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A storm brewing

08 July 2010 / Roger Smith
Issue: 7425 / Categories: Opinion , Human rights
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Cambridge looked characteristically beautiful during the Legal Services Research Centre’s 8th annual conference. Given the global nature of the recession, attendance held up pretty well—bolstered by a somewhat disproportionately large delegation from Australian legal centres.

Cambridge looked characteristically beautiful during the Legal Services Research Centre’s 8th annual conference. Given the global nature of the recession, attendance held up pretty well—bolstered by a somewhat disproportionately large delegation from Australian legal centres. Few from the UK, however, were unaware of the legal aid storm to come. The atmosphere, all in all, was close to what it must have been in those long Edwardian summers just before the First World War.

The research centre will do well to survive and odds must be against a ninth conference at the customary two-yearly interval. Research struggles to get support from policy practitioners at the best of times. Attendance from the high ups at the Legal Services Commission and the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) was notably sparse. The Commission is, of course, currently decapitated and being absorbed within a Ministry focused

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The government’s plan to introduce a Single Professional Services Supervisor could erode vital legal-sector expertise, warns Mark Evans, president of the Law Society of England and Wales, in NLJ this week
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Writing in NLJ this week, Sophie Ashcroft and Miranda Joseph of Stevens & Bolton dissect the Privy Council’s landmark ruling in Jardine Strategic Ltd v Oasis Investments II Master Fund Ltd (No 2), which abolishes the long-standing 'shareholder rule'
In NLJ this week, Sailesh Mehta and Theo Burges of Red Lion Chambers examine the government’s first-ever 'Afghan leak' super-injunction—used to block reporting of data exposing Afghans who aided UK forces and over 100 British officials. Unlike celebrity privacy cases, this injunction centred on national security. Its use, the authors argue, signals the rise of a vast new body of national security law spanning civil, criminal, and media domains
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