Practice Toolset

Feeds
gettyimages-598776175_fmt

Cure for all ills?

Fees are still too low, but the Bar has developed a better settlement for criminal practitioners to reward advocacy in a fairer and more transparent way. Now it’s up to the profession to make their voices heard and respond to the consultation, as Daniel Oscroft explains  

Ask most criminal barristers to tell you if there is a future at the criminal Bar and you will be told, ‘No’.  

21 February 2017 / Daniel Oscroft
120139_24

Uncommon counsel (2): Barts, butchers and barristers

Gregory Jones QC relays a short history of barristers’ haunt ‘Farringdon Without’. Never a place for grey-suited City workers, the ward’s past has been a radical and bloody one but in its own way continues to move with the times  

As the largest of the 25 wards, Farringdon Without possesses a diversity of trades and professions greater than any other part of the City of London.  

24 January 2017 / Gregory Jones KC
istock-537383764_alter_fmt

The threat escalates

Identified as one of the four biggest threats to UK security, cyber attacks are not limited to corporate giants or election tampering. Chambers are equally at risk, as Colin Nicholls QC explains  

Cyber security is acknowledged to be one of the greatest threats to business around the world, with a global cost estimated at $445bn, according to the World Economic Forum’s 2016 Global Risks Report.  

24 January 2017 / Colin Nicholls KC
120139_25

Keeping in good working order

Nick Hill explains how the Institute of Barristers’ Clerks and clerking community are working with the Bar to help drive the wellbeing initiative  

At the Bar Conference in October the Wellbeing at the Bar  website was launched, providing information, advice and support for those working at or with the Bar.  

24 January 2017 / Nick Hill
download_fmt

QC Q&A

As the 2016-17 Silk cohort is announced, Counsel probes the appointments system with the Chairman of the Queen’s Counsel Selection Panel, Helen Pitcher OBE  

Q  The basic principle of Queen’s Counsel Appointments (QCA) has always been that the process should be open, fair and transparent. But over the years, the process itself has been refined. What have been the major changes and how were the lessons learned – that is, how was it determined that something else would work better? 

24 January 2017 / Helen Pitcher OBE
istock-487826116_fmt

BPTC: vote now

Don’t let consultation fatigue saddle generations of future Bar students with more of the status quo: a hugely expensive course with low prospects of acquiring pupillage at the end, argues Guy Fetherstonaugh QC  

Consultation fatigue is a particular problem for the Bar, with its substantial cohort of busy and independently minded practitioners.  

20 December 2016 / Guy Fetherstonhaugh KC
istock-490557188_alter_fmt

The employed perspective

Michael Jennings and Patrick Walker respond to the snapshot findings: while financial security, work/life balance and variety of work are encouraging barristers to take the in-house route, significant frustrations were also reported  

FOOD FOR THOUGHT 

20 December 2016 / Michael Jennings / Patrick Walker
120139_22

First steps

One hundred new Recorders sought: Lord Justice Burnett encourages barristers to apply for the 2017 competition and Eason Rajah QC shares his first year’s Recorder experience  

The Lord Chancellor has decided that there should be another Recorder competition, which is expected to launch on 1 February 2017. 

20 December 2016 / Lord Justice Burnett
istock-493578018_alter_fmt

Leading the way on ethics

Is the Bar still a stand-out example of adherence to high ethical standards? Desiree Artesi discusses the practicalities of professional ethics with Andrew Walker QC  

It is a truth universally acknowledged (but never out loud) that an individual barrister, hemmed in by increased competition and, in some areas of law, decreased fees, must be in want of time to observe certain professional ethics. 

20 December 2016 / Desiree Artesi
120139_23

New era for CPD

Dr Vanessa Davies explains how and why the Continuing Professional Development (CPD) scheme for established barristers is changing in January  

A constant commitment to update knowledge and skills is a hallmark of being a professional. In the words of Alistair Hodge, advocacy trainer at Inner Temple: 

20 December 2016 / Dr Vanessa Davies
Show
10
Results
Results
10
Results
virtual magazine View virtual issue

Chair’s Column

Feature image

Outreach and collaboration at home and abroad

Now is the time to tackle inappropriate behaviour at the Bar as well as extend our reach and collaboration with organisations and individuals at home and abroad

Job of the Week

Sponsored

Most Viewed

No data available.

Partner Logo

Latest Cases