Book reviews – Page 31
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Opinion
Book review: Maverick with many causes
Rather His Own Man: In Court with Tyrants, Tarts and Troublemakers
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How to deal with alleged crimes against humanity
The Obligation to Extradite or Prosecute, by Kriangsak Kittichaisaree.
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JUST 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 ...
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Opinion
BOOK REVIEW: From Russia with love
The best lawyers are dispassionate even when responding to their clients’ needs for support and empathy.
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Opinion
BOOK REVIEW: Where complex litigation is akin to space exploration
Sovereign Defaults Before Domestic Courts
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JUST OUT: New books
New books on data protection, employment law and human rights, financial services and criminal law.
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Opinion
BOOK REVIEW: Lifting the lid
A review of Tax Havens and International Human rights by Paul Beckett.
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BOOK REVIEW: Brilliant resource on global rights
A review of Rhona Smith’s International Human Rights Law (8th edition).
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Opinion
TV REVIEW: BBC One's The Split
The Beeb's six-part drama is set in London's glossy divorce circuit.
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Opinion
BOOK REVIEW: Lloyd George: Statesman or Scoundrel
Lloyd George: Statesman or Scoundrel Richard Wilkinson £25, I.B. Tauris Only one solicitor has ever become prime minister of the UK. You can find his portrait in the lobby of the Law Society’s HQ in Chancery Lane – so long as you take a sharp left at ...
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Opinion
BOOK REVIEW: Life on the inside
Subtitled ‘the key to avoiding the risk’, this book is an excellent introduction to a complicated subject.