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05 September 2013 / Roger Smith
Issue: 7574 / Categories: Opinion , Legal aid focus
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The gathering storm

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

No doubt about the legal issue of the year. Professional leaders, practitioners and legal aid administrators are grappling with unprecedented cuts. The sun may be shining in the physical world but the clouds are gathering over publicly funded legal services—all over the world.

We loved Lucy

The Law Society was lucky, or unusually foresightful, to have chosen mental health practitioner Lucy Scott-Moncrieff as its most recent president. She stepped down in mid-July just in time for her successor, Nick Fluck, to give the Society’s valedictory speech in honour of Lord Judge’s tenure as Lord Chief Justice. She could have come from central casting: a woman, respected expert in her own field, long-time legal aid practitioner, mental health tribunal judge, and alternative business structure pioneer heading up one of the earliest virtual law practices in the UK. Her greatest attributes in legal aid’s annus horribilis can be stated negatively: she didn’t have a plummy accent; she didn’t go to Oxbridge; she

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NLJ Career Profile: Daniel Burbeary, Michelman Robinson

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Employment and people solutions offering boosted by partner hire

NEWS

The Court of Appeal has slammed the brakes on claimants trying to swap defendants after limitation has expired. In Adcamp LLP v Office Properties and BDB Pitmans v Lee [2026] EWCA Civ 50, it overturned High Court rulings that had allowed substitutions under s 35(6)(b) of the Limitation Act 1980, reports Sarah Crowther of DAC Beachcroft in this week's NLJ

Cheating in driving tests is surging—and courts are responding firmly. Writing in NLJ this week, Neil Parpworth of De Montfort Law School charts a rise in impersonation and tech-assisted fraud, with 2,844 attempts recorded in a year
As AI-generated ‘deepfake’ images proliferate, the law may already have the tools to respond. In NLJ this week, Jon Belcher of Excello Law argues that such images amount to personal data processing under UK GDPR
In a striking financial remedies ruling, the High Court cut a wife’s award by 40% for coercive and controlling behaviour. Writing in NLJ this week, Chris Bryden and Nicole Wallace of 4 King’s Bench Walk analyse LP v MP [2025] EWFC 473
A €60.9m award to Kylian Mbappé has refocused attention on football’s controversial ‘ethics bonus’ clauses. Writing in NLJ this week, Dr Estelle Ivanova of Valloni Attorneys at Law examines how such provisions sit within French labour law
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