Last 3 months headlines – Page 1464
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Thompsons presses for greater focus on rehabilitation
National personal injury firm Thompsons has called on government ministers to put rehabilitation for injury victims at the heart of its review of civil justice, after research into client attitudes showed overwhelming support for the benefits of rehabilitation. According to the firm, in a survey of ...
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Expertise, experience and efficiency – the outsourcing dilemma
A strong feature of 2010 was the growing debate about legal process outsourcing (LPO), offshoring and commoditising. To some practitioners this is anathema: a deskilling and cheapening of the practice of law. Others see it, more positively, as a separation of the repetitive, low value ...
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Forum shopping for a lawyer’s title is alive and well
In this New Year, there is a new name to be added to the roll call of names that have contributed to the development of the practice of law in Europe, by bringing a case to the European Court of Justice. Added to those on the list such as Gebhard ...
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Support grows for regulation of will-writing
A call for evidence on whether will-writing should become a regulated activity has received a huge response from the profession and public, with consumer bodies in favour of regulation. The Legal Services Board Consumer Panel has received 380 case studies from lawyers, members of the public ...
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Employment lawyers are under attack
It is open season on employment tribunals and the ‘parasitical creatures’ (aka employment lawyers) that argue their clients’ cases before them. Maybe it is time that the profession got its public relations act together and took on its detractors at their own game.
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Family procedure rules published
The Ministry of Justice has this week published the long-awaited Family Procedure Rules 2010, which will come into force on 6 April 2011. The new code provides a single set of rules for proceedings in the magistrates’ court, county court and High Court, along the model ...
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Control orders ‘infringe fundamental principles’
Control orders infringe the most fundamental principles of due process, and should be replaced with surveillance and criminal trial, the Law Society has urged. Control orders are an anti-terrorism power that allows curfews of up to 16 hours a day, electronic tagging, regular home searches and ...
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Can cuts to legal aid still be halted?
Next week sees the launch in the House of Commons of Justice for All, a broad coalition of over 1,000 legal and advice groups, politicians, trade unions, community groups and members of the public. It has been set up in response to the government’s proposed ...
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MoJ to extend Freedom of Information Act
More public bodies are to be opened up to public scrutiny under the Freedom of Information Act (FOI), the Ministry of Justice announced today. The MoJ said it will extend the scope of the FOI to make it easier for people to find and use information ...
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Profession under stress, helpline reveals
A charity that provides support to solicitors has identified high levels of stress among the profession. Telephone helpline LawCare recorded the second busiest year in its 13-year history. The advice line opened 517 new case files in 2010, down from the ...
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What mystery shoppers can tell us
The Legal Services Board has commissioned a mystery shopping exercise into the will-writing market to explore the experience of consumers getting wills from different channels and test the quality of wills. The study will recruit 100 consumers who are looking to obtain a will – ...
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Legal advice
Access to justice – Disability equality duty – Mental health – Tender process Public Interest Lawyers v Legal Services Commission: QBD (Admin) (Mr Justice Cranston): 13 December 2010 The claimant ...
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Human rights
Detention – Drug trafficking – Right to life – Death of drug smuggler Ayesha Al Hassan-Daniel (in her own right and as representative of the estate of Anthony Daniel, deceased) & Anor (appellants) v Revenue & Customs Commissioners (respondent) ...
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Human rights
Local government – Penology and criminology – Declarations of incompatibility Peter Chester v (1) Secretary of State for Justice (2) Wakefield Metropolitan District Council: CA (Civ Div) (Lord Neuberger (MR), Lords Justices Laws, Carnwath): 17 December 2010 ...
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Gotta lotta bottle
Obiter has always suspected that the legal profession is partial to a tipple (indeed, see Memory Lane’s report of the Solicitors Wine Society annual banquet). The phenomenal response to our Christmas competition, with more than 100 entries, rather seemed to prove the point.
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Facing the sack
Christmas cards – of the paper variety, not the pert and pointless email attachments that fill up mailboxes and nobody ever clicks on – have long been a civilised method of sending seasonal good wishes. But one pressure group, Justice for All, has spotted the opportunity they represent for making ...
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Family law
Administration of justice – Human rights – Jurisprudence – Children’s hearings Principal reporter v K: SC (Lords Hope (deputy president), Rodger, Kerr, Dyson, Lady Hale): 15 December 2010 The appellant ...
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Keep your wig on
There is nothing the papers love more than an eccentric judge, so there was plenty of coverage of Beatrice Bolton’s outburst when she was found guilty of breaching the Dangerous Dogs Act at Carlisle Crown Court last month. London newspaper Metro reported that the 57-year-old judge (pictured), who was told ...
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Localism Bill – running the rule over council powers
The Localism Bill, published on 13 December, is a substantial and important piece of legislation. It has 207 clauses in eight parts and 24 schedules in 406 pages.