Practising law since 1989, in her career as a barrister Lieven specialised in planning and administrative law and was appointed a Queen's Counsel in 2006.
Early life
A member of the English branch of the Lieven family, originally Baltic Germans, on her father's side, and of Irish Catholic descent on her mother's side, Nathalie Lieven was born to Alexander Lieven and Veronica Eileen Mary (née Monahan) Lieven. She is the sister of Elena, Dominic, Anatol, and Michael Lieven.[3]
Before her appointment as a judge, Lieven commented
"For me Magna Carta is an important part of the UK’s creation myth. Without knowing any of the detail of its provisions or its history, Magna Carta establishes the principle that Kings (or Prime Ministers) are subject to man-made law and to the judges who uphold it... It forms part of our belief in the core values of the UK and the values that the courts will always act to protect."[10]
In June 2019, on the application of a National Health Service Trust in charge of an ante-natal clinic, Mrs Justice Lieven made an order in the Court of Protection for a pregnant Nigerian woman with learning difficulties to have a forced abortion against her wishes, on the grounds that it was in her best interests.[12] She said she was not sure the woman understood what having a baby meant and that "she would like to have a baby in the same way she would like to have a nice doll". However, the woman's mother, represented by John McKendrick QC, appealed successfully against this decision to the Court of Appeal.[12] The order was overturned by Lady Justice King, Lord Justice McCombe, and Lord Justice Jackson, with King explaining that "In the end, the evidence taken as a whole was simply not sufficient to justify the profound invasion of AB’s rights represented by the non-consensual termination of this advanced pregnancy."[13]
In March 2021, Mrs Justice Lieven had to consider whether a transgender teenager with gender dysphoria who wished to continue with puberty-blocking drugs needed the permission of the court to do so. She found that "... the parents' right to consent to treatment on behalf of the child continues even when the child is Gillick competent to make the decision, save where the parents are seeking to override the decision of the child". As the parents and the teenager were in agreement, the treatment was to continue.[16]
Personal life
In 1995, Lieven married Stewart MacDonald Wright, a barrister.[17][18] They have two children.[19]
^Joseph Hone, Wicked Little Joe: A Tale of Childhood and Youth (Lilliput Press, 2009), p. 240; Dominic Lieven, Towards the Flame: Empire, War and the End of Tsarist Russia (2015)
^ abGraya: A Magazine for Members of Gray's Inn, Issue 90 (1986), p. 92
^"Landmark Chambers", company-information.service.gov.uk, appointment as director 2007, accessed 13 April 2021