Commentary and opinion – Page 165
-
OpinionFalse economies afflicting courts
Removal of public funding in family law is having a huge impact on court business.
-
OpinionGoogle is the wrong target
History suggests that anti-trust action is the wrong way to promote innovation in IT.
-
OpinionUndoing Magna Carta
New court fees leave decisions on the burden of proof at risk of being secondary to whether defendants can afford to plead not guilty.
-
OpinionStudents providing justice?
Is it inappropriate for the legal system to come to depend at least in part on student work?
-
OpinionChange is afoot on the bench
Lawyers with no judicial experience given a route to the High Court – a controversial but bold move.
-
OpinionWe are not policemen
The reporting obligations imposed on lawyers are inconsistent and confused.
-
OpinionUK constitution and lawyers
Lawyers must help to engage the whole of the UK in a constitutional debate.
-
OpinionCo-op Legal reboots
Like its fellow pioneer QualitySolicitors, Co-op Legal is looking to a digital future after moving into the black.
-
OpinionKeeping up the fight
The Law Society’s relentless lobbying over civil court fee rises and related justice issues has paid dividends. But following counsel’s advice a judicial review bid has been ruled out.
-
OpinionA Hague tribunal on the wrong track
Special tribunal for Lebanon has put journalists in the dock. And for what?
-
OpinionLaw in the future
We can’t predict the exact nature of threats to legal services. So future plans should be of only the broadest variety.
-
OpinionThe Charlie and Lola election campaign
Political parties seem to be burying legal issues in the run-up to this May’s poll.
-
OpinionHuman rights defenders should defend TTIP too
Free trade gives ruling elites a stake in the rule of law.
-
OpinionCompetition and Markets Authority – one year on
What has the body responsible for enforcing UK competition law achieved in the year since it was established?
-
-
OpinionWhen a fund united the profession
A 1919 list of contributors show solicitors putting their hands into their pockets to commemorate the fallen.
-
-
OpinionMuch of the Quindell-Slater deal makes no sense
Slater and Gordon’s Quindell acquisition looks like a risky strategic departure.
-
OpinionThe brightest and the bench
Has the senior judiciary reached a tipping point in terms of attracting candidates of the highest calibre?
-
OpinionLawyers reflect on racism
‘Diversity’ was not a word district judge Tan Ikram heard much in the 1990s, he told attendees at the launch of the Law Society’s Ethnic Minority Lawyers Division earlier this month.





















