Jurisdiction(s):
United Kingdom
Key definition
Third parties definition

What does Third parties mean? In legal practice, third parties are persons or organisations that are not the principal parties to a contract, dispute, or data-processing activity but may interact with or be affected by it. The term is descriptive across contexts. In data protection law it is defined: a third party is anyone other than the data subject, controller, processor, and those acting under a controller’s or processor’s direct authority (UK GDPR/EU GDPR). cookies and similar technologies: if a service permits third parties (for example, advertising, analytics or social media vendors) to set, read or access cookies or other identifiers, those third...

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Instructing Experts and Barristers: Firm Procedures for Selection, Client Consent, Fees, Commission, Equality and Compliance (England and Wales)

Precedents
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1 Introduction

1.1 This policy sets out how we engage experts, barristers and other third parties to contribute to a client’s case. For ease, we refer to all such providers collectively as ‘third parties’ within this policy.

2 Difference between instructing a third party and introducing a client to a third party

2.1 Giving instructions to a third party is not equivalent to introducing your client to a third party, for example a financial adviser or another lawyer...

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Web page updated on 22/05/2026

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