Caoilfhionn Gallagher KC KC > Doughty Street Chambers > London, England > Barrister Profile

Doughty Street Chambers
53-54 DOUGHTY STREET
LONDON
WC1N 2LS
England
Caoilfhionn Gallagher KC photo

Work Department

Position

Caoilfhionn Gallagher QC is a barrister at Doughty Street Chambers, specialising in human rights and civil liberties.

She has acted in many of the leading human rights cases in the UK in recent years, including acting for bereaved families and survivors of the 7/7 London bombings and the Hillsborough disaster, and acting in a series of cases which have established that the UK Government’s welfare changes are discriminatory. Caoilfhionn undertakes many ‘test cases’ which secure results for her clients but also achieve wider change in the law.  For example, her recent cases include acting in a number of successful challenges to the Department of Work and Pensions’ benefit changes, R (Hurley and others) v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions [2016] PTSR 636 (benefit cap unlawfully discriminates against the severely disabled), R (A and Rutherford) v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions [2016] HLR 8 (social sector size criteria, ‘bedroom tax,’ unlawfully discriminate against women) and R (MA) v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions [2013] PTSR 1521 (Regulations required to correct discriminatory impact of the bedroom tax on severely disabled children).

Caoilfhionn has particular expertise in freedom of expression and open justice. She regularly advises and acts for newspapers and broadcasters in the UK concerning journalistic access to the courts and public interest reporting. She has acted, for example, for media organisations in the inquests into the deaths of Alexander Litvinenko and Gareth Williams (the GCHQ employee found dead in a holdall), ensuring that these hearings were open to public scrutiny and could be freely reported. She worked with the Media Lawyers’ Association and the Chief Coroner in the development of new guidelines on open justice in the coroners’ courts. She also regularly acts for journalists worldwide who are imprisoned, prosecuted, sued or subjected to travel bans due to their journalism; her current and recent case load includes work for journalists, bloggers, cartoonists, peaceful protestors and human rights defenders in Egypt, Turkey and Equatorial Guinea. She leads the international legal team for the family of Daphne Caruana Galizia, the award-winning journalist assassinated in Malta in 2017, and she is leading counsel to 152 BBC Persian journalists persecuted by Iran due to their work. She is a member of the UK Advisory Board to Reporters Without Borders (RSF) and regularly works with Index on Censorship and other NGOs specialising in freedom of expression.

Women’s rights is another area of particular interest for Caoilfhionn. Much of her work in relation to austerity and welfare cuts concerns the disproportionate impact of those cuts upon women, particularly BAME women and victims and survivors of domestic violence. She has also acted in a series of cases concerning the almost total ban on abortion in Northern Ireland, including R (A and B) v Secretary of State for Health [2017] UKSC 41 and Re Northern Ireland Human Rights Commission [2018] UKSC 27.

Caoilfhionn also has expertise in children’s rights and she has acted in many of the leading cases in this field, including HH v Italy [2013] 1 AC 338 (right of children to be heard in extradition proceedings concerning their parents) and R (HC) v SSHD [2014] 1 WLR 1234 (acted for Hughes Chang in this test case on treatment of 17-year-olds in police custody as adults rather than children; it has resulted in a change to the law, affecting 70,000 17-year-olds in custody every year). Internationally, she acts in many cases concerning children’s rights, particularly in Strasbourg and before the UN Special Procedures, and she has provided consultancy services to the UN on child soldiers and Boko Haram.

Languages

Irish
German

Memberships

Howard League for Penal Reform
INQUEST
Association of Prison Lawyers
Police Action Lawyers Group
Liberty
British Irish Rights Watch
Irish Council for Civil Liberties
Irish Penal Reform Trust

Education

BCL (University College Dublin)

BL (Honorable Society of the King’s Inns, Dublin)

LLM (Cambridge, Gonville & Caius College)

Lawyer Rankings

London Bar > International human rights and criminal law

(Leading Silks)Ranked: Tier 2

Caoilfhionn Gallagher KC – Doughty Street Chambers ‘Caoilfhionn is incredibly knowledgeable and has built up a strong portfolio of so many of the cases that matter most to global press freedom. She not only has a brilliant legal mind, but she has become adept at developing advocacy strategies around her cases, and forging strong partnership with NGOs, leading to greater impact for her clients.’

Doughty Street Chambers is praised for its ‘immense strength in depth in the specific area of international human rights and criminal law’ with members of the chambers frequently acting in the highest profile cases before international human rights bodies and criminal courts, including the ECHR, the UN Human Rights Committee, ICJ and the ICC. Members of the set are active in cases concerning the protection of press freedom, with Caoilfhionn Gallagher KC advising the BBC concerning the ongoing alleged harassment of BBC Persian journalists by the Iranian government, while Tatyana Eatwell and Jennifer Robinson continue to act on behalf of the International Federation of Journalists and Palestinian Journalists’ Syndicate in filing complaints to the UN and ICC regarding their alleged targeting and discrimination by Israel. Tim Moloney KC leads Megan Hirst and Peta-Louise Bagott in the high-profile appeal against the ICC decision not to investigate war crimes and crimes against humanity in the context of the 2001-2021 Afghanistan war, and Amal Clooney represents the Republic of the Maldives intervention in The Gambia v Myanmar case before the ICJ relating to the Gambia’s allegation, on behalf of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, that Myanmar is carrying out a genocide against the Rohingya people.

London Bar > Inquests and inquiries

(Leading Silks)Ranked: Tier 1

Caoilfhionn Gallagher KCDoughty Street Chambers ‘Caoilfhionn is a powerhouse. She is incredibly intelligent, strategic and committed.’

London Bar > Police law (claimant)

(Leading Silks)Ranked: Tier 2

Caoilfhionn Gallagher KC – Doughty Street Chambers ‘Caoilfhionn is incredibly knowledgeable and experienced in this area of law. She is creative, thinks outside the box and brings arguments and points to submissions that others simply would not think of.’

London Bar > Court of Protection: health and welfare

(Leading Silks)Ranked: Tier 3

Caoilfhionn Gallagher KCDoughty Street Chambers ‘Caoilfhionn produces top-quality work and has the best legal mind.’

London Bar > Administrative law and human rights

(Leading Silks)Ranked: Tier 3

Caoilfhionn Gallagher KCDoughty Street Chambers Caoilfhionn is a powerhouse. She is incredibly intelligent, strategic and committed. She gives everything to cases and is a real team player. Her advocacy is persuasive and passionate.’

London Bar > Defamation and privacy

(Leading Silks)Ranked: Tier 3

Caoilfhionn Gallagher KC – Doughty Street Chambers ‘With an astute legal mind, passionate and dedicated to the matters she is instructed on Caolifhionn is great to work with. A formidable strategic thinker and a total heavyweight.’

Doughty Street Chambers has an ‘impressive offering in this area and real strength in-depth as free speech lawyers’, covering a wide array of media and information law issues, including defamation and malicious falsehood, privacy, freedom of information, and harassment. The set is particularly well regarded for its expertise of media and information law with an international element, with Caoilfhionn Gallagher KC acting as leading counsel for award-winning journalist Maria Ressa in defending a litany of criminal charges brought by the Filipino government, including three charges of criminal defamation. Jude Bunting KC was instructed to advise Channel 4 on all aspects of media law related to its documentary about Russell Brand, In Plain Sight, which made a series of serious allegations of sexual misconduct against the former television personality. Mark Henderson represented the claimant in Tahir Alam v Guardian News and Media, a major libel claim following the “Trojan Horse” imbroglio,  which alleged a plot to run a number of schools in the West Midlands according to strict Islamic principles.