
Careers

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Are you intrigued about working in local government but hesitant to take the plunge? Real estate lawyer Matthew Dineen explains how he overcame his initial doubts and never looked back.

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What is it like to work as an in-house solicitor for a registered provider for social housing or housing association? Radian’s Scott Greenwood sets out the attraction and advantages, how the sector differs from private practice and how the transition can be made by those who may be considering a move.

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Rob Hann tells Local Government Lawyer about his other career as an author.
How did you become an author?
I started writing books through my work as a lawyer, as a way of explaining complex legal issues to myself. My first published book was A Guide to Local Authority Charging Powers which involved a huge amount of research through Halsburys laws and was designed to help councils to better understand when and how they could generate income through identifying statutory powers.
This topic has been very controversial and has come back into vogue during the credit crunch and recession. I have written or contributed to several other law books since. I find writing and updating law books a great discipline for keeping up to date with fast moving legal developments and my loose-leaf book ‘Local Authority Companies and Partnerships – LACAP’ has been in continuous circulation for over 25 years, now on its 37th update!
Has your legal background influenced your writing?
Definitely. I was always keen to find a job that involved writing and being a lawyer certainly hits that objective. There have been many lawyer/authors of course so I think it is a natural progression of sorts.
Can you tell us a bit about your other books which seem to cover a wide range of genres?
Basically, I love inventing stories. When my two boys were small, I wrote some rhymes and stories on the train to and from work (Nottingham to London).
I loved reading my kids nonsense poetry such as Spike Milligan, Dr Zeuss and the daddy of them all - Edward Lear. The first rhyming story that popped into my head was The GrumbleGroar – a story about a fearsome creature who lives near the centre of the Earth and is responsible for earthquakes, volcanoes and other seismic events.
The GrumbleGroar serves as a metaphor for what really happens beneath our feet and schools like the concept as it triggers children’s imagination to want to find out more. The GrumbleGroar won the New Writers UK Children’s Book of the Year 2012 following feedback from schools in the East Midlands and was featured in the summer of 2016 as a visitor attraction at the Nottingham City of Caves which was really fun to do and involved audio, props, lighting and a script for actors to take smaller visitors round the caves complex to discover signs of the GrumbleGroar’s existence.
How did you come to write a prize winning book about war?
It is a bit strange going from children’s writing and law to something completely different but I wrote a book about my father’s experiences in the Special Air Service (‘SAS’) during the second world war (‘SAS Operation Galia’). This was my first attempt at a serious novel and it ended up forming part of my dissertation for the MA in creative writing at the Nottingham Trent University a few years ago.
The book won the Impress prize for New Writers. I republished it in 2013 following some great reviews by famous military personnel and after many of the families of the Galia squad got in touch. Channel 4 have recently screened a series of documentaries on World War II escape stories and the third episode ‘Rossano’ tells the story of SAS Operation Galia and, in particular, how my father and his colleagues escaped from the pursuing enemy forces.
Finding so much out about my dad’s army life after he had passed away was a really cathartic but rewarding experience. It was great to find so many photographs of my dad and his SAS pals hidden away in my mother’s drawer for so many years.
To be able to piece together what happened in war torn Northern Italy over 70 years ago and to tell the story in the right way - in my father’s voice, was the toughest challenge I have taken on to date.
Can you tell us your plans for the future?
I would like to get more children’s books illustrated and published. I love reading to kids in schools, helping them to read and to use their imaginations to invent more stories. I have many more rhymes waiting to be illustrated (for example, Bumble Bee Ten – the bee who just wants to stand out from the swarm and make jam, lemon curd, anything but honey’).
I have managed to get one other children’s book illustrated and to print to date – namely - Sidney Sneed – World famous footballing centipede and star of the mini-beast soccer league who ‘signed’ for Brentford FC a few years ago, bringing his particular brand of ‘grassroots football’ direct to schools in Brentford.
As Sid’s agent I am ‘pitching’ him currently to the Premier League which is aiming to provide teaching resources to more than 10,000 primary schools by 2019.
If we can export Sid’s amazing life-story (the highs and lows of being the talisman of the mini-beast football league) to all schools and football clubs in the UK who knows? I might even give up the law one day!
![]() This article was first published in the February edition of Local Government Lawyer Insight, which can be accessed at http://www.localgovernmentlawyer.co.uk/insight Insight is published four times a year and is circulated free-of-charge to all Local Government Lawyer newsletter subscribers (click here to subscribe) in electronic format. A single hard copy is also circulated to all local authority legal departments in England and Wales. Additional printed copies are available for just £49.95 for four issues. Multiple copies are also available at £149.95 for five or £249.95 for 10. Payment can be made by purchase order/invoice or by credit/debit card. To order, please call 0207 239 4917 or email |

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Stephen McNamara, former head of legal at Bristol City Council, is currently volunteering setting up justice centres in Yangon. Here he gives his first impressions on life and the law a long way from home.
After too long as Head of Legal at Bristol City Council (15 years 234 days 2 hours 13 minutes and 12 seconds) and too short a time as a consultant in Bristol with Veale Wasbrough Vizards (3 years @ 2 or 3 days a week), I find myself working in Yangon for Myjustice as a VSO volunteer, whilst still working for VWV on a radical ‘working from home policy’ .
Myjustice
Myjustice (www.myjusticemyanmar.org) is implemented by the British Council and funded by the European Union. The fundamental objective is to increase “Access to Justice” in Myanmar (Burma - even the country’s name is contentious).
I am based at the Yangon Justice Centre. The Justice Centres primarily provide free legal representation in criminal cases to those who cannot afford a lawyer. The Centres are funded on a grant basis by Myjustice.
There is no state provision for legal aid i.e. no state funding (save in death penalty cases). We are seeking to support the work of the Centres . There is limited pro bono support, and so the vast majority of the accused go through the court system without support/ advice or representation
There are numerous challenges. This is not the place to rehearse the history or difficulties (economic, historical, political etc, etc) facing Myanmar . But, there is hope of a better future.
The monsoons have arrived and it is wet, wet and wet. My partner and I live downtown within earshot of many keen vociferous nocturnal religious groups. My work, and my home life have prevented me from beginning to study the constitution of the Yangon Development Corporation (the local local authority), but I will. NB if your local authority is so inclined then do remember The Localism Act 2011 s1(4)(a).
The legal system is Victorian and colonial. The fundamental statutes include: the Evidence Act (1882), the Penal Code (1860) and the Code of Criminal Procedure (1898) - these being developments of Indian colonial legislation.
The Constitution of the Union of Myanmar (2008) has a “consistent objectives” and a “Basic Principle”: “Enhancing the eternal principles of Justice, Liberty and Equality” (Art 6(e)).
The World Justice Project (www.worldjusticeproject.org) rates Myanmar 98th out of 113 countries (14th out of 15 in the sub-region). There is a disparity between legal theory and legal practice.
I am developing training modules with the aspiration that these will encourage Myanmar lawyers to use the law to challenge bad practice. The challenges would be by writ or by appeal and would need to be pursued to the Supreme Court
If you are interested in learning about Myanmar criminal law- its challenges /curiosities and my hopes for my training modules then contact me. If you are ever in Yangon then I will treat you to beer and mohinga (fish soup).
Stephen McNamara is a consultant at Veale Wasbrough Vizards.
![]() This article was first published in the July edition of Local Government Lawyer Insight, which can be accessed at http://www.localgovernmentlawyer.co.uk/insight Insight is published four times a year and is circulated free-of-charge to all Local Government Lawyer newsletter subscribers (click here to subscribe) in electronic format. A single hard copy is also circulated to all local authority legal departments in England and Wales. Additional printed copies are available for just £49.95 for four issues. Multiple copies are also available at £149.95 for five or £249.95 for 10. Payment can be made by purchase order/invoice or by credit/debit card. To order, please call 0207 239 4917 or email |

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A commitment to public service and a willingness to move for the right opportunity have seen Suki Binjal, President of LLG, work for public bodies across England. Philip Hoult finds out what she considers to be the key challenges for local government lawyers.

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Austerity has left authorities with a severe shortage of senior lawyers while a dearth of trainees and NQs is failing to swell the junior ranks. Neasa MacErlean assesses what can be done to close the gap.
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