Latest blog – Page 119
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Opinion
Unduly lenient sentences: time for a review
Further thought should be given to the attorney general’s role.
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Opinion
Unfinished business on LASPO
Leading industry figures put their heads together on Part 2 of the Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012.
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News
News focus: 'Lines are being drawn' - EY's message to legal sector
Profession starts to reflect on the emerging threat from Big Four competitors.
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Opinion
Misogyny as hate crime
The debate about whether to use a general gender hate crime label or a specific misogyny label is ongoing.
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Opinion
CJEU dragged into political disputes
The constitutional crisis in Poland epitomises the CJEU’s widened remit.
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Opinion
Get smart: blockchain will liberate lawyers
The rise of artificial intelligence and its replacement of human workers is now well-documented, but will the blockchain technology known as ‘smart contracts’ one day replace lawyers?
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Opinion
Thirteen-year contempt battle will extend HRA
Until now, William Hammerton was best known to assiduous readers of the law reports as the disappointed litigant imprisoned 11 years ago for throwing eggs at a senior circuit judge.
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Opinion
Oasis of opportunity
Chippy northerners like me bristle when broadcasters speak airily of the English ‘regions’.
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Opinion
Armed forces chief has no desire to end prosecutions
Despite the headline there is little appetite for exempting soldiers from investigation and prosecution.
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Opinion
Spare a thought for lawyers busy as ever in August
Some will disappear for weeks on end, but the days of the long vacation are gone.
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Opinion
Client instructions and the public interest - again
Cases are mounting where solicitors are identified with their clients’ interests and behaviour in carrying out instructions against what is perceived as the public interest.
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Opinion
The public is being left in the dark about unexplained wealth orders
Stringent reporting restrictions in the first public unexplained wealth order hearing threaten to undermine open justice.
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Opinion
Light touch is the right touch for AI regulation
A requirement for transparency is essential - but the regulatory framework must not stifle development.
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Opinion
Bench test should not favour bar
Hardly a week goes by without confirmation that we are facing a judicial recruitment crisis.
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Opinion
Sir James Munby retires: his best quotes
On the day that the outspoken family division president retires, the Gazette recalls some soundbites.
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Opinion
Why the Kit Kat trade mark row is far from over
Far from being thrown out, the contested trade mark application will now return to be considered by the EU Intellectual Property Office’s board of appeal.
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Opinion
Breaking up is hard to do. Why make it harder?
The government's lack of interest in no-fault divorce is baffling.
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Opinion
SRA's price publication demand was inevitable
The Law Society has published an important briefing paper on information solicitors’ firms will likely have to publish on their websites.
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Opinion
In with the in crowd
Crowdfunding may be ‘a la mode’, yet in one important respect this burgeoning phenomenon appears rather old-hat.