All Law Gazette articles in Archive – Page 1565
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News
Songs of praise
The legal sector is the latest to catch the choral bug (cue jokes about solicitors singing for their supper). Global firm Norton Rose last month sang its way to the Office Choir of the Year 2012 award after a virtuoso performance in London. Singing pieces from ...
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Title role
If Mr Pearlman would like to be addressed as ‘Doctor’, at what stage of his career does he want to be addressed as ‘Mr’? Or is he suggesting that medical consultants are not as well-respected as their junior colleagues? ...
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Theme tune
Our waxing lyrical competition - to come up with songs appropriate to Gazette news stories - has set the newsdesk at Obiter towers humming. One colleague suggests that Michael Jackson’s Leave Me Alone might go well with the Legal Ombudsman’s complaints procedure, and the Communards’ Don’t Leave Me This Way ...
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Lawyers and the push for growth
We are entering the third phase of responses to the economic crisis. First, there was the effort to put right through new law or regulation what had gone wrong before - not very strongly or accurately, since banks are still paying bonuses and credit rating agencies still doing whatever they ...
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Society wins clarity on independent advice
A Law Society campaign has led the government to re-draft legislation to remove uncertainty over whether a dismissed employee’s solicitor may be said to provide ‘independent’ advice on a compromise agreement. Compromise agreements are undertakings between employers and dismissed employees, whereby in return for a severance ...
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Hamza deportation no breach of article three, rights court rules
Abu Hamza and four other alleged terrorists are set to be extradited to the US following today’s European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) ruling that detention conditions and length of sentences in the US would not amount to ill-treatment. Proceedings against a sixth alleged terrorist, who ...
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OFR: the first stumbling block?
So where are we after six months of operating under outcomes-focused regulation (OFR)? Well the world hasn’t ended, the profession hasn’t imploded and we haven’t seen any public floggings. We have of course seen some high-profile criminal charges against individuals caught appropriating funds from their firms which hasn’t done the ...
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Caplen next in line for deputy vice president
The Law Society council has elected Andrew Caplen as the next deputy vice president of the Society. Caplen, a criminal and commercial property consultant at Southampton firm Abels, will take up the role in July and become president in 2014. He has been a council member ...
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Drinking and casual sexism still institutional in top firms, LSB research claims
The legal profession’s culture of ‘casual sexism’ and high levels of drinking has led women and ethnic minority solicitors to adopt special strategies to overcome institutional discrimination in law firms, researchers funded by the Legal Services Board told a conference today. Some Asian women solicitors choose ...
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Border agency 'cynicism' behind appeal losses
‘Bad and cynical’ decision making lies behind the UK Border Agency’s (UKBA) continued record of losing half of all appeals against orders to remove immigrants and failed asylum seekers, it was alleged today. Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants legal policy director Hina Majid ...
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The human cost of legal aid cuts
Next Tuesday the Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders bill will be back in the Commons for MPs to consider amendments made by peers. It is likely that many of the amendments will be reversed and the bill, which removes huge areas of law from the scope of legal ...
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Law Society slams minimum salary consultation
Scrapping the minimum salary could force some trainee solicitors to claim housing benefits and take on second jobs, creating an image that will neither benefit the profession nor promote social mobility within it, the Law Society has warned. In its response to a Solicitors Regulation ...
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The right address
I was interested by Ian Kinloch’s letter in which he refers to a German solicitor being addressed as Herr Doktor. I hold the Institute of Linguists diploma in French and liaised with a monolingual French notaire on behalf of a client buying a holiday home in the Dordogne. Leaving aside ...
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Advise courts of uncooperative clients, solicitors told
Criminal solicitors should tell the court when clients fail to co-operate with them, to avoid the risk of breaching their duty to the court, the Law Society has advised. Chancery Lane has issued an updated practice note setting out the duties and burdens affecting solicitors arising ...
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Retain legal aid bill amendments, MPs urged
Opponents of the government’s legal aid reforms have united to lobby MPs to retain amendments made by peers when the Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders bill returns to the Commons next week. The Law Society and Bar Council, together with bodies representing charities ...
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Tracking scheme aims to cut family delays
A new initiative to tackle delays in the family courts has got under way. The pilot scheme to track all public law cases issued from 2 April 2012 follows the launch of a case management system monitoring the progress of cases, recording all case management decisions, adjournments, the use of ...
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Asbestos victims hit by legislation delay
The government has admitted that a 2010 act designed to help people gain compensation for industrial diseases is unlikely to be implemented until 2013. The Third Parties (Rights Against Insurers) Act was pushed through two years ago to update legislation dating from 1930. It gave claimants, ...
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Sleeping beauties
Reading the report of the magistrate who was alleged to have gone to sleep during a mitigation reminds me of the late Wilfrid Fordham. He used to say: ‘A speech in mitigation gets no better the longer it goes on’. In his later years, Wilfrid was a great one for ...





















