Ms Ann Mallalieu
November 27, 1945 -Summary information for Ms Ann Mallalieu
Contributions
1994
Summer Time Lords January 19, 1994
Prison Overcrowding Lords February 2, 1994
Dangerous Dogs (Amendment) Bill [H.L.] Lords February 9, 1994
APPEALS AGAINST CONVICTION Written Answers February 11, 1994
ANIMALS SLAUGHTERED BY RELIGIOUS METHODS Written Answers February 14, 1994
Car Crime Lords February 16, 1994
Immigration Practice Lords February 16, 1994
FINNAMORE WOOD CAMP Written Answers February 21, 1994
Criminal Justice and Public Order Bill Lords April 25, 1994
Sunday Trading Bill Lords May 5, 1994
Game Licences Lords May 10, 1994
United Kingdom Passport: Design Lords May 10, 1994
Greyhounds: Welfare Lords May 11, 1994
Sheep Scab Lords May 17, 1994
11 speeches — Criminal Justice and Public Order Bill Lords May 17, 1994
Criminal Trials: Rules of Disclosure Lords May 23, 1994
Criminal Justice and Public Order Bill Lords May 23, 1994
4 speeches — Criminal Justice and Public Order Bill Lords May 23, 1994
4 speeches — Criminal Justice and Public Order Bill Lords May 24, 1994
3 speeches — Criminal Justice and Public Order Bill Lords May 24, 1994
2 speeches — Criminal Justice and Public Order Bill Lords June 20, 1994
Criminal Justice and Public Order Bill Lords July 5, 1994
5 speeches — Criminal Justice and Public Order Bill Lords July 5, 1994
Criminal Justice and Public Order Bill Lords July 7, 1994
3 speeches — Criminal Justice and Public Order Bill Lords July 11, 1994
Litigation: Conditional Fee Scheme Lords July 18, 1994
6 speeches — Criminal Justice and Public Order Bill Lords July 19, 1994
War Crimes Prosecutions Lords July 21, 1994
Conduct of Public Life Lords October 25, 1994
Conditional Fees Lords November 1, 1994
2 speeches — Drug Misuse: Health Risks Lords December 1, 1994
HIV Prevention in Prisons Lords December 14, 1994
Information presented on this page was prepared from the XML source files, together with information from the History of Parliament Trust, the work of Leigh Rayment and public sources. The means by which names are recognised means that errors may remain in the data presented.