About

Bio

Yorkshire Legal keeps the legal community within the region up-to-date on the latest legal victories, client wins, firm expansions and appointments, as well as all of the corporate social responsibility work being undertaken on behalf of worthy causes and charities. Yorkshire Legal is the preeminent source of news, views and analysis in the region’s legal community.

Email

email@cision.one

Website

site@cision.one

Social media

linkedin x facebook reddit

Location

United Kingdom

Frequency

upgrade

Circulation

upgrade

Sectors

Nonprofits & Charitable Foundations, Law Firms & Lawyers


Is this you? We'd love to hear from you, contact our journalist team.
Contact us to unlock the full profile

Most recent articles by Yorkshire Legal

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit

Article description

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit

Article description

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit

Article description

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet
Contact us to explore recent articles

Explore outlets similar to Yorkshire Legal

  • L
    Law360

    Law360 serves as a comprehensive resource for business lawyers and other legal professionals. It provides breaking industry news and follows major lawsuits, federal decisions, class actions, multidistrict litigation, major hires at top firms and major initiatives by state, federal and international legislatures. It is divided into sections according to practice area and branch of law, allowing for more specialized coverage. These sections include Bankruptcy, Competition, Employment, Energy, Environmental, Financial, Health, Insurance, IP, Product Liability, Real Estate, Securities and Technology.

    View
  • T
    The Chronicle of Philanthropy

    The Chronicle of Philanthropy provides news and information for non-profit executives, fundraisers, and professional employees of foundations. The publication covers trends in giving, fundraising, grant making, volunteers, management and professional development. Regular features include profiles of foundations, updates on federal and state regulations, tax and court rulings, and a calendar of events. Unless something is urgent, they prefer contact by email rather than phone. Press Releases should be relevant to nonprofit practitioners across the country, and if there's been a recent article about a similar development at a different organization, they probably won’t cover it again soon. They like: stories about best or innovative practices in fundraising and managing organizations, profiles of interesting charity leaders, fundraisers, and donors, and new trends in giving or fundraising. They usually don’t cover: galas, celebrity events, groundbreakings and ribbon cuttings, and gifts of less than $1 million. The Chronicle’s Opinion section is designed to spark robust debate about all aspects of the nonprofit world. They welcome Op-Ed submissions that provide new insights and promote innovative thinking about leadership, fundraising, grant-making policy, and more. They especially appreciate articles about timely topics. Most of the pieces are about 1,000 to 1,200 words.

    View
  • L
    Law360 - Washington Bureau

    Law360 serves as a comprehensive resource for business lawyers and other legal professionals. It provides breaking industry news and follows major lawsuits, federal decisions, class actions, multidistrict litigation, major hires at top firms and major initiatives by state, federal and international legislatures. It is divided into sections according to practice area and branch of law, allowing for more specialized coverage. These sections include Bankruptcy, Competition, Employment, Energy, Environmental, Financial, Health, Insurance, IP, Product Liability, Real Estate, Securities and Technology.

    View
  • N
    New York Law Journal

    Written for lawyers, judges and court personnel throughout New York state. Covers law and law/financial developments in New York. Features notes and views on federal courts and New York Court of Appeals decisions, as well as calendars of upcoming cases, bankruptcy and judgment notices, and court notes The New York Law Journal DOES accept bylined articles/submissions. All articles are submitted on speculation. Publication is not guaranteed. We also reserve the right to publish accepted articles in other sections of the New York Law Journal, as needed. All articles must be original. Articles that have appeared elsewhere, including as client alerts and on law firm websites, will not be published. Authors must be law firm partners or of counsel, or judges, public attorneys, in-house counsel, solo practitioners, or law professors. Experienced law firm associates may appear on the byline with partners. Associates in their early years of practice and other contributors may be included in the bio credit that accompanies the article. Authors cannot write about cases in which they or their firms are involved during ongoing litigation. Authors may mention (but not primarily write about) cases or matters in which they or their firms have been involved, provided the appeals process has been exhausted. In no event should inclusion of such a matter constitute more than 10 percent of an article. Any such involvement must be disclosed in the author’s biography line. Authors must be New York-based, admitted to practice in New York, and must sign a rights agreement, which will be faxed or e-mailed once submission is accepted and the editing process begins. Only final submissions will be reviewed. Review is not available for draft articles. There are no deadlines; articles are scheduled after they are submitted. Articles are generally published six to eight weeks after submission. Scheduled dates are tentative. Articles must be under 2,000 words, including a very limited number of footnotes/endnotes. Use footnotes/endnotes sparingly; indeed, do not feel compelled to use any. Avoid using Id footnotes; they will not appear in the paper. Articles must be written in the third person. Do not address the reader. Do not use the imperative tense, "you," "I" or "our." Do not use contractions. Do not rely on headings to make a point or create a transition. Articles should be even-handed treatment of a subject, but need not be dry. In discussing a court case, for example, analyze the decision, provide background and context as needed, explain the significance and potential impact of the decision and discuss any open questions. Keep lists or block quotes from decisions to a minimum.

    View
  • I
    Inside Philanthropy

    Intended to be a source for day-to-day coverage of how foundations and individual donors give away their money and why.

    View
Use CisionOne to find more relevant outlets

Explore journalists that write for Yorkshire Legal

Contact us to find more relevant journalists

Contact Yorkshire Legal and get access to over 850K accurate, up-to-date media profiles.

Discover the stories that impact your brand. In realtime.

CisionOne delivers relevant news, trends and conversations that matter to your brand with the world’s most comprehensive media monitoring service across Print, Online, TV, Radio, Social, Magazines, Podcasts and more.