17th Annual Bar Leaders' Conference

22 May - 23 May 2024

Constanta Ballroom

Session information

2024 is ‘the global year of elections’. What should bars and law societies do during national elections? Heads down or speak up? How can you participate with impact on important issues without being seen as politically partisan?
Constanta Ballroom

Committee(s)

Bar Issues Commission (Lead)

Description

Your members naturally have differing individual allegiances ranging across your nation’s party political spectrum. But shouldn’t all lawyers support increased investment in the legal system, the courts and access to justice? Some Bars and law societies now publish ‘manifestos’ at election time urging their various proposals for reform of the law and the legal system. 

We live in a political era increasingly characterised by polarisation of views, populism, disinformation, discourtesy, intolerance of difference and binary, extreme, ‘us-and-them’ divisions. Human rights, the rule of law and democracy itself are at risk in an election atmosphere hostile to evidence-based, respectful and balanced debate. Crucial decisions are being taken in this ‘global year of elections’. How can the independent voice, expertise and value-system of the legal profession play an appropriate role, in the public interest, at election time?

Session / Workshop Chair(s)

Ken Murphy Law Society of Ireland, Dublin, Ireland; Chair, Bar Issues Commission

Speakers

Deborah Enix-Ross Debevoise & Plimpton LLP, New York, New York, USA; Co-opted Member, Credentials Committee
Ian Jeffery The Law Society of England and Wales, London, England
Hung Ou Yang Taipei Bar Association, Taipei, Taiwan
Anne Ramberg Anne Ramberg, Stockholm, Sweden; IBAHRI Co-Chair, IBA's Human Rights Institute