All Law Gazette articles in Archive – Page 1177
-
News
Firms face assigned risk pool threat
A far greater number of solicitors could end up in the assigned risks pool (ARP) and face paying up to half their fee income in solicitors’ professional indemnity insurance (PII) premiums as the crisis in the market deepens. Industry sources have predicted that more small firms ...
-
News
To Hellespont and back
Leander did it for love; Byron for glory. Lucy Scott-Moncrieff, London mental health and human rights specialist, and Law Society Council member, did it for the Howard League for Penal Reform. Swam the Hellespont, of course: 4.5 kilometres from shore to shore. At a steady ...
-
News
South-west lawyers battle the credit crunch
A decade of benign growth has seen leading firms in south-west England attract national clients. It is getting tough on the high street, however. Polly Botsford reports. The outlook for the south-west can perhaps best be described as ‘bright sunshine, with a few dark clouds on ...
-
News
Are you being served?
Robert Hill looks at the new regime for service of documents as outlined in the changes to the Civil Procedure (Amendment) Rules 2008 The Civil Procedure (Amendment) Rules 2008 (S.I 2008 no 2178) come into force on 1 October. The most important change is to repeal ...
-
News
Lawyers blamed for negligence fees rise
Clinical negligence practitioners have hit back at claims they are fuelling a‘compensation culture’ by charging too much, after it emerged that the NHS’s bill for patients’ lawyers has more than doubled in the last four years. The NHS paid out £90.7m in costs to claimant solicitors ...
-
Feature
Book review: a football journey
Football fan and solicitor William Barr takes a journey to rediscover his love for the game. Recent events in the increasingly bonkers world of football – including Arab billionaires buying out a Thai multi-millionaire for control of Manchester City – highlight how the game, at the ...
-
News
Inquest cash gap fears
Inadequate levels of legal aid funding for inquests mean too many grieving families have to attend coroner’s court without representation, lawyers have warned. Amanda Stevens, president of the Association of Personal Injury Lawyers (APIL), criticised government proposals contained in a consultation, which closed last week, ...
-
News
JAC 'can change history'
The Judicial Appointments Commission (JAC) ‘has the potential to alter the historical pattern of under-representation of certain groups among the judiciary’, but a broader range of people need to apply, the Employment Tribunals president said last week. Speaking at an event hosted by the Society of ...
-
News
A fraudster's charter?
Top judges are deeply concerned about plans to introduce 'plea negotiation' in fraud cases. A move to US-style ‘plea bargaining’ in fraud cases would undermine British justice, leading judges have told the government. The comments, from the Council of Circuit Judges, will ...
-
News
Going green as the clouds gather
Environmental sustainability is no longer a luxury but rather a business-critical issue for law firms, argues Des Hudson. With the Met Office warning that this September could be the wettest ever, the urgent warnings of climate change scientists seem to be thrown into ever sharper relief. ...
-
News
Poland: rule of law concerns
Continuing concerns about the Polish government’s interference in the rule of law have emerged in a new study by the International Bar Association. In a follow-up to its 2007 report Justice under Siege, the association commended efforts by the new government since last year’s election, ...
-
News
Crisis set to spur consolidation
The collapse of Lehman Brothers amid turmoil on Wall Street will provide rich pickings for top firms but spell tough times for the rest, analysts have warned.
-
News
Mediation: lawyers still need convincing
When former Court of Appeal judge Sir Henry Brooke retired at the age 70, it was to embark on a new career. Two years on he is much in demand as a mediator, having already conducted more than 50 mediations, from high-profile corporate disputes to individuals at war over land ...
-
News
Corporate counsel hit by crunch
The credit crunch has increased pressure on in-house counsel worldwide to prove their worth and thereby survive the economic downturn, according to a poll carried out by the New York State Bar Association (NYSBA). The results of the 2008 Global Challenge Survey, which will be presented ...
-
News
Costs-capping power for courts
Courts will have formal powers to make costs-capping orders under changes proposed by the civil procedure rule committee. The courts have been developing their costs-capping jurisdiction, most notably in personal injury and defamation cases, and the consultation issued last week is largely an attempt to codify ...
-
News
Racism: courage in the line of fire
I refer to Martin Mears’s trenchant dismissal of allegations of racism at the Solicitors Regulation Authority. Mr Mears treats the peddlers of these allegations and the powerful organisations at their back with more respect than they deserve. But it would be ...
-
News
Criminal law
Environment – Unincorporated associations – Clubs – Criminal liability – Pollution R v (1) RL (2) JF: CA (Crim Div) (Lord Justice Hughes, Mr Justice David Clarke, Mr Justice Blair): 28 August 2008 ...
-
News
Oil and gas deal
City firm Speechly Bircham advised corporate financiers and brokers Ambrian Partners on the reverse takeover of oil and gas exploration group BPC by Falkland Gold and Minerals, and the admission of the enlarged share capital to AIM. BPC was advised by City firm Norton Rose, national firm McGrigors, Jersey firm ...





















