Think about what is facing us: the calls to action, the future of articling — or if not articling, what to have in its place — the impact of technology on legal practice, the access to justice imperative, the experience of
racialized members of the profession, mental health among lawyers and law students and so on and so on.
So, what did the Law Society do when told by Stratcom that
some racialized members of the professions felt that» the very act of studying racialization as a distinct phenomenon may produce stronger perceptions of its importance than are warranted in reality» or, in simple terms, that the research may tend to cause problems rather than solve them?
Not exact matches
Racial equity related experiences encountered by
racialized and Aboriginal Peoples as
members of the Nova Scotia legal
profession;