Book reviews – Page 30
-
OpinionReasoned analysis of sexual offences
Criminalizing Sex: A Unified Liberal Theory | Stuart P Green
-
OpinionZooming in on a new normal
The Virtual Workspace: 50 Tips for Effective Video Conferencing | Andrew King
-
OpinionA succinct and no-fuss reference tool
Parker’s Will Precedents (10th edition) | Leon Pickering
-
OpinionPlaying the markets
The Little Book of Market Manipulation: An Essential Guide to the Law | Gregory J Durston and Ailsa McKeon
-
OpinionStarting out on your own
Business Skills? Don’t Be Daft I Am A Lawyer! What you need and why you need it | Ann Page
-
-
OpinionTalismanic legal aid text
The Legal Aid Handbook | Vicky Ling, Sue James, Carol Storer, Anthony Edwards
-
OpinionFalling short in the execution
An account of two parallel murder trials in 1945, both involving 18-year-old defendants facing the possibility of death by hanging if convicted.
-
-
OpinionFacts made to fit the suspect
The Case of Stephen Downing: the worst miscarriage of justice in British history | Stephen Downing
-
OpinionWhen it’s time to put your feet up
Partner Retirement in Law Firms: Strategies for Partners, Law firms and Other Professional Services | Ronnie Fox
-
-
OpinionAmerican history through the lens of the law
A History of American Law 4th edition | Lawrence M. Friedman
-
OpinionAliens sent among us
Criminal Dissent – Prosecutions Under the Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798 | Wendell Bird
-
OpinionOnes that (almost) got away
Investigating the Almost Perfect Murders: The Case of Russell Causley and Other Crimes | Anthony Nott
-
OpinionCopy that! Accessible guidance with a global reach
International Copyright: Principles, Law, and Practice (Fourth Edition) Paul Goldstein, P. Bernt Hugenholtz OUP, £94 ★★★★✩ International Copyright: Principles, Law, and Practice (Fourth Edition) This heavyweight academic work is a surprisingly easy read. Although it runs to 396 pages of type – ignoring copyright ...
-
OpinionNegligence in the raw
Until this book’s publication, legal practitioners might have been excused for believing that the doctrine enshrined in statute under the Law Reform (Contributory Negligence) Act 1945 was relatively well understood in practice.
-
OpinionLoving your enemies
Plaintiff in Chief: a portrait of Donald Trump in 3,500 lawsuits by James D. Zirin.
-
-
OpinionAnd the fault will be ours
Trials of the State: Law and the Decline of Politics by Jonathan Sumption.





















