All Law Gazette articles in 18 September 2017
View all stories from this issue.
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NewsNews focus: More questions than answers on Asons
Bolton Council may have been exonerated by a long-awaited report into why it gave cash-strapped Asons Solicitors a £300k grant, but key issues have not been addressed.
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FeatureCompetition: Anti-competitive damages
A tale of two trials: Mastercard, death spirals and MIFs.
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OpinionAvoiding an arbitrary fix
Cost-cutting must not curb the rights of wronged parties in clinical negligence cases.
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NewsFixed costs fury builds as timetable slips back
Costs experts believe implementation of Lord Justice Jackson’s proposals could be set back by up to a year.
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OpinionWe know how to behave
Regulator’s guidance to solicitors on how to communicate properly is otiose since most professionals know how to conduct themselves.
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OpinionClean code
How can we cut through a morass of sentencing law that dates back 650 years? Create a consolidation bill
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FeatureGDPR: Don't panic on data protection
What law firms must do to survive data regulation’s new dawn
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FeatureResidential property: Don't write off leasehold just yet
As public concern mounts, leasehold must evolve if it is to survive.
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NewsWhitehall fudge
Justice ministry’s three-word equivalent to ‘strong and stable’ rolled out by latest incumbents.
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NewsMemory lane
The Law Society Gazette, 20 September 2007 In-house solicitors reel after privilege ruling In-house lawyers must rethink their strategy for dealing with European Commission dawn raids, the Commerce & Industry Group has warned. It follows the long-awaited decision of the European Court of First Instance in the Akzo Nobel case, ...
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FeatureSeeing the wood for the trees
In legal IT, ‘disruption’ is morphing into the new normal. Solicitors must also keep an eye on the basics.





















