Meanwhile
discussions elsewhere reached consensus on disability rights, taking competition out of the NHS, tribunal fees,
legal aid, zero - hours and short - hours contracts, agency workers, immigration, local government funding, housing, the Middle East, the minimum wage, the living wage, Royal Mail, the railways, science and technology, mental health, fracking, animal welfare, Lords
reform, reducing smoking and consumption of alcohol, fats and sugar, reaffirming all - women shortlists, youth services, careers advice, sexual and relationship
education, and even the 11 - plus (recognising that selection at age 11 damaged
education for all children, but stopping short of abolishing existing grammar schools).
Online, our monthly #CBAFutureschat reaches an international audience of people active in the Futures discourse, holding lively
discussions on topics such as
legal education, regulatory
reform and business opportunities.
There has long been
discussion that
legal education needs to be
reformed, but slow to respond to the debate have been the bodies regulating lawyers, says Harry Arthurs, former Osgoode Hall Law School dean and former LSUC bencher.