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Sexual harassment and discrimination is still happening at the Bar, a wide-ranging survey of women barristers has found.
Nine law firms feature in The Times’ top 50 employers for women 2015.
Concerns over Olympics congestion has led several London law firms to alter their normal training contract interview schedule for 2012 and advise students to apply for training contracts earlier than usual.
Several City firms are set to expand their offerings and strengthen existing teams by opening offices in Europe.
The news comes after the UK officially left the EU at midnight on 31 December 2020.
What is servitization and what are the legal challenges associated with it?
Commercial chancery barrister Max first trained and qualified as a solicitor before transferring to the Bar. Read on to hear about how he made the switch, as well as the interesting cases he worked on during pupillage and after.
Sentinel Solicitors 2 training contracts 5 work placements
The senior presiding judge for England and Wales, Lord Justice Edis, has delayed the sentencing of convicted criminals on bail due to overpopulation in prisons. As a longer term solution, the government plans to send prisoners overseas and build more prisons.
The Sentencing Council has suggested that judges should consider non-custodial options in a submission to the government’s sentencing review, which is being carried out by former Conservative Justice Secretary David Gauke.
The chair of Parliament’s justice select committee has called for fee-charging McKenzie Friends to be banned after the High Court ruled that an unqualified “legal adviser” was negligent in his handling of a clinical negligence case.
Senior judges in the criminal courts have been criticised for ignoring “very modest requests” to adopt email and sitting hours protocols to improve barristers’ wellbeing.
Leaked data reveals that top government lawyers have been offered an average 16% pay increase but a third of the Government Legal Department’s workforce have been excluded from the deal.
A senior family court judge has admitted that it feels “shaming” to preside over cases where people are forced to represent themselves, in the latest warning about the social costs of legal aid cuts.
What do trustees need to think about when selling their charity's property?
A decision by the Bar Standards Board on an unfunded pupillage has been upheld by the Bar's appellate body, the Inns of Court.