header-logo header-logo

20 February 2015 / Michael L Nash
Issue: 7641 / Categories: Features
printer mail-detail

The changing of the guard

backpage_5

Michael L Nash wonders if Prince Charles’s accession will usher in a new style of monarchy

The day after a new biography of Prince Charles was published (Charles: The Heart of a King by Catherine Mayer) the King’s Troop Royal Horse Artillery fired 41 guns in Green Park, to mark the 63rd anniversary of his mother’s accession. Clearly now, and perhaps for some time, we are in a period of transition. But, as the writer states: “The Queen is inviolable, her son is not.”

The book brings into sharp focus a number of the issues, both present and in the foreseeable future, which need both attention and address. The Times’ editorials in the last month have concentrated on the need for royal reform, something echoed by Mayer: “It will always be better for the Windsors to initiate reform rather than it being imposed.” It is interesting to note, as she does, that the Way Ahead Group, an informal meetings of senior royals and aides, which began during the Annus Horribilis

If you are not a subscriber, subscribe now to read this content
If you are already a subscriber sign in
...or Register for two weeks' free access to subscriber content

MOVERS & SHAKERS

Gateley Legal—Caroline Pope & Bob Maynard

Gateley Legal—Caroline Pope & Bob Maynard

Construction team bolstered by hire of senior consultant duo

Switalskis—four appointments

Switalskis—four appointments

Firm expands residential conveyancing team with quadruple appointment

mfg Solicitors—Claire Pope

mfg Solicitors—Claire Pope

Private client team welcomes senior associatein Worcester

NEWS
What safeguards apply when trust corporations are appointed as deputy by the Court of Protection? 
Disputing parties are expected to take part in alternative dispute resolution (ADR), where this is suitable for their case. At what point, however, does refusing to participate cross the threshold of ‘unreasonable’ and attract adverse costs consequences?
When it comes to free legal advice, demand massively outweighs supply. 'Millions of people are excluded from access to justice as they don’t have anywhere to turn for free advice—or don’t know that they can ask for help,' Bhavini Bhatt, development director at the Access to Justice Foundation, writes in this week's NLJ
When an ex-couple is deciding who gets what in the divorce or civil partnership dissolution, when is it appropriate for a third party to intervene? David Burrows, NLJ columnist and solicitor advocate, considers this thorny issue in this week’s NLJ
NLJ's latest Charities Appeals Supplement has been published in this week’s issue
back-to-top-scroll