Stair Society seeks new blood
New members wanted to help support further publications
The Stair Society, which aims to encourage the study, and advance the knowledge, of the history of Scots law, and which has always enjoyed close links with the practising profession, is seeking to expand its membership among Scottish lawyers.
An educational charity founded in 1934, the society has published more than 60 volumes which between them now comprise a significant body of historical material, most of which is not otherwise readily available to practitioners or historians. It is actively looking to expand its membership to help to support its publications programme.
Further details can be found at stairsociety.org/membership from which an application form can be downloaded.Share this article
In this issue
- Weighing the risks
- Private parking fines – are they enforceable?
- Scotland – home of (dangerous) golf
- Shareholder details: the right to refuse
- Perils of the owner-occupied croft (fuller version)
- Reading for pleasure
- Opinion: Thomas Ross
- Book reviews
- Profile
- President's column
- Land Register completion: one year in
- People on the move
- Rights: whose final say?
- The word on the street
- Screen test
- Making the best of mediation
- Keep up the payments
- The right priorities
- When reputation is not enough…
- Sports justice – being seen to be done?
- Source of disputes
- CML Handbook: the new deal
- Perils of the owner-occupied croft
- In-house and in-tune in the Commonwealth
- Stair Society seeks new blood
- New Build Standard Clauses revised
- Law reform roundup
- Leven's last hole rarely in benevolent mood
- Year of the new look
- AML just became simpler
- "My time is valuable!" Oh really?
- Learning opportunity
- Ask Ash
- Technology: slave or master?