Civil contempt arises (among other things) when a party to proceedings breaches a judgment or order against it or fails to refrain from doing a particular act. Under
Further to the previous Legal Neurodiversity Network (LNN) article about retaining and optimising neurodivergent individuals in the workplace, we will focus on the third core pillar: people. By
The Land Registration Act 2002 was thought to have killed off adverse possession as an active legal mechanism, but the recent case of Brown v Ridley has reopened
Shire Professional Funding is always looking at ways to drive excellence in the legal profession, as part of our Strategic Partnership with the Law Society of England and
When asked to consider the importance of your brand it can be too easy to think about logos, slogans, name awareness and advertising and in doing so perhaps
The low down Professionals across the justice system are failing to understand and respond to the needs of women and girls who are victims of domestic abuse, lawyers
It was May 2021 when we first heard the name Great British Railways. The Williams-Shapps Plan for Rail unveiled it to parliament as key to addressing issues uncovered
The delays to inquests proceeding in the coroners’ courts in England and Wales have been a recurrent theme for many years. Following last year’s recognition of increased demand
When democracy clashes with the rule of law, who should come out on top? The standard answer, advanced by many eminent legal thinkers, is ‘neither’: democracy requires the
One year on from the seminal Supreme Court decision in Philipp v Barclays [2023] UKSC 25, the English courts are still grappling with payment processing claims brought by