All Leader articles – Page 10

  • Paul rogerson
    Opinion

    Reed and learn

    27 July 2020

    It's three years since Lord Reed delivered a devastating rebuke to government in the Supreme Court’s judgment outlawing employment tribunal fees.

  • Paul rogerson
    Opinion

    Remember Brexit?

    20 July 2020

    Chancery Lane is set to open a new front in its campaign by appealing to the EU 27 direct.

  • Paul rogerson
    Opinion

    A ‘new deal’ for housing?

    13 July 2020

    Sunak’s stamp duty holiday is a welcome boost for conveyancing. But for society as a whole it is a distinctly mixed blessing.

  • Paul rogerson
    Opinion

    Back in the (new) routine

    6 July 2020

    Pandemic proves that working outside normal office hours – and outside the office – need not reduce productivity.

  • Paul rogerson
    Opinion

    Jury trials: apportioning guilt

    29 June 2020

    As many point out, proposal to abolish jury trials is unintended consequence of avowedly political choices.

  • Paul rogerson
    Opinion

    You belong in a museum

    22 June 2020

    Is it wise for campaigners to be diverted into a culture war over the fate of embrowned masonry? 

  • Paul rogerson
    Opinion

    LeO’s long journey

    15 June 2020

    The beauty of the term ‘improvement journey’ lies in its elasticity.

  • Paul rogerson
    Opinion

    Public relations

    8 June 2020

    In the City certain time-honoured traditions are not quite dead – or are at least not dead everywhere.

  • Paul rogerson
    Opinion

    A cautionary tale

    1 June 2020

    If the demise of McMillan Williams teaches us anything, it’s the recurring lesson that it can be difficult for investors to make money out of a commoditised consumer law offer.

  • Paul rogerson
    Opinion

    Honesty, the best policy

    18 May 2020

    A profession is a disciplined group of people who adhere rigorously to codes of ethics. The question is, how rigorously?

  • Paul rogerson
    News

    Testing, testing

    11 May 2020

    Has the UK’s fifth-biggest accountancy firm already identified a partial route back into the office?

  • Paul rogerson
    Opinion

    Disappearing High Street

    4 May 2020

    When the EU referendum was held in June 2016, the Civil Service employed fewer people than at any time since the second world war – rather unhappily, given the result.

  • Paul rogerson
    Opinion

    Shutter island

    27 April 2020

    Tory MP Tom Tugendhat, son of the judge, rather unexpectedly quoted Lenin last week in a Mail article berating lawyers for aiding money launderers.

  • Paul rogerson
    Opinion

    Pleading your case

    20 April 2020

    A significant number of lawyers, particularly those serving people most in need, are at risk of not being able to continue in practice because of the Covid-19 crisis. Paul Rogerson Not my words, but those of Tony Blair’s former lord chancellor Charlie Falconer, recently restored to the ...

  • Paul rogerson
    Opinion

    Tough conversations

    6 April 2020

    Chancellor Rishi Sunak is having a better Covid-19 crisis than the prime minister. This is something of a turn-up, given that the Westminster commentariat had Sunak down as a Boris Johnson cipher following Sajid Javid’s noisy departure from number 11. OddsChecker tells me the 39-year-old is as short as 5/2 ...

  • Paul rogerson
    Opinion

    Out of the knacker’s yard?

    30 March 2020

    Remote and agile working is certainly one for the medium-term. I speak from experience.

  • Paul rogerson
    Opinion

    London first

    16 March 2020

    Capital’s pole position in cross-border dispute resolution will take some shifting. 

  • Paul rogerson
    Opinion

    Market contagion

    9 March 2020

    Coronavirus is here. But UK government action plan unveiled a week ago had little detail to impart about business continuity in law.

  • Paul rogerson
    Opinion

    Not rocket science

    2 March 2020

    In forensic science, as in so much else justice-related, the UK’s position of global pre-eminence has been compromised by funding cuts and falling standards.

  • Paul rogerson
    Opinion

    Expensive trainers

    24 February 2020

    Aspiring solicitors who amass debts to enter the profession are surely entitled to information that would enable them to make an informed choice of training provider.