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

  • 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

    • Lawscot Foundation

    • 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

    • Our logo and branding

    • Equality and diversity

  1. Home
  2. For members
  3. Journal Archive
  4. Issues
  5. June 2013

June 2013

Risk and the duty to inform
A recent Inner House decision highlights the difficulties facing a pursuer who attempts to argue an informed consent case relating to medical procedure
Decrofting back on track
The Crofting (Amendment) (Scotland) Bill corrects a defect in the law, and continues the process towards parity between croft tenants and owner-occupier crofters
The long road to qualify
One Scottish law graduate’s experience of voluntary legal and community work in Tanzania while he continues the search for a traineeship place
Scotland scores on “Themis” debut
How three COPFS trainees made Scotland’s first venture into the European Judicial Network “Themis” competition, presenting on international judicial co-operation, and won a place in the final
Equality and regulatory reform
The UK Government’s regulatory reforms are having an impact on equality law, including the role of the Equality & Human Rights Commission
https://lawware.co.uk/

In this issue

  • Risk and the duty to inform
  • Decrofting back on track
  • The long road to qualify
  • Scotland scores on “Themis” debut
  • Equality and regulatory reform
  • Reading for pleasure
  • Opinion column: Martin Crewe
  • Book reviews
  • Profile
  • President's column
  • What right of way?
  • Gas in the tank
  • Scotland on the world stage
  • Up there with the best
  • The Significant Seven
  • Out on 65?
  • Gatekeeping the experts
  • Fairway failings
  • Beware of solvent liquidations
  • Passing off update
  • Scottish Solicitors' Discipline Tribunal
  • Holyrood out of bounds
  • DPAs: cross-border confusion?
  • The road to land reform, but where is it going?
  • How not to win business: a guide for professionals
  • Information security: raising the bar
  • Waste: help sort it out
  • Where there's a will
  • Ask Ash
  • "Reply to all"
  • Law reform roundup
  • Incidental financial business: amendments ahead
  • Times are tough

Recent Issues

Dec 2023
Nov 2023
Oct 2023
Sept 2023
Search the archive

Additional

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: lawscot@lawscot.org.uk
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 | © 2025
Made by Gecko Agency Limited