Opinion – Page 212
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Opinion
The truth about whiplash
It is likely that whiplash claims have not dramatically fallen but instead been ‘reclassified’.
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Opinion
No respect for interpretation
Claims over respecting interpreters’ human rights will remain hollow – unless there are changes.
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Opinion
Stop solicitors using word ‘industry’
Solicitors have a habit of undermining their own status.
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Opinion
Duty calls
I increasingly believe that inside the M25, Wales is viewed as being the size of a modest English county.
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Opinion
Standing up to attacks on LPP
The Law Society will continue to vigorously counter a range of threats to legal professional privilege.
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Opinion
Will the appeal court turn its nose up at the sale of PI cases?
True value of pre-Jackson caseloads is difficult to work out.
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Opinion
Accounts rules changes – ignoring lawyers
The profession, clients and the SRA alike would struggle to cope with the regulator’s radical change to the definition of ‘client money’.
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Opinion
Lawyers’ guide to Brexit
Despite the ongoing uncertainty, solicitors could make money out of the leave vote.
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Opinion
Access to justice for Travellers and Gypsies
A new movement aims to highlight the problems still faced by these groups and to end discrimination against them.
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Opinion
A solicitor who broke the mould (and a lock)
Preparations are under way to celebrate the centenary of a solicitor becoming prime minister. But David Lloyd George remains one of a kind.
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Opinion
Law firms and the John Lewis-style model
How can firms reconcile a profit-sharing model with the traditional partnership?
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Opinion
Contract drafters: don't be complacent
Solicitors churn out contracts full of imperfections while thinking they are good at drafting.
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Opinion
We are one profession
Foreign firms competing with world-class City practices will be delighted the LSB is seeking to degrade our quality mark.
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Opinion
Advising on tax avoidance isn’t a crime
A thriving tax avoidance sector is a sign of a society that has got one thing right.
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Opinion
‘Political correctness’ and lawyers
The scope of new American bar rules on anti-discrimination is controversially broad – is it time for the SRA to revisit its own?
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Opinion
‘Hot tubbing’: is concurrent expert evidence working?
CEE may improve the quality of evidence but doesn't necessarily cut costs.
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Opinion
Proceeds of crime: outsourcing makes sense
The use of civil fraud solicitors to boost asset recovery rates is a welcome step forward.
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Opinion
Judicial diversity: solicitors are the key
We must help to give solicitors a ‘line of sight’ to a judicial appointment from the start of their career.
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Opinion
It is right to report sweary judges
Defendant John Hennigan was thoroughly unpleasant in court. But it’s not the judge’s place to exchange abuse.