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This critical report provides the most up-to-date and detailed
guide to the practical, regulatory and ethical considerations that
must be reflected in your partnership agreement. Extensively
revised, the second edition features new case studies and real-life
examples, including a sample agreement precedent and comprehensive
updates to reflect how new legal and regulatory developments will
affect your deed. Key subjects covered include: *The impact of the
Legal Services Act on partnership agreements; *Discrimination in
partnerships, in particular, age discrimination; *Outcomes-focused
regulation; *New business structures; *Distressed partnerships;
*Current trends in mergers; *Profit-sharing arrangements and
management structures: *The equality system *Profit share by
capital contribution *Seniority (lockstep) *Merit or performance
systems *Hybrid profit sharing systems *Retirement annuities
*Performance measurement, supervision and disciplinary measures;
*De-equitisation: provisions for expulsion from the partnership;
*Expulsion, retirement and dissolution; *Good faith, arbitration
and mediation; *Drafting for the future, avoiding early revisions
and much more - Ensure you understand the necessary considerations
of an agreement that not only fulfils legislative requirement, but
ensures the attraction, retention and motivation of the best talent
for your firm.
With the introduction of Alternative Business Structures fast
approaching and more and more partnerships converting to LLP status
to meet the new requirements and remain competitive - now may be
the time to start considering the benefits of conversion for your
own firm. The conversion process can be a challenging one with
wide-reaching implications. But a successful LLP conversion can
provide the ideal opportunity to review your core business
operations, allowing you to plan positive change and growth in an
increasingly competitive and changing market. Managing Partner's
new report on LLP Conversion for Law Firms provides a highly
practical, step-by-step guide specifically taking into account the
unique considerations that are raised by today's economy and
evolving legal marketplace. It highlights the key questions that
need to be asked during the preparation and transition stages, as
well as how to deal with the complications that may arise after
conversion has taken place. Key topics covered include: +
Converting from a partnership to an LLP - key considerations and
trends; + Advantages and disadvantages of converting from a
partnership to an LLP; + Preparatory work and practical issues
involved; + The default provisions and their drawbacks; + Tailoring
the LLP agreement to reflect the needs of your firm; + Transferring
the existing partnership business into the LLP - key issues and
contractual obligations; + The general tax treatment of limited
liability partnerships - possible complications that may arise
after the conversion and how they might be handled; + Management
and technical resources involved in the conversion - Is outsourcing
an option? + The implications of the Legal Services Act 2007 and
the introduction of Alternative Business Structures. LLP Conversion
for Law Firms includes valuable behind-the-scenes access to
existing LLPs and the common pitfalls and successes they
encountered through the conversion process. In addition, you will
also find a precedent for an LLP agreement within the Appendix.
Whats more ...this publication comes complete with a complimentary
CDRom containing all the required forms for an LLP agreement in an
easy to access format. About the author Nicholas Wright is chief
executive of Wright Son & Pepper. He has specialised in LLPs
and professional regulation for over 15 years and has been a member
of the Solicitors' Assistance Scheme for most of that time. He has
acted for a number of substantial firms in dealing with regulatory
issues, as well as dealing with drafting, restructuring issues and
disputes.
A two-play dramatisation of Philip Pullman's extraordinary
award-winning fantasy trilogy, first seen at the National Theatre.
His Dark Materials takes us on a thrilling journey through worlds
familiar and unknown. For Lyra and Will, its two central
characters, it's a coming of age and a transforming spiritual
experience. Their great quest demands a savage struggle against the
most dangerous of enemies. They encounter fantastical creatures in
parallel worlds - rebellious angels, soul-eating spectres,
child-catching Gobblers and the armoured bears and witch-clans of
the Arctic. Finally, before reaching, perhaps, the republic of
heaven, they must visit the land of the dead. This adaptation of
Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials, by Nicholas Wright, was first
performed at the National Theatre in London in 2003.
This book examines the impact on member states of long-term foreign
policy co-operation through the EU's Common Foreign and Security
Policy (CFSP). Focusing on Germany and the UK, it provides an
up-to-date account of how they have navigated and responded to the
demands co-operation places on all member states and how their
national foreign policies and policy-making processes have changed
and adapted as a consequence. As well as exploring in depth the
foreign policy traditions and institutions in both states, the book
also offers detailed analyses of how they addressed two major
policy questions: the Iranian nuclear crisis; and the establishment
and development of the European External Action Service. The book's
synthesis of country and case studies seeks to add to our
understanding of the nature of inter-state co-operation in the area
of foreign and security policy and what it means for the states
involved.
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8 Hotels (Paperback)
Nicholas Wright
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R278
R242
Discovery Miles 2 420
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'Iago only suspected it. I know.' Celebrated actor, singer and
political campaigner Paul Robeson is touring the United States of
America as Othello. His Desdemona is the brilliant young actress
Uta Hagen. Her husband, the Broadway star Jose Ferrer, plays Iago.
The actors are all friends, but they are not all equals. As the
tour progresses, onstage passions and offstage lives begin to blur.
Revenge takes many forms and in post-war America it isn't always
purely personal - it can be disturbingly political too. Based on
true events, Nicholas Wright's play 8 Hotels was first staged at
the Minerva Theatre, Chichester, in 2019, in a production directed
by Richard Eyre.
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Regeneration (Paperback)
Nicholas Wright; Originally written by Pat Barker
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R381
Discovery Miles 3 810
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Craiglockhart, Scotland, 1917. In a hospital for shell-shocked
officers, a brilliant doctor provides the cures required to send
his patients back to War. Under his tolerant reign, two young
officers form a passionate comradeship. Each is a poet, one
unknown, the other privileged and successful. Mentored by the older
man, the younger falls in love; his genius flowers and he becomes
the greater writer. But as his health is restored, he must face a
return to battle. ** "Nicholas Wright's deeply moving play stays
true to Barker's vision while highlighting its own chosen themes of
companionship, guilt and inequality" Michael Billington, Guardian
"I was raptly absorbed throughout by this superb stage version of
Pat Barker's award-winning First World War novel...gutting and
unmissable" Paul Taylor, The Independent
Eugene de Kock was a paid white political assassin nick-named
"Prime Evil" for his crimes against anti-apartheid activists. While
serving his two life sentences, black psychologist Pumla
Gobodo-Madikizela went to interview him hoping to seek humanity and
forgiveness within the government-sanctioned monster. The
thought-provoking interogation moves from clinical to intimate in a
cell where fear and compassion coexist.
Few scientists have made lasting contributions to as many fields as Francis Galton. He was an important African explorer, travel writer, and geographer. He was the meteorologist who discovered the anticyclone, a pioneer in using fingerprints to identify individuals, the inventor of regression and correlation analysis in statistics, and the founder of the eugenics movement. Now, Nicholas Gillham paints an engaging portrait of this Victorian polymath.
Dieses Buch untersucht die Auswirkungen der langfristigen
außenpolitischen Zusammenarbeit im Rahmen der Gemeinsamen Außen-
und Sicherheitspolitik (GASP) der EU auf die Mitgliedstaaten. Es
konzentriert sich auf Deutschland und das Vereinigte Königreich
und liefert einen aktuellen Bericht darüber, wie sie die
Anforderungen, die die Zusammenarbeit an alle Mitgliedstaaten
stellt, bewältigt haben und wie sich ihre nationalen
Außenpolitiken und politischen Entscheidungsprozesse infolgedessen
verändert und angepasst haben. Das Buch untersucht nicht nur die
außenpolitischen Traditionen und Institutionen beider Staaten,
sondern bietet auch detaillierte Analysen darüber, wie sie zwei
wichtige politische Fragen angegangen sind: die iranische
Nuklearkrise und die Einrichtung und Entwicklung des Europäischen
Auswärtigen Dienstes. Die Synthese von Länder- und Fallstudien in
diesem Buch soll dazu beitragen, das Wesen der zwischenstaatlichen
Zusammenarbeit im Bereich der Außen- und Sicherheitspolitik und
ihre Bedeutung für die beteiligten Staaten besser zu verstehen.
Exciting and provocative... Overall, this courageous, well-written
book provides us with a ground-breaking survey. It brings out a
story of the Hundred Years War that has long needed to be told, and
will deservedly form an essential addition to reading on the
subject. HISTORY TODAY
This alternative account of peasant life during crisis is a
welcome addition to the historiography of late-medieval France... a
useful corrective to most standard interpretations of warfare and
peasantry. SPECULUM
This study of the soldier-peasant relationship in the context of
the Hundred Years War (1337-1453) aims to bring out the realities
of the situation. It seeks an understanding of different attitudes:
how aristocratic soldiers reconciled the ideals of chivalry with
exploitation of non-combatants, and how French peasants reacted to
the soldiery, drawing on the late-medieval literature of chivalry
and political commentary in England and (especially) in France.
Employing additional documentary material, including the largely
unpublished records of the French royal chancery, the book also
describes the ways in which individual peasants and village
communities were exploited by soldiers, and how, in order to
survive, they adjusted to and reacted against their treatment.
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Lulu (Paperback, New Ed)
Frank Wedekind; Adapted by Nicholas Wright
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R282
R246
Discovery Miles 2 460
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Nicholas Wright's version of Wedekind's celebrated erotic
masterpiece is the first to be based on the author's original text,
restoring the clarity, the daring and the sexual explicitness of a
modern masterpiece written a hundred years before its time. Lulu is
the story of the decline and fall of a young woman possessed of a
fatal combination of sexuality and innocence. She passes from
German and Parisian high society to the streets of Jack the
Ripper's London - destroying, and ultimately destroyed by, her
lovers. Wedekind originally wrote his extraordinary 'monster
tragedy' a full twenty years before the First World War. Finding
no-one prepared to stage it on account of its sexual candour, he
toned it down and rewrote it as two full-length dramas, which is
how The Lulu Plays were published and produced throughout most of
the twentieth century. Nicholas Wright's version, based on
Wedekind's original text, reveals the author's original conception
for the play. It was premiered at the Almeida Theatre, London, in
2001.
Nicholas Wright's play about the controversial psychoanalyst
Melanie Klein is a haunting and poignant study of mother-daughter
relationships. In 1934 the son of Melanie Klein, Britain's most
admired psychoanalyst, was reported killed in a climbing accident.
There were no witnesses. Nicholas Wright's play shows the effect of
this shattering and unexpected death on Mrs Klein, on her daughter
and on her new assistant Paula, a young refugee from Hitler's
Berlin. Melanie Klein had herself come to Britain from Berlin with
a controversial mission to extend psychoanalysis to infants. But
her analysis of her own children has damaged her relationship with
them almost beyond repair, and the news of her son's death provokes
a bitter confrontation with her daughter. Nicholas Wright's Mrs
Klein was first performed at the National Theatre, London, in 1988.
This edition was published alongside the revival at the Almeida
Theatre in 2009.
Recent discoveries in psychology and neuroscience have improved our
understanding of why our decision making processes fail to match
standard social science assumptions about rationality. As
researchers such as Daniel Kahneman, Amos Tversky, and Richard
Thaler have shown, people often depart in systematic ways from the
predictions of the rational actor model of classic economic thought
because of the influence of emotions, cognitive biases, an aversion
to loss, and other strong motivations and values. These findings
about the limits of rationality have formed the basis of behavioral
economics, an approach that has attracted enormous attention in
recent years. This collection of essays applies the insights of
behavioral economics to the study of nuclear weapons policy.
Behavioral economics gives us a more accurate picture of how people
think and, as a consequence, of how they make decisions about
whether to acquire or use nuclear arms. Such decisions are made in
real-world circumstances in which rational calculations about cost
and benefit are intertwined with complicated emotions and subject
to human limitations. Strategies for pursuing nuclear deterrence
and nonproliferation should therefore, argue the contributors,
account for these dynamics in a systematic way. The contributors to
this collection examine how a behavioral approach might inform our
understanding of topics such as deterrence, economic sanctions, the
nuclear nonproliferation regime, and U.S. domestic debates about
ballistic missile defense. The essays also take note of the
limitations of a behavioral approach for dealing with situations in
which even a single deviation from the predictions of any model can
have dire consequences.
An enthralling detective story based on the true life story of BBC
reporter James Mossman. A brilliant man kills himself mid-career,
leaving behind a cryptic suicide note. Based on the remarkable life
of the star BBC correspondent James Mossman during his last years,
1963 to 1971, Nicholas Wright's play The Reporter searches for the
truth behind his bewildering suicide. What lies beneath the
surface? Or is the surface ultimately all there is? The Reporter
was first staged at the National Theatre, London, in 2007.
A moving portrait of the young Vincent van Gogh - a hit in the West
End and on Broadway. Winner of the 2003 Olivier Award for Best New
Play. Brixton, 1873. A brash young Dutchman rents a room in the
house of an English widow. Three years later he returns to Europe
on the first step of a journey which will end in breakdown, death
and immortality. Nicholas Wright's play Vincent in Brixton was
first performed at the National Theatre, London, in the Cottesloe
auditorium, in April 2002, directed by Richard Eyre. The production
transferred to Wyndhams Theatre in the West End in August 2002.
Song of Shadows and Dust is a standalone miniatures wargame based
on the award winning Song of Blades and Heroes rules engine. The
rules reflect the gritty reality of urban violence while preserving
the keep-it-simple, play-as-you-want, no-book-keeping-required
spirit of the Ganesha Games family. Easy to learn: The elegant core
rules are easy to learn in just one game. Fast to play: Games are
designed to be finished in under an hour allowing small campaigns
to be completed in a single sitting. Flexible: Inspired by the
break down in civil order which plagued the great cities of the
Mediterranean in the first century BC, these rules are suitable for
any pre-modern setting from Babylon to Bruges. Expansive: Includes
57 unique character profiles with whom to populate your faction or
guild - from henchmen, assassins and punch-drunk boxers, to street
urchins, elder statesmen and courtesans. Players are also free to
create their own custom characters choosing from among 46 defining
special rules. Variable: Eleven different faction objectives allow
for 121 different tabletop scenarios. Expandable: Easily
supplemented by special rules and scenarios drawn from the other
rule books produced by Ganesha Games.
This is a Cookbook with interesting, hands-on recipes, giving
detailed descriptions and lots of practical walkthroughs for
boosting the performance of your Oracle SOA Suite.This book is for
Oracle SOA Suite 11g administrators, developers, and architects who
want to understand how they can maximise the performance of their
SOA Suite infrastructure. The recipes contain easy to follow
step-by-step instructions and include many helpful and practical
tips. It is suitable for anyone with basic operating system and
application server administration experience.
Marivaux's light-hearted comedies of love and intrigue are enjoying
a vigorous revival One of the most original of French eighteenth
century dramatists, Marivaux wrote over thirty comedies of love and
intrigue. This, the only major single-volume selection of
Marivaux's plays in English, brings together five full-length and
five shorter pieces in lively translations by John Bowen, Michael
Sadler, John Walters, Donald Watson and Nicholas Wright.
'I don't know how I became so filled with hate. I find it shocking
that I did. Somebody said to me that war affects us in all kinds of
ways, and that drinking is only one of them. Perhaps hating people
is another. Perhaps sex is too.' 1943, Henley-on-Thames. Miss Roach
is forced by the war to flee London for the Rosamund Tea Rooms
boarding house, a place as grey and lonely as its residents. From
the safety of these new quarters, her war effort now consists of a
thousand petty humiliations, of which the most burdensome is
sharing her daily life with the unbearable Mr Thwaites. But a
breath of fresh air arrives in the form of a handsome American
lieutenant and things start to look distinctly brighter. Until a
new boarder moves into the room next to Miss Roach's - outwardly
friendly, she soon starts upsetting the precarious balance in the
house. Nicholas Wright's play The Slaves of Solitude weaves a
fascinating blend of dark hilarity and melancholy from Patrick
Hamilton's much-loved story about an improbable heroine in wartime
Britain. The play premiered at Hampstead Theatre, London, in
October 2017.
Recent discoveries in psychology and neuroscience have improved our
understanding of why our decision making processes fail to match
standard social science assumptions about rationality. As
researchers such as Daniel Kahneman, Amos Tversky, and Richard
Thaler have shown, people often depart in systematic ways from the
predictions of the rational actor model of classic economic thought
because of the influence of emotions, cognitive biases, an aversion
to loss, and other strong motivations and values. These findings
about the limits of rationality have formed the basis of behavioral
economics, an approach that has attracted enormous attention in
recent years. This collection of essays applies the insights of
behavioral economics to the study of nuclear weapons policy.
Behavioral economics gives us a more accurate picture of how people
think and, as a consequence, of how they make decisions about
whether to acquire or use nuclear arms. Such decisions are made in
real-world circumstances in which rational calculations about cost
and benefit are intertwined with complicated emotions and subject
to human limitations. Strategies for pursuing nuclear deterrence
and nonproliferation should therefore, argue the contributors,
account for these dynamics in a systematic way. The contributors to
this collection examine how a behavioral approach might inform our
understanding of topics such as deterrence, economic sanctions, the
nuclear nonproliferation regime, and U.S. domestic debates about
ballistic missile defense. The essays also take note of the
limitations of a behavioral approach for dealing with situations in
which even a single deviation from the predictions of any model can
have dire consequences.
A gripping psychological thriller adapted for the stage by Emile
Zola himself from his own notorious novel, in a version by Nicholas
Wright. Stifled by an oppressive mother-in-law and a sickly
husband, Therese Raquin falls passionately for another man. Their
feverish affair drives the lovers to an act of terrible
desperation, which catapults them headlong into a world more
claustrophobic than the one they sought to destroy. This English
version of Therese Raquin was first staged at the National Theatre,
London, in 2006.
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