Legal Profession
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The Legal Careers in Russia
Many people consider the profession of a lawyer to be one of the most popular professions in our country.
Training lawyers is the task of different higher schools and the Dagestan State University is one of them.
Graduates from higher legal schools are said to have a lot of options where to apply their knowledge. The choice is very wide. Lawyers with the same qualification and professional title may be doing very different kinds of work. The working conditions and pay among members of the legal profession also vary greatly.
Our graduates can work at the Bar, in the organs of the Prosecutor’s Office, in different courts, in notary offices, legal advice offices, in organs of police as well as in different companies, banks, and enterprises. They can work as advocates, judges, notaries, investigators, prosecutors, in-house lawyers, customs officers, and other workers of law enforcement agencies.
Some lawyers may work as judges. Judges preside in the courtroom, conduct legal proceedings, resolve disputes and pass judgments.
As an advocate, a lawyer acts for the client in court and out of court. The advocate’s work can include defending those accused of committing a crime.
A lawyer can work at the Prosecutor’s Office as a prosecutor or a prosecutor’s assistant. He / she should supervise the correct application and observance of the law.
He / she can also be a notary at the notary office and should be able to perform notary actions such as checking the legality of all the documents before notarizing them.
A lawyer can be appointed as an arbitrator at the Commercial court. He / she should be able to settle disputes between legal persons.
Nowadays there are many careers in law enforcement at the Police and the Investigative Committee. The main task of law enforcement is to prevent, investigate and solve crimes.
Some lawyers serve as in-house lawyers and work for companies and enterprises. They inform clients about legal matters, draft contracts and other documents, mediate and negotiate settlements.
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Types of legal professions in the uk
England is almost unique in having two different kinds of lawyers, with separate jobs in the legal system. The two kinds of lawyers are solicitors and barristers.
Solicitors
If a person has a legal problem, he will go and see a solicitor. Almost every town will have at least one. There are about 50,000 solicitors, a number which is rapidly increasing, and they make up by far the largest branch of the legal profession in England and Wales.
Many problems are dealt with exclusively by a solicitor. They deal with all the day-today work of preparing legal documents for buying and selling houses, making wills, etc. Solicitors also work on court cases for their clients, prepare cases for barristers to present in the higher courts, and may represent their client in a Magistrates' court, the lowest Court. The solicitor deals with petty crimes and some matrimonial matters in Magistrates' Court. He prepares the case and the evidence. He actually speaks in Court for you.
In a civil action he can speak in the County Court, when the case is one of divorce or recovering some debts. In the County Court the solicitor wears a black gown over his ordinary clothes.
A solicitor also deals with matters outside Court. He does the legal work involved in buying a house, for instance. He writes legal letters for you and carries on legal arguments outside Court. If you want to make a will the best man to advise you is a solicitor.
To qualify as a solicitor, a young man or woman joins a solicitor as a "clerk" and works for him whilst studying part time for the "Law Society" exams. Interestingly enough, it is not necessary for you to go to university. When you have passed all the necessary exams, you can "practice", which means you can start business on your own.
Barristers
There are about 5,000 barristers who defend or prosecute in the higher courts. Although solicitors and barristers work together on cases, barristers specialize in representing clients in court and the training and career structures for the two types of lawyers are quite separate. In court, barristers wear wigs and gowns in keeping with the extreme formality of the proceedings. The highest level of barristers has the title Q.C. (Queen's Counsel).
Barristers are different from solicitors. Barristers are experts in the interpretation of the Law. They are called in to advise on really difficult points. The barrister is also an expert on advocacy (the art of presenting cases in Court). Indeed, if you desire representation in any Court except the Magistrates' Court, you must have a barrister, with one or two exceptions.
Barristers are rather remote figures. If you need one, for instance, you never see him without your solicitor being with him. Barristers do not have public offices in any street. They work in what are known as chambers, often in London. They all belong to institutions called Inns of Court, which are ancient organizations rather like exclusive clubs. In many ways the remoteness they have and the job they do are medieval in conception.
To qualify as a barrister you have to take the examinations of the Bar Council. These are different from solicitors' examinations. There are over 5,000 barristers in England. A good one can earn 30,000 pounds a year. Only barristers can become judges in English Court above a Magistrates' Court.
Judges
There are a few hundred judges, trained as barristers, who preside in more serious cases. The statutory basis for the appointment of judges dates back to the Act of Settlement 1700. There is no separate training for judges.
In Britain, the vast majority of judges (that is, the people who decide what should be done with people who commit crimes) are unpaid. They are called "Magistrates", or "Justices of the Peace" (JPs). They are ordinary citizens who are selected not because they have any legal training but because they have "sound common sense" and understand their fellow human beings. They give up time voluntarily.
MAGISTRATES
There are about 30,000 magistrates (JPs), who judge cases in the lower courts. They are usually unpaid and have no formal legal qualifications, but they are respectable people who are given some training.
Magistrates are selected by special committees in every town and district. Nobody, not even the Magistrates themselves, knows who is on the special committee in their area. The committee tries to draw Magistrates from as wide a variety of professions and social classes as possible.
There are two types of magistrates in England and Wales: lay magistrates, also known as lay justices, who have the title of 'JPs', and stipendiary magistrates. The former is a body of men and women which has been in existence since the fourteenth century, and is called on to pass judgement on their fellow citizens, without any real legal training. The latter is a body of lawyers, called upon to do substantially the same job, which dates from the 18th century. They both exercise their powers in a less formal court than the other courts, known as the Magistrates' Courts, and deal with more cases than any other court of law in the English legal system.
The main job of the magistrates is to deal with civil and criminal cases too trivial to be dealt with by the Crown and County Courts.
In terms of their criminal jurisdiction the Magistrates' Courts deal with something over 95% of all cases.
HIGH COURT JUDGES
A small proportion of judges are not Magistrates. They are called "High Court Judges" and they deal with the most serious crimes, such as those for which the criminal might be sent to prison for more than a year. High Court Judges, unlike Magistrates, are paid salaries by the State and have considerable legal training.
Jury
The use of the jury in English law stretches far into history. The modern English jury now owes its statutory existence to the Juries Act 1974.
A jury consist of twelve people ("jurors"), who are ordinary people chosen at random from the Electoral Register (the list of people can vote in elections). The jury listen to the evidence given in court in certain criminal cases and decide whether the defendant is guilty or innocent. If they all agree, they have reached a unanimous verdict. If no more than two people disagree the judge may ask for a majority verdict. If the person is found guilty, the punishment is passed by the presiding judge. The accused has the right to appeal and ask for the case to be heard by a higher court. Juries are rarely used in civil cases.
Coroners
Coroners have medical or legal training (or both), and inquire into violent or unnatural deaths.
Clerks of the court
Clerks look after administrative and legal matters in the courtroom.
1. What is the main difference between barristers and solicitors in the English legal system?
ReplyDelete2. What are the main functions of a solicitor in providing legal assistance to clients?
3. What steps must be taken to become a barrister in England?
4. How many lawyers practice in England compared to the US, and what does this say about the legal profession in each country?
5. What arguments are made in the debate about the possibility of eliminating the distinction between barristers and solicitors?