RogueAcademic said:
Sorry, what do you mean by that? Can you elaborate?
That your comparison of access to justice/access to medical services is flawed. I think in the broadest sense, access to justice and the success of our civil society depends on the law remaining in the hands of the many, rather than a privileged few. I don't have any problem with medical knowledge being concentrated in a class of experts whose services must be relied on by laymen. On the other hand, I think it is dangerous to entrust a large amount of political and social power to an expert class of lawyers. Therefore I'm wary of any move which might further insulate legal education from the masses.
But see, you're not taking into account the fact that there are now more law students than there are legal jobs available in the system. Far more. Accessibility to justice, if we're talking from a community legal or Legal Aid point of view, is already at its peak at this stage (whether accessibility is actually, well, accessible or not). Public funding is not going to increase simply because there is an increase of law graduates. In that circumstance, people don't generally go through all that trouble to get into and complete an LLB simply with a goal of having 'access to justice'.
I mean accessibility in the broadest possible sense. Not in terms of how many lawyers are produced, but in terms of who has the option of becoming legally trained, or who is put off legal training by cost/time/etc.
And in fact, while we're on the topic of justice, I've found more law students who are genuinely passionate* about justice and human rights in the JD cohort than the LLB students. The LLB students are more likely to be interested in vague concepts of working in a private commercial law firm with a 'high salary'.
*With personal and professional reasons and life experience, and history leading up to how this passion came about.
I think that's a generalisation, but you may well be right. Certainly, the social justice aspirations of LLB students often melt away after a hard slog in law school. A mature-age student may well be more inclined to stay the course. If you have spent 10yrs working in the community/public/charity sector, you're probably unlikely to jump ship for corporate law after a few contracts tutes, after all.
The main thing I'm trying to get at is that law should be accessible as a generalist, and therefore undergraduate degree. I'm doing an LLB not necessarily to become a legal profession, but as a complement to my B.A. I want to work in government/policy. I'll probably not ever practise law in a formal sense.
I think it's a positive thing for people with legal training to be working in a diverse range of areas, and 'professionalising' the study of law into a grad discipline probably defeats this.