Planning Reform: a vote winner or a vote loser?

John Walker from CT Local explains the implications of the Government’s Housing White Paper and previews exclusive research carried out by CT Gr...

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The Rise of Class Actions in Europe: Will London Remain The Preferred Choice?

The last five years have seen a significant increase in the number of class actions in Europe, with the U.K. and the Netherlands considered as the key...

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CT Group & one club’s date in sporting history

CT Corporate Advisory Director Jonathon Flegg discusses our most recent victory in the sports advisory space, and the instrumental role that CT Group ...

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If everyone is thinking alike, then no one is thinking…

Article for the Journal of International Arbitration, by Nathalie Allen, Leonor Diaz Cordova* & Natalie Hall The popularity and longevity of inter...

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1.6M more Tory votes in building homes and levelling up

A new poll from CT Local, Sir Lynton Crosby’s real estate advisory business, and the Adam Smith Institute, finds that Conservatives could achieve ma...

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Nuclear submarine

AUKUS: Brits are undecided but the PM must convince them

Two big issues have set the backdrop for this week’s meeting between Prime Minister Johnson and President Biden – the withdrawal from Afghanistan ...

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AU / UK / US research finds support in Australia for strategic partnerships with the United States

The rise of China’s influence is one of the chief issues of concern to Australian voters when it comes to global affairs as the world starts to reco...

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JB Priestley, the novelist and playwright, was being mischievous when he said that “public opinion polls are rather like children in a garden, digging things up all the time to see how they’re growing”. Of course, he was spinning a yarn but there is an element of truth to what he said because it is crucial to understand what polling is and what it isn’t. There is a consequence as to how polling is interpreted and the commentary and actions that follow.

Media risks drawing the wrong lessons from America’s polling fiasco

JB Priestley, the novelist and playwright, was being mischievous when he said that “public opinion polls are rather like children in a garden, diggi...

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With its far-sighted new defence policy, the Australian Government has taken important steps to ensure we can better shape our own destiny.  This is especially relevant in an uncertain post COVID-19 world, where the tide of globalisation and global alliances may have begun to ebb.  In this scenario, nation states including Australia will need to play a greater role in asserting their own sovereignty, including defending their own borders and strategic interests.

Australia’s military is set to become a potent regional force for good

With its far-sighted new defence policy, the Australian Government has taken important steps to ensure we can better shape our own destiny.  This is ...

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