The Legal Services Act 2007 effected major changes in the disciplinary system for solicitors in England Wales. Both the practice regulator, the Solicitors Regulation Authority, and a disciplinary body, the Solicitors Disciplinary Tribunal, were reconstituted as independent bodies and given new powers. Our concern is the impact of the Act on the disciplinary system for solicitors. Examination of this issue involves consideration of changes to regulatory institutions and the mechanics of practice regulation. Drawing on Foucault’s notion of governmentality, empirical evidence drawn from disciplinary cases handled by the SDT and the SRA in 2015 is used to explore potentially different conceptions of discipline informing the work of the regulato...
In England and Wales the arrangements for compensating victims of lawyer default, fraud, incompetenc...
The regulation of solicitors in England and Wales has undergone great change in the wake of the Lega...
Around the globe regulators are rethinking the scope of their mandates and responsibilities. They ar...
The legal profession in England and Wales has a long established approach to the regulation of lawye...
This study deals with misconduct cases involving solicitors, the largest legal profession in England...
The Legal Services Act 2007 caused a need to change professional conduct rules for lawyers in Englan...
The Legal Services Act 2007 provided a framework for a liberalised marketplace for legal services. T...
This Note begins with an examination of the disciplinary role of the Law Society, the solicitors\u27...
The Legal Services Act 2007 represents an ambitious attempt to reconcile consumerism and professiona...
Self-regulation and discipline by the solicitor's profession is in crisis. There is evidence of fail...
This chapter explores the regulation of legal professions. It looks at different theories of regulat...
Outcomes-Focused Regulation (OFR) was introduced to the solicitors’ branch of the legal services mar...
In many jurisdictions, lawyer-run discipline systems are inefficient, overly lenient and insufficien...
This article analyses the regulatory handbooks produced by the new regulators for solicitors and bar...
This working paper is a chapter from the forthcoming ‘Clinical Legal Education Handbook’ which is du...
In England and Wales the arrangements for compensating victims of lawyer default, fraud, incompetenc...
The regulation of solicitors in England and Wales has undergone great change in the wake of the Lega...
Around the globe regulators are rethinking the scope of their mandates and responsibilities. They ar...
The legal profession in England and Wales has a long established approach to the regulation of lawye...
This study deals with misconduct cases involving solicitors, the largest legal profession in England...
The Legal Services Act 2007 caused a need to change professional conduct rules for lawyers in Englan...
The Legal Services Act 2007 provided a framework for a liberalised marketplace for legal services. T...
This Note begins with an examination of the disciplinary role of the Law Society, the solicitors\u27...
The Legal Services Act 2007 represents an ambitious attempt to reconcile consumerism and professiona...
Self-regulation and discipline by the solicitor's profession is in crisis. There is evidence of fail...
This chapter explores the regulation of legal professions. It looks at different theories of regulat...
Outcomes-Focused Regulation (OFR) was introduced to the solicitors’ branch of the legal services mar...
In many jurisdictions, lawyer-run discipline systems are inefficient, overly lenient and insufficien...
This article analyses the regulatory handbooks produced by the new regulators for solicitors and bar...
This working paper is a chapter from the forthcoming ‘Clinical Legal Education Handbook’ which is du...
In England and Wales the arrangements for compensating victims of lawyer default, fraud, incompetenc...
The regulation of solicitors in England and Wales has undergone great change in the wake of the Lega...
Around the globe regulators are rethinking the scope of their mandates and responsibilities. They ar...