All Law Gazette articles in Archive – Page 1388
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News
Negligence
Health and safety at work – Local government – Breach of statutory duty – Risk assessments Steven Threlfall v Hull City Council: CA (Civ Div) (Lords Justices Ward, Jackson, Lady Justice Smith): 20 October 2010 ...
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News
Spell test
Legal aid minister Jonathan Djanogly does not have the easiest surname to pronounce. Indeed, in this electronic era, he must find much of his highly valuable time devoted to spelling out his email address letter by letter. But it has come to Obiter’s attention that many in the solicitors’ profession ...
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Feature
BOOK REVIEW APIL Guide to Catastrophic Injury Claims
Author: Grahame Aldous QC, Peter Andrews QC, Stuart McKechnie, Terry Lee This is an excellent guide to both the experienced practitioner and the more junior lawyer developing their expertise in this area of work.
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Feature
BOOK REVIEW Claud Mullins – Rebel, Reformer, Reactionary
Author: Emma Dally ‘A man of contradictions’ – this is how he is described by his granddaughter Emma Dally, author of Claud Mullins – Rebel, Reformer, Reactionary – and she takes the reader through those brilliantly. One of the ...
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News
Law Society warning over immigration cap proposals
The government’s immigration cap must be scrapped completely, or the international competitiveness of the UK will be damaged, the Law Society warned today. In a speech at the Policy Exchange thinktank, home secretary Theresa May confirmed that restrictions on highly skilled workers entering the UK will ...
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News
EMI case: the judge and the jury
The attention of the business and legal worlds was drawn to Manhattan this week, where private equity baron Guy Hands lost his law suit against US bank Citigroup. This was a jury trial before Jed Rakoff, US district court judge for the Southern District of New ...
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News
Hammonds agrees latest transatlantic merger
Partners at national firm Hammonds and US firm Squire Sanders & Dempsey have approved a merger of the firms, creating a 1,275-lawyer transatlantic practice with $625m (£387m) in combined revenues. The new firm, which will span 17 countries and 37 offices, will be named Squire Sanders ...
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Revenues rise at Allen & Overy
Half-year turnover at magic circle firm Allen & Overy have risen by 3% on last year, the firm reported today. For the six months ending 31 October, turnover at the firm rose to £526m, up from £511m over the same period in 2009. The firm said ...
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News
Indemnity insurance bill falls to three-year low
Solicitors paid less to insurers for professional indemnity insurance (PII) this year than they did in the previous two years, Solicitors Regulation Authority figures revealed today. The cost of insuring the profession on the open market this year was £214m, down from £241m in 2009/10 and ...
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News
National Pro Bono Week gets under way
National Pro Bono Week begins today with events marking the donation of hundreds of millions of pounds worth of free legal advice over the last 12 months. Sponsored by the Law Society, Bar Council and Institute of Legal Executives, the NPBW highlights the broad range of ...
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News
EU’s own Mama Grizzly
Forgive me for being a cultural slave of the US, but the US mid-term elections have coloured my thinking this week of developments here in Europe.
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News
The future is (almost) here
Last week I wrote about the role that automation could play in delivering legal services to the public, using products that firms of all sizes could buy in.
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News
New legal aid court challenge set to proceed
A High Court judge has refused an injunction that could have further delayed the start of the new mental health and public law legal aid contracts – but awarded a protective costs order to enable a legal challenge to the two Legal Services Commission tender processes.
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News
Mid-tier firms appear set to fall further behind
The UK’s top 10 law firms have shaken off their hangover from the recession – but the chasing pack are still nursing sore heads, if recent numbers are anything to go by.
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News
LSC facing court challenge over immigration contracts
The future of the Legal Service Commission’s new immigration and asylum contract could be in doubt after the High Court gave South Manchester Law Centre (SMLC) permission to challenge the outcome of the tender process. The law centre challenged the lawfulness of the tender process in ...
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News
‘Sluggish’ justice must be faster and cheaper
The criminal justice system is ‘sluggish’, stifles innovation, and is both fragmented and bureaucratic. Agencies including the Crown Prosecution Service need to share resources and innovate to shorten the time between arrest and sentencing, and increase the number of early guilty pleas. These are among ...
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News
GC100 rejects government's disclosure proposals
General counsel at Britain’s biggest companies have rejected government plans to force companies to disclose more information about corporate social responsibility and risk. The GC100, the association for general counsel and company secretaries in FTSE 100 companies, said the requirement might leave companies vulnerable to legal ...
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News
Top-50 firms see revenues grow
Top-50 law firms have successfully grown their revenues in the first half of the financial year, figures released by firms this week suggest. Among City firms, Norton Rose posted a 9% rise in fee income for the six months ending 31 October, indicating fee income of ...





















