Danielle Worden and Charlotte Tosti join Cloisters as Pupils

We are delighted to welcome Danielle Worden and Charlotte Tosti as they embark upon their pupillage here at Cloisters

About Danielle

Before pupillage, Danielle worked as a legal caseworker for grassroots trade unions for several years. She represented members in all stages of Employment Tribunal proceedings. In particular, she assisted precarious workers in bringing several successful strategic claims involving issues such as false self-employment, irregular migration, and sex work.

Danielle continues to build upon over a decade of legal studies through doctoral research at University College London. She previously graduated first in her LLB cohort at University College London with eight academic prizes before attending Harvard University as a Kennedy Scholar.

She is currently the Assistant Editor of the UK Labour Law Blog and Head of Equality Law at the Law Corner, a charity that provides pro bono legal advice. Her prior work in the legal sector and the third sector ranges from working as a research assistant at the Law Commission of England and Wales to volunteering with domestic workers in Hong Kong.

About Charlotte

During Charlotte’s legal studies, she worked as a researcher for Landmark Chambers’ Public and Administrative Law team and wrote articles for their Public Law blog. She volunteered as a trade union advocate for the Cleaners and Allied Independent Workers’ Union (CAIWU), representing its members in a range of employment law disputes and drafting opinions. Charlotte spent a summer volunteering at a centre for refugees in Cyprus, where she supported asylum seekers with writing their CVs and applying for labour cards.

Charlotte is also a freelance writer. She has contributed to British and Italian publications including The House Magazine, Il Fatto Quotidiano, The Fabian Society and Legal Cheek.

Before coming to the Bar, Charlotte worked in Westminster as a parliamentary researcher and speechwriter, specialising in economic and education policy. 

Charlotte is a native speaker of Italian and English.

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Splitting hairs: A review of the ‘related to’ test under section 26 Equality Act 2010