic reader."

  13. Tyler, Richard (2006-05-30). "The HSE is accused of over-the-top action on company's safety record". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 2024-04-28. Retrieved 2024-04-28.

    The article notes: "The chairman of the supermarket group J Sainsbury, Philip Hampton, proposed this approach more than a year ago and his ideas were fully accepted by the Chancellor, who subsequently asked Richard Macrory, professor of environmental law at University College, London, to examine how the penalties system could be reformed. Only last week Prof Macrory said that agencies such as the HSE should be given the tools to adopt a different approach to businesses like Clingfoil, ..."

  14. Tyler, Richard (2006-12-05). "Law-breaking companies face 'community service'". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 2024-04-28. Retrieved 2024-04-28.

    The article notes: "Professor Richard Macrory of University College London has reviewed the current system for the Cabinet Office and found it flawed. He said regulators like the Health & Safety Executive and the Environment Agency were over-reliant on criminal prosecutions that often do not deliver the sanction and change in behaviour by the offending business that the regulator wishes to achieve. So instead Prof Macrory has recommended the creation of a set of tools."

  15. Ince, Martin (1992-03-20). "Digging dirt in the back yard". The Times Higher Education Supplement. No. 1011. p. 48. ProQuest 2348067768.

    The abstract notes: " Martin Ince talks to Richard Macrory, first professor of environmental law in the UK"

  16. Abbot, Carolyn (2010-05-28). "Regulation, Enforcement and Governance in Environmental Law. By Richard Macrory". Journal of Environmental Law. 22 (2): 343–345. doi:10.1093/jel/eqq004.

    The abstract notes: "This book is a testament to the invaluable and distinctive contribution that Macrory has made to environmental law scholarship over the years. It contains a selection of the author’s work, ranging across public lectures, previously published academic articles and book chapters, and reports commissioned by government and NGOs. The work spans four decades of intellectual endeavour, beginning in 1979 with Macrory’s first published legal article, and culminating in a revised version of the 2007 Brodies Environment Lecture on reforming regulatory sanctions. "

  17. Stallworthy, Mark (2012-11-08). "Carbon Capture and Storage–Emerging Legal and Regulatory Issues. Edited by Ian Havercroft, Richard Macrory and Richard B. Stewart". Journal of Environmental Law. Vol. 24, no. 3. pp. 590–592. doi:10.1093/jel/eqs026.

    The abstract notes: "The editorial team responsible for this volume press a central case espousing a need for effective carbon capture and storage (CCS) law and regulatory structures, with a view to ‘reconciling the complex issues and relationships involved’ (p 296). To this end, Havercroft, Macrory and Stewart provide the reader with a clear thematic structure, which they book-end with an informative introduction and a stimulating concluding section ..."

  18. Sunkin, Maurice (2004-07-01). "Modernising Environmental Justice: Regulation and the Role of an Environmental Tribunal". Journal of Environmental Law. 16 (2): 307–309. doi:10.1093/jel/16.2.307.

    The review notes: "In conclusion this is an important contribution to a discussion that may well be nearing some form of conclusion. Certainly, this report combines solid research, a serious desire to achieve a system that meets the needs of environmental justice, and an acute awareness of the practical and technical problems involved in creating a coherent new jurisdiction where so much incoherence currently exists. Inevitably, this report will disappoint some but it shows a way forward and provides a sound and workable basis for modernising the system for achieving environmental justice."

BOZ (talk) 04:14, 29 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]