Arlene Walsh-Wallace#11659

Arlene Walsh-Wallace, BL

Barrister, The Bar of Ireland
Arlene is a graduate of Law and French at Trinity College Dublin, and has been a practising barrister in Ireland since 2020. She entered the Bar as a 2019 recipient of the Denham Fellowship, which aims to support aspiring barristers from socio-economically disadvantaged backgrounds to build their practice at the Bar.
 
Arlene has a particular interest in immigration and asylum law. She has recently completed an Advanced Diploma in Immigration and Asylum Law at Kings’ Inns as a recipient of the Immigration, Asylum and Citizenship Bar Association’s annual bursary, and is currently serving as a legal panel member at the International Protection Office (Department of Justice).
Contributed to

4

Other work

Ireland—Contract interpretation—implied terms
Ireland—Contract interpretation—implied terms

This Practice Note provides an overview of the distinction between express and implied terms and outlines the manner in which terms may be implied into a contract. In addition, this Practice Note provides guidance on the common law and statutory rules affecting implied terms in a consumer law, employment law, and landlord and tenant law context.

Ireland—Contracts—formation and interpretation
Ireland—Contracts—formation and interpretation

This Practice Note provides an overview of the essential components required to create a valid and enforceable contract: offer, acceptance, and consideration. This Practice Note defines each of these concepts in turn, identifies the conditions which must be satisfied for them to be deemed valid, and discusses their operation in various legal contexts. Subsequently, this Practice Note identifies which contractual relationships give rise to an assumption of an intention to create legal relations, and further, which categories of persons lack the requisite capacity to enter binding legal relations. Finally, this Practice Note considers the general principles of contract interpretation which apply in Ireland.

Ireland—Exclusion and limitation of liability
Ireland—Exclusion and limitation of liability

This Practice Note provides guidance on the common law and statutory controls affecting exclusion and limitation of liability clauses (also known as limitation of liability clauses, limitation clauses, exclusion of liability clauses, exclusion clauses and exemption clauses) including the provisions of the Sale of Goods Act 1893 (Ireland) and the Sale of Goods and Supply of Services Act 1980 (Ireland), Consumer Rights Act 2022 (Ireland) and SI No 27/1995 European Communities (Unfair Terms in Consumer Contracts) Regulations 1995.

Ireland—The relationship between Irish and English contract law
Ireland—The relationship between Irish and English contract law

This Practice Note provides an overview of the general application and interpretation of English case law in Ireland and examples of where similar and divergent approaches have been taken in the two jurisdictions on issues of contract law. It also considers the impact of Irish and European Union legislation and the Constitution of Ireland on the application of Irish contract law, before providing a brief overview of the civil court system.

Practice Area

Panel

  • Contributing Author

Qualified Year

  • 2020

Membership

  • Immigration, Asylum and Citizenship Bar Association

Qualifications

  • LL.B (ling. Franc.) (2019)
  • Barrister-at-Law Degree (BL) (2020)
  • Advanced Diploma in Immigration and Asylum Law (2023)

Education

  • Trinity College Dublin, Law and French (2015-2019)
  • Kings’ Inns, Barrister-at-law degree (2019-2020)
  • Kings’ Inns, Advanced Diploma in Immigration and Asylum Law (2022-2023)

If you expected to see yourself on this page, click here.