Woolf reforms: a year on.

Last year's Woolf reforms have resulted in wide spread change in work practices among brokers and insurers. What is needed now is consistency in the way cases are judged. Shona Cronin reports.

In the past year since the Woolf reforms were introduced, there has
been a lot of reshuffling of attitudes and work patterns.


In April 1999, Lord Woolf forced insurers, brokers, solicitors and judges,
to a lesser extent, to rethink the way they conduct their daily
business.


His aim was to alleviate the delays, costs and complexities in the civil
litigation system.


Richard Chapman, senior partner at Chapman Everatt, and chairman of the
special interest group at the Forum of Insurance Lawyers, said:

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