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Centre for Legal Profession and Legal Services

Who we are

During the last 20 years research and scholarship on the delivery of legal services and the organization and work of the legal profession has expanded rapidly. Abel and Lewis’ three-volume series in the 1980s opened a new field of research both national and comparative. Since then there has emerged a wide range of research approaches to legal profession and legal services: organizational, geographical, on lawyer-client relationships, ethics and malpractice, on politics of lawyers, cause lawyering, and diversity in the legal profession, to name some.

The University of Westminster’s School of Law has been and continues to be at the forefront of legal profession and legal services research. Our work includes research on solicitor-advocates, women in law, pro bono and ethics, theorisations of legal ethics and morality, legal education, entry into the legal profession , cause lawyering, lawyer-client relationships, and the globalization  of the legal profession. We have also researched in the areas of dispute resolution in civil justice, dispute resolution in the family law context, legal aid, and litigation funding.

We have received research funding from, amongst others, Nuffield Foundation, ESRC, Law Society, Legal Services Commission, Bar Council, Department for Constitutional Affairs, German Science Foundation, and ACLEC.

Staff

The centre is composed of fellows and associate fellows. We also have research students attached to the centre. Please follow the links below to find out more.

Fellows 

  • Prof Richard L Abel, UCLA Law School, Visiting Professor, University of Westminster
  • Prof David Barnhizer, Cleveland-Marshall College of Law, Visiting Professor, University of Westminster
  • Prof Andrew Boon, Dean of School of Law, University of Westminster
  • Ms Elizabeth Duff, Head of Dept of Academic Legal Studies, University of Westminster
  • Prof John Flood, School of Law, University of Westminster
  • Dr Andreas Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos, Reader in Law, University of Westminster
  • Dr Magdalena Tulibacka, Senior Lecturer in Law, University of Westminster
  • Dr Lisa Webley, Reader in Law, University of Westminster
  • Ms Avis Whyte, Principal Research Fellow, School of Law, University of Westminster

Associate Fellows

  • Dr Daniel Muzio, Senior Lecturer in Employment Relations, Leeds University Business School
  • Roger Fisher, Solicitor and Honorary Professor, University of Kent
  • Chris Maguire, Director of Quality Assurance and Enhancement, BPP College of Professional Studies

Research Students

For more information please contact Prof John Flood at john@johnflood.com

The Modern Research Context

This is an opportune time to be launching a new research centre on the legal profession and legal services as they are experiencing their most profound changes in many years following the passing of the Legal Services Act 2007. In addition to its mainstream research activities the centre will study and inform both the profession and others who are affected by these changes.

The act introduces new regulators, especially the Legal Services Board, and new forms of organization for the delivery of legal services, such as Legal Disciplinary Practices and Alternative Business Structures.  And this may place pressures on current conceptions of legal ethics and best practice approaches to lawyering. It may require a radical rethinking of conceptions of professional ethics in the context of transparency and accountability. It may also change the way in which clients engage with and perceive legal services and alternatives to traditional legal service delivery.

Although the main impact will be felt in the UK, the eventual repercussions will be global. Law is a global business and profession. The UK has some of the largest law firms in the world and competes with lawyers from the USA and Europe. Its legal services market generates revenues in excess of £14 billion and accounts for over 20% of the European legal market.

New organizational forms — whether Big Law or at the supermarket level — will transform the delivery of legal services and at the same time create tensions with foreign legal regulators who take more restrictive views of the legal profession.

The legal profession also faces challenges from governments who want to restrict expenditure on legal services for poor people. Legal aid now covers less than 29% of the population. Mixed models of delivery have become the norm: judicare, salaried lawyers, legal expenses insurance, third party litigation funding, and pro bono.

Activities

The centre will run research projects, organize seminars and workshops, and disseminate information through its website and blogs.

Conferences

Andy Boon and David Barnhizer, with Avrom Sherr, Director of the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies,  organised an international conference, Regulating and Deregulating Lawyers, at the Institute on 3rd and 4th June 2010. The conference was attended by US, Canadian and Australian, lawyers academics and regulators, including representatives of the Legal Services Board, and was opened by Baroness Ruth Deech, Chair of the Bar Standards Board and Charles Plant, Chair of the Solicitors Regulation Authority. A range of issues were covered, from regulation of lawyers in tribal courts to curbing contingency fees, but the main focus was the increasing adoption of entity and audit approaches to regulation, as found particularly in the UK, Australia and Canada. Many were in favour of this development, arguing that lawyers had much to gain from being regulated as businesses. Others expressed concerns at the erosion of professionalism by the state, including threats to lawyer independence. John Flood, Lisa Webley  and Andy Boon presented papers.

Download the Legal Regulation IALS - interim (PDF 241 Kb)

Download the Law Society Gatekeeper powerpoint