Pulse UK

  • January 12, 2026

    Paralegal Banned From Law For Lying About Missing Docs

    A former paralegal has been permanently banned from working for law firms after a tribunal concluded Monday she lied to a firm and a client by falsely claiming documents had been misplaced.

  • January 12, 2026

    City Law Firm Liable For £2M Over Partner's AML Oversight

    A London court ruled Monday that the liquidators of a property company can recover just over £2.1 million ($3 million) from a City law firm after it found a partner had ignored obvious red flags of a client involved in fraud.

  • January 12, 2026

    Make Legal Aid Priority Like Health, Education, Bar Chair Says

    The new chair of the Bar Council called on Monday for legal aid funding to get the same kind of priority as spending on education and health care as she outlined her priorities for the year ahead.

  • January 12, 2026

    Solicitor Accused At Trial Of Stalking Court Blogger

    A solicitor stalked a legal blogger who had covered litigation in which he was involved by sending repeated emails that included threats of litigation and comments about his sexuality, prosecutors said at a London criminal court Monday.

  • January 12, 2026

    Ward Hadaway's Turnover Passes £50M With 12% Growth

    Ward Hadaway LLP said Monday that strong performances across the business have helped its annual turnover jump to more than £50 million ($67 million), an increase of about 12%.

  • January 12, 2026

    Knights Hits £103M In Revenue In First-Half Results

    Knights said Monday that a series of law firm acquisitions and a return to organic growth have helped the group's revenue pass £100 million ($135 million) as it released financial results for the first half of its current financial year.

  • January 12, 2026

    Fixed Costs Regime Unfair To Winners, Law Society Says

    The fixed recoverable costs regime is failing to deliver the certainty it promised to winning parties in civil litigation, the Law Society said Monday in response to an impending government consultation.

  • January 12, 2026

    Master Of The Rolls Geoffrey Vos To Retire

    Master of the Rolls Geoffrey Vos announced Monday that he will step down from his post as the most senior civil judge in England and Wales later in 2026.

  • January 09, 2026

    SDT Clears Two Over Trainee-Run Firm, Fines Others £40K

    A tribunal has fined two individuals a total of more than £41,000 ($55,000) for allowing a trainee to run a firm for nine months, but didn't sanction two others involved after concluding that they were misled about who would be in control. 

  • January 09, 2026

    Ropes & Gray Expands AI Program To Europe

    Ropes & Gray LLP said Friday that it has extended a program to its European offices that allows junior lawyers to spend time experimenting with artificial intelligence, empowering them to develop competency and to help drive the firm's strategy for integrating the new technology.

  • January 09, 2026

    Court Term Starts With Move To Close 'Transparency Gap'

    The start of a new court term on Monday will usher in a pilot program designed to increase the transparency of court documents, but there are unanswered questions about whether it will fulfill a stated aim of informing public understanding of court proceedings.

  • January 09, 2026

    JLG Adds 5 New Partners Amid Pogust Woes

    Johnson Law Group has added five new partners from Pogust Goodhead amid doubts over the litigation boutique's future viability.

  • January 09, 2026

    Jones Day To Help Restore David Bowie's Old London Home

    Jones Day's charitable foundation will help to restore the childhood home of musical icon David Bowie before it opens to the public in late 2027, the historical trust leading the project said Friday.

  • January 09, 2026

    Part Of Barrister's Race Bias Case Dismissed As Speculatory

    A tribunal has tossed out part of a barrister's race discrimination claim against her professional regulator, ruling that the claim was a "fishing expedition" because it was based on speculation and had no realistic prospect of success

  • January 09, 2026

    UK Litigation Roundup: Here's What You Missed In London

    This past week in London has seen a collapsed investment firm revive a $15 million dispute with a hedge fund, major Hollywood studios bring an IP claim against the U.K.'s largest internet providers over illegal streaming, and the Department of Health and Social Care sue the law firm and barrister representing it in a pharma competition damages case.

  • January 09, 2026

    Barrister Disbarred Over LLM Dissertation Plagiarism

    A barrister who was recently called was disbarred by a London legal disciplinary tribunal panel Friday after it found that he had copied another student's work and submitted it for his law master's degree dissertation.

  • January 09, 2026

    The Revolving Door: Latham Raids A&O For Finance Trio

    Over the past week, Latham & Watkins recruited a finance trio from A&O Shearman, Morgan Lewis & Bockius bolstered its employment bench with an expert from DLA Piper, and DAC Beachcroft lost a commercial disputes veteran to Shoosmiths. 

  • January 08, 2026

    Ex-UnitedHealth GC Joins WilmerHale As Partner In London

    After more than 25 years as a general counsel handling some of the direst corporate crises imaginable, former UnitedHealth Group general counsel Rupert Bondy is returning to London to co-lead WilmerHale's crisis management and strategic response group.

  • January 08, 2026

    Alston & Bird Largely Turns To Litigators In 22-Partner Class

    Alston & Bird LLP has elected 22 attorneys in Dallas, Atlanta, New York, Los Angeles, Charlotte and Raleigh, North Carolina, as well as London, to its partnership, with litigators comprising the bulk of the new partners, a move that comes after the firm promoted 20 partners in 2025.

  • January 08, 2026

    Bar Standards Board Director General To Stand Down

    The Bar Standards Board said Thursday that its director general has moved his planned retirement ahead to March as recruitment is underway for a new chief operating officer.

  • January 08, 2026

    SRA Investigates Lawyer Over Threats To Leaseholders

    The Solicitors Regulation Authority said Thursday it is investigating a London lawyer accused of bullying and threatening leaseholders into buying freeholds from him at inflated prices.

  • January 15, 2026

    Pinsent Masons Hires Litigation Pro From Close Brothers

    Pinsent Masons has hired a senior in-house solicitor from Close Brothers to boost its services to companies and financial services institutions in complex litigation.

  • January 08, 2026

    Pulse UK's 2026 NQ And Trainee Salary Tracker

    U.S. law firms continue to lead the way on the salaries paid to newly qualified solicitors in London, offering as much as £180,000 ($242,000) for lawyers who are starting out in their careers after completing training.

  • January 08, 2026

    Solicitor Accused Of Misleading Court In Personal Injury Case

    A solicitor faces being prosecuted before a tribunal over allegations that she made a series of misleading statements to the court and defense counsel when she represented a client in a personal injury matter, the Solicitors Regulation Authority has said.

  • January 07, 2026

    Three Crowns Comes To Dubai International Financial Centre

    International arbitration law firm Three Crowns LLP has expanded its global footprint with a new office in the Dubai International Financial Centre, saying it now operates out of offices in London, Paris, Singapore, Madrid and Washington, D.C., as well as in its new DIFC locale.

Expert Analysis

  • Series

    Practice Leader Insights From Baker Botts' Neil Coulson

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    Neil Coulson, chair of intellectual property at Baker Botts, discusses the challenges of tackling a patent litigation with a short timetable, the post-Brexit delineation between the European Union's and the U.K.'s approaches to trademark examination, and why it is important to be able to discourse with clients easily on technical topics.

  • Series

    Practice Leader Insights From Freshfields' Kathleen Healy

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    Kathleen Healy, partner in London and co-leader of Freshfields' people and reward practice in Asia, discusses the challenges of advising on employment and industrial relations during the financial crisis, why the employment tribunal system would benefit from additional funding, and how reforming noncompete clauses will create plenty of legal and practical issues.

  • Series

    Practice Leader Insights From HSF Kramer's Sarah McNally

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    Sarah McNally, head of the global insurance disputes practice at HSF Kramer, discusses the challenges of orchestrating an expedited proceeding during the pandemic, how document disclosure in litigation is becoming a huge burden, and why insurance is all-pervasive, and accordingly interesting and varied.

  • EU-US Data Transfer Ruling Offers Reassurance To Cos.

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    The European Union General Court’s recent upholding of the EU-U.S. Data Privacy Framework in Latombe v. European Commission, although subject to appeal, provides companies with legal certainty for the first time by allowing the transfer of European Economic Area personal data without relying on alternative mechanisms, say lawyers at Wilson Sonsini.

  • Series

    Practice Leader Insights: Shakespeare Martineau's Phil Pepper

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    Phil Pepper, head of employment at Shakespeare Martineau, discusses the challenges of working on a high-stakes case that progressed to the European Court of Justice, the need for reform of employees' rights legislation when a business transfers, and why lawyers should develop soft skills early in their careers.

  • Series

    Practice Leader Insights From Forbes' Kella Bowers

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    Kella Bowers, head of insurance at Forbes, discusses the challenges of balancing the needs of the people and institutions involved in child sexual abuse exploitation cases, why a preaction protocol for abuse work is needed, and how insurance law can enable lawyers to work on many hard-hitting issues.

  • AI Risks Legal Sector Must Consider In Dispute Resolution

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    Artificial intelligence presents significant opportunities to lawyers and decision-makers navigating increasingly data-heavy legal proceedings, but two recent cases provide a sobering reminder of the potential for misuse, say lawyers at White & Case.

  • Series

    Practice Leader Insights: Harbottle & Lewis' Yvonne Gallagher

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    Yvonne Gallagher, head of employment at Harbottle & Lewis, discusses the challenges of dealing with clients' emotions, the significance of the widening scope for discrimination disputes, and why junior lawyers should focus on learning the basic contractual and statutory principles of employment law. 

  • How Cos. Can Straddle US-UK Split On Work Misconduct, DEI

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    With U.K. regulators ordering employers to do more to prevent nonfinancial misconduct and discrimination, and President Donald Trump ordering the rollback of similar American protections, global organizations should prioritize establishing consistent workplace conduct frameworks to help balance their compliance obligations across the diverging jurisdictions, say lawyers at WilmerHale.

  • Viral Comms Crises Create Dual Corp. Governance Threats

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    As legislative hearings increase in frequency and social media fuels their reputational impact, corporate legal teams face a new dual challenge that reflects a fundamental shift in accountability and demands new strategies, governance frameworks and organizational capabilities, says Joanna Ludlam at Jenner & Block.

  • Series

    Practice Leader Insights From Mishcon's Richard Leedham

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    Richard Leedham, head of the commercial litigation practice and insurance disputes team at Mishcon de Reya, discusses the challenges of coordinating a complex lawsuit during lockdown, why the remedy for damages for late insurance claim payments is practically worthless, and the importance of focusing on hard legal argument in class actions.

  • Series

    Practice Leader Insights From V&E's David Berkery

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    David Berkery, head of aviation finance at Vinson & Elkins, discusses the challenges of striking an asset-backed securitization deal after the 2008 financial crisis rewrote the rules, why sustainable aviation goals need more government encouragement, and why young attorneys should focus on finding people they enjoy working with.

  • Series

    Practice Leader Insights From Gibson Dunn's Sandy Bhogal

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    Sandy Bhogal, co-chair of Gibson Dunn's tax practice, discusses the challenges of working on a complicated restructuring during the financial crisis, the difficulty of dealing with rules that are adjusted by nonbinding guidance, and why tax lawyers need to know the law as well as they possibly can.

  • SRA Ruling Raises Issue Of Jurisdiction Over Private Conduct

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    The recent Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal ruling, suspending a former Orrick associate after determining that a criminal offense of nonconsensual touching had occurred, serves as a cautionary tale that the regulator's jurisdiction may extend into private social settings, even where no abuse of power is proven, says Nick Brett at Brett Wilson.

  • Why Leveson Review Is Significant For UK Court System

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    Brian Leveson’s recent review into the U.K. criminal justice system calls for judge-only trials in serious and complex fraud cases, a controversial recommendation that is sparking debate over the future of jury trials, says Louise Hodges at Kingsley Napley.

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