FIRE Magazine Issue 9 - FIRE International 2022 Vilamoura Edition

Page 89

ThoughtLeaders4 FIRE Magazine • ISSUE 9

60-SECONDS WITH: JOSEPHINE DAVIES BARRISTER TWENTY ESSEX

Q

hat would you be doing if W you weren’t in this profession?

Q

hat has been the most W interesting case you have seen so far in 2020/2021?

A

Playing the trumpet.

A

Q

hat’s the strangest, most W exciting thing you have done in your career?

A

hen I was still quite junior, W receiving a call from my solicitor at late at night on a Thursday asking if I was free to go New York the next day to meet our client who couldn’t come to the UK because of a freezing injunction. We didn’t book tickets until 10am the next morning and were on the Friday lunchtime flight out of London. It led to as mad (professional) weekend in NYC.

okia v Oppo [2021] EWHC N 2952 (Pat) on jurisdiction in which I act for Oppo. The case is all about which court should decide global license terms for technology patents. It raises some really interesting policy issues about forum conveniens in the post Brexit, post Brussels I, world – i.e. where UK companies can now contest jurisdiction again. It’s due to be heard by the Court of Appeal this year.

Q

hat is the easiest/hardest W aspect of working on FIRE cases?

A

he easiest part of FIRE cases T usually is working with the solicitors on the case. The hardest part can often be managing other work and personal commitments to accommodate the urgent and sometimes unexpected hearings that come up.

Q

hat is the best piece of W advice anyone has given you in your career?

A

on’t ask the question if you D don’t want the answer.

Q

I f you could learn to do anything, what would it be?

A

arkour – jumping and P somersaulting from place to place in the urban environment. I love the city and parkour would mean seeing it from a different perspective (while performing acrobatics).

Q

What is the one thing you could not live without?

A

English cheeses.

Q

What one positive has come out of COVID-19 for you?

A

I was able to justify buying a whole truckle of cheddar cheese (my lockdown ‘panic’ buying).

Q

ow the world is beginning N to open up again, what are you most looking forward to doing?

A

isiting my friends in the USA V and finally managing to visit some of Utah’s amazing National Parks.

Q

Who would you most like to invite to a dinner party?

A

osalind Franklin so I could tell R her that her contribution to the structure of DNA has now been recognized. My first degree was in science and I’d be really interested to talk about how much had changed since she did hers 60 years earlier.

Q

What does the perfect weekend look like?

A

leeper train to the Scottish S Highlands, walk out, climb a couple of Munroes, camp (or stay in a bothy), watch the sun set while enjoying a single malt, climb a couple more Munroes the next day and get the sleeper train back to London. To make it perfect, there’d be no rain and no midges.

Q

s chair/speaker at our A upcoming FIRE UK: Welcome Back Summit, what are you most looking forward to at the event?

A

his will be the first in person T conference I’ve been to since COVID and so, although it’s a cliché, the answer is meeting and chatting to everyone in real life.

89


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Articles inside

Regulating anthropogenic climate change with tort law

12min
pages 96-101

Substituted service of proceedings upon foreign defendants through their lawyers within the Cyprus jurisdiction

5min
pages 92-95

60-Seconds with: Josephine Davies

2min
pages 89-91

A new Swiss §1782? Article 185a PILA and the assistance of Swiss courts in support of foreign arbitral evidentiary proceedings

5min
pages 87-88

Private prosecutions & economic crime: A route to justice for victims

6min
pages 82-86

60-Seconds with: Lucy Pert

2min
pages 76-77

Sanctions and the problem with trusts

5min
pages 78-81

Weaponizing the financial system brings money laundering risks

5min
pages 73-75

Fortification for damages in freezing injunctions: Out with the old, in with the new?

9min
pages 66-69

Tracing cryptocurrency and the English court’s power to compel disclosure from foreign respondents

6min
pages 70-72

60-Seconds with: Nicola Boulton

1min
page 59

The era of mobile spyware

11min
pages 62-65

Pleading the fifth (in England & Wales

6min
pages 56-58

Service of process abroad: no international agreement? No problem. Rely on FRCP 4(f)(2) & (3

13min
pages 48-52

60-Seconds with: Sophia Purkis

1min
pages 45-47

Looking back from 2030

5min
pages 41-44

An investigative approach to non-performing loan recovery: the wood, the trees and the low-hanging fruit

5min
pages 53-55

60-Seconds with: Jude D’Alesio

5min
page 40

The International Law Book Facility Essay Competition

3min
page 37

The Judging Panel

1min
pages 38-39

The impact of Russia sanctions on BVI legal and insolvency practitioners

6min
pages 32-36

Receivership: Draconian or now versatile?

7min
pages 7-10

Personal and cross-border insolvency in India

3min
pages 21-23

The case of the missing diamonds: A best-practices primer in multijurisdictional asset recovery

6min
pages 26-28

Quincecare: A panacea for victims of APP Fraud?

7min
pages 13-16

Freezing oligarchs’ assets: yes, but

6min
pages 17-20

Developments in the UAE

6min
pages 4-6

jurisdiction for claims which relate to economic loss finally been resolved?

5min
pages 29-31

60-Seconds with: Lucy Colter

2min
pages 11-12
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FIRE Magazine Issue 9 - FIRE International 2022 Vilamoura Edition by thoughtleaders4 - Issuu