Hulls announces legal education review
VICTORIAN Attorney-General Rob Hulls has announced a review of legal education services in the state. The move coincides with significant changes to legal regulation and administration in
VICTORIAN Attorney-General Rob Hulls has announced a review of legal education services in the state. The move coincides with significant changes to legal regulation and administration in Victoria with the creation of the position of Legal Services Commissioner, currently Victoria Marles.
The scope of the proposed review “ensures legal practitioners maintain acceptable levels of professional competence and ethical standards, and deliver quality legal services to the community”, briefing materials claim. The need to regularly assess and evaluate legal education services is a significant topic in the legal community in the wake of recent changes to state and national regulations. Legal practitioners now have a wide and exhaustive array of new codes with which to acquaint themselves, as well as a new technologically advanced context in which to study further. For this reason, issues raised by online courses, for example, will be studied by the review.
The state’s Legal Profession Act 2004, which seeks to implement a more consistent national model for regulatory standards, also provides for the purposes outlined by the review Hull has announced. These include “legal aid, reform, education and research”. The Act states that it makes “changes to the way funding is administered” for these purposes. The legal education review represents the execution of this legislative promise, enabling Campbell and the advisory committee to undertake the task with a view to reporting their recommendations to the Hull by July 2006.
The terms of reference for the review can be found at www.justice.vic.gov.au and submissions may be lodged at that site or sent by email to: