Full-Time
Posted on 5/12/2026
No salary listed
London, UK
Hybrid
Hybrid role; minimum 50% time in the office.
| , |
Company Size
5,001-10,000
Company Stage
N/A
Total Funding
N/A
Headquarters
London, United Kingdom
Founded
1987
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Clifford Chance boosts global offering in private capital, energy and infrastructure by hiring two new partners in Paris. * en * fr * Language options 3 april 2026. Global law firm Clifford Chance continues to grow its global offering in private capital, energy and infrastructure by hiring Patrick Tardivy and Paul Loisel, two new partners in Paris. Patrick Tardivy is an M&A and private equity lawyer and is particularly active in the energy and infrastructure fields as well as the tech sector, working alongside investment funds, financial investors, French and foreign groups, on both domestic and cross-border transactions. Paul Loisel's practice focuses on project finance and strategic finance transactions in energy and infrastructure. He advises sponsors and financiers on large greenfield and brownfield financings, both cross-border and domestic, primarily in France and EMEA. Mathieu Remy, Managing Partner at Clifford Chance's Paris office, comments: "We are thrilled to welcome Patrick Tardivy and Paul Loisel, whose extensive experience will further strengthen our ability to support clients across the entire private capital lifecycle. Their top-tier expertise in the energy and infrastructure sectors will enhance our global capability to create lasting advantage for our clients". These appointments are the latest in a series of high profile global Private Capital lateral hires at Clifford Chance. Over the recent months, the firm has been joined by David Schultz and Vince Ferrito in New York, Jamie McLaren in Singapore, Aimee Sharman and Matt Lilley in London, Arnaud Fromion and Frédéric Guilloux in Paris and Matthias Kerbusch in Luxembourg.
Clifford Chance advises Unilever on the $45bn combination of Unilever foods with McCormick and Company, inc. 31 march 2026. Global law firm Clifford Chance is advising Unilever on the $45bn combination of Unilever foods[1] with McCormick. The team is led by Melissa Fogarty and Dominic Ross from Clifford Chance working alongside Ben Roth and Jenna Levine from Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz and the Unilever deal team led by Prakash Kakkad (Chief Legal Officer and Group Company Secretary, Unilever) and Ritesh Tiwari (Global Head of M&A and Treasury, Unilever). Melissa Fogarty, Partner at Clifford Chance commented: "We wish Unilever and McCormick every congratulations on the announcement of this exciting combination of two fantastic businesses. Our immense thanks go to Fernando (CEO), Srini (CFO), Mairéad (CPO) and Prakash (CLO) for their support and leadership towards this significant milestone and for our long-standing partnership. It has also been a great pleasure to work with Ben and Jenna and their team at Wachtell Lipton Rosen & Katz." The Clifford Chance team includes partners Alanna Hunter and Harriet Martin, and senior associates Jennifer Xue, Chelsea Bruk-Jackson, Sheridan Jones and Daniel Ayad (M&A). Partner Sue Hinchliffe and senior associate Nissim Massarano (Antitrust), partner Zayed Al Jamil and senior associate Midori Takenaka (Separation), partner Stephen Reese and senior associate Briony Byrne (IP), partner Nicola Hemsley and senior associate Viktoria Parkhomenko (Tax), partner Chinwe Odimba-Chapman, director Florence Wong and senior associate Francesca Baker (Employment), partner Clare Hoxey and director Rebecca Trapp (Pensions), partner Andrew Patterson and associate Richard Compton (Incentives) and partner Alis Pay and senior associate Melissa Jones (Real Estate). [[1. Excluding Unilever's food business in India, Nepal, and Portugal; its Lifestyle Nutrition business; its Buavita business; and its Lipton Ready-to-Drink business]]
Digital transformation in European law firms: what the big firms are doing (with real data). Discover how major European law firms are transforming their operations with AI and real data. Clifford Chance, Freshfields and more reveal their strategies. The European legal sector is experiencing something that goes beyond chatbot experimentation. There are firms making operational decisions that affect hundreds of people, reorganizing entire teams and citing artificial intelligence as a determining factor. These aren't future plans. These are facts that have already happened. Analyzing what they're doing and why is useful for any legal executive, regardless of the size of their firm. Because what's happening today in the big firms usually reaches the rest of the sector in two or three years. Clifford Chance: optimizing from profitability. In November 2025, Clifford Chance informed about 550 support services employees in London that the firm planned to eliminate approximately 50 positions and modify the functions of another 35. The affected areas included finance, human resources and technology. The context is what makes this case relevant. Clifford Chance had just come off a year with revenues of £2.4 billion (9% more than the previous fiscal year) and an average profit per partner of £2.1 million. This wasn't a firm in crisis. It was a profitable firm redesigning its operational structure. The firm cited greater use of AI as one of the factors, along with outsourcing to centers in Poland and India. Clifford Chance had developed its own internal AI tool (Clifford Chance Assist, launched in 2023), which gave it a technological foundation on which to make these decisions. The pattern is clear: the restructuring didn't affect lawyers, but support functions. AI didn't replace the jurist. It redesigned the operational architecture around the jurist. Baker McKenzie: confirmation at scale. In February 2026, Baker McKenzie announced cuts that could affect between 600 and 1,000 support services employees globally (less than 10% of its workforce of more than 7,000 professionals in this category). The affected functions included research, marketing, know-how, secretarial and design. The firm was explicit in its communication, saying it had conducted a "careful review" to "rethink the way we work, including the use of AI, introduce efficiencies and invest in the roles that best serve our clients' needs." The case opened a debate about whether some firms are using AI as a convenient justification for cuts motivated by other factors, a phenomenon known as "AI washing." But regardless of the motivations, the effect on the market was real: legal recruitment experts anticipate that more firms will follow this path. Iberdrola: integration without headlines. Not everything is cuts. There are organizations that have integrated AI into their legal departments progressively and with measurable results. In October 2025, during an event of the Madrid Bar Association, Isabel Nieto (Iberdrola) explained how the company has been using AI to optimize legal processes since 2018. Custom tools, internal chatbots, intelligent search for contract management. All with multidisciplinary teams that combine legal and technological profiles. What makes Iberdrola's case different is governance. The company has a corporate AI policy approved by its board of directors, a Global AI Center, and was the first company to certify its AI management system with AENOR under ISO/IEC 42001. That's not a pilot. It's a strategy sustained over years. The trend isn't limited to big firms. In 2025, BCLP cut 8% of its global support staff. DWF launched dismissal consultations for more than 100 professionals. Pinsent Masons reduced its team in Germany. CMS eliminated positions in London for the second time in 18 months. In Spain, according to the Break the Limits 2025 report, generative AI is the number one technology that firms plan to invest in (48% prioritize it). According to Wolters Kluwer, 54.4% of small and medium-sized firms have already increased their automation. The data that none of the 100 largest U.S. firms plan to reduce their lawyer workforce (Harvard Law Center) is significant. What's changing isn't the number of jurists. It's the structure around them. Three emerging patterns. Looking at these cases together, there are three constants. AI impacts support functions first, not lawyers. The firms that best integrate technology invest in governance (policies, mixed teams, certifications), not just tools. And whoever waits too long doesn't choose, reacts. Those who decide now do so with margin to plan and measure. Those who wait will end up making reactive cuts. What a legal executive can do with this information. Three concrete steps that don't require budget or anyone's approval: First, map for two weeks where the support team's time goes. Document management, internal reporting, deadline tracking, administrative coordination. The data will tell you where the real opportunity lies. Second, ask what tools your team is already using on their own. Not to police, but to govern. Without that information, any technological decision starts from an incomplete picture. Third, don't copy another firm's strategy. What works at Clifford Chance doesn't work in a 15-lawyer firm. But the principle does apply: identify the operational problem before choosing the tool. * Financial Times, "Clifford Chance to cut London business services staff" (November 2025). * RollOnFriday / Bloomberg Law, coverage of restructuring at Baker McKenzie (February 2026). * ICAM, "The AI that's already revolutionizing law practice" (October 2025). * Iberdrola, commitment to EU AI Act and ISO/IEC 42001. * Fundación Aranzadi LA LEY, Break the Limits 2025 Report. * Wolters Kluwer, Small Law Firms Spain Report (2025). * Harvard Law Center on the Legal Profession. * The Global Legal Post, restructuring at BCLP, DWF, Pinsent Masons and CMS (2025). digital transformation European law firms AI in law firms Clifford Chance AI legal optimization with AI large firms AI legal outsourcing artificial intelligence law European firm restructuring AI legal tools legal sector digitalization
Clifford Chance advises Huayan Robotics on its Chapter 18C listing in Hong kong. 30 march 2026. Global law firm clifford Chance has advised guangdong Huayan Robotics co., ltd. (Huayan Robotics) on its initial public offering and listing on the main board of the stock exchange of Hong kong, under the exchange's Chapter 18C listing regime for specialist technology companies. The listing raised approximately HK$1.579 billion (approximately US$202 million). Chair of China Practice and partner Tim Wang co-led the transaction with partners Fang Liu and Virginia Lee, with support from counsel Janet Fok, senior associates Astrid Zhuang and Veronica Liu, associates Ruonan Tang, Rita Cao and Sibin Hong, trainee solicitors Pu Wang and Nianyi Ye and paralegal Jay Lee. Tim said, "Huayan Robotics' listing is notable as one of the more commercially mature offerings under the Chapter 18C regime, reflecting a 'hard tech' business with established revenues, diversified end-markets and proprietary IP supported by integrated manufacturing capabilities. This transaction reflects the role of intelligent automation and robotics in China's push to upgrade its manufacturing base, as the economy shifts toward higher-value, technology-driven industrial production." Huayan Robotics is a leading developer and manufacturer of collaborative robots (cobots). The company specialises in the research, development, production and commercialisation of cobots and core motion components for industrial applications, with products widely used across sectors including consumer electronics, automotive, healthcare, logistics and semiconductors. It is one of the leading Chinese cobot exporters globally, and serves customers across Asia, Europe and the Americas. Clifford Chance previously advised on the Chapter 18C listings of CiDi, Deepexi Technology and Black Sesame.
Goodwin adds Private Investment Funds partner Olya Kurilovich in New York. Tuesday, March 24, 2026 Goodwin today announced that Olya Kurilovich has joined the firm's Private Equity practice as a partner in the Investment Funds group in the New York office. Kurilovich arrives at Goodwin from Clifford Chance LLP. "The private capital market continues to evolve rapidly, and sponsors are launching increasingly sophisticated funds and vehicles," said Eric Goldstein, partner at Goodwin. "Olya brings the insight and experience to help us capture growing fundraising and spin-off opportunities while continuing to build our funds platform in New York." Olya specializes in advising clients on the formation and operation of private investment funds across sectors including private debt, private equity, real estate, infrastructure, and emerging markets. She also advises sponsors and investors on strategic transactions, internal arrangements, complex secondary deals, and fund restructurings. This announcement of the recent strategic hire of Julia Kolovarsky in the Investment Funds group in New York. The firm's Private Investment Funds team with more than 200 lawyers brings over 50 years of experience representing more than 1,000 investment managers on funds ranging from under $10 million to over $25 billion, with core strengths in private equity, real estate, technology, and life sciences. The team is recognized as Private Funds/Hedge Funds Law Firm of the Year by U.S. News - Best Lawyers Best Law Firms, ranked by Chambers Global for Private Equity: Fund Formation, and listed among the top firms in Private Equity International's Fund Formation League Table for Private Equity & Venture Funds and Infrastructure Funds. Goodwin is also ranked in PERE's Fund Formation League Table - Real Estate Funds and was named Law Firm of the Year for Real Estate Fund Formation in Europe in the PERE Global Awards. Analysis | Jobs | News