All Law Gazette articles in 15 January 2018 – Page 3
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News
Carillion collapse raises question over legal arm's ABS status
Carillion Advice Services was set up in 2011 to support the construction giant's in-house legal team.
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News
Government to support bill empowering tenants over housing safety
Housing specialist welcomes housing secretary Sajid Javid's announcement but says the overall law is fragmented and inadequate.
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News
Bar chair: Separation remains for a reason
Andrew Walker QC says there are good reasons to reject fusion and alternative business structures - and warns of a dearth of juniors entering the profession.
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Opinion
Worboys: searching questions
For the Parole Board to have its vital independence of decision-making diluted would be bad news for our handling of offender rehabilitation.
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Opinion
Stay lucky
A dignitary interviewed on the radio the other day was asked what had been the most important factor in his life – the answer was luck. Looking back on a long legal career, I realise how vital this was. I was lucky after National Service, knowing virtually nothing about the ...
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News
MEPs issue tax warning to profession
European Parliament says professional services firms that facilitate ‘illegal, harmful or wrongful corporate tax arrangements’ should face sanctions.
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Feature
Privacy and disclosure
Two recent cases at the Court of Appeal considered the application of article 8 to Disclosure and Barring Service (DBS) checks.
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Opinion
Dispelling the D-Day myth
Media hype around Divorce Day does not reflect well on solicitors.
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Feature
Future status of EU citizens and families
On 8 December 2017 the European Commission and UK government issued a Joint Report on the progress of article 50 talks to date. A week later the stage was set to proceed.
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News
Russells changes its tune
London entertainment firm Russells has moved into the original home of BBC Music.
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News
In the middle of a chain reaction
A Dutch legal software company has announced a blockchain-enabled smart contract.
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News
News focus: Worboys case raises questions on open justice
Lord chancellor David Gauke’s pledge to make Parole Board decisions more transparent in the wake of the Worboys furore chimes with calls for open justice elsewhere.
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Opinion
Breaking point
I am sure that John Greenwood (Gazette, 20 November) is by no means the only solicitor to have suffered at the hands of a disappointed opponent. While still an articled clerk, my firm’s office was almost burnt to the ground by an arsonist whose wife we were acting for. Apparently, ...
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Opinion
BOOK REVIEW: Conflicts of interest
Justice For All and How to Achieve It: citizens, lawyers and the law in the age of human rights.
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