Progress continues towards a settlement in a court action brought by thousands of shareholders against the Royal Bank of Scotland, senior counsel has said. The case was meant to begin this week but has been adjourned to allow settlement discussions between the bank and investors to take place.
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Staff at ByrneWallace took part in their first choir competition at the National Workplace Choir of The Year Competition.
A man whose wife changed her surname for a supermarket promotion was caught on film taking revenge — by filling her car with cement. The man was seen on video outside a St Petersburg grocery shop using a cement-mixing truck to dump the substance through the car window.
An employee of the Health Service Executive has been granted a declaration to the effect that the HSE’s unilateral decision to temporarily reassign her from her role as Area Director of Nursing, Mental Health Services to a position within the Programme Management Office, constituted a breach of he
Over 400 lawyers have been welcomed to Belfast for the International Bar Association's Bar Leaders' Conference and Mid-Year Meetings.
Professor Eoin O'Dell A digital rights expert has warned that the State could face repercussions if the Data Protection Bill is not amended to explicitly provide for compensation in case of personal data abuse.
The Irish Human Rights and Equality Commission has welcomed a landmark Supreme Court ruling that clarifies the rights of disabled students to receive accommodations within the education system. The test case, brought by dyslexic student Kim Cahill, focused on the nature of the duties owed by the Min
Karen Kearney Karen Kearney, medical negligence solicitor at Cantillons Solicitors in Cork, questions if the Government has learned lessons from a new report on perinatal deaths.
Senator Ivana Bacik A bill mandating companies with over 50 employees to publish information about any pay gap between men and women in their organisation has been approved by Senators.
Richard Grogan Employment law solicitor Richard Grogan of Richard Grogan & Associates writes on the need for employers to think ahead to their employees' retirement.
20 June In the matter of an application by Jason Loughlin for Judicial Review (Northern Ireland)
Kathleen O’Toole The Commission of the Future of Policing in Ireland met for the first time in Dublin yesterday.
Over 100 CEOs, directors and business professionals examined their preparedness for Brexit at a ByrneWallace seminar yesterday. Micheál Martin, leader of Fianna Fáil, was the guest of honour, outlining his party's attitude to Brexit and proposed initiatives to support the Irish business community.
A defendant who made the mistake of addressing a judge as "mate" was escorted back to the cells for his disrespect. Sebastian Stroud, 35, gave a casual response when Judge Simon Cooper asked how he was going to pay a backlog of fines.
Fíona Ní Chinnéide A penal reform group has raised concerns after the Oireachtas justice committee voted to amend the Parole Bill 2016 to raise the period of ineligibility for parole for life-sentenced prisoners from eight to 12 years.

