ESSENTIAL READING FOR BARRISTERS
Issue#19 - 13.01.2004
Feature Archives



 

 

Feature archives
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comment and opinion

It Is Far Harder To Stay Clean In A Dirty World Than It Is To Get Dirty In A Clean One.
By Dr. Hamilton Wallis, Chairman, Fields Associates
The recent spate of prosecutions for possession of child pornography proves the maxim once again. Nowhere, it seems, are otherwise law-abiding citizens more likely to commit serious offences than from behind the flickering monitors of their home computers. 

Trends In Digital Evidence Handling
By Philip Bowles, Senior Forensic Analyst, Datasec Ltd
John Cooper, Barrister 25 Bedford Row

A white paper has recently been published regarding the evidential value of email. The events that led up to the publication arose from the case of R v Rowe and Bhatt (Canterbury Crown Court Feb 2003) in which it was alleged that a number of emails and other computer documents relied upon by the prosecution had in fact been forged. 

Matthias Kelly QC Warns Of The Threat To Independent Publicly Funded Advocacy Services From Current Government Policy

“Everybody knows that lawyers are all parasites. Lawyers made the law complicated to line their own pockets. Lawyers do not contribute to justice, they frustrate it. Lawyers simply spin cases out for their own ends. All lawyers are grossly over-paid fat cats. There is no need for lawyers to exist at all. The best thing is to just get rid of them”. 

How Are The Courts Influencing Mediation In The UK?
By Michael Lind, operations director, ADR Group

What message does this send out? The message is clear. The Government, Judiciary and Court Service fully embrace the concept of mediation and are integrating it into the litigation environment  

Pensions- The Saga Continues

By Richard Cobbold, Buzzacott Financial Services Ltd

On the 10th December 2003, the Treasury published its second consultation document, summarising its proposals for simplifying pension rules and regulations. There follows a summary of the main points, together with some brief comments giving Buzzacott Financial Services Ltd’s reaction to the document. 

“Barristers’ Chambers and change”
By Anil Shah (Managing Director - LPA Legal Recruitment)

Barristers with a good reputation and with some portable business can now choose a set, which they consider, would provide them with the best platform for their areas of work. 

Marketing Chambers - More Than Another Drinks Party.
By Stephen Bedford, Managing Director of the specialist law consultancy firm Conical

Many Chambers do not formally gather information on client needs, few research or ask structured questions about how services could be improved and on-going satisfaction feedback is rarely requested. Only when a complaint is received or a client lost is there any real attention paid to these issues. This is worrying since Barristers are operating in an increasingly commercial environment.  

Human Rights At The Heart Of Europe
By Roger Smith, director of JUSTICE, discusses the importance of human rights within the European Union.

The British may be about as sceptical about Europe as they were about human rights. However, we are slowly advancing a human rights culture. Our membership of Europe - tendentious and contentious as it is - should assist in this process.  

The Shadow of Costs

By Kay Linell, Morley and Scott
I was talking to a friend of mine who is an eminent Canadian lawyer and arbitrator about his views of litigation in the United Kingdom and unsurprisingly he was very critical that we did not have a combined profession in the United Kingdom, where both solicitors and barristers undertook the same functions from the same offices. 

Witness Coaching In Criminal Cases
By Linda Dobbs QC, Chair of the Professional Standards Committee of the Bar Council and Chair of the CBA and David Etherington QC Chair of the Professional Conduct and Complaints Committee of the Bar Council.
Since "witness coaching" is not an offence in its own right, we must look to the individual participants to ascertain the consequences of engaging in this activity. 


 

 


 

 

 

   

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