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Modernizing Legal Services in Common Law Countries

Will the US Be Left Behind?

Modernizing Legal Services in Common Law Countries cover

Modernizing Legal Services in Common Law Countries

Will the US Be Left Behind?

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Description

Most people understand that regulations have a direct bearing on their access to things such as clean air and water and safe working environments. However, in the United States, few people make the connection between how legal services are regulated and how difficult it is for them to access legal services. Indeed, on the question of affordable and accessible civil justice, the World Justice Project ranks the US 94th out of 113 countries, behind Albania, Belarus, Myanmar, and Russia.

For decades academics and others have debated whether the legal profession is self-regulated and, if it is, whether it should be. But is it the right debate? Self-regulation—or not—does not obviate the need for effective regulation.

Independent, accountable, and transparent regulatory bodies, effective oversight of those bodies, the genuine engagement of citizens in the regulatory process, evidence-based research to fully assess the impact of regulation, and an approach to regulation that is proportionate and targeted to actual risks are essential for effective regulation. Through the lens of the adoption of alternative structures, this book explains how England, Wales, and Australia have, by embracing these essential elements, successfully modernized their regulatory environments for legal services, and how Canada has taken firm steps down its own path to the same. In contrast, by rejecting these elements, the United States remains paralyzed in an unproductive regulatory environment for legal services.

This book provides a blueprint for how the US can take inspiration from its common law sisters to breathe new life into its regulatory environment for legal services. Ultimately, modernization will require more—and better—regulation that is financed publicly through equitable, progressive revenue sources.

Table of Contents

1 Good Regulation: What it Takes
2 The Regulation of Legal Services
3 A Great Big Mess
4 The Seismic Shift (with Survivors)
5 Aftershocks on their Way?
6 Assessment
7 It’s Easy to Forget Australia was First
8 In this Corner: Queensland et. al.
9 And in this Corner: New South Wales and Victoria
10A Complex Regulatory Environment…where ILPs are just Part of the Landscape
11Assessment
12 Nova Scotia: The Road is Made by Walking
13 Manitoba (and the Other Prairie Provinces): An Intimate Connection
14 British Columbia: ABS? Who Said ABS?
15 Ontario: A False Start but on its Way
16 Canadian Bar Association: Creating the Future
17 The Continuing Path of Revolution
18 Assessment
19 There was a Time before Model Rule 5.4
20 Indestructible Model Rule 5.4
21 The Two Commissions: Different or the Same?
22 The Outliers: Washington DC, Colorado and Illinois
23 Effect of Model Rule 5.4 and the Current Regulatory Framework
24 Assessment
25 Final Assessment
26 How to Modernize a Regulatory Environment
27 Rules for a Flat World (or Regulatory Dystopia) Appendix The Modern (or Modernizing) Regulator: First-Hand Insight

Product details

Published Aug 07 2017
Format Hardback
Edition 1st
Extent 384
ISBN 9781498530064
Imprint Lexington Books
Illustrations 3 BW Illustrations, 8 Tables
Dimensions 9 x 6 inches
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Author

Laura Snyder

Laura Snyder has been a lawyer, both in law firms…

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