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judge:"Steven Andrews"
court:Florida
topic:"Civil Appeals"
practicearea:Lobbying
"Steven Andrews" AND Litigation
"Steven Andrews" OR "Roger Dalton"
Litigation NOT "Roger Dalton"
"Steven Andrews" AND Litigation NOT Florida
(Florida OR Georgia) judge:"Steven Andrews"
((Florida AND Georgia) OR Texas) topic:"Civil Appeals"
2,517 results for 'Addleshaw Goddard/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////' You can use Search Constraints to get even better search results
October 30, 2008 |
Addleshaw Goddard has boosted its professional practices and limited liability partnership (LLP) group with the hire of new partner Rachel Khiara.Khiara joins the national law firm from Allen & Overy, where she held the position of counsel. At A&O she assisted the funds group on the establishment of LLP fund managers, as well as advising on traditional partnership issues and LLP conversions. She will formally take up her new position next month (10 November).Richard Linsell, head of the professional practices and LLP group, said: "Few solicitors are real specialists in this practice area and none, other than our team at Addleshaw Goddard, do it all the time."Rachel has been involved in the LLP movement from its outset and is someone we have always admired. We have recruited her to help with client handling, where we have too many clients for the current partners to look after, and Rachel is looking forward to this exciting new role."The hire follows the top 20 UK law firm's separate announcement earlier this month it has made 16 redundancies in the last 12 months, including two part-time fee earners and 14 support staff. The cuts came across the firm's London, Leeds and Manchester practices.
1 minute read
October 29, 2008 |
Proskauer Rose has made its first partner-level hire in London since January with the arrival of Michael Crosby from Addleshaw Goddard. Crosby will head up the firm's corporate finance group in the City. He advisers lenders and borrowers on all aspects of acquisition financings, debt restructurings, recapitalisations and leveraged buyouts.Proskauer's London managing partner Matthew Hudson said: "Michael's background and practice will allow us to fully expand our finance platform into the UK and capitalise on these opportunities on behalf of our clients."
1 minute read
October 23, 2008 |
Addleshaw Goddard has joined forces with a host of top names in the litigation funding market to launch a £50m action on behalf of a group of claimants against a London law firm. Addleshaws and three funders have signed up around 500 individuals to bring the claim against the law firm and a foreign business national over advice they gave on technology investment schemes, which they claim were unsuccessful.The group action, which is still to be filed, is being funded through a groundbreaking financial litigation package combining conditional fee agreements, after-the-event insurance (ATE) and third-party funding.
1 minute read
October 14, 2008 |
Allen & Overy (A&O) has landed a mandate to advise Britannia Building Society on its merger discussions with Co-operative Financial Services (CFS). Corporate partner Richard Slynn is leading a team advising Britannia on the early stages of talks that could see a marriage between the two building societies, creating an organisation worth more than £70bn in assets.The instruction marks the second major M&A role for Slynn in as many months after Nationwide turned to longstanding adviser A&O on its August takeover of Derbyshire and Cheshire building societies.
1 minute read
October 14, 2008 |
Long hours and barriers to flexible working could cause a drain on the legal profession with young mothers and fathers struggling to find a balance between family and career, new research has found. Legal Lives: Retaining Talent through a Balanced Culture, sponsored by Addleshaw Goddard and compiled by work-life balance charity Working Families, surveyed 13 City law firms on their approach to work-life balance.The study will be published today (14 October) at the Legal Lives conference at the Stock Exchange, to be addressed by Baroness Scotland.
1 minute read
October 13, 2008 |
National law firm Addleshaw Goddard has made 16 redundancies over the course of this financial year, it has emerged. The firm has cut two part-time fee earners, while a further 14 support staff have been made redundant, with six being axed from the City office and four each from the firm's branches in Leeds and Manchester. A further part-time fee-earner was also cut last NovemberThe majority of the redundancies were made during July, with some of the redundancies taking place earlier in the year. The number of losses represents the highest number of cuts at the firm in a single year since 2003, with the firm making redundancies every year since 2005.
1 minute read
October 10, 2008 |
Clifford Chance (CC), Herbert Smith, Addleshaw Goddard and Eversheds have all been recognised as top places to work for women. All four firms feature in The Times's Top 50 'Where Women Want to Work' ranking. Herbert Smith is the only new entrant to the rankings, which are now in their third year. Addleshaws has featured in all three years, with CC and Eversheds making the grade in 2007 in addition to 2008.
1 minute read
October 9, 2008 | International Edition
Beachcroft has launched a mentoring scheme intended to help newly-promoted lawyers adapt to changes in their roles.More than 60 of the national law firm's partners and staff have signed up to mentor lawyers at the firm, as part of a scheme that was officially rolled out at the beginning of the month. The programme, which is primarily aimed at helping salaried partners make the steps to the equity ranks, will also see trainees within the firm assigned a mentor throughout their two-year training contract.Around 25 individuals, including partners, senior associates and human resources officers, have so far been trained as mentors, with a similar number expected to be trained by the end of the month.Lawyers will be able to turn to their mentors for advice on issues concerning their clients, their roles within the firm and their career path. Beachcroft's human resources director, Phil Cousins, said: "In the broadest sense it is to help a gradual cultural shift to a coaching style as opposed to the conventional directive style typical to lawyers. As a result, one of the tactics of the scheme is, in a sense, as much about coaching as it is about mentoring. "Rather than open up the floodgates we are taking a gradual approach so the scheme is welcomed, beneficial and wanted. We need to take it steadily to show that effective mentoring can be achieved."Many of London's law firms, including Berwin Leighton Paisner, Allen & Overy and Addleshaw Goddard, already operate some form of mentoring system for lawyers.Separately, SJ Berwin has become the latest firm to explore the option of alternative career paths. The firm is consulting with its associate solicitors forum about the option of bringing in an alternative to partner, potentially bringing in an 'of counsel' role. Legal Week's assistant report, published late last month, found that 67% of law firms now operate some form of partnership alternative, with firms including Olswang and Nabarro among more recent converts.
1 minute read
October 9, 2008 |
Beachcroft has launched a mentoring scheme intended to help newly-promoted lawyers adapt to changes in their roles.More than 60 of the national law firm's partners and staff have signed up to mentor lawyers at the firm, as part of a scheme that was officially rolled out at the beginning of the month. The programme, which is primarily aimed at helping salaried partners make the steps to the equity ranks, will also see trainees within the firm assigned a mentor throughout their two-year training contract.Around 25 individuals, including partners, senior associates and human resources officers, have so far been trained as mentors, with a similar number expected to be trained by the end of the month.Lawyers will be able to turn to their mentors for advice on issues concerning their clients, their roles within the firm and their career path. Beachcroft's human resources director, Phil Cousins, said: "In the broadest sense it is to help a gradual cultural shift to a coaching style as opposed to the conventional directive style typical to lawyers. As a result, one of the tactics of the scheme is, in a sense, as much about coaching as it is about mentoring. "Rather than open up the floodgates we are taking a gradual approach so the scheme is welcomed, beneficial and wanted. We need to take it steadily to show that effective mentoring can be achieved."Many of London's law firms, including Berwin Leighton Paisner, Allen & Overy and Addleshaw Goddard, already operate some form of mentoring system for lawyers.Separately, SJ Berwin has become the latest firm to explore the option of alternative career paths. The firm is consulting with its associate solicitors forum about the option of bringing in an alternative to partner, potentially bringing in an 'of counsel' role. Legal Week's assistant report, published late last month, found that 67% of law firms now operate some form of partnership alternative, with firms including Olswang and Nabarro among more recent converts.
1 minute read
October 2, 2008 |
It is hard to imagine an industry that, on paper, is less exposed to asset price bubbles, the vagaries of financial markets or the risks of leverage. And yet, as a string of law firm redundancy announcements in recent weeks have made clear, law firms have been far from immune to the speculative bubble that built up since the mid-1990s in the UK property market.With hundreds of redundancies now announced in real estate (see box, right) - including more than 100 jobs being officially put under threat in redundancy consultations last week alone - it has become clear that UK law firms have too many jobs for a real estate sector that is set to substantially shrink over the next two years. So much for cautious, conservative law firms.
1 minute read