Latest feature

  • Shops to let
    Feature

    Building better

    12 April 2024

    Economic and ecological challenges have combined to focus attention on the perceived shortcomings of 70-year-old landlord and tenant legislation. Maria Shahid reports on how this is affecting the commercial property market and the litigators who work in it.

  • Analysis

    Previous digital editions

    2024-04-12T01:14:00Z

    Dates ...

  • Phase 2 clapper board
    Feature

    Double take

    5 April 2024

    Feelings run high on the multiple-choice ‘super-exam’ SQE1. Part two has had less scrutiny. Joanna Goodman takes a closer look.

  • Liberal club
    Feature

    My London club: reflections on the Garrick row

    2024-04-05T10:39:00Z

    It matters how accessible elite institutions are.

  • Paul Green (left) and Cleveland Davidson
    Feature

    Unfinished business?

    2024-03-26T00:01:00Z

    The Police and Criminal Evidence Act transformed the criminal justice process. As it turns 40, Catherine Baksi canvasses opinion on whether the legislation is showing its age.

  • Robot books
    Feature

    A matter of trust

    22 March 2024

    In the second of two features on AI adoption, Joanna Goodman looks at the evolution of the technology’s regulation, as the legal sector learns how and when to trust it.

  • Stressed businessman
    Feature

    Occupational hazards

    2024-03-19T15:17:00Z

    Employment lawyers are braced for the reintroduction of fees at a time when tribunals continue to struggle with the volume of claims. Fresh legislative upheaval will also have a profound effect on how they work, writes Catherine Baksi.

  • Birmingham-6-released
    Feature

    Look back in anger

    15 March 2024

    It is 50 years since the pub bombings which led to the convictions of the Birmingham Six. Eduardo Reyes revisits episodes that shame the police, lawyers and judges with Chris Mullin, whose campaign exposed a notorious miscarriage of justice.

  • women steps
    Feature

    The longest journey

    8 March 2024

    Far more women than men are entering the legal profession – but many struggle to move up its ranks. Structural reform is needed, hears Maria Shahid.

  • Screenshot 2024-03-07 at 09.21.41
    Feature

    The shape of money

    2024-03-01T00:01:00Z

    In the second of two articles on law firm profitability, Joanna Goodman examines the impact on the bottom line of ownership and structure.

  • Bryan Cranston
    Feature

    Breaking America

    23 February 2024

    A legal tech mission to North America included UK start-ups keen to break into the priority markets of Canada and the US.

  • Disability access
    Feature

    Opening up on disability

    23 February 2024

    Lawyers take pride in protecting the rights of disabled clients, but the profession’s own record on access is mixed. Are attempts to change that paying off? In the first of two features investigating disability and legal careers, Katharine Freeland reports on the position of trainees and junior lawyers.

  • Paper house illustration
    Feature

    Paper trials: Conveyancing and the Building Safety Act

    16 February 2024

    Solicitors are turning down leasehold instructions, blaming unacceptable professional risks. New Law Society guidance will help but fresh legislation is still needed, hears Maria Shahid.

  • Prison inside
    Feature

    Life in limbo

    2024-02-13T15:47:00Z

    Indeterminate sentences of ‘imprisonment for public protection’ are thoroughly discredited. So is the end of this manifestation of ‘state-sponsored psychological harm’ in sight at last? Catherine Baksi reports.

  • Liverpool homelessness
    Feature

    'Left in the lurch' in Liverpool

    2024-02-09T00:01:00Z

    The city’s housing and homelessness crisis is not just a consequence of austerity. Government at both local and national level is failing in its legal duties to vulnerable people, reports Eduardo Reyes.

  • Humanoid-robot
    Feature

    Generation tech

    2024-02-06T00:01:00Z

    Generative AI is transforming the way lawyers work. But it poses multiple challenges for firms, from procurement to data security. Above all, how much human interaction should AI replace? 

  • Rent protest parliament
    Feature

    Home truths

    2024-01-30T11:25:00Z

    Insecure tenancies and poor living conditions have pushed the plight of the UK’s growing army of renters up the political agenda. But in England ministers continue to fudge and prevaricate on much-needed reform, reports Maria Shahid.

  • University of Law
    Feature

    Star tech: the next generation

    26 January 2024

    The emergence of graduate schemes reflects the enhanced value and status of a career in technology at law firms.

  • Price value scales
    Feature

    Balancing act

    19 January 2024

    Innovate, communicate, and understand your costs. Joanna Goodman reports on how law firms can shore up their profit margins in a softening market.

  • Screenshot 2024-01-15 at 15.26.14
    Feature

    Deal or no deal

    2024-01-15T15:59:00Z

    The number of corporate scalps amassed by US regulators, driven by controversial ‘plea deals’, is envied by other jurisdictions. As Catherine Baksi reports, the UK has had deferred prosecution agreements since 2014 – so why have there been so few?