header-logo header-logo

19 February 2026
Categories: Movers & Shakers , Profession
printer mail-detail

Hugh James—Jonathan Askin

London corporate and commercial team announces partner appointment

Hugh James has appointed Jonathan Askin as a partner in its commercial practice, bolstering its corporate and commercial team and sector expertise in London. The move marks a further step in the continued growth of the firm’s London office and wider national offering.

Askin joins with more than 20 years’ experience as a commercial lawyer, including senior leadership roles at Top 50 UK law firms and time in-house with the UK Government as senior legal counsel (commercial). He has advised clients ranging from PLCs and multinationals to owner-managed businesses and start-ups, with expertise spanning complex supply chain and outsourcing contracts, data and AI governance, and large-scale public sector outsourcing and procurement matters.

Aled Walters, partner and head of the commercial practice, said: ‘Jonathan’s appointment is a significant boost for our London office and our commercial practice… He brings additional strength, depth and credentials to many of our current sector groups… and we’re thrilled to have him on board.’

Askin added: ‘Hugh James has a clear strategy for developing a high-quality, sector-focused commercial offering… I’m looking forward to contributing to that growth and working with teams across the firm.’

MOVERS & SHAKERS

Hugh James—Jonathan Askin

Hugh James—Jonathan Askin

London corporate and commercial team announces partner appointment

Michelman Robinson—Daniel Burbeary

Michelman Robinson—Daniel Burbeary

Firm names partner as London office managing partner

Kingsley Napley—Jonathan Grimes

Kingsley Napley—Jonathan Grimes

Firm appoints new head of criminal litigation team

NEWS
Personal injury lawyers have welcomed a government U-turn on a ‘substantial prejudice’ defence that risked enabling defendants in child sexual abuse civil cases to have proceedings against them dropped
Children can claim for ‘lost years’ damages in personal injury cases, the Supreme Court has held in a landmark judgment
Holiday lets may promise easy returns, but restrictive covenants can swiftly scupper plans. Writing in NLJ this week, Andrew Francis of Serle Court recounts how covenants limiting use to a ‘private dwelling house’ or ‘private residence’ have repeatedly defeated short-term letting schemes
Artificial intelligence (AI) is already embedded in the civil courts, but regulation lags behind practice. Writing in NLJ this week, Ben Roe of Baker McKenzie charts a landscape where AI assists with transcription, case management and document handling, yet raises acute concerns over evidence, advocacy and even judgment-writing
The cab-rank rule remains a bulwark of the rule of law, yet lawyers are increasingly judged by their clients’ causes. Writing in NLJ this week, Ian McDougall, president of the LexisNexis Rule of Law Foundation, warns that conflating representation with endorsement is a ‘clear and present danger’
back-to-top-scroll