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David Langwallner

Barrister
David Langwallner is a graduate of the Harvard Law School & the London School of Economics. He is a barrister at 1MCB & lectures in jurisprudence at Middlesex University.
Barrister
David Langwallner is a graduate of the Harvard Law School & the London School of Economics. He is a barrister at 1MCB & lectures in jurisprudence at Middlesex University.
ARTICLES BY THIS AUTHOR
What would Denning do? David Langwallner reports on frustration by impossibility in modern contract law
Paying homage or a licence to steal? David Langwallner delves into the tricky topic of musical sampling in copyright law
What exactly is ‘music’ for copyright purposes? David Langwallner looks beyond the lyrics & settles the score
In UK law, artistic parodies remain in a grey area between freedom of expression & protecting commercial reputations, as David Langwallner explains
In the eye of the beholder? David Langwallner examines copyright protection for works of artistic craftsmanship
Law in the hotel lobby: David Langwallner examines the dilemmas arising from the relocation of trials to temporary courtrooms
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Results
Results
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Results

MOVERS & SHAKERS

Cadwalader—Matthew Sperry

Cadwalader—Matthew Sperry

Firm grows private wealth practice with transatlantic hire

Michelmores—Jennifer Morrissey

Michelmores—Jennifer Morrissey

Financial services and securities litigation specialist joins as partner in London

Shakespeare Martineau—David Smithen

Shakespeare Martineau—David Smithen

South West land team bolstered by real estate partner hire in Bristol

NEWS
MPs have expressed disappointment after the government confirmed it will not consider updating the parental leave system until at least 2027
Lord Neuberger, former president of the Supreme Court, shares his views on the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill in this week's NLJ with William Raven
Writing in NLJ this week, Nick Brett and Vicky Lankester of Brett Wilson dissect the chronic failures of the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) in meeting disclosure obligations. From the Post Office scandal to the collapsed trial of Liam Allan, they highlight how systemic neglect has led to wrongful convictions and miscarriages of justice
In July, the Supreme Court quashed the convictions of Tom Hayes and Carlo Palombo, ruling that trial judges had wrongly directed juries to treat profit-motivated Libor submissions as inherently dishonest. In this week’s NLJ, David Stern and James Fletcher of 5 St Andrew’s Hill reflect on the decision
In his latest 'Civil way' column for this week's NLJ, Stephen Gold delivers a witty roundup of procedural updates and judicial oddities. From the rise in litigant-in-person hourly rates (£24 from October) to the Supreme Court’s venue hire options (canapés in Courtroom 1, anyone?), Gold blends legal insight with dry humour
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