Skip to content
Law Society of Scotland
Search
Find a Solicitor
Contact us
About us
Sign in
Search
Find a Solicitor
Contact us
About us
Sign in
  • For members

    • For members

    • CPD & Training

    • Membership and fees

    • Rules and guidance

    • Regulation and compliance

    • Journal

    • Business support

    • Career growth

    • Member benefits

    • Professional support

    • Lawscot Wellbeing

    • Lawscot Sustainability

    • Lawscot Tech

  • News and events

    • News and events

    • Law Society news

    • Blogs & opinions

    • CPD & Training

    • Events

  • Qualifying and education

    • Qualifying and education

    • Qualifying as a Scottish solicitor

    • Career support and advice

    • Our work with schools

    • Funding your education

    • Social mobility

  • Research and policy

    • Research and policy

    • Research

    • Influencing the law and policy

    • Equality and diversity

    • Our international work

    • Legal Services Review

    • Meet the Policy team

  • For the public

    • For the public

    • What solicitors can do for you

    • Making a complaint

    • Client protection

    • Find a Solicitor

    • Frequently asked questions

    • Your Scottish solicitor

  • About us

    • About us

    • Contact us

    • Who we are

    • Our strategy, reports and plans

    • Help and advice

    • Our standards

    • Work with us

    • Equality and diversity

Journal logo
  • PRACTICE

    PRACTICE

    • Practice

    • Corporate law

    • Criminal law

    • Employment law

    • Environment law

    • Family law

    • Industry updates

    • Intellectual property

    • Property law

    • Technology law

    • Technology and innovation

    • Practice

    • Corporate law

    • Criminal law

    • Employment law

    • Environment law

    • Family law

    • Industry updates

    • Intellectual property

    • Property law

    • Technology law

    • Technology and innovation

  • PEOPLE

    PEOPLE

    • People

    • Equality, diversity & inclusion

    • Ethics & professional responsibility

    • Obituaries

    • Wellbeing & support

    • Noticeboard

    • From the President's desk

    • People

    • Equality, diversity & inclusion

    • Ethics & professional responsibility

    • Obituaries

    • Wellbeing & support

    • Noticeboard

    • From the President's desk

  • CAREERS

    CAREERS

    • Careers

    • Job board

    • Leadership

    • Management

    • Skills

    • Training & education

    • Careers

    • Job board

    • Leadership

    • Management

    • Skills

    • Training & education

  • KNOWLEDGE BANK

    KNOWLEDGE BANK

    • Knowledge Bank

    • Book club

    • Interviews

    • Sponsored content

    • Next generation

    • The Future of Law on our High Streets

    • In-House – Behind the Scenes

    • Space — Scotland's Next Legal Frontier

    • 2026 Employment & Salary Survey

    • Knowledge Bank

    • Book club

    • Interviews

    • Sponsored content

    • Next generation

    • The Future of Law on our High Streets

    • In-House – Behind the Scenes

    • Space — Scotland's Next Legal Frontier

    • 2026 Employment & Salary Survey

  • ABOUT THE JOURNAL

    ABOUT THE JOURNAL

    • About the Journal

    • Contact us

    • Journal Editorial Advisory Board

    • Newsletter sign-up

    • About the Journal

    • Contact us

    • Journal Editorial Advisory Board

    • Newsletter sign-up

Meet the five new Senators appointed to the College of Justice by His Majesty the King including former Lord Advocate

30th June 2026 Written by: Joshua King
Former Lord Advocate Dorothy Bain KC is one of the newly appointed judges.

His Majesty the King, on the recommendation of First Minister John Swinney, has appointed five new Senators to the College of Justice, including a former Lord Advocate.

Sheriff Principal Anwar KC, Liam Ewing KC, Indranil (Julian) Ghosh KC and Christine O’Neill KC will take up appointment on 24 August 2026. The Rt Hon. Dorothy Bain PC KC will take up appointment on 7 January 2027.

Lord Pentland, Lord President of the Court of Session said: “I would like to thank the Judicial Appointments Board for Scotland for undertaking the appointment process. I warmly congratulate the five new Senators with whom I look forward to working. Each new Senator brings a distinctive breadth of legal knowledge and professional experience, developed across a wide range of practice areas. That diversity of expertise will be invaluable to them.”

The Lord President added that their contributions would help maintain the strength, integrity and independence of the court system. He expressed confidence that the new Senators would support the continued provision of high quality justice for the people of Scotland.

Senators hear a wide variety of important civil and criminal business in the Supreme Courts of Scotland.

They preside over the most complex and high-profile cases where decisions have a significant impact.

In the Court of Session, Senators hear an extensive range of civil business including commercial, family, immigration and international child abduction cases. Judicial review cases often involve important and novel points of public law. In the High Court of Justiciary, Senators preside over the most serious criminal cases.

Sheriff Principal Aisha Anwar KC

Sheriff Principal Aisha Anwar KC was appointed Sheriff Principal of Glasgow and Strathkelvin and President of the Sheriff Appeal Court in 2023 and as a Temporary Judge in 2024.

She graduated from the University of Edinburgh (LLB Hons) in 1996 and from the University of Oxford (BCL) in 1998. She was admitted as a solicitor in 2000. From 2009 to 2012 she became a partner and head of litigation for Scotland in a global law firm.

She was appointed as a part-time sheriff in 2011 and as a sheriff at Glasgow Sheriff Court in 2014 where she was a designated family law and commercial law sheriff. She was appointed Sheriff Principal of South Strathclyde, Dumfries and Galloway in 2020 and as Honorary King’s Counsel in 2024.

Sheriff Principal Anwar designed and developed Summary Case Management (SCM) and chairs the SCM Board. She is an adviser to the Scottish Sentencing Council, a member of the Board of the Scottish Courts and Tribunal Service and a former member of the Judicial Appointments Board for Scotland.

She co-authored the Civil Bench Book for Sheriffs on behalf of the Judicial Institute and is a contributor to the 4th edition of Macphail on Sheriff Court Practice.

Dorothy Bain PC KC

The Right Honourable Dorothy Ruth Bain PC KC is a graduate of the University of Aberdeen who has been in practice at the Scottish Bar since 1994. She was awarded silk in 2007 and served as Scotland’s Lord Advocate from June 2021 until her tenure concluded in June 2026. A significant part of her career has been dedicated to public service as an Advocate Depute which culminated in her appointment as Principal Crown Counsel for Scotland from 2009 to 2011, the first women to hold this prosecutorial position in Scotland. She has appeared in many leading cases in the fields of public and administrative law, human rights and criminal law heard before the Court of Session, Edinburgh, the Court of Criminal Appeal, and the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom. In 2021 she was appointed to the Privy Council, and in 2023, the University of Aberdeen awarded her an Honorary LLD (Doctor of Laws).

Liam Ewing KC

Liam Ewing is a graduate of the University of Glasgow (LLB Hons) and the University of Strathclyde (LLM). He qualified as a solicitor in 1990 and has both criminal and civil rights of audience. Mr Ewing practised in the criminal, civil and regulatory fields and became a KC in 2019. He has served as an Advocate Depute since 2018 and was subsequently appointed Assistant Principal Crown Counsel. During his time at Crown Office, he conducted a range of complex prosecutions and appeals.

Indranil (Julian) Ghosh KC

Julian Ghosh is an Edinburgh University law graduate. He holds a DPhil from St Edmunds Hall, Oxford and a PhD from Clare Hall, Cambridge. He practised at the Bar of both England and Wales (Lincoln’s Inn, called 1993, Queen’s Counsel 2006) and Scotland (called 1999, Queen’s Counsel 2010), with a primarily tax practice in England and a mixed practice (latterly including crime) in Scotland. He is a Bye-Fellow at Peterhouse, Cambridge and a Preceptor at Corpus Christi, Cambridge, having taught undergraduates across a range of private law and public law subjects. He represented Scotland as a fencer for Scottish Universities, several Five Nations tournaments and at the Commonwealth Games (2018 and 2022).

Christine O’Neill KC

Christine O'Neill holds an LLB in Moral Philosophy & Public Law from the University of Glasgow and an LLM from Harvard Law School where she was a Kennedy Scholar. She taught at Edinburgh Law School before joining Brodies in 2000. A partner from 2004, she was Chair of the firm from 2013 to 2025. She became a solicitor advocate in 2008, was first Standing Junior to the Scottish Government between 2016 and 2020 and was appointed Queen's Counsel in 2020. She is co-author, with Professor Chris Himsworth and David Blair, of Scotland's Constitution: Law and Practice.

SPONSORED: Why law firms should invest in a cyber incident response simulation

6th July 2026
Cyber resilience requires firms to have a proven and workable incident response plan that gives them the best chance to survive and recover from a serious cyber breach, writes Lindsay Hill, solicitor and CEO of Mitigo Cyber Risk Management.

Weekly roundup of Scots law in the headlines including calls to scrap Lord Advocate's dual role — Monday July 6

6th July 2026
You weekly roundup of Scots law in the headlines including an announcement by the Law Society of Scotland calling on the government to consult on changing the role of the Lord Advocate.

The end of the affair: Are partnerships no longer lawyers’ chosen corporate relationships?

3rd July 2026
Will the traditional partnership structure still appeal to lawyers in years to come? Peter Ranscombe reports.
About the author
Joshua King
Editor of the Journal of the Law Society of Scotland. Leading The Journal's coverage of the legal sector and profession with a clear eye to the future. Qualified in Scots law.
About
Add To Favorites

Additional

www.production5.co.uk
https://lawware.co.uk
https://yourcashier.co.uk/

Related Articles

The end of the affair: Are partnerships no longer lawyers’ chosen corporate relationships?

3rd July 2026
Will the traditional partnership structure still appeal to lawyers in years to come? Peter Ranscombe reports.

New £1,000 student prize to find future star of Scotland’s legal sector

1st July 2026
Budding lawyers across Scotland are poised to battle it out to win a prestigious £1,000 student prize and the chance...

‘What is it like to launch a firm in a new city?’ Inside the challenges and opportunities

26th June 2026
Andersonbain’s expansion into Glasgow is more than just new premises: it’s the opportunity to build a fresh new culture built...

Journal issues archive

Find all previous editions of the Journal here.

Issues about Journal issues archive
Law Society of Scotland
Atria One, 144 Morrison Street
Edinburgh
EH3 8EX
If you’re looking for a solicitor, visit FindaSolicitor.scot
T: +44(0) 131 226 7411
E: [email protected]
About us
  • Contact us
  • Who we are
  • Strategy reports plans
  • Help and advice
  • Our standards
  • Work with us
Useful links
  • Find a Solicitor
  • Sign in
  • CPD & Training
  • Rules and guidance
  • Website terms and conditions
Law Society of Scotland | © 2026
Made by Gecko Agency Limited