City Law School

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The City Law School
London-Inns-of-Court.JPG
Parent school City University London
Established 1852
School type Public
Dean Professor Carl Stychin
Location London, England
Website http://www.city.ac.uk/law/

The City Law School is one of the seven schools of City University in the City of London. In 2001, the prestigious Inns of Court School of Law became part of City University London, and is now known as The City Law School. Until 1997,[1] the ICSL had a monopoly on the provision of the Bar Vocational Course (BVC), now known as the Bar Professional Training Course (BPTC), the obligatory professional training for would-be barristers in England and Wales, before they commence pupillage.

The School is divided into two sections on two campuses. The academic instruction section is based in the Gloucester Building, next to the university's main campus on Northampton Square. It offers education at all levels of legal qualification, including a three-year undergraduate Bachelor of Laws (LLB) programme, a two-year Graduate Entry LLB degree programme, a one-year Masters of Law (LLM) and the Graduate Diploma in Law (GDL) course (formerly known as the Common Professional Examination). This latter programme enjoys a nationwide reputation as one of Britain's elite qualifying diploma courses for non-law graduates. The School also teaches the Legal Practice Course (LPC) for would-be solicitors. In 2007, it received the highest grading from the Law Society of England and Wales for its provision.

The professional instruction section, formerly the Inns of Court School of Law, is located at Gray's Inn near Holborn in the Camden district of London. This section administers the Bar Professional Training Course (formerly the Bar Vocational Course) for intending barristers and the Legal Practice Course for intending solicitors as well as several Master of Laws (LLM) masters programmes. The Legal Practice Course is the only one in London to be rated 'Excellent' by the Law Society.

Approximately 1500 students are enrolled at the City Law School each year.

The City Law School is the home of the Senior Moot, an internal cross-programmes postgraduate moot for which approximately 800 students are eligible from the BPTC, LPC, GDL and GE LLB programmes. A Prestige Places scheme enables a number of places to be pre-allocated to existing national or international mooting champions within the eligible student body. It was launched in 2014 and is commercially sponsored. Its prize pot is annually one of the largest in the world. Winners: 2014 Darryl Hutcheon; 2015, Mark Galtrey.

History

The Inns of Court School of Law, often abbreviated as ICSL, was founded by the Council of Legal Education in 1852. It was a professional legal training institution based for 100 years at Lincoln's Inn and then at Gray's Inn in London. Until 1997, the ICSL had a monopoly on the provision of the Bar Vocational Course (now the Bar Professional Training Course), the obligatory, pre-pupillage training course for intending barristers in England and Wales. Before that time the Inns of Court were responsible for the education of those intending to become barristers. There was call during the nineteenth century for the education of barristers to be unified and thus the Council of Legal Education was formed and ICSL founded. Since 2001 the ICSL has been part of City University London.

The Council of Legal Education (CLE) was established by Resolutions of the Inns of Court in 1852. The CLE initially met in the library of Lincoln's Inn. In 1903 it moved to 15 Old Square, Lincoln's Inn. In 1947, the CLE moved to 7 Stone Buildings, where it was able to provide lecture rooms, and other facilities for students. In 1964, the CLE acquired premises in Gray's Inn. In 1967, the Inns of Court School of Law (ICSL) was formally established on the current site, 4 Gray's Inn Place. The first Dean, Charles Morrison, was appointed in 1969.

As well as the site at 4 Gray's Inn Place, the ICSL also acquired the Atkin Building in Gray's Inn and a building in Princeton Street - formerly the London studios of Yorkshire Television.

Although the name "Inns of Court School of Law" is no longer used, the location, and traditions of the original institution remain unchanged.

When the ICSL was first created, each of the four Inns of Court were required to provide two rooms for teaching purposes. Until just after the Second World War, the ICSL was located in Lincoln's Inn. In the 1950s, a purpose-built building was constructed at 4, Gray's Inn Place (within Gray's Inn) and the school relocated there. Shortly after that, Atkin Building in Gray's Inn was secured and then in the 1980s a further building was acquired for the ICSL in Princeton Street, formerly the London studios of Yorkshire Television.

Rebranding

In July 2008, the ICSL brand was dropped and replaced with the City Law School brand. Replacement of the ICSL brand was phased in gradually. Initially, both logos were used on the school stationery. In the 2007-2008 academic year, school publications bore The City Law School name with the ICSL logo. Now, The City Law School logo is used exclusively.

Many students, legal professionals and Inns of Court School of Law alumni still refer to City Law School as the "Inns of Court School of Law".

ICSL Coat of Arms

The ICSL Coat of Arms, used to be displayed at the front entrance to Gray's Inn Place. The Arms consisted of the joint Coats of Arms of all four Inns of Court, namely (in order) Lincoln's Inn, the Middle Temple, the Inner Temple and Gray's Inn. The Council of Legal Education used a similar form of the Arms.

Academic courses

The School teaches the Graduate Diploma in Law (GDL) for graduates who wish to qualify as a lawyer without a law degree. The diploma has a strong reputation, and boasts an array of visiting lecturers, many of whom are leading academics in legal education.

The School also offers the Graduate Entry LLB (Hons); a senior status law degree which allows non-law graduates to achieve an LLB law degree in just two years rather than the usual three.

The School also offers an undergraduate LLB three year degree.

Professional courses

The School teaches the Bar Professional Training Course (BPTC) for intending barristers and the Legal Practice Course (LPC) for intending solicitors. In 2007, it received the highest grading from the Law Society of England and Wales. The School also provides a range of Continuing Professional Development (CPD) courses and a Master of Laws (LLM) programme.

Students who successfully complete the BPTC or LPC are awarded a Postgraduate Diploma. The City Law School provides both BPTC and LPC students with the ability to apply for a LLM degree with additional work to be completed over a second year of study.

Campus

Academic courses are based in the Innovation Centre, based in the Social Sciences Building on Whiskin Street in Clerkenwell, part of the Northampton Square campus of City University. Law students have their own academic and library facilities.

Professional courses are based in three buildings at the site of the former Inns of Court School of Law, at Gray's Inn, 4, Gray's Inn Place, Atkin Building and Princeton Street.

4 Gray's Inn Place houses the library, school office and the staff offices. Located in Atkin Building is the lecture theatre, the Student Common Room, the Muslim Prayer Room and several small group rooms. The Princeton Street building houses seminar rooms, a computer suite, and video recording rooms, and is host to the School's pro bono facilities. The buildings contain "mini-courtrooms" in which BPTC students practice their advocacy skills.

Each room has digital recording facilities to allow for filming a student's advocacy performances.

BPTC Association

The purpose of the BPTC Association is to provide parties and social activities for those students at The City Law School reading for the Bar. The School provides the BPTC Association with funds for the purpose of undertaking this task. All BPTC students are automatically members of the BPTC Association. The Committee Officers are the President, Vice President, Social Secretary and Treasurer, all of which are elected by the BPTC students.

Notable people and alumni

Alumni include many judges, Queen's Counsel, and distinguished academics. Others who went on to achieve the highest distinction include four British Prime MinistersTony Blair,[2] Margaret Thatcher, Clement Attlee and H. H. Asquith — as well as Carwyn Jones (First Minister of Wales), M A Jinnah (first Governor General and founder of Pakistan),[2] Mahatma Gandhi, Jawaharlal Nehru (first Prime Minister of India) and Richard Ground, former Attorney General of the Cayman Islands, Chief Justice of the Turks and Caicos Islands and Chief Justice of Bermuda.

The current Dean of City Law School is Carl Stychin. Professor Carl Stychin joined City University London as Dean of The City Law School in December 2012. After completing his initial legal training in Canada, he articled at a large corporate commercial firm in Toronto followed by a judicial clerkship for Chief Justice Brian Dickson at the Supreme Court of Canada. He studied for a Masters in Law at Columbia Law School, and was part of the Associates in Law Program, which gave him the opportunity to teach Legal Research and Writing to first year JD students. Professor Stychin is best known for his research on law, gender and sexuality, and he has published three monographs, co-edited three collections, and published numerous articles in the field. In addition, he has longstanding interests in tort law, law and popular culture, and he has edited a student 'text and materials' collection (now in its fourth edition, co-edited with Professor Linda Mulcahy) on Legal Methods and Systems. He is currently the editor of Social & Legal Studies: An International Journal.

In 2014, he was made a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences in recognition of his contribution to research in the field of socio-legal studies of gender and sexuality.

Previous Deans include Professor Adrian Keane. Professor Keane is also the author of the Modern Law of Evidence and a contributing author to both Blackstone's Civil Practice and Blackstone's Criminal Practice. The BPTC Course Director is Stuart Sime, who is also the Co-ordinator of the Civil Litigation module. Mr Sime is also the author of a Practical Approach to Civil Litigation, author and editor of the ICSL Civil Litigation Manual and co-editor of Blackstone's Civil Practice.

The Head of the Professional Programmes is Professor Peter Hungerford-Welch, who joined the Inns of Court of Law in 1986 and is an authority on Criminal Procedure and Sentencing. The Head of the Academic Programmes is Professor Jason Chuah, a leading authority on Commercial and Maritime Law.

The BPTC Course Director is Professor Stuart Sime. Professor Sime is also the author of a Practical Approach to Civil Litigation, co-editor of Blackstone's Civil Practice, co-author of the Jackson ADR Handbook, and the author and/or co-author of several other books on civil procedure, ADR and company law. The LPC and CPD departments are led by David Amos.

References

  1. International Handbook of Selection and Assessment - Anderson & Herriott (Wiley, 1997) page 184
  2. 2.0 2.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links

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