Modernizing Legal Services in Common Law Countries: Will the US Be Left Behind
By (Author) Laura Snyder
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
7th August 2017
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Central / national / federal government
Public administration / Public policy
340.57
Hardback
384
Width 157mm, Height 240mm, Spine 34mm
753g
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-regulationor notdoes 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 moreand betterregulation that is financed publicly through equitable, progressive revenue sources.
Laura SnydersModernizing Legal Services in Common Law Countriesis a major step forward for legal services regulation scholarship.Snyder offers a sophisticated, comprehensive comparison ofregulatory structures and reform in England & Wales, Australia, Canada, and the United States.The book draws on an enormous wealth of primary and secondary research.It also offers a compelling vision for fostering access to justice and professionalism through regulatory reform.This highly recommended book willprove a valuable resource for all scholars and practitioners of legal services regulation, as well as anyone who wants to improve the practice of law. -- Noel Semple, University of Windsor
Laura Snyder takes the OECD's six principles of effective regulatory policy and forensically applies them to legal services. She compares them across the US, the UK, Australia, and Canada. Each country (and states within) has its own approach to legal regulation. Some like the US are conservative while others like the UK are liberal. Using deep analysis and interviews with key players in legal services, Snyder refreshingly opens a dark, convoluted world to our gaze, which is long overdue. -- John Flood, Griffith University Law School
This careful, comprehensive and thoughtful study throws down the gauntlet to the American legal profession...now the question is whether there is anyone brave enough to pick it up -- Richard Devlin, Dalhousie University
Laura Snyder has been a lawyer, both in law firms and as in-house counsel, for over twenty years. She received her JD from the University of Illinois, a DEA from the University of Paris I, and a TRIUM Executive MBA.