The following note was issued today by the courts of England and Wales encouraging greater participation of junior counsel in courts and tribunals hearings. It states upfront the rationale for doing so.
Courts in other jurisdictions have issued similar notes, and even without such encouragement, the practice is followed in the courts of some jurisdiction already.
Some arbitral tribunals may raise in a case management conference the desirability of the parties and their representatives considering the greater participation of junior counsel with “speaking parts”.
The concept may be more acceptable to parties and counsel if (a) they understand that the tribunal is encouraging such participation, and (b) a particular issue (for example) is agreed between counsel as one that will be handled by junior counsel on both sides.
November 8, 2023
"Encouraging greater participation of junior counsel in courts and tribunals hearings"
Allowing junior counsel to participate in oral argument supports their continuing development as advocates. There is also anecdotal evidence, supported by empirical data from a Supreme Court study, that women are under-represented as leading advocates, especially in major civil and Business and Property Courts litigation.
It is desirable therefore to give junior counsel in general, and female junior counsel in particular, better opportunities to advance oral argument in courts and tribunals.
It is acknowledged that this will not always be possible, and will depend upon the nature of the argument and the length of the hearing. However in all suitable cases involving leading and junior counsel, particularly where junior counsel has been heavily involved in the drafting of the written argument, judges will be expected to ask whether a speaking part for junior counsel has been considered, and will generally be amenable to both junior and leading counsel addressing the court or tribunal (junior counsel may for example, deal with intermediate points in the principal argument). In cases where this issue is likely to arise therefore, the parties should consider it in advance of the commencement of the oral argument.
Baroness Carr of Walton-on-the-Hill
Lady Chief Justice of England & Wales
Sir Geoffrey Vos
Master of the Rolls
Dame Victoria Sharp
President of the King’s Bench Division
Sir Andrew McFarlane
President of the Family Division
Sir Julian Flaux
Chancellor of the High Court
Sir Keith Lindblom
Senior President of Tribunals
A link to the judiciary's note is in Comments.
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Mediator and Arbitrator at JAMS
2wThis is a great!