All Law Gazette articles in 2 July 2018
View all stories from this issue.
-
OpinionPrice is right but what about quality?
The Crown Commercial Service’s recently launched tendering process for legal services to the ‘wider public service’.
-
-
NewsENRC appeal to determine privilege scope
The extent of legal professional privilege comes into the spotlight tomorrow.
-
OpinionAutonomous working is still a pipe dream
For an organisation to be truly ‘flexible’, its employees need to be trusted to manage their own working hours and arrangements.
-
-
-
-
-
OpinionJUST OUT: New books
Slaughter James Stewart £8.99 Melrose Books A wealthy family has been murdered. The only survivor is a 19-year-old girl, sexually assaulted but left alive by the killer. An abundance of forensic evidence points to an escaped convict in retired judge James Stewart’s story. This should be an easy ...
-
FeatureSpecial Focus PII: Brokers' tips
How to get the best deal on professional indemnity insurance.
-
OpinionNo need to browse for business
My firm does not have a website and neither does it intend to do so.
-
-
NewsCautionary tale from Gold Coast
Family and migration lawyer Gisele Reid of Nyst Lawyers on Australia’s Gold Coast has sent me a cautionary tale.
-
NewsClaims farmers
Radio 4’s The Archers runs its first ever legal services cross-selling storyline.
-
-
NewsCouncil partnership leads family courts digital drive
An initiative by local authorities and judges has pushed family courts into the digital age.
-
FeatureTake cover
Regulators do not aim to be popular, but feedback on the SRA’s reheated proposals for reform of professional indemnity insurance could herald a newly volatile market.
-
OpinionUnion dues
Research shows that two out of three cohabiting couples wrongly believe ‘common law marriage’ laws come into play when dividing up their finances.
-
-
OpinionLeftist infection
The Judicial Appointments Commission and the system for appointment of QCs have both been infected by leftist policy.





















