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Issue: Vol 173, Issue 8033

14 July 2023
IN THIS ISSUE
Which judges are tipped for the top jobs? In this week’s 'Insider', Professor Dominic Regan, of City Law School, praises Dame Sue Carr, the next Chief Justice, and reveals how her career could have taken an alternative albeit still high-profile trajectory!
Rules should be ‘simple and simply expressed’, according to the Courts Act 2003—yet Mr Justice Mostyn recently urged rule-makers to look again at the ‘Byzantine’ rules governing the release of documents to children proceedings.
The rise of legal consultants has been a game-changer for lawyers who want to work independently, manage their own caseload, and reduce the burdens of self-employment. In this week’s NLJ, Adrian Jaggard, CEO at AllC Group & Taylor Rose MW, looks ahead to the expansion of this model of working—research suggests one third of lawyers will work this way by 2026—and offers advice on how to prepare now for the changes to come.
The Nuremberg trials laid the groundwork for personal international criminal liability, and the process by which Vladimir Putin may one day be held responsible. In this week’s NLJ, Simon Parsons, associate lecturer at Bath Spa University, looks at the lack of individual liability for international crime before 1945.
As the courts gear up for the Long Vacation, Dominic Regan charts judicial stars on the rise & recommends a handy surgical procedure for costs lawyers
Back to school already? Ian Smith sets out some instructive lessons from the courts on the definition of a worker, the conduct of disciplinary hearings, & the perils of making a mistake
A Byzantine set of rules governs the release of documents in children proceedings: David Burrows calls for some sorely-needed simplicity
The courts in the Cayman Islands have shown a willingness to explore the link between insolvency & trust law in resolving novel issues: Christopher Levers & Jordan Constable analyse a recent example
In the first of a two-part series, Simon Parsons charts the development of individual liability for international crimes
Service without a seal; reducing tax penalties; no jokes: the Glancing blow; coughing impecuniosity; actuarial bunfight; chancery talk.
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MOVERS & SHAKERS

OUT WITH THE OLD… IN WITH THE NEW

OUT WITH THE OLD… IN WITH THE NEW Premium Content

New partner joins the Kent firm’s construction team

Experiment2

Experiment2 Premium Content

"With growing numbers of 'crypto' disputes hitting the courts in the Caribbean", Grant Carroll examines the latest power to be added to a liquidator’s arsenal

Experiment1

Experiment1 Premium Content

"With growing numbers of 'crypto' disputes hitting the courts in the Caribbean", Grant Carroll examines the latest power to be added to a liquidator’s arsenal

NEWS
Paul Magrath recalls the chequered history of law reporting prior to the establishment of a Council of Law Reporting in 1865
Mark Solon stresses the importance of experts knowing & following the rules
‘Lucy Keane assesses the damage after Paccar Inc v CAT drove a juggernaut through the UK” litigation funding industry’
"A ’ recent 'Employment' Appeal Tribunal ruling on gender-critical beliefs has brought human rights to the fore: Charles Pigott analyses a significant development for discrimination claims";
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