Lecture on How to be a Feminist Lawyer
/Listen to the audio of our lecture on How to be a Feminist Lawyer. Speakers are Elizabeth Woodcraft and Alison Diduck.
Listen to the audio of our lecture on How to be a Feminist Lawyer. Speakers are Elizabeth Woodcraft and Alison Diduck.
How to be a Feminist Lawyer
Speakers: Elizabeth Woodcraft, family law barrister and Professor Alison Diduck, Professor of Law at University College London
Government’s attack on squatters
Speakers: David Watkinson, barrister and specialist in squatters’ rights and representative from Squatters Action for Secure Rights (SQUASH)
Our comrade Selcuk Kozağaçlı, Chair of Contemporary Lawyers Association in Turkey, has been detained, along with other lawyers, since January 2013. He is awaiting trial on trumped up charges. These dreadful photographs show him being assaulted after he had refused to give blood and saliva samples to the Turkish police in January.
Photos of the abuse can be found by clicking "Click to read more" below.
Please distribute widely, around your workplace and in robing rooms at court.
Download the new leaflet: No Confidence - Support the Strike (PDF).
The motion below, which can be downloaded here in Word (docx) form, is intended as a model motion for trade unions who want to show their support to the fight to save Legal Aid.
This organisation believes:
1. Legal aid, which celebrated its 60th birthday recently was a major concession won in the post-war consensus years. This major reform was won by the working class hand in hand with the trade union movement and the Labour Party.
2. Legal aid helped to secure rights and court representation in relation to eviction, welfare and the threat of unjust convictions. It leveled the playing field between the richest who could afford lawyers and the poorest who could not.
3. At the time of its launch, eight out of 10 people were entitled to the scheme’s assistance. The latest figures from the Ministry of Justice reveal fewer than one in three are now eligible.
4. On 1 April 2013, the cuts in the Legal Aid Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012 came into force. There is no longer legal aid for advice or representation in welfare benefits, employment, family cases (where there is no domestic violence), immigration cases and consumer rights.
5. On 9 April 2013 the government announced a consultation on further legal aid cuts: “Transforming legal aid”. The Government intends to cut a further 17.5% from the criminal defence budget and proposes to introduce a tendering system for large scale regional contracts in relation to duty solicitor work. If these proposals are implemented, we believe that the quality of legal aid services will fall dramatically and there will be an increased risk of miscarriages of justice that could lead to innocent people being convicted of crimes that they did not commit.
6. In addition, further cuts to civil legal aid rates mean that there will no longer be specialist legal aid lawyers providing advice and representation in areas of housing law, education, for people asserting their rights against the state or other civil cases.
7. The legal aid budget only represents only 0.545% of national public spending (or £2.2 billion - the approximate cost of keeping the NHS running for 2 weeks). Legal aid is provided at a very low cost to the public purse but has the potential to provide access to justice to a great many, most often those most in need.
8. Legal aid should be viewed as part of the wider trade union campaign to defend public services and the welfare state.
This organisation agrees to:
1. Campaign for the defence of legal aid.
2. Support calls for legal aid to be recognised as part of the welfare state.
3. Support publicity efforts including: demands to campaign for the defence of legal aid and for legal aid rates to be restored to pre-1979 levels; and publicising advice and representation on employment law issues, as a stepping stone to a fully funded legal aid system.
4. Affiliate to The Justice Alliance - an alliance of legal organisations, charities, community groups, campaigning groups, trade unions and individuals who are united in the opposition to the Government's proposed attack on legal aid and the criminal justice system[1].
5. Register our support for those in the legal profession taking direct action, including strike action.
[1] To affiliate please contact Justice Alliance organiser Russell Fraser: russell.fraser@me.com
Motion opposing the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership agreement
Haldane strongly opposes the EU/ US free trade agreement, otherwise known as the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership agreement (TTIP) - the purpose of which is to further entrench the power of capital and corporate rights at the expense of everything else - social, environmental and labour standards.
Motion regarding devastation and human catastrophe unfolding in the Phillipines
Haldane AGM notes:
(i) the devastating and urgent human catastrophe in the Philippines caused by Typhoon Haiyan;
(ii) the need for an effective humanitarian response that will alleviate suffering in the immediate future and further when the passing interest of the world’s media moves on;
(iii) the specific request for financial support by Haldane’s comrades in the Philippines, several of whom visited London in February 2012 as part of the DHRD conference and with whom we have developed strong links and offered solidarity in their struggle for social and economic rights.
Resolves:
(i) To facilitate a collection at the conclusion of the AGM with any monies raised being sent with a donation of £100 already agreed by the Haldane Executive earlier this week.
Advance tickets have now sold out but plenty will still be available on the door for the Haldane Society of Socialist Lawyers Winter Party!
The party will be held at Garden Court Chambers on 5 December 2013 from 6.30 pm. (Click here for directions.)
Tickets are £10 full priced or £8 students / unwaged / low-waged (£12 full priced or £10 students / unwaged / low-waged on the door).
Food and drink are included in the ticket price.
Members and non-members alike are welcome.
Tickets were sold online up to around midnight the night before the party. Tickets can be purchased at full price of £12/£10 on the door.
Liz Davies, Chair of the Haldane Society of Socialist Lawyers, has sent a letter to the President of Turkey expressing our strong concerns regarding the treatment of Advocate Ramazan Demir.
Adv. Demir has been summoned to appear before the special prosecutor of the 15th Criminal Court in Silivri in relation to a statement he made in the course of his duties as counsel in court on 16 November 2012. No complaint was made by either the judge or the prosecutor at the time he made the statement, however, six months later, on 13 May 2013, the prosecutor placed him under formal investigation, alleging a violation of article 125 of the Turkish Criminal Code, namely “offending the dignity of a public authority in the performance of its duties”.
The alleged statement was made in what is known as the “KCK Press Trial” in which 44 journalists stand accused in Silivri. Adv. Demir on behalf of his client requested that an expert witness should be appointed. He stated the self-evident fact that it is not open to a prosecutor to simply assert that journalists lacked “independence” or behaved in any way inappropriate to their profession. Such an allegation must be proved by expert evidence on issues such as journalistic ethics and the international human rights guarantees of freedom of expression.
On the basis of his request, we understand that Adv. Demir now faces prosecution for an offence of “insulting or offending the dignity of a public authority in the performance of his duties.”
We will be bringing these matters to the attention of the appropriate United Nations Special Rapporteurs and the Council of Europe’s Commissioner for Human Rights. We will continue to monitor any further attempts to undermine the abilities of Adv. Demir and his professional colleagues to provide the professional representation to their clients and international standards of human rights require.
[The first embedded file in this article is a letter from the Justice Alliance to Nick Clegg. The second embedded file in this article includes testimonials attached to the letter.]