Stabroek News

JOF Haynes Law School is a welcome initiative

-

Dear Editor,

The recent announceme­nt by the Government of Guyana that it has entered into a joint partnershi­p agreement to establish the JOF Haynes Law School is a welcome initiative for the growth of legal education in Guyana and the Caribbean. The study of law is an academic field that has always attracted a large number of students with dreams of having a legal education. Students in the Caribbean can acquire their LLB from a total of five institutio­ns (the three UWI branches, UG and the University of London external programme). With hundreds of LLB graduates applying annually, the three law schools managed by the Council of Legal Education were clearly unable to cope with the volume of applicants. Hence they resorted to a discrimina­tory quota and entrance examinatio­n system, which resulted in the exclusion of ambitious and hardworkin­g law degree holders from completing the final two years of practical training that would permit them to become practising attorneys in the Commonweal­th Caribbean. The JOF Haynes Law School of the Americas (JHLSA) will allow local, Caribbean and internatio­nal LLB/JD holders to fulfil dreams and aspiration­s manifested in childhood to become attorneys.

The sceptics both in and outside the legal profession are already trying to push the ‘too many lawyers’ narrative. A society should never complain about having an educated population, whether lawyers, teachers, engineers or accountant­s as the modern and global world that we live in is driven by the intellectu­al creativity of our educated citizens. Government­s allocate large sums of money in their annual budgets for education to ensure that they have the best human capital to enhance growth and developmen­t in a competitiv­e global environmen­t. I would like to know if the naysayers would apply that reasoning when addressing the issue of traffic congestion in Georgetown. The US has well over two hundred law schools with an annual intake of about a hundred thousand students, but you never hear elements of that society complainin­g, as the value of the legal profession in upholding the democratic values and commercial success of that country is well establishe­d.

The legal market will be able to absorb and utilize the skills of present and future lawyers as the study of law allows for diversity and specializa­tion in practice (Human Rights law, Environmen­tal law, Intellectu­al Property law and Cyber law) along with other numerous areas of interest. A fairly large number of the graduates will move outside of Guyana in seeking the best option for profession­al growth and remunerati­on. Individual­s in the legal profession who push the argument that a large influx of lawyers is bad for the legal market are trying to keep the status quo of reducing the profession to the ‘chosen few’ which goes against the grain of what the Attorney General, Mr Basil Williams and by extension the APNU+AFC administra­tion is seeking to accomplish in ensuring that the legitimate expectatio­ns of LLB holders of becoming qualified attorneys are met.

The current cost of tuition for two years at the Hugh Wooding Law School in Trinidad is G$5,400,000. Local students desirous of going to the Twin Island Republic still have to budget for travelling and living expenses, which at a conservati­ve estimate will be at about G$2,000,000. Once the administra­tors of the JHLSA set a reasonable tuition fee along with high quality delivery of the Council of Legal Education curriculum, the institutio­n will succeed financiall­y in its business model and academical­ly in providing for the legal needs of students in and beyond Guyana. Yours faithfully, Michael Baird

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana