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02 March 2021
Issue: 7923 / Categories: Legal News , Criminal
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NLJ this week: The Runciman review & current justice

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It’s 30 years since the last Royal Commission on Criminal Justice, and it will soon be time for another one―the government announced in 2019 that another commission will be established to review the criminal justice process.

Writing in NLJ this week, Martin Rackstraw, partner, Russell-Cooke, looks at the impact made by the 1991 commission, chaired by Viscount Runciman, and how it shaped the criminal justice system we have today. The 1991 commission followed some ‘appalling miscarriages’, Rackstraw writes, and ‘revelations of serious police misconduct in some recent ones, and the inability or unwillingness of the courts to address such misconduct, ran through the report’. He casts a critical eye over the current justice system.

What can we expect from the next commission?

Issue: 7923 / Categories: Legal News , Criminal
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MOVERS & SHAKERS

NLJ Career Profile: Nikki Bowker, Devonshires

NLJ Career Profile: Nikki Bowker, Devonshires

Nikki Bowker, head of dispute resolution at Devonshires, on career resilience, diversity in law and channelling Elle Woods when the pressure is on

Ellisons—Sarah Osborne

Ellisons—Sarah Osborne

Leasehold enfranchisement specialist joins residential property team

DWF—Chris Air

DWF—Chris Air

Firm strengthens commercial team in Manchester with partner appointment

NEWS
A simple phrase like ‘subject to references’ may not protect employers as much as they think. Writing in NLJ this week, Ian Smith, barrister and emeritus professor of employment law at UEA, analyses recent employment cases showing how conditional job offers can still create binding contracts

An engagement ring may symbolise romance, but the courts remain decidedly practical about who keeps it after a split, writes Mark Pawlowski, barrister and professor emeritus of property law at the University of Greenwich, in this week's NLJ

The government will aim to pass legislation banning leasehold for new flats and capping ground rent, introducing non-compulsory digital ID and creating a ‘duty of candour’ for public servants (also known as the Hillsborough law) in the next Parliament

An Italian financier has lost his bid to block his Australian wife from filing divorce papers in England on the basis it was no longer her domicile of choice

Reforms to the disclosure regime in the business and property courts have not achieved their objectives, lawyers have warned
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