header-logo header-logo

Tim Hardy
Tim Hardy

Chair

View Articles
Card image
Tim Heywood

Lawyer & management consultant

View Articles
Tim Hirst
Tim Hirst

Barrister

View Articles
Card image
Tim Horlock

View Articles
Tim Jones
Tim Jones

Professor of law,

View Articles
Card image
Tim Kerr

View Articles
Tim Lawson-Cruttenden
Tim Lawson-Cruttenden

Solicitor-advocate

View Articles
Card image
Tim Leaver

Partner

View Articles
Tim Malloch
Tim Malloch

Solicitor

View Articles
Card image
Tim Maxwell

Partner

View Articles
Tim Parker
Tim Parker

Barrister, 9 Gough Square, chambers of Andrew Ritchie QC.

View Articles
Card image
Tim Parker

Barrister, 9 Gough Square, chambers of Andrew Ritchie QC.

View Articles
Tim Pullan
Tim Pullan

Chief Executive Officer

View Articles
Card image
Tim Rothwell

Barrister

View Articles
Tim Seal
Tim Seal

Head of construction law

View Articles
Card image
Tim Shepherd

View Articles
Tim Smith
Tim Smith

Partner

View Articles
Card image
Tim Smith

Technical Director

View Articles
Tim Spencer-Lane
Tim Spencer-Lane

Lawyer

View Articles
Card image
Tim Suter

View Articles
Show
20
Results
Results
20
Results

MOVERS & SHAKERS

Burgess Mee—Victoria Sterritt

Burgess Mee—Victoria Sterritt

Family law boutique expands London team with legal director hire

Ward Hadaway—Mike Gore

Ward Hadaway—Mike Gore

Firm enhances advisory capability with strategic risk specialist hire

Stewarts—Alexandra Lyons

Stewarts—Alexandra Lyons

Insurance and reinsurance specialist joins policyholder disputes practice as partner

NEWS
Some employment law controversies never disappear—they merely lie dormant
Artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming legal practice, but its successful adoption depends as much on culture as technology
The fallout from Lord Mandelson’s appointment and dismissal as UK ambassador to Washington raises profound questions about constitutional governance, accountability and political appointments
Pastries may be in the firing line while kebabs escape scrutiny, but the reality is far more nuanced
The Supreme Court’s decision in Dillon highlights a central tension in modern public law: rights may be recognised without being fully realised
back-to-top-scroll