PLIGHT OF A KENYAN LAW STUDENT.
Admission systems unfair to law students
Becoming a member of the legal profession leading to enrolment as an
Advocate of the High Court of Kenya under the Advocates Act has been
made gruelling with unnecessary delays and the process developing into a
nightmare.
There are presently 10 universities offering LLB
degrees, most with conventional full time curriculums, and some with
part time training in what has come to be known as the parallel
programmes, where students undertake their education part time.
Disturbing gap
There is also the influx of Kenyans who obtain various degrees in other
foreign countries, mostly common law countries such as England, India
and Uganda.
On the average, after primary and secondary
education and before joining the four year university degree course in
the public sector in the regular entry under Joint Admissions Board
there is a most disturbing gap of about two years before entrance into a
public university.
Parallel students who can afford are privileged to short circuit the two year delay.
Effectively this means that the most deserving students in the country
are disadvantaged and to the student, parent and the Nation this delay
is most unwarranted. Upon finishing the examinations offered at the end
of the four year LLB degree courses and before graduation, in most
universities, there is another delay of up to six months.
After graduation an application is made to the Kenya School of Law set up under the Council for Legal Education Act (Cap. 16A).
Originally from 1963 to 1972, the Kenya School of Law produced lawyers
after five years training under articles and some of the country’s
prominent judges and lawyers were trained under this system. Then in
about 1967, a Faculty of Law was established and Kenya School of Law
developed into a post graduate institute.
The School presently
strives to set standards in the legal profession by training students on
the practice of law and offering exams on the same to ensure high
professional standards.
At the moment the Kenya School of Law
is the only accredited institution that offers the post-graduate diploma
in law that leads to admission as an Advocate.
The Kenya
School of Law doubles up both as a regulator of institutions offering
post graduate training and a service provider of the same and this could
be a problem hence the need to separate the two functions.
Students who graduate with degrees in law from the various universities
locally and abroad have to fight for the limited spaces at the one
institution if they want to practice in Kenya.
Rigorous training
Once the successful applicant is admitted to the School, they go
through a rigorous one year course and finally sit for the bar exams at
the end of the year, in November and thereafter go for pupilage for 6
months.
Obtaining pupilage with practitioners is also difficult.
One of the major areas for concern is the mode of teaching at the
School which is meant to be delivered in a clinical manner yet the
student to lecturer ratio is 220 to 1 which makes it difficult to have
any meaningful assessment of every student.
The present
situation is that the results of the examinations undertaken in November
are announced in June/July of the succeeding year thus students wait
for more than 6 months to have their results after which they petition
the Chief Justice to be admitted to the Bar, if they have passed.
This period of waiting for results is unwarranted.
All things being equal, it takes a little over three years to become a
lawyer after a university degree and if stakeholders have their way it
will take longer as there is a proposal to increase the time at the Law
School by one more year.
What’s more, the date of admission to
the Bar by the Chief Justice is not known. Upon admission one must
practice for two years under an advocate of not less than five years
standing.
Law graduates are opting for other fields due to all the red tape and unnecessary duplication in training.
The quality of legal training offered in the country is also under
attack due to the mass exit of some of the top law lecturers from the
classrooms in favour of state jobs.
A massive increase of fees at the Law School was implemented recently.
The plight of the student and the parent and the financial burden of
becoming a lawyer in the country are concerns which need to be addressed
urgently and there is a real case of a second Law School in the
country.
The writer is a lawyer.
7 comments:
That's what life is all about.Nothing good comes easily.
very true..but would you rather a simplified system that would allow massive influx of non serious legal ambitionists who would subsequently flood the legal market with half cooked minds not worthy of practicing law who will eventually resort to teaching(if they don't quit law altogether)and transfer their 'half-knowledge' to law students in the future and ultimately a complete corruption of kenya's legal field.?i am not refuting ur grivances as flivorous but it is important to consider the role these measures have played as a significant meritocratic filter on the crop of legal minds being injected into the market...mundia
The students actually don need a simplified system.Its about a straightforward system that students are certain of. Infact i love the toughening sytem where its the cream students who come out smiling.But this altogether is not garranteed, the expensive post graduate system locks out bright ambitious law students who cannot contain the expensive fees.
I am searching for my assignment and found your blog post ( PLIGHT OF A KENYAN LAW STUDENT. ) on google search your post is informative an give me lots knowledge for my current assignment thanks for sharing such a wonderful information keep updating share the knowledge whole world including me.
Okechi, thanks for your research, LLB students have to grapple with this thorny issue, i bet we should follow the US system in lieu of ineffective systems that disadvantage impoverished
candidates
A deep insight into a legal system i am applying now to join.thanks.
awesome read Okechi
Post a Comment