Barristers


LSB rejects call to harmonise indemnity insurance and compensation rules

1 December 2017

The Legal Services Board has rejected a call from its consumer panel to consider a centralised regime of financial protection for clients to replace what the panel called the “fragmented” nature of insurance and compensation arrangements across the different legal regulators.


Six years after it was due to begin, BSB pulls the plug on QASA

29 November 2017

The Bar Standards Board effectively killed the Quality Assurance Scheme for Advocates (QASA) today – six years after it was meant to come into force – by saying it was pulling out to go in a different direction to assure the quality of criminal advocates. QASA was originally meant to start in December 2011.


Lack of young barristers could be fatal for “sustainable, separate profession”

29 November 2017

The lack of young barristers is now so acute that it could spell the end of a “sustainable, separate profession”, the incoming chairman of the Bar has warned. Andrew Walker QC said: “To put it bluntly, we are recruiting and retaining ever fewer new tenants, and have been for over a decade, and the Bar is steadily growing older.”


BSB to lower standard of proof in disciplinary cases as it names new chair

24 November 2017

The standard of proof in disciplinary cases involving barristers is being lowered to the balance of probabilities following a decision yesterday by the Bar Standards Board. Meanwhile, a former Labour minister has been appointed as the next chair of the board.


LSB reveals “stream of disagreements” as it begins review of regulatory independence rules

10 November 2017

A “steady stream of disagreements” between legal regulators and representative bodies means the rules governing their relationships may need to be rewritten, the Legal Services Board said yesterday. The oversight regulator said it had been notified of 30 disputes over the past three years.


Munby sets aside divorce petitions because of fraud by disbarred barrister

9 November 2017

The president of the Family Division has set aside 21 fraudulent divorce petitions produced by a disbarred barrister. Sir James Munby found that, in each case, the underlying proceedings were “tainted by deception”. The applications were made by the Queen’s Proctor – an official of the Crown able to intervene in divorce and probate cases.


Bar recognises wellbeing pioneers as CBA warns of “crisis” among criminal barristers

7 November 2017

The Bar Council has issued its first series of certificates to recognise efforts made to support the wellbeing of barristers, clerks and chambers’ staff. The move came as the Criminal Bar Association – itself one of the 31 chambers, inns and specialist Bar associations to receive a certificate – warned of a “crisis” in the wellbeing of its members.


Langdon sounds warning bell over “shrinking” junior Bar

6 November 2017

While the Bar continues to increase in size, the junior Bar is shrinking, in part because of competition from solicitors, the profession’s leader has warned. Bar Council chairman Andrew Langdon QC highlighted wellbeing and diversity as two further challenges to a Bar that he said was otherwise changing with the times and following the market.


BSB presses ahead with compulsory registration of youth court barristers

1 November 2017

The Bar Standard Board has decided to introduce compulsory registration of youth court barristers, despite fierce opposition from the Bar Council. However, it shied away from demanding compulsory training, arguing that the market for youth advocacy was too “fragile” for additional regulation.


“Complete backing” for not extending cab-rank rule to public access work

30 October 2017

The cab-rank rule will not be extended to public and licensed access (PLA) cases after the Bar Standards Board received complete backing for the position in consultation. Feedback has also led it to drop plans for a requirement that PLA barristers disclose of the level of their professional indemnity insurance.

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