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More questions than answers?

22 September 2016 / Dr Jon Robins
Issue: 7715 / Categories: Opinion , Legal services , Human rights
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Jon Robins reviews the Lord Chancellor’s first outing before the House of Commons’ Justice Committee

There are only so many ways of saying “Can I get back to you on that?”. The new lord chancellor must have used every single one of them in a frustrating debut before the House of Commons’ Justice Committee earlier this month.

After all the harrumphing over the appropriateness or not of Liz Truss’s appointment as our first female lord chancellor—some fair, some not—you might have expected the minister to have spent the summer mugging up on her new brief.

If she had, there wasn’t much evidence of it. Much of the session was devoted to the MPs trying to get a handle on what the change in officeholder might mean for her predecessor’s plans for the biggest shake up of prisons since Victorian times.

Pressing issues

After thanking MPs for “the fantastic opportunity to set out my agenda”, Liz Truss confirmed that, yes, sorting out our prisons was “the most pressing issue”. The second key priority

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Gibson Dunn—London partner promotions

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Residential conveyancing team expands with solicitor hire

NEWS
One in five in-house lawyers suffer ‘high’ or ‘severe’ work-related stress, according to a report by global legal body, the Association of Corporate Counsel (ACC)
The Legal Ombudsman’s (LeO’s) plea for a budget increase has been rejected by the Law Society and accepted only ‘with reluctance’ by conveyancers
Overcrowded prisons, mental health hospitals and immigration centres are failing to meet international and domestic human rights standards, the National Preventive Mechanism (NPM) has warned
Two speedier and more streamlined qualification routes have been launched for probate and conveyancing professionals
Workplace stress was a contributing factor in almost one in eight cases before the employment tribunal last year, indicating its endemic grip on the UK workplace
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