Comment and opinion – Page 170
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Opinion
Lawyers rerouted
A system that focuses almost exclusively on the point of professional entry is skewed.
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Opinion
Surveillance: judges, not politicians
Governments should never be allowed to authorise surveillance of lawyers’ secret conversations – otherwise politicians become judge and jury in their own case.
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Opinion
Building a court for war crimes
The professional support services section of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia carries out tasks that range from the exceptional to the everyday.
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Opinion
Rule of folklore
Lawyers treat one financial target as holy writ. But where did it originate?
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Opinion
International courts and lawyers
International courts keep growing, which raises questions about how they treat lawyers.
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Opinion
Gateley: opening the floodgates?
As the first UK law firm goes public, will Gateley’s competitors scramble to follow suit?
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Opinion
Who is going to pay for rogue solicitors?
There is hardly a queue to pay compensation fund costs. This thorny issue has to be resolved at some point.
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Opinion
Securing your site against fraudsters
Firms that actively manage their online presence will stand a better chance of spotting malicious attacks.
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Opinion
Going Dutch
Does the University of Law’s sale to a foreign consolidator offer a glimpse into the future of higher education?
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Opinion
Breaking with convention
A British Bill of Rights is indefinitely delayed – but it hasn’t been shelved.
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Opinion
Two cheers for Sir Rupert
The inception of costs management was botched, but there are grounds for optimism.
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Opinion
Lawyers v robots
Are law firms doing enough to innovate and compete with the rise of the machines?
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Opinion
Legal aid’s founding text turns 70
How the 1945 report of a Conservative-chaired committee laid the foundations of state-funded legal aid.
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Opinion
Are fixed costs about to move beyond PI?
Momentum is building for fixed costs outside personal injury. Get ready.