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Swansea University was named University of the Year by UK student users of the comparison website, whatuni.com.
The Sustainable consumption and net zero Posted on 17 January 2023 What’s sustainable consumption and why should lawyers care?
What’s sustainable consumption and why should lawyers care?
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High numbers of female lawyers feel that the profession must undergo serious cultural change in order to increase the representation of women in partnership positions and stop female lawyers from deserting law altogether, a survey has revealed.
The 2016 Law Society Law Management Section Financial Benchmarking Survey has shown that the income of firms has increased for a sixth consecutive year, with a median rise last year of 5.4%.
The Bar Council and the Bar Standards Board have released results from a survey entitled "Barristers' Working Lives". It aimed to provide data on the Bar’s profile, and to gather insight into the working lives and employment experiences of barristers.
The recent LawCareers.Net Trainee Survey has revealed that 81% of respondents used either LawCareers.Net or The Training Contract & Pupillage Handbook, or both, as part of their hunt for a job.
The Bar Council and the Bar Standards Board have commissioned a survey of barristers' working lives, the results of which will be used to inform organisations' short, medium and long-term strategic planning.
The president of the Supreme Court, Lord Neuberger, has announced measures to diversify the roster of Supreme Court judges as upcoming retirements create vacancies over the next couple of years.
The government’s attempt to introduce a discriminatory residence test for legal aid claimants, which sought to limit the availability of services for people born outside the United Kingdom, but living here for "one year or more", has been unanimously thrown out by the Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court has embraced the digital age, and is now live streaming its proceedings over the Internet.
The Supreme Court has ruled that the government acted unlawfully and unconstitutionally by introducing fees of up to £1,200 for those bringing claims to an employment tribunal.
Is the Supreme Court ‘on-demand’ service the Netflix of the legal world?
What is a penalty clause?
Women will be in the majority on a panel of Supreme Court judges for the first time ever next month, almost a century after women were first able to access the barristers’ profession.
The bitter legal battle over the introduction of employment tribunal fees is set to end soon as the verdict on a Supreme Court hearing is considered.
A number of City firms weathering the effects of coronavirus are evaluating the need for secretaries and support staff during the pandemic.