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William Byfield’s Secret E-Diary July 2009

16 July 2009: “When sorrows come, they come not single spies But in battalions” – Hamlet. 

31 July 2009
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The Crime Writers

The Crime Writers 

The skills a barrister acquires and the atmospheric backdrop of the Inns of Court have been fully utilised by barristers writing legal-detective fiction, finds Sunil Tailor 

31 July 2009
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Taking a Stand

Sappho Dias sends a clear message to the judges purporting to try Daw Aung San Suu Kyi.  

31 July 2009
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The District Line

Martin Bowley QC charts the route of Robin Griffith-Jones, Master of the Temple at the Temple Church, from Westminster to the Temple, by way of Oxford, Calcutta, Cambridge and Liverpool 

31 July 2009
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Joining Forces

David Pittaway QC outlines how Inner Temple, working in conjuncture with the National Educational Trust, is making the Bar more accessible as a career path for school children.  

The Neuberger Report marked a step-change in the thinking of the Inns of Court as to how they should address the issue of access to the profession, as well as being the providers of education to Bar Vocational Course (“BVC”) students, pupils and new practitioners. For some years the Inns have run their own programmes, in an increasingly co-ordinated way, largely focussing on universities and providing substantial merit or means-tested scholarships or bursaries to give financial assistance to students whatever their background wanting to join the profession. 

30 June 2009
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William Byfield’s Secret E-Diary June 2009

22 June 2009: HERE WE GO GATHERING NUTS IN MAY (AND JUNE)! 

30 June 2009
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The Future is Bright

Lord Justice Jackson has recognised the advantages of third party funding in his interim report on civil costs. The Bar needs to be aware of this mechanism, believes Timothy Mayer 

30 June 2009
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The Reckoning

Iain Morley QC worked for four years at the UN International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda in Tanzania prosecuting four cases of genocide in Rwanda. He reports on the work performed by the tribunal.  

Between April and July 1994, in 100 days, at an average rate of 10,000 souls per day, almost one million minority defenceless civilian Tutsi men women and children were systematically butchered by the Hutu majority throughout Rwanda, mostly with machetes, knives, spears, and cudgels, sometimes with grenades and firearms, sometimes by the army and police, but mostly by fearsome civilian militias often called the Interahamwe. There is evidence very many of the several hundred thousand women were raped before being murdered. The pretext for the carnage was the assassination of the Hutu President Juvenal Habyrimana on 6 April 1994, against a background of ethnic troubles over generations, smoldering particularly after the advent of independence from Belgium in 1959. 

30 June 2009
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A Lord of Appeal Extraordinary

The Rt Hon Lord Slynn of Hadley PC, GBE, QC was an outstanding advocate and judge, writes Khawar Qureshi QC 

30 June 2009
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Lindsay Scott

Name: Lindsay Scott
Position: Chief Executive
Chambers: Matrix Chambers 

30 June 2009
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Chair’s Column

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In the Chair: the roads ahead

Kirsty Brimelow KC, Chair of the Bar, sets our course for 2026

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