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Nick Rowles-Davies

Founder and Chief Executive Officer

Nick Rowles-Davies is founder and CEO of Lexolent, the world’s first origination network platform for legal finance professionals and a litigation finance fund. He is a key voice in the legal finance industry and wrote Third Party Litigation Funding (via Oxford University Press).


Founder and Chief Executive Officer

Nick Rowles-Davies is founder and CEO of Lexolent, the world’s first origination network platform for legal finance professionals and a litigation finance fund. He is a key voice in the legal finance industry and wrote Third Party Litigation Funding (via Oxford University Press).


ARTICLES BY THIS AUTHOR

Nick Rowles-Davies discusses due diligence, risk & insurance in his second article on litigation funding trends

In the first article of a two-part series, Nick Rowles-Davies highlights the need for education surrounding litigation funding

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8
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Results
8
Results

MOVERS & SHAKERS

NLJ Career Profile: Maria Karaiskos KC, Church Court Chambers

NLJ Career Profile: Maria Karaiskos KC, Church Court Chambers

Maria Karaiskos KC, recently appointed as the first female head of Church Court Chambers, discusses breaking down barriers, the lure of the courtroom, and the power of storytelling

Kingsley Napley—Jenny Higgins

Kingsley Napley—Jenny Higgins

Legal director joins regulatory practice to lead offering for actuarial sector

Bolt Burdon Kemp—Alan Collins & Danielle Vincent

Bolt Burdon Kemp—Alan Collins & Danielle Vincent

Bolt Burdon Kemp acquires Hugh James’ abuse team

NEWS
Writing in NLJ this week, Kelvin Rutledge KC of Cornerstone Barristers and Genevieve Screeche-Powell of Field Court Chambers examine the Court of Appeal’s rejection of a discrimination challenge to Tower Hamlets’ housing database
In a special tribute in this week's NLJ, David Burrows reflects on the retirement of Patrick Allen, co-founder of Hodge Jones & Allen, whose career epitomised the heyday of legal aid
Michael Zander KC, Emeritus Professor at LSE, tracks the turbulent passage of the Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill through the House of Lords in this week's issue of NLJ. Two marathon debates drew contributions from nearly 200 peers, split between support, opposition and conditional approval
Alistair Mills of Landmark Chambers reflects on the Human Rights Act 1998 a quarter-century after it came into force, in this week's issue of NLJ
In his latest Civil Way column for NLJ, Stephen Gold surveys a raft of procedural changes and quirky disputes shaping civil practice. His message is clear: civil practitioners must brace for continual tweaks, unexpected contentions and rising costs in everyday litigation
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