[ad_1] How does the government get 1.5 million new homes built in five years and meet challenging renewable energy targets? By pulling every lever possible in the planning
[ad_1] A recent securities class action filed in the US against a Kazakh bank suggests that investors may be able to bring claims against financial institutions for making
[ad_1] For nearly three decades, the Arbitration Act 1996 has provided a robust legal framework for arbitrations seated in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. However, concerns over ambiguities
[ad_1] Beware of mistakenly binning valuables. Once collected and transferred to the statutory waste authority, they become the authority’s property and irretrievable. Why? Section 14(6)(c) of the Control
[ad_1] At the beginning of March, the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) announced an investigation into a number of social platforms, focused on the ways in which they collect
[ad_1] IHT Changes The IHT changes announced in the Autumn Budget will dramatically affect the passing on of an estate for individuals, non-doms, business owners and farmers from
[ad_1] An indefinite all-out strike by Birmingham’s refuse workers began on Tuesday. The strike is led by the union Unite, which has 1.2m members across the UK and
[ad_1] The low down Low margins, risk and highly pressurised transactions continue to preoccupy lawyers and law firms involved in residential conveyancing. The upshot, some allege, is a
[ad_1] Infamously described as ‘nuclear weapons’ of the law, several recent cases have provided important lessons for practitioners concerning Worldwide Freezing Orders (WFOs), from how they are applied,
[ad_1] The drive to regulate litigation funding is gathering pace on both sides of the Atlantic. What does this spell for the future of the $15bn funding industry?