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Give and take

Joy Adeniran on how she was able both to help and to learn during her internship at the Women’s Legal Centre in Cape Town  

Last June, I was selected to undertake the City Law School human rights internship to the Women’s Legal Centre (WLC) in Cape Town, South Africa. As an aspiring public law barrister and recent BPTC graduate, this placement provided an opportunity to build on the skills learnt on the course. I spent three months at the centre. 

30 September 2013
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Experienced allies

Designed to help applicants for Silk and judicial appointments from all areas of the profession, the Bar Council’s Mentoring Service for the Bar launches this month. Amanda-Jane Field explains  

This month sees the launch of the Bar Council’s Mentoring Service for the Bar. The idea began as a joint initiative between two Bar Council Committees, the Legal Services Committee and the Employed Barristers’ Committee. Supported by the Equality & Diversity Committee, it is designed to increase the number of successful applicants for Silk and judicial appointments from all sectors of the Bar. It builds on the many years’ work that the Bar Council has undertaken to increase diversity in the profession and in the higher judiciary. The service aims to put applicants for silk and judicial appointments in the best position they can be in, by providing an adviser to help analyse their skills and complete the evidence-based forms. 

30 September 2013 / Amanda-Jane Field
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The countdown begins

With keynote speeches from the new Lord Chief Justice and from Lord Pannick QC, Saba Naqshbandi explains why you should attend this year’s Annual Bar Conference  

Key Facts
Date: Saturday 2 November 2013
Venue: Westminster Park Plaza
CPD: 6 points
Cost: Prices start from £125 

30 September 2013
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Paying the Bar

With frustrations common on both sides, Maura McGowan QC, Chairman of the Bar, investigates the process by which the Legal Aid Agency pays barristers, and Matthew Coats, its Chief Executive, explains the agency’s work and priorities.   

I do not generally suffer from paranoid delusions but I confess to a belief that any file in my name which arrived at the Legal Aid Agency was spirited away and hidden behind a filing cabinet for a few months before being dusted down in order to be rejected because I had missed a full stop. Having spoken to practitioners over the last year or two I have discovered that I am not alone. Why do so many of us think this is what is happening? Are they out to get us? 

30 September 2013 / Maura McGowan KC
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Grand Masters

Nicolas Bragge outlines highlights of the colourful life of Master Richard Wakeford VC whose photograph is one of many past Masters on show at the Rolls Building.  

The Chancery Masters, together with other judiciary, moved to the Rolls Building from the Thomas More Building two years ago; more recently, photographs of past and current Masters have been displayed there for public view. It is hoped that this has been welcomed as a source of interest by those who appear before us. 

30 September 2013
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Justice delayed is justice denied

Chris McWatters talks to Sir James Munby, President of the Family Division, about the modernisation of family justice . 

Sir James Munby, President of the Family Division since January, is in defiant mood. He has been tasked with a wholesale modernisation of family justice to reduce delay, the scourge of children’s proceedings. And he isn’t going to tolerate pessimism from family justice professionals who think that, for a variety of reasons, this just can’t be done. 

30 September 2013 / Chris McWatters / Chris McWatters
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A necessary evil?

Ali Naseem Bajwa QC and Terry McGuinness examine port stops carried out under Schedule 7 of the Terrorism Act 2000  

In June this year, journalist Glenn Greenwald published in The Guardian newspaper the first of a series of reports detailing US and British mass surveillance programmes, based on documents obtained by the National Security Agency whistleblower, Edward Snowden. On 18 August, Mr Greenwald’s partner and occasional assistant, David Miranda, flying via London from Berlin to Rio de Janeiro was stopped at Heathrow Airport under schedule 7 of the Terrorism Act 2000. Mr Miranda was detained for nine hours, questioned and had various items of electronic equipment seized from him. The link between Mr Greenwald’s publications and Mr Miranda’s detention is undisputed. 

30 September 2013 / Ali Naseem Bajwa / Terry McGuiness
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Inspecting the judges

As QASA, the assessment of advocates by the judges before whom they appear, is finalised, Lord Carlile suggests a scheme by which the judges themselves are inspected . 

All of us at the Bar have stories about the behaviour of judges. Many are about exceptional brilliance, kindness and courtesy: there is little doubt that the overall quality of the judiciary at every level compares favourably with any other jurisdiction in the world. It is not always so, however: for example, in my early days on the Welsh Circuit there was a ferociously able (both words used literally) judge who, while reaching the correct decisions, reduced not a few barristers to tears, and witnesses to jelly. The trial outcomes were rarely challengeable, but the means of reaching them were sometimes unacceptable. 

31 August 2013
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Taryn Lee QC

Job title
Head of chambers of 37 Park Square Chambers, Leeds. 

37 Park Square Chambers is a leading North Eastern Circuit set, specialising in the core areas of family law, criminal and civil common law. 

You are one of a few elite female QCs at the Bar, and in a further select of female heads of chambers. Do you feel the Bar is improving in supporting women through the profession?
I was fortunate enough to come to the Bar at a time when the real trailblazers had paved the way for female practitioners like myself. Lorna Cole, who was the first female barrister on the North Eastern Circuit, was a real inspiration for many of us who came after her. When she joined circuit she had to eat her meal separate from the men and completely alone in the entrance hall to the venue! Hearing stories like that provided real inspiration for me. 

31 August 2013
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The successful anti-anti suit injunction

Andrew Otchie reflects upon the Commercial Court’s approach to granting an anti-anti suit injunction  

The jurisdiction to grant a final injunction to prevent the breach of an arbitration clause is provided by s 37(1) of the Senior Courts Act 1981, which confers upon the court a general power to grant injunctions “in all cases in which it appears to the court to be just and convenient to do so”. 

31 August 2013
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Chair’s Column

Heading into summer

Chair of the Bar Sam Townend KC encourages colleagues to take a proper break over summer and highlights recent events and key activities for autumn

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