header-logo header-logo

07 March 2018
Issue: 7784 / Categories: Legal News
printer mail-detail

Doughty Street women take to the streets

You may not know Lyons Street, Lawson Street, Kerr Street or Singh Street. If not, that’s hardly surprising, for they are actually known as Doughty Street, Guilford Street, Roger Street and Gray’s Inn Road. In celebration of International Women’s Day 2018 and 100 years after women first got the vote, Doughty Street’s women members asked why the streets they walk each day are named after men, mainly wealthy landowners and benefactors, rather than the many inspiring and influential women who lived or worked nearby, such as Jane Lyons, Marie Lawson, Harriet Kerr and Princess Sophia Duleep Singh. For eight days, they are renaming the streets around their Bloomsbury-based chambers after eight leaders of the women’s suffrage movement, documenting their journey on Twitter via the hashtag #DoughtyStWomen.

Issue: 7784 / Categories: Legal News
printer mail-details

MOVERS & SHAKERS

mfg Solicitors—Tracy Ashby

mfg Solicitors—Tracy Ashby

Birmingham partner returns to private client practice

No5 Barristers’ Chambers—Ian Tullett, Daniel Griffiths & Marc Forrest-Thomas

No5 Barristers’ Chambers—Ian Tullett, Daniel Griffiths & Marc Forrest-Thomas

Set introduces C-suite leadership team to support continued growth

Coodes Solicitors—17 promotions

Coodes Solicitors—17 promotions

Firm promotes 17 lawyers, including five new partners, across multiple practice areas

NEWS
As family structures evolve, the law may face difficult questions about inheritance rights for those in polyamorous relationships
A series of procedural developments could have significant practical consequences for litigators. Writing in NLJ this week, columnist Stephen Gold highlights important updates ranging from digital court reforms to family procedure and admissions of liability
Global mobility is transforming family law, creating new challenges around jurisdiction, assets and child arrangements
The civil justice landscape could be heading for a shake-up, with reform of the Solicitors Act 1974 gathering pace
Employers are being urged to prepare now for far-reaching employment law changes taking effect in January 2027
back-to-top-scroll