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25 July 2014 / Jane Ching
Issue: 7616 / Categories: Features , Training & education , Profession
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A paradigm shift

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Jane Ching reflects on two decades in legal education & looks to the future

Social media is full of surprises, not least the one presented by LinkedIn which prompted a colleague to congratulate me on my 21st anniversary with Nottingham Law School—really a rather terrifying anniversary. I know I had registered my six-year anniversary, on the entirely self-serving basis that that meant the limitation period had expired on any messes I had managed to leave behind in practice. A group of us, all recruited for the first year of the LPC in 1993, had also had a survivors’ lunch once we hit our 20th anniversary. But 21 is a rather different kind of watershed, marking, as it does, the coming of age of a particular form of vocational legal education for solicitors in England and Wales: what I will call the shift from the “knowledge era” to the “skills era”.

Days of yore

In June 1993, we still didn’t have a building to put our new LPC in. Even when we did, it only just had furniture in it for the first week

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MOVERS & SHAKERS

Hogan Lovells—Lisa Quelch

Hogan Lovells—Lisa Quelch

Partner hire strengthens global infrastructure and energy financing practice

Sherrards—Jan Kunstyr

Sherrards—Jan Kunstyr

Legal director bolsters international expertise in dispute resolution team

Muckle LLP—Stacey Brown

Muckle LLP—Stacey Brown

Corporate governance and company law specialist joins the team

NEWS

NOTICE UNDER THE TRUSTEE ACT 1925

HERBERT SMITH STAFF PENSION SCHEME (THE “SCHEME”)

NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND BENEFICIARIES UNDER SECTION 27 OF THE TRUSTEE ACT 1925
Law firm HFW is offering clients lawyers on call for dawn raids, sanctions issues and other regulatory emergencies
From gender-critical speech to notice periods and incapability dismissals, employment law continues to turn on fine distinctions. In his latest employment law brief for NLJ, Ian Smith of Norwich Law School reviews a cluster of recent decisions, led by Bailey v Stonewall, where the Court of Appeal clarified the limits of third-party liability under the Equality Act
Non-molestation orders are meant to be the frontline defence against domestic abuse, yet their enforcement often falls short. Writing in NLJ this week, Jeni Kavanagh, Jessica Mortimer and Oliver Kavanagh analyse why the criminalisation of breach has failed to deliver consistent protection
Assisted dying remains one of the most fraught fault lines in English law, where compassion and criminal liability sit uncomfortably close. Writing in NLJ this week, Julie Gowland and Barny Croft of Birketts examine how acts motivated by care—booking travel, completing paperwork, or offering emotional support—can still fall within the wide reach of the Suicide Act 1961
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