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Mental Health Nursing Skills is a highly evidence-based, practical textbook designed so students can develop and apply the skills required for practice. Written in response to the Chief Nursing Officer's review of mental health nursing, this text translates theory into clear practical skills supported by useful examples, tips and online resources.
An essential guide to the law relating to solicitors.This expert book covers all the main areas of concern to practising solicitors, whether in a sole practice or a large law firm. These range from serious issues of concern such as negligence and the solicitors' compensation fund, to every-day practical matters such as costs and fees.Written in a practical and straightforward style, this book should prove to be of great benefit to all solicitors.Covers the following:Rights and Privileges of Solicitors;Obtaining Instructions;The Contract of Retainer;The Solicitor/Client Agency Relationship;Matters Arising on a Retainer;Conflicts of Interest;Solicitors' Undertakings;Costs and Taxation;Solicitors' Liens;Liabilities of a Solicitor to a Client;Negligence;Professional Indemnity Insurance;The Solicitors' Compensation Fund;Solicitors' Accounts;Practice Structures;Partnership Matters;Competition and Restraint of Trade;Cross-Border Movement of Legal Staff;Practising Certificates;Solicitors' Conduct and Discipline;Unqualified Persons.
This book is about privacy interests in English tort law. Despite the recent recognition of a misuse of private information tort, English law remains underdeveloped. The presence of gaps in the law can be explained, to some extent, by a failure on the part of courts and legal academics to reflect on the meaning of privacy. Through comparative, critical and historical analysis, this book seeks to refine our understanding of privacy by considering our shared experience of it. To this end, the book draws on the work of Norbert Elias and Karl Popper, among others, and compares the English law of privacy with the highly elaborate German law. In doing so, the book reaches the conclusion that an unfortunate consequence of the way English privacy law has developed is that it gives the impression that justice is only for the rich and famous. If English courts are to ensure equalitarian justice, the book argues that they must reflect on the value of privacy and explore the bounds of legal possibility.
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Vol. for 1900 consists of Report of the Corporation Counsel (John Whalen) and reports of Bureau of Street Openings, Bureau for the Recovery of Penalties, assistant assigned to Department of Buildings, assistant detailed to Department of Health, bureau for collections of Arrears of Personal Taxes, and Report of proceedings against delinquent jurors for quarter ending Dec. 31, 1900.