All News articles – Page 1747
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News
Into the firing line?
In the show’s best tradition, The Apprentice contestant Anita Shah doesn’t come over as a shrinking violet. But the ‘self-confessed perfectionist’ has a novel strategy for getting ahead in the competition to impress Sir Alan Sugar. Shah reckons that you can be successful by investing ...
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Fire forces move of tribunal hearings
Tribunal hearings at Field House, off Chancery Lane, will move to Taylor House, Rosebery Avenue for a ‘considerable time’ following a major fire last week. Some 75 firefighters and 15 appliances fought the blaze at the building, which houses asylum and immigration tribunals and the patents court. None of the ...
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Sports sponsors, media moves and fashion sales
Bigger splash: British Swimming, the sport’s national governing body, announced a £15m sponsoring partnership with British Gas. In-house teams advised British Gas and British Swimming, while English governing body ASA was separately advised by Leicester firm BHW. Swim Wales was advised by Swansea ...
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Ready for what, exactly?
A conference organised by the Advice Services Alliance contained some blunt messages for the Legal Services Commission and its master, the Ministry of Justice.
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Trespassing in the public interest; functional entanglement
A Birmingham city councillor was found by the Administrative Court to have breached the council’s Code of Conduct...
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Database survey warns of legal risks
People who take the government to the European Court of Human Rights for mishandling personal data should not have to risk paying the state’s costs if they lose, a landmark survey of government IT programmes said this week. Database State, published by the Joseph Rowntree ...
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Customer service is not just for restaurants
Here’s something I bet you never do – call up your own law firm and pretend to be what support people call ‘a wasp in a bottle’. Law firms should know all about customer service.
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Corporate firms need regulatory group, says Smedley
The Solicitors Regulation Authority is not up to the job of regulating corporate law firms and needs to be fundamentally restructured to equip it for the task. That is the key conclusion of Nick Smedley, the former senior civil servant commissioned by the Law Society to ...
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LSB consults on regulatory independence
The Legal Services Board has today (25 March) launched a consultation on regulatory independence. A new document sets out proposals for rules that would require the separation of regulatory work from any representative work at eight approved regulators, including the Law Society. It also deals with rules necessary to approve ...
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UK has more lifers than rest of Europe combined
England and Wales sentence more prisoners to life than all 46 other Council of Europe member states combined, according to the Howard League for Penal Reform. Figures released this week show that 12,090 men, women and children in England and Wales are serving life sentences, ...
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Clarification: Franks Solicitors
We have been asked to clarify that Franks Solicitors of London E8, which is the subject of an SRA intervention (see [2009] Gazette, 19 March, 23), is not the same firm as Franks & Co of Cursitor Street, London EC4A.
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Handling of some fast-track claims gives rise to serious concerns
by District Judge David Oldham. The Civil Procedure Rules are 10 years old. Their ambition was to sweep away undue delay, complexity and heavy costs with new procedures for civil cases.
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Civil evidence
Real property – Admissibility – Limitations – Without prejudice communications Ofulue & Anor v Bossert: HL (Lords Hope of Craighead, Scott of Foscote, Rodger of Earlsferry, Walker of Gestingthorpe, Neuberger of Abbotsbury): 11 March 2009 ...
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Clifford Chance freezes pay
Magic circle firm Clifford Chance today (31 March) announced a pay freeze for all lawyers and business services staff worldwide. Around 3,800 lawyers will be affected, across the firm’s 30 global offices. In a statement, Clifford Chance said it will hold salaries ...
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Chancery Lane dismisses NHS ‘cash cow’ claim
The Law Society has taken issue with a Sunday Times report alleging that fee-hungry lawyers use the NHS as a ‘£100m cash cow’ in making compensation claims. Chief executive Des Hudson (pictured) said the best way for the NHS Litigation Authority to pare legal costs ...
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Council legal departments face budget crunch
Local authorities face gaps in the availability of legal advice in key areas as council legal departments struggle to cope with rising demand and diminishing resources, according to exclusive research for the Gazette. A survey of 124 heads of legal found respondents predicting a rise in ...
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Bring on equality
I read with some disbelief Jack Straw’s remarks. On what planet is this man living, or more frighteningly, what planet are those who advise him living on?
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Social welfare boost
A quarter of a million more people will qualify for help with social welfare problems following a 5% rise in the cut-off threshold for civil legal aid, the Ministry of Justice announced last week. Lord Bach, legal aid minister, told the Advice Services Alliance conference in ...
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Biggest ever survey of women solicitors
The biggest ever survey of women’s status and role within the profession may contradict recent suggestions that the recession is having less impact on female workers than on men, the new chairwoman of the Association of Women Solicitors (AWS) said last week.
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Why solicitors are best equipped to be notaries
Having qualified as a solicitor at Allen & Overy, my experience has always been in the commercial world. I then spent eight years in private practice with commercial firms in Hong Kong. While I was in Hong Kong, I became a notary. On returning to the UK, I qualified as ...