Headlines – Page 1343
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News
Family law
Human rights - European Court of Human Rights - International Child Abduction - Rights of custody Re E (Children) sub nom (1) KE (2) TB (Appellants) v SE (Respondent) and (1) Reunite (2) Aire Centre (Interveners): CA (Civ Div) ...
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Proportionality and housing possession – the sequel
On 23 February the Supreme Court gave judgment in what was effectively episode two of the housing possession proportionality drama (see the conjoined appeal in London Borough of Hounslow v Powell [2011] UKSC 8). Back in November 2010 the Supreme Court had made an important ...
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Family law
Contact orders - Enforcement - Parental contact - Residence orders Re H (A Child): CA (Civ Div) (Lord Justices Thorpe, Tomlinson): 7 April 2011 The appellant mother (M) appealed against ...
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Changing legal specialism
For some it is redundancy. For others the hallowed path towards partnership appears strewn with potholes. It may simply be a question of lifestyle. Whatever the motive, many lawyers are reshaping their careers, either by switching specialism, leaving private practice ...
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Solicitors Regulation Authority launches review of CPD rules
The Solicitors Regulation Authority will today launch the first review of solicitors’ continuing professional development obligations for more than 25 years, to create a new scheme designed to improve solicitors’ competence and ethical conduct. The review will form part of important changes to education and training ...
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IT errors costly for legal aid firms
Two law firms have lost High Court actions against the Legal Services Commission after IT errors at the firms caused them to send blank documents when submitting tenders for legal aid work. The firms had claimed that the LSC should have informed them that some of ...
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Court hearings should not be private, says Lord Neuberger
Court proceedings should be in public and freely reported, and any restrictions should be kept to the minimum necessary to enable justice to be done, the Court of Appeal said last week. Refusing to allow a case to be heard in private, the master of the ...
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City lawyers warn over EU boardroom plans
EU proposals to improve diversity in the boardroom and ensure transparency around a company’s ‘risk appetite’ depart from current UK thinking, City lawyers have warned. A consultation on a framework for EU corporate governance published earlier this month asked whether more non-nationals should be represented on ...
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Advocacy Training Council calls for vulnerable witness support
Criminal and family advocates should be specially trained and certified to handle vulnerable people in court proceedings, the Advocacy Training Council has recommended. In a report published this week, it said evidence suggests that vulnerable witnesses and defendants ‘frequently face almost insurmountable barriers to justice’ and ...
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Firm wins injunction against Solicitors from Hell
A Thames Valley firm has been awarded an interim injunction against the owner of website Solicitors from Hell, which blacklists law firms and lawyers. Gabbitas Robins, and one of the firm’s partners, Stephen Robins, won the injunction last week prohibiting site owner Rick Kordowski from ...
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Shadow justice minister attacks Jackson costs reforms
Shadow justice minister Andy Slaughter (pictured) called on personal injury lawyers to get their clients involved in the fight to amend the government’s proposals on civil litigation costs. Solicitors have until 30 June to respond, and the Labour MP for Hammersmith stressed how difficult it is ...
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News focus: council lawyers face up to government cuts
Local government solicitors at last weekend’s three-day training event in Exeter were in a curiously upbeat mood for a group facing ‘salami-slicing’ cuts of 10% or more to their legal departments’ headcounts.
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On your marks for the LSC
The Legal Services Commission is clearly getting into the spirit of 2012. In recent months bills to the LSC have been returned and the travel time claimed has progressively been reduced. Our office is situated just over 1.5 miles from Bristol County Court. Many fee-earners ...
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Witnesses and directed surveillance
In his letter, Jon Mack may have misunderstood Ibrahim Hasan’s article of 10 March on directed surveillance. The focus of the piece was changes in the law now proposed, namely judicial approval, which is already the subject of the Protection of Freedoms Bill and the ...
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Naked attempt to slash debt
In response to a letter from my MP concerning the proposed legal aid cuts, I received a reply from justice minister Jonathan Djanogly. This stated: ‘The government wants to discourage people from resorting to lawyers whenever they face a problem...’ This ...
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Doctors know how to cure oversupply
I write in response to Gemma Bond’s letter. Considering the struggling economy, legal aid cuts (particularly the Legal Services Commission’s training grant scheme), and concerns in relation to alternative business structures and changes to civil costs, the drop in training contracts is no surprise. ...
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Still time to build on splendid idea of setting up solicitors' building society
I saw the letter from Edwin Lee, reminding us of that splendid idea of setting up a solicitors’ building society. It was a good idea in 1984 and it is still a good idea. The loss of so many building societies ...
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Advertising age discrimination
I read Ivan Sanders’ letter, in which he pointed out the failure of many firms of solicitors to comply with equality legislation, with particular regard to age discrimination. I too have noticed for some time that many advertisements do not comply.
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County courts system failure
The complaints of Graeme Hydari regarding the state of the criminal courts in which he practises are reflected in the state of certain county courts, and in particular the Central London County Court.





















