PLC Public Sector reports:
Make sure that you have not missed a key development in your area of the law by reviewing our latest list of recommended actions. Continue reading
PLC Public Sector reports:
Make sure that you have not missed a key development in your area of the law by reviewing our latest list of recommended actions. Continue reading
Our January 2013 case digest includes the latest on cases concerning undertakings in damages in public procurement claims and the interaction of the information law and public procurement regimes.
Readers may also be interested in our digest of cases from 2012, which provides links to all of our public procurement case digests for 2012, with details of the key cases covered.
Please feel free to submit a comment below or contact us at: feedback@practicallaw.com if you have any views on the cases covered or think that we have missed a case that should be brought to the attention of public procurement practitioners.
PLC Public Sector reports:
This post provides links to all of our public procurement case digests for 2012, with details of the key cases covered in each of the posts. Links to our full updates on these cases can be found in the individual digest posts.
PLC Public Sector reports:
Make sure that you have not missed a key development in your area of the law by reviewing our latest list of recommended actions. Continue reading
This is the first of our new series of quarterly local government update blogs, which will enable readers specialising in local government law to catch up on the most important cases, issues or developments. This post looks at developments from November 2012 to January 2013, when the most interesting developments have been two recent cases dealing with local government powers.
Please feel free to submit a comment below or contact us at feedback@practicallaw.com if you have any views on the cases, issues, or legal development that is covered or if you think we have missed something that should be brought to the attention of local government practitioners. Continue reading
William Upton, Barrister, Six Pump Court and Fran Aldson:
[a version of this article was previously published in the UK Environmental Law Association’s journal, e-law, issue 74]
“The Practicalities of the Presumption in Favour of Sustainable Development” was a joint event was organised by UKELA and the Planning and Environment Bar Association (PEBA). Led by Morag Ellis QC, the Chairman of PEBA, our speakers were Dr Hugh Ellis (Chief Planner with the TCPA), Ben Linscott (the Planning Inspectorate, Group Manager (Planning)), and John Rhodes (Quod, Planning Consultant and one of the four authors of the practitioners’ draft of the NPPF). It was held on 22 November in the excellent lecture hall at Simmons & Simmons, and led to some robust discussion.
In this post William Upton and Fran Aldson, the Convenors of the UKELA Planning and Sustainable Development Working Party, identify the 10 key things to take away from the seminar.
PLC Public Sector reports:
Make sure that you have not missed a key development in your area of the law by reviewing our latest list of recommended actions. Continue reading
As the weather becomes even more miserable (unless you are a pupil out sledging instead of in the classroom) and Christmas cheer is but a distant memory, we though it would be a good time to reflect on 2012 and what it meant for PLC Public Sector and its subscribers.
In this post we take a look at our most popular content of 2012 and the new content we have published.
PLC Public Sector reports:
Make sure that you have not missed a key development in your area of the law by reviewing our latest list of recommended actions. Continue reading
PLC Public Sector reports:
Our December 2012 case digest includes an update on the latest cases on taking account of service user choice and the difference between selection and award criteria.
Please feel free to submit a comment below or contact us at: feedback@practicallaw.com if you have any views on the cases covered or think that we have missed a case that should be brought to the attention of public procurement practitioners.