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Is the Taylor Review the Scottish Jackson, asks Jenny Dickson

Dominic Regan considers the road ahead for whiplash claims

Tim Lawson-Cruttenden questions the Anti-social Behaviour, Crime & Policing Bill

Sara Ibrahim covers the recent controversy concerning the niqab

Post-Mitchell, it’s time to take budgeting seriously, says Murray Heining

Erskine has been long recognised as our greatest advocate...

Jon Robins takes little solace from the government’s recent U-turn on legal aid reform

Stephen Mason & Nicholas Bohm take issue with the PIN requirements of Santander

Roger Smith measures the impact of legal aid cuts on both sides of the Atlantic

Should we call time on zero hours contracts, asks Sarah Johnson

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Results

MOVERS & SHAKERS

Hamlins—Maddox Legal

Hamlins—Maddox Legal

London firm announces acquisition of corporate team

Ward Hadaway—Nik Tunley

Ward Hadaway—Nik Tunley

Head of corporate appointed following Teesside merger

Taylor Rose—Russell Jarvis

Taylor Rose—Russell Jarvis

Firm expands into banking and finance sector with newly appointed head of banking

NEWS
Mazur v Charles Russell Speechlys LLP [2025] EWHC 2341 (KB) continues to stir controversy across civil litigation, according to NLJ columnist Professor Dominic Regan of City Law School—AKA ‘The insider’
SRA v Goodwin is a rare disciplinary decision where a solicitor found to have acted dishonestly avoided being struck off, says Clare Hughes-Williams of DAC Beachcroft in this week's NLJ. The Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal (SDT) imposed a 12-month suspension instead, citing medical evidence and the absence of harm to clients
In their latest Family Law Brief for NLJ, Ellie Hampson-Jones and Carla Ditz of Stewarts review three key family law rulings, including the latest instalment in the long-running saga of Potanin v Potanina
The Asian International Arbitration Centre’s sweeping reforms through its AIAC Suite of Rules 2026, unveiled at Asia ADR Week, are under examination in this week's NLJ by John (Ching Jack) Choi of Gresham Legal
In this week's issue of NLJ, Yasseen Gailani and Alexander Martin of Quinn Emanuel report on the High Court’s decision in Skatteforvaltningen (SKAT) v Solo Capital Partners LLP & Ors [2025], where Denmark’s tax authority failed to recover £1.4bn in disputed dividend tax refunds
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