Latest blog – Page 66
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Opinion
The British Paralympic Association and Hogan Lovells
Partner Richard Welfare describes the strategic partnership that has become one of the firm's most notable and mutually beneficial.
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Opinion
Mother in law: Back to school
Diary of a busy practitioner, juggling work and family somewhere in England.
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Opinion
Improving social mobility will help people succeed on merit
Law Society social mobility ambassador Alice Kinder examines social mobility in the profession and what must be done to improve it.
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Opinion
Fleeing Afghans are up against three decades of Britain’s mean stance on asylum
Most people will be hoping the UK ambassador to Afghanistan will issue many, many visas. Last week it was controversial to make such an argument.
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Opinion
Cybersecurity: solace of quantum
Quantum computing is a potential threat to client confidentiality. Can it also hold the solution?
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Opinion
Hybrid working could create joyless, half-empty offices
Solicitors will look elsewhere if they think their firm has become virtual by default.
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Opinion
At the cliff-edge of 17
A defendant appearing before the adult court for an offence allegedly committed while they were legally a child can have a serious impact on their future.
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Opinion
Without adequate resources the war against money laundering is destined to fail
HMRC has only 120 ongoing investigations relating to breaches of money laundering regulations - and only six of these are criminal investigations.
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Opinion
Online dispute resolution should be part of the engine of recovery
SMEs could benefit from a simple and streamlined platform with the teeth to enforce judgments.
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Opinion
Positive discrimination: the case for legal reform
Now is the time to revisit this issue to help give employers more freedom to create change.
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Opinion
Guideline hourly rates: an assessment
A member of the last costs committee to propose new guideline hourly rates, which were rejected, assesses the Civil Justice Council’s final report.
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Opinion
Julian Assange: peering through the murk
If Assange is extradited to the US and convicted of any of the charges he faces there, the US government will let him serve his sentence in an Australian prison.
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Opinion
The future’s orange
‘Cutbacks are being made across the criminal justice system, with a massive shortfall in the court service budget and prison reform groups saying efficiency savings are crippling attempts at rehabilitation.’