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A UK charity that is involved in the provision of aid and development projects internationally, with the goal of ending poverty.
The first barristers’ set to address elitist discrimination at the Bar by adopting contextual recruitment practices has been accused of “virtue signalling,” according to its head of chambers.
A recent study has revealed that 37% of legal professionals worked on their days off last year, a figure predicted to rise to 50% in 2023.
Over 100 people have now qualified as solicitors through working as paralegals, instead of a traditional training contract.
Over half of all training contracts nationwide in 2016-17 were based in London, research by the Law Society has revealed.
Tens of thousands of pounds have been spent on improving the security of top judges’ homes due to fears for their safety, a freedom of information request has revealed.
The majority of corporate legal departments will be using artificial intelligent systems in a year’s time, a survey of global businesses has predicted.
Dozens of barristers’ chambers are refusing to take on new defence work in protest at the crisis in the justice system created by the government’s cuts and reforms, the latest being changes to the Advocates Graduated Fee Scheme.
The 2015 Bar National Mock Trial Competition saw over 2,000 students from state schools compete in a series of mock trials.
Over 1,000 small and medium-sized firms have gone under in the last 12 months, a recently published research paper has revealed.
Outsourcing has grown increasingly more prevalent in the public and private sectors since it emerged in the 1980s.
Senior associate Thomas Stables offers valuable insights into his journey from being a vacation schemer to an associate in the regulatory disputes team at Osborne Clarke LLP.