Archive for October, 2008

October 30th, 2008

The Nigerian Lawyer in the 21st Century

by admin

The internet as a tool of globalization is one without peer. Truth be told, globalization in most of its ramifications has been in existence since kingdoms were formed and countries traded one with the other. However, the rate of information disseminated via the internet cannot be adequately quantified. What then is globalization?

The term is used loosely and specifically in a myriad of contexts. A working definition would be that globalization refers to movement towards global unity; where countries and governments relate and integrate through trade, education, politics and culture thereby forming a global personality sometimes at the expense of the national identity. www.Globalization.Org defines globalization as a process of interaction and integration among the people, companies, and governments of different nations, a process driven by international trade and investment and aided by information technology.

Globalization, advanced by the internet has opened up new and previously undiscovered avenues of economic empowerment to the citizens of the world. This is because the constraint of distance, that is time and space is largely diminished. Partnerships are springing up with both partners in different parts of the world and most times, without any prior physical meeting; the internet serves as a sufficient meeting point. With new internet based businesses springing up every second, the possibilities are endless for the legal practitioner. However, I will mention just three spheres in which a lawyer may be relevant online.

Virtual Assistants (VA): A VA may be in almost any field, but is particularly in the area having to do with services. A VA could be in any area of specialization; accounting, auditing, secretarial services and law, just to mention a few. From the comfort of the home (or office), a lawyer may offer legal advice to a client an ocean away. This could be a one-time arrangement or on a retainer basis. Letters can be exchanged via email and bills paid through credit cards and other avenues set up for that purpose. The client and the lawyer need never meet face to face.

Legal Services to Potential Investors: A good grasp of International law would be an advantage in this area. As the world becomes further reduced into the global village, we find investors who would never have looked beyond the boundaries of their country beginning to look across the ocean for opportunities. These entrepreneurs need the help and advice of lawyers versed in the laws of prospective country. This can also be offered via email and the internet.

Cyber Law: The law governing practices and transactions on the internet is sketchy at best as new facets crop up every day. Issues such as intellectual property, privacy, antitrust, fraud and countless others emerge regularly for consideration. More often than not, expert advice is needed. In Nigeria, there is barely any law governing the use of the internet, therefore fraudsters and plagiarists run amok. This is another field in which a legal practitioner may be distinguished.

Emeka Maduewesi, Esq. in his article, “Trans-national Legal Practice: Preparing Locally to Practice Globally” provided a more extensive list on how Lawyers can further realign their practise with the digital age. Read it here.

The Nigerian Lawyer is dedicated to exploring the various means by which the legal practitioner can harness the various opportunities provided by technology, and the internet in particular, to hone and expedite law practice.

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October 29th, 2008

Some Useful Stuff for Lawyers

by admin

Words are a Lawyer’s tool therefore it is no surprise that when it comes to technology, what is uppermost in a Lawyer’s mind is how it may further enhance and elucidate those words.

Microsoft word plays a remarkable role in the Lawyer’s professional life. Although a few people are defecting to other free word processors like Star Writer, Microsoft Word still remains the prevalent word processor of choice, at least in Nigeria.

The aim of The Nigerian Lawyer is to enhance the fluidity between Law Practise and Technology; we will concentrate on Microsoft Word. Microsoft Word is a word processor which most Nigerian Lawyers have more than a passing acquaintance with. The majority of the functions are familiar to us such as saving a document, working with margins and fonts and other overt functions. However there are quite a few which even Word veterans might find novel.

In his article on Pcmag.com, Neil J. Rubenking mentioned 8 of these easily overlooked tools. Read the article here.

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October 17th, 2008

How the Traditional Role of Lawyers will Change

by Sharon Famonure

After years of talking with a wide variety of lawyers, I have found that many practitioners have one thing in common: they seem to want to deny that they are, well, lawyers. They downplay the legal content of their jobs.Private client lawyers (for example, those who advise on divorces or draft wills) tell me that their job is not really about the law; rather, they insist, they are experienced counsellors, confidantes, therapists even, in whom their clients have unwavering faith in relation to their personal problems.

In similar vein, litigators say that their primary role in life is that of project manager rather than provider of legal advice; corporate lawyers claim to be deal-makers and negotiators much less than legal draftsmen; capital market lawyers suggest they are transaction managers rather than gurus of finance law; in-house lawyers maintain they are risk managers more than legal counsellors; banking lawyers assert their clients come to them not for legal advice but for their market knowledge; and high street solicitors insist that they rarely undertake legal research. Even judges say that they are becoming . . . case managers.

Where have all the lawyers gone? Why are lawyers not undertaking the rarefied legal work that our law schools led us to expect (and many still do)?

A variety of reasons might be advanced for lawyers denying they are lawyers. One response might be that being a lawyer is, bluntly, not the coolest of jobs, and perhaps not as prestigious as once it was. There may even be a stigma of sorts attached to being a lawyer – hence the wealth of lawyer jokes. And so, in response, lawyers might be holding themselves out as belonging, at least in part, to another discipline.

I do not accept this line of thought. It may be that the ill-informed and the disconnected will trash the legal profession but in most walks of life lawyers remain well respected. In any event, I cannot imagine according to what scale it is cooler or more prestigious to be, say, a project manager than a lawyer, with all due respect to project managers.

It may be that lawyers often genuinely forget how much they know about the law and so do not regard themselves as especially lawyerly. Or perhaps they do not feel that it is their legal knowledge that differentiates them in the marketplace and so they point to complementary skills of which they are proud.

There is something different here, I believe, from yesteryear’s traditional role of the lawyer as the “man of affairs”, the all-purpose rock of an adviser upon whom clients could unfailingly rely. That old boy (and these chaps were invariably male) regarded the law, in contemporary jargon, as their core competence, around which they built more general business acumen.

In contrast, the modern lawyer, who is in denial of being lawyerly, seems to want argue that they have some different core competence and relegate their legal ability to the background or periphery. I believe this is an indicator of profound forces at play, forces that are lessening the need for the traditional “black letter” lawyer. When it becomes possible to standardise, systematise, package and even commoditise the law, the need for the traditional bespoke handling by the conventional lawyer lessens considerably.

Lawyers’ denial of their lawyerliness is an early but crucial indicator that they can sense there is less purely legal work to be done and so they are beginning to adapt. Whether they are fully conscious of this phenomenon or not, in order to survive, many are widening their range of skills, broadening their sphere of impact, and are anxious that the world does not pigeon hole them as detached analysts who sit in ivory towers. Most lawyers, in other words, can no longer eke a living from the law alone. >>>more.

Richard Susskind is Emeritus Professor of Law at Gresham College, IT adviser to the Lord Chief Justice and consultant to leading law firms. He was awarded an OBE in 2000. This is an extract from his forthcoming book, The End of Lawyers? Rethinking the Nature of Legal Services. For more information click here

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October 5th, 2008

A Wiki Of Nigerian Law?

by Sharon Famonure

A wiki is a software which allows a group of users to freely add and edit articles on any subject. Wiki.Org defines a wiki as “a piece of server software that allows users to freely create and edit Web page content using any Web browser.” Wikipedia is probably the most successful wiki on the web.

One of the earliest legal wikis was created by Sun Microsystems in 2007; Between January and the start of September, there had been 1,200 articles published internally at Sun (Niraj Chokshi). In-house departments and Law Firms have begun using wikis. It is an effective method of publishing and keeping track of articles emanating from that law firm or in-house department.

Nigerian Wiki is probably the only Nigerian wiki available on the internet – if there are others, please let me know. Nigeria has a number of Law Firms and in-house departments; Legal Practitioners and Law students. Why can’t we come together and produce a wiki of Nigerian law? Any Lawyer could write an article on any aspect of Nigerian law and publish on the wiki; others would be able to edit and add to it until an authoritative position is produced on that area of law.

Think about it and if you are interested, please let me know. You could either leave a comment here, or send a mail to me at sharon {dot} famonure {at} gmail {dot} com.

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October 3rd, 2008

The Future of Law and The End of Lawyers

by Sharon Famonure

One of the problems with being an author who makes predictions is that, eventually, you can be called to account. With the benefit of hindsight, critics can expose the misconceptions and the naiveties. Or, much less likely, they can confirm that the vision has been fully realised.In my book, The Future of Law, published in 1996, I made many predictions. When judging that book, however, commentators often overlook the fact that the view of the legal world set out there was a 20-year view. I was speculating about changes from 1996 to 2016 (give or take). Today, we are just past the half-way point of the 20-year transition and so it is still a little early to assert that I was right or wrong. That said, I think it worth saying that I remain committed to that book’s central themes and that we are on course for many of the fundamental changes I anticipated.

Perhaps the most crucial line of thought was that we were witnessing what I called a change in the “information substructure” in society. I used this term to refer to the dominant means by which information is captured, shared and disseminated within society. I observed, as some anthropologists have, that you can see that human beings have travelled through four phases in relation to information substructure: the first being the era of orality, where communication was dominated by speech; thereafter the era of script; then came print; and then, and we were in that transition then (and still are), into the fourth stage – of the world of information technology.

My next point, and I still strongly believe this, is that the information substructure in society – this dominant means by which information is captured, shared and communicated – dictates to a large extent the quantity of our law, the complexity of our law, the regularity with which our law can change, and those who are able to advise upon it and be knowledgeable about it.If we look at the way the law has changed throughout history, we can see transitions as the information substructure has changed. I argued that there was going to be a shift in legal paradigm (although now the notion of “paradigm” is rather overused). By this I meant that many of our fundamental assumptions about the nature of legal service and the nature of legal process would be challenged by the coming of information technology and the internet. In other words, much that we had always taken for granted in the past, about the way that lawyers work and the way non-lawyers receive legal guidance, would change through technology.

I also identified a phenomenon that I introduced as the “technology lag”. This was a lag between two forms of technology: data processing and knowledge processing. Data processing is our use of technology to capture, distribute, reproduce and disseminate information. We have become extremely adept at this. Indeed, everyone who bemoans the information overload that affects all of us will say we have become too good at data processing. But now, knowledge processing is coming to the rescue.This is a set of technologies that helps us analyse, sift through and sort out the mountains of data that we have created and helps make them more manageable. Data processing has advanced well ahead of knowledge processing, but the gap between the two – the technology lag – is going to close. When it closes, we will be fully in the information society.

I believe now, and I believed then, that we are in a transitional phase between the print-based industrial society and the IT-based information society. Only when knowledge-based technologies allow us to manage more effectively these mountains of data we have created, will we be fully in the information society.

I talked also of the “latent legal market”, and this attracted a lot of interest. This was the notion that many people in their social and in their working lives need legal help and would benefit from legal guidance but lack the resources, or perhaps simply the courage, to secure legal counsel from lawyers. I believe things have changed: on the internet we now have vast resources available to people who, from the Government’s 2,500 websites or the innumerable voluntary legal services sector websites, can obtain practical, punchy legal guidance. I believe there is not just a latent legal market for the ordinary citizen but also for major organisations, too, when they find it difficult to secure legal guidance on all those occasions when they need it. All of this led me to speak about access to justice – not in the sense that Lord Woolf, the former Lord Chief Justice, was then speaking of access to justice, when he referred to improved access and greater access to dispute resolution – but in a broader sense. I had in mind the notion that as citizens we should be able to find out easily and quickly what our legal entitlements are, and in so doing, we should be able to avoid legal disputes. >>>more.

Richard Susskind is Emeritus Professor of Law at Gresham College, IT adviser to the Lord Chief Justice and consultant to leading law firms. He was awarded an OBE in 2000. This is an extract from his forthcoming book, The End of Lawyers? Rethinking the Nature of Legal Services. For more information click here

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