Latest blog – Page 184
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Opinion
Smashing the glass ceiling… in heels
A photographic project to inspire women lawyers provides lessons for addressing the gender imbalance in firms.
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Opinion
What price a life shortened by abuse?
The ‘overarching inquiry’ into institutional child abuse will trigger memories of trauma.
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Opinion
When planning drives local government
It would be a mistake to let planning law drive the shape of London’s local democracy.
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Opinion
Who cares it’s August. Get back to work
The legal profession seems stuck in a time warp of long August breaks.
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Opinion
Managing the conveyancer shortfall
One legacy of the recession is that there is a shortage of trained conveyancers now times are improving.
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Opinion
Arbitration should not be a cloak
Settling the e-borders fiasco in private has a cost beyond the £224m awarded to a contractor.
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Opinion
Commercial lawyers: new target for claims
Commercial lawyers who failed to give proper advice on funding and ATE are likely to be the next target for claims.
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Opinion
A course in US history
Solid rock of US constitution stands in the way of EU-US free trade talks.
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Opinion
Is depression the last taboo for law firms?
Lawyers suffering from depression often don’t want to talk about it. But the profession needs to do more.
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Opinion
Across the pond
TTIP talks should address barriers to free movement of lawyers between the EU and US, says Law Society president Andrew Caplen.
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Opinion
Law books for summer
There is a good array of fiction set in the legal world. But why are the stars always barristers and not solicitors?
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Opinion
If only Lord Hill were Lady Hill
The UK’s new European commissioner candidate may face one insuperable problem – he is not a woman.
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Opinion
Legal legacy of 1914’s ‘boy soldiers’
Protests over under-age recruitment have their echoes today.
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Opinion
Regulator is bewitched by insurance mirage
Before stepping out into the unknown, perhaps the SRA should check the forecast.
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Opinion
Lawyers on the hippy trail?
Take better care of yourselves – even if 2014 isn’t the summer of love.
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Opinion
Open thread: Gaza and international law
‘I’m not an international lawyer,’ the prime minister said yesterday when asked to comment on the legality of Israeli military action. ‘It’s up to international lawyers.’ What is your opinion?
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Opinion
The short-lived planning legacy of the Great War
Noble attempts were made to set a new standard for social housing after the first world war.
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Opinion
Hot topics at ABA meeting
Long-running issues - including a proposed free-trade deal between Europe and the US - are up for discussion in Boston.
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Opinion
Grieve: conventional wisdom
Dominic Grieve should be applauded for putting commitment to the rule of law ahead of his party’s short-term political advantage.