Tag Results
Court of Appeal: no room for “grandiloquent, rhetorical” advocacy in modern trials
Friday, 8 July 2016The “grandiloquent, rhetorical and at times almost facetious” advocacy style of a criminal defence barrister has no place in modern trials, the Court of Appeal has said. It found the barrister “certainly appears to take a considerable degree of satisfaction in having a style all of his own”.
Tags: advocacy, Barristers, Court of Appeal
Posted in Competence, Latest news, Practice Management
QASA warning over “that’s not how I would have done it” evaluations by judges
Thursday, 11 February 2016Many judges are not “advocacy trainers” and may produce “subjective” evaluations under the Quality Assurance Scheme for Advocates scheme, solicitor-advocates have warned. The Solicitors’ Association of Higher Court Advocates said there was a danger that some judges would assess on the basis of how they would have done it.
Tags: advocacy, QASA, SAHCA
Posted in Barristers, Latest news, Legal Executives, Regulation, Solicitors
Judges should be able to decline ‘unfair’ QASA evaluations, SRA says
Tuesday, 26 January 2016Judges should be able to opt out of assessing advocates under the Quality Assurance Scheme for Advocates if they believe it would be unfair, the Solicitors Regulation Authority has said. Despite a Supreme Court ruling in its favour last year, QASA is still to get off the ground.
Tags: advocacy, Judicial Advisory Group, QASA, Quality Assurance Scheme for Advocates, Solicitors Regulation Authority
Posted in Barristers, Latest news, Legal Executives, Regulation, Solicitors
LSB joins solicitors in questioning government’s criminal advocacy plans
Tuesday, 1 December 2015The Legal Services Board has joined solicitors in questioning government plans to introduce additional regulation of criminal advocacy. The Bar Council supported the proposals by the Ministry of Justice.
Tags: advocacy, Bar Council, Barristers, Legal Services Board
Posted in Barristers, Consumer panel, Latest news, Legal Services Board, Regulation, Solicitors
BSB promises action after report finds “highly variable” standards of youth court advocacy
Friday, 20 November 2015The Bar Standards Board has accepted in principle all the recommendations of a hard-hitting report which found “highly variable” standards of advocacy in the youth courts. Only 52% of advocates thought they had sufficient knowledge of the youth justice system to do their job properly.
Tags: advocacy, bar standards board, CILEX Regulation
Posted in Barristers, Latest news, Legal Executives, Regulation
“Many parts of the Bar are in severe pain,” acknowledges BSB chair
Tuesday, 6 October 2015The present model for delivering justice in the criminal, family and immigration courts has become “increasingly challenged” and “many parts of the Bar are in severe pain”, the chair of the Bar Standards Board has said. Sir Andrew Burns said he wanted the BSB to become much more of a risk-based regulator.
Tags: advocacy, bar standards board, Litigants-in-person
Posted in Barristers, Latest news, Regulation
Employed barristers need specialist training in “persuasive advocacy” beyond the courtroom
Monday, 14 September 2015The needs of employed barristers should not be ignored and “second class citizenship” should “by now be a myth”, a former Crown prosecutor has said. Karen Squibb-Williams argued that specialist training should be introduced for employed barristers, including “persuasive advocacy” which could be used in the boardroom as much as the court.
Tags: advocacy
Posted in Barristers, Latest news
Keep legal executives out of the Crown Court, Rivlin report demands
Tuesday, 31 March 2015A report for the Bar Council on the future of criminal justice and advocacy has recommended that legal executives are kept out of the Crown Courts, while solicitors should only be granted rights of audience if they have undergone the same level of training as barristers.
Tags: advocacy, Chartered Institute of Legal Executives, rights of audience, Rivlin report
Posted in Barristers, Latest news, Legal Executives, Legal Services Act, Regulation, Solicitors
QC status “should be extended” beyond barristers and solicitors
Wednesday, 18 March 2015QC status should be available to all advocates appearing in the higher courts, whether or not they are barristers or solicitors, the Legal Services Consumer Panel has said. It also reiterated its call for re-accreditation and ongoing competence checks for those with the mark.
Tags: advocacy, Legal Services Consumer Panel, solicitor-advocates
Posted in Consumer panel, Latest news, Legal Services Act
Grayling promises crackdown on criminal law referral fees
Thursday, 8 January 2015Justice secretary Chris Grayling has promised criminal law barristers that the government will “take measures” to strengthen the Legal Aid Agency’s ban on solicitors demanding referral fees.
Tags: advocacy, Bar Council, Jeffrey review, Legal Aid Agency, referral fees
Posted in Barristers, Latest news, Regulation, Solicitors