Click to listen highlighted text! Powered By GSpeech

Home » Law (Page 36)

Timetables for terms 4 and 5 of the BPP Legal Awareness Society (meetings now at Holborn)



The BPP Legal Awareness Society is a well-established and popular Society within BPP.

This timetable has been developed in line with the FT timetable at BPP Holborn which has been published on the VLE Blackboard. The BPP Legal Awareness Society is a student-run society for students at BPP to help them understand why and how regulation has an important part to play in a corporate strategy and for building competitive advantage.

The page of the BPP Legal Awareness Society on the official BPP website is here:

http://www.bppstudents.com/clubs/item/229/start/0/num/10/

As such, it is therefore an informal society for students to develop their interest in commercial awareness, appropriate for the basic professional training of student lawyers at BPP doing their Legal Practice Course as well as Masters level students at BPP studying finance, marketing, accountancy and tax disciplines at BPP University College. Any BPP student is welcome, and strongly encouraged to attend, especially those submitting vacation placement or training contract applications to corporate law firms for 2014 or beyond.

Our programme in this Society, to be held at BPP Holborn for the first time (we held all our meetings in the BPP Business School, St Mary Axe last time), is designed to complement the LPC course at BPP. The Society is entirely independent of BPP teaching, however. Your input into the development of the programme of LegalAware for terms 4 and 5 is much welcomed, and you’re strongly encouraged to involve yourself in the Society’s activities through Twitter.

In addition to the formal sessions below, we will be discussing pervasive issues of setting up and financing a company in English law, directors, shareholders, tax and business accounts and insolvency, as or when they occur.

In the timetable below, links are given to the ‘Legal Aware’ blog where background information can be found. We are currently finalising exact room bookings in BPP Law School as we speak, and this page will be continually updated as more information becomes available.

Meeting 1 Thursday 5 Jan 2012  Introduction 5 – 6 pm room 2.4

Meeting 2 Thursday 12 Jan 2012 Corporate finance 1 (debt finance) 5 – 6 pm room 2.4

http://legal-aware.org/category/debt-finance/

Meeting  3 Thursday 26 Jan 2012 Introduction to employment and pensions 5 – 6 pm room 2.4

http://legal-aware.org/category/employment-and-pensions/

Meeting 4 Thursday 9 Feb 2012 Corporate finance 2 (IPOs and rights issues) 5 – 6 pm room 2.4

http://legal-aware.org/category/ipos-and-rights-issues/

Meeting 5 Thursday 1 Mar 2012 Social media and technology 5 – 6 pm

http://legal-aware.org/category/technology-and-media/

Meeting 6 Thursday 15 Mar 2012 Taxation and business accounts 5 – 6 pm

Meeting 7 Thursday 3 May 2012 Share acquisitions 5 – 6 pm

http://legal-aware.org/category/share-acquisitions/

Meeting 8 Thursday 17 May 2012 Insolvency and English company law 5 – 6 pm

 

 

 

Ed Miliband: towards an inclusive society



What sets out Labour from the other parties now is that we embrace the opposite to a culture which is obsessed about shareholder dividend. Perhaps the word ‘predator’ is not quite hitting the right note with the City but it conveys the ‘quick buck’ culture which can go so badly wrong in investment of critical services such as care homes. I remember going to this meeting at the Institute of Education, at @thefabians’ new year annual conference 2011, with my friend @saminstroud;  in fact, @CriminologyUK has just reminded me about it just now, which is why I am posting this.

It is how I view the role of the City, as part of the society, not divorced from this; this shapes my views on corporate social responsibility, which are in full agreement with Prof Michael Porter’s seminal contribution ‘strategy and society‘ published at the beginning of this year also in the Harvard Business Review. The City in my view should learn from their mistakes in not including themselves in the rest of Society, which is why they have lost trust with many stakeholders. Bob Diamond opined on this in the seminal BBC Today lecture, and it’s what led me to spend two months spending hours travelling to the City from the Primrose Hill due to the blockage round St. Paul’s Cathedral.

&

The purpose of legal education



What is the purpose of legal education?

Education is the act or process of acquiring knowledge – it comes from ‘educatio’ and carries with it a meaning of bringing out a person from darkness to light. Like Prof Gary Slapper, I believe in lifelong learning, and I feel that it should not be given an arbitrary cut-off age. Part of it must be training, but part of it must surely be life enriching. I was once told by a Professor of Law at Queen Mary and Westfield College at the University of London that no knowledge or learning would go to waste, as you would never know when it would come in useful. I strongly believe this as it happens, as I have found myself being able to make numerous linkages in my academic training in law, neuroscience, medicine and business through a ‘Medici effect‘. Like Gary I suspect, I loved studying classics at school, and likewise I do not consider this to have been a waste of time, as it helps you to understand structure and logic. Finally, I hope that you may be able to join me on my twitter threads @legalaware for a general conversation about the law and societal issues, or @tc_applications for ‘bridging the gap’ between students, teachers and practising lawyers. The purpose of this is to have an open inclusive conversation of people in the same network discussing what works, and what doesn’t. You might find it helpful to look at the formal ‘Legal Education and Training Review‘, currently underway, with some key players’ views, including @RichardMoorhead, @BexHuxBinns and @JohnAFlood. Personally, I think the answer lies in innovation, with people like @legaltrainee, @colmmu and @claychristensen.

 

 

My brain made me do it – a problematic schism between neuroscience and the law



There is no doubt that a number of factors potentially lead in increased levels of crime in society, for examples gang culture, or population density. This requires a different experimental approach altogether to considering how the legal and neuroscientific approaches can be made to converge in the “mens rea” of the crime, which we have previously discussed elsewhere.

The degree to which a person can be truly culpable of crime is to do with the degree of his voluntariness. That is when the factors which are ‘internal’ to someone can be highly relevant. For example, in one isolated study, significantly higher testosterone levels were found among violent female outpatients than among the non-violent ones, whose levels were similar to those reported for normal females.  This study reported increased irritability among violent patients during menstruation, which is consistent with other research showing associations between criminality and both premenstrual and menstrual periods (1). Obviously, as a society, some people perhaps believe that, culturally, women cannot blame their periods for a crime. Criminal law,cthrough a combination of case-made law and statute law,chas stumbled its way through dealing with mental illness in the US and UK jurisdictions.The discussion here centres on the English jurisdiction, except where stated otherwise.

The evolution of this law has been almost exactly, punctuated at various intervals with observations from the law, rarely neuroscience, cognitive neurology and neuropsychiatry, being put on a statutory footing. The best paradigm of the interface and the law is arguable the defence is the insanity defence. Embarrassingly, this defence has its roots in a very old  case in English law. In 1800 James Hadfield was found to be insane on a charge of the attempted murder of George III (2), but he received an outright acquittal. Public and political reaction to this case led in turn to the enactment of the Criminal Lunatics Act 1800 which required the courts to order anyone who had been acquitted by reason of insanity of various serious offences to be detained until His (or Her) Majesty’s pleasure be known. The rules which provide for the insanity defence to be satisfied are known as the “McNaghten Rules” (1842) (3). Firstly, all defendants are presumed sane. On a balance of probabilities, the defendant must prove that at the time the offence, he was labouring under such a defect of reason, arising from a disease of the mind, and that he did not to know the nature and quality of the act he was doing, or, if he did know. it that he did not know that what he was doing was wrong. The jury can therefore return a special verdict of “not guilty by reason of insanity”.  Before the 1957 Act, over 40% of murder trials involved a plea of insanity. Now most defendants will opt of the defence of diminished responsibility. Insanity is a rare defence compared to diminished responsibility.

The law on diminished responsibility is contained in s.2 Homicide Act [1957], and has the following definition:

2 Persons suffering from diminished responsibility

(1)Where a person kills or is a party to the killing of another, he shall not be convicted of murder if he was suffering from such abnormality of mind (whether arising from a condition of arrested or retarded development of mind or any inherent causes or induced by disease or injury) as substantially impaired his mental responsibility for his acts and omissions in doing or being a party to the killing.

(2)On a charge of murder, it shall be for the defence to prove that the person charged is by virtue of this section not liable to be convicted of murder.

(3)A person who but for this section would be liable, whether as principal or as accessory, to be convicted of murder shall be liable instead to be convicted of manslaughter.

(4)The fact that one party to a killing is by virtue of this section not liable to be convicted of murder shall not affect the question whether the killing amounted to murder in the case of any other party to it.

In Byrne [1960] Lord Parker defined ‘abnormality of mind’ as: “a state of mind so different from that of ordinary human beings that the reasonable man would term it abnormal. It appears to us to be wide enough to cover the mind’s activities in all its aspects, not only the perception of physical acts and matters, and the ability to form a rational judgment as to whether an act is right or wrong, but also the ability to exercise willpower to control physical acts in accordance with that rational judgment.” (4) Byrne was a sexual psychopath who found it difficult, if not impossible, to control his perverted sexual desires he strangled a young woman and horrifyingly mutilated the body.

However, the key concept of “disease of the mind” has no agreed psychiatric meaning.  As interpreted by the courts, it has even come to include conditions that are not mental disorders, such as epilepsy and diabetes, The Law Commission in their introduction to their consultation on “Unfitness to plead and the Insanity defense”, provide that, “Given the vulnerability of the mentally ill and the increasing frequency with which they are coming into contact with the criminal justice system, modern criminal law should be informed by modern science, and in particular by modern psychiatric thinking.” (5) There is no doubt at all that at the time the rules over insanity and diminished responsibility were formulated, cognitive neuroscience was its infancy.

The application of these antiquated rules has become felt by may as being increasingly difficult, problematic, and artificial. One of the most rapidly advancing fields is neurogenetics. This should be to both cognitive neuroscientists and experts in jurisprudence. Criminal defendants most often offer behavioral predispositions as evidence to mitigate punishment after a finding of guilt, rather than as a defense to criminal liability (People v Sapp [2003]) (6)

Denno (1988) argues that,

“no strong evidence supports either a strictly free will or a strictly deterministic philosophy in the criminal law regarding either the causes of crime or the determinants of criminal responsibility.”

Denno further emphasizes the need that the criminal justice system must evaluate the neuroscience of this behaviour with a view to constructing sensible policy (7). A now historic case (People v Tanner [1970] (8)) failed prove innocent a defendant, with an extra Y chromosome, guilty of kidnapping, forcible rape, and assault with intent to commit murder, was found to have an extra Y chromosome. The two expert witnesses, who were geneticists, stated that their research and that of others demonstrated a causal link between the XYY chromosome disorder and aggressive behaviour.

However, leading academics Farahany and Coleman (2006) describe graphically the double-edged sword of arguing a genetic predisposition for criminal behaviour, by providing that, “Not only have criminal defendants experienced little success by introducing behavioral genetics during sentencing; in some cases it has cut against the defendant, courts have regarded the genetic predisposition of defendants as a potential aggravating sentencing factor or circumstance.” (9) In a final blog tomorrow in this series of articles, we consider the neurological evidence regarding free will from the alien hand syndrome and Gilles de la Tourette syndrome.

References

(1) Ehlers, Rickler & Hovey, A Possible Relationship Between Plasma Testosterone and Aggressive Behavior in a Female Outpatient Population, in Limbic Epilepsy and the Dyscontrol Syndrome 183, 191 (M. Girgis & L. Kiloh eds. 1980).

(2) Hadfield (1800) 27. St Tr 1281

(3) McNaghten (1843) 8 ER 718

(4) R v Byrne B [1960] 44 Cr App R 246; [1960] 2 QB 396

(5) http://www.lawcom.gov.uk/insanity.htm accessed 26.2.10

(6) People v. Sapp, 73 P.3d 433, 469–73 (Cal. 2003) (introducing the defendant’s psychological and neurological factors contributing to the homicide as mitigating evidence).

(7) Denno, DW. Human biology and criminal responsibility: free will or free ride? University of Pennyslvania Law Review (1988) 137: 651-671.

(8) 3 Cal.App.3d 596, 91 Cal.Rptr. 656, 42 ALR3d 1408 (1970

(9) Farahany, NA, Coleman, J. Genetics and responsibility: to know the criminal from the crime. Law and Contemporary Problems Vol. 69, p. 115, June 2006, Vanderbilt Public Law Research Paper No. 06-14, Duke Law School Legal Studies Paper No. 110

The handout for our meeting of LegalAware on debt finance in Nov 11



I am making this handout available for background reading. Please do not rely on the information contained in it for the BLP revision for BPP. This handout is nothing to do with BPP or its teaching activities. We only had a casual discussion of some of the issues related to debt finance. This handout is for private use of students, and not to be copied or distributed without the permission of the BPP Legal Awareness Society, an entirely student-run society at BPP for law and business students predominantly. Please observe the disclaimer at the top of the handout.

Presentations on debt finance

Neuroscience and the law focus: what's the point of regulating advertising?



I have no doubt after reading the article entitled “The advertising effect – how do we get the balance of advertising right?” published today by Compass by Zoe Gannon and Neal Lawson that the major thesis of the authors that unregulated advertising is likely to be dangerous for society, and could have a massively detrimental effect.

I really liked this article, as I think that it is one of the few articles which seemed to have an understanding of the modern neuroscience involved in tackling a problem of huge cultural significance, maybe using legal measures. As someone who tends to read the introduction and conclusion of article, I found it most helpful that Gannon and Lawson summarized the gist of their argument successfully in the conclusion,

If you go to an advertising company to sell a product or service their planners will strip the issue down to bare essentials before building a campaign around it. It is the essence of the message they are after, the essence of the advertising industry is that new technologies, new science and new psychology have put the industry increasingly out of social and political control. Advertising regulations now need to catch up with the reality of the advertising effect on us and our planet.”

On the other hand, I found Jackie Ashley’s response lacked any depth to an analysis of the problem from either a neuroscience or legal perspective (1). However, arguably, one of the most interesting enticing paragraphs begins with the sentence,

“Meanwhile neurologists are working out what images will trigger the buy button in our brains.”

Gannon and Lawson provide that “machines are being used to shed light on brain mechanisms that play a central role in consumer behaviour: circuits that underlie reward, decision making, motivation, emotions and the senses of self.” This would indeed seem to make sense, as the subjective experience of being the target of advertising probably has the same underlying neural basis as our euphoria on sex or drugs of abuse. Indeed, one of the many successes of neurological research in the last century has been to identy a neurobiological mechanism mediating behavior motivated by events commonly associated with pleasure in humans. These events are termed “rewards” and are viewed as primary factors governing normal behavior. The subjective impact of rewards (e.g., pleasure) can be considered essential (e.g., Young, 1959) or irrelevant (e.g., Skinner, 1953) to their effect on behaviour, but the motivational effect of rewards on behavior is now universally acknowledged by experimental psychologists.

In addition, the authors give due credit to one of the most important papers on the subject of “neuromarketing”, a relatively new field. A cognitive neuroscientist (Read Montague) postulated that, if people preferred the taste of Pepsi, the drink should have dominated the market. It didn’t. So in the summer of 2003, Montague gave himself a ‘Pepsi Challenge’ of a different sort: to figure out why people would buy a product they didn’t particularly like. Neuromarketing is effectively the study of the brain’s responses to ads, brands, and the rest of the messages littering the cultural landscape.

Montague had his subjects take the “Pepsi Challenge” while he watched their neural activity with a functional MRI machine, which tracks blood flow to different regions of the brain. Without knowing what they were drinking, about half of them said they preferred Pepsi. But once Montague told them which samples were Coke, three-fourths said that drink tasted better, and their brain activity changed too.

Coke “lit up” the medial prefrontal cortex (a part of the brain very much involved in higher cognitive processes). Montague’s hypothesis was that the brain was recalling images and ideas from commercials, and the brand was overriding the actual quality of the product. For years, in the face of failed brands and laughably bad ad campaigns, marketers had argued that they could influence consumers’ choices. The paper was a substantial contribution to the literature. Montague published his findings in the October 2004 issue of Neuron, and a new field of the neurosciences was born: neuromarketing. (1)

However, there are still some problematic unanswered questions from a neuroethics perspective.

(1) What effect did the Coke label have on the brain that the Pepsi label did not?

(2) What other evidence suggests that taste alone does not determine your favorite cola? Obesity is epidemic in America, and sugared soft drinks are one of the primary culprits.

(3) How might this research help doctors fight obesity?

(4) Suppose both the Coke and the Pepsi labels triggered the same reaction in the brain. What conclusion would you draw?

For a long time, marketing experts have relied on behavioral studies for guidance. In the USA, some companies are taking the practice several steps further, commissioning their own fMRI studies consistent with the research above. For example, in a study of men’s reactions to cars, Daimler-Chrysler has found that sportier models activate the brain’s reward centres as well as activating the area in the brain that recognizes faces, which may explain people’s tendency to anthropomorphize their cars. Steven Quartz, a scientist at Stanford University, is currently conducting similar research on movie trailers. And in the age of poll-taking and smear campaigns, political advertising is also getting in on the game. Researchers at the University of California, Los Angeles have found that Republicans and Democrats react differently to campaign ads showing images of the Sept. 11th terrorist attacks. Those ads cause the part of the brain associated with fear to light up more vividly in Democrats than in Republicans.

Gannon and Lawson in their scholarly article appear to develop their case that, if unregulated, this is dangerous:

Excessive advertising turns a never ending series of new needs into new wants, and crowds out the space for other visions of the good society, where time and relationships matter more than what we buy. Advertising encourages us to run ever faster on the treadmill of modern consumer life; in so doing it contributes to growing consumer debt, a number of social problems which this report discusses, and to the very real prospect of climate change beyond our ability to manage. So the report calls for a tax on all advertising that encourages greater consumption to limit its scope and slow the pace of growth for the good of society and the future of the planet.

There are in fact seven ways which Gannon and Lawson perceive as perhaps being capable of solving the problem: e.g. banning advertising in public spaces, controling advertising on the Internet, tax advertising, and probably, most contentiously, introduce statutory regulation of the advertising industry. This would be yet another example of where cognitive neuroscience meets the law in some way – exciting times indeed. If advertising is so rampant, should we spend money researching it like cancer?

References

(1) Jackie Ashley. Let’s take on the ads that fuel such waste, debt and misery. The Guardian, Sunday 24th February 2009.

(2) McGlure SM, Li, J, Tomlin, D, Cypert KS, Montague LM, Montague PR.  Neural correlates of behavioral preference for culturally familiar drinks. Neuron 2004 Oct 14;44(2):379-87.

 

A view from North of the Border: Law Firms, Law Students and Twitter by @LegalEagleMHM



A view from North of the Border: Law Firms, Law Students and Twitter by @LegalEagleMHM.

In this vlog, Michelle explains what Twitter is, the potential benefits of law firms embracing Twitter (especially with regards to Scottish law firms), personal benefits for using Twitter in the context of road traffic law, and, finally, the uses of Twitter by individuals and corporate firms.

Michelle feels that Twitter is not the ‘be-all-and-end-all’ and is merely one marketing tool, raising the profile of law firms, students and law firm employees. Michelle feels that Twitter gives law students an opportunity to establish interest and knowledge about a subject, and also that Twitter can even generate networks of lawyers who know where to go for specialist advice. Michelle has used Twitter to download legal sources, to do legal research, to enroll students for special projects, to build a personal profile, and to establish rapport with fellows. Michelle however advises that it’s very important to conduct yourself professionally at all times, as what you write can reflect on you personally, and your firm; not to be of an opinion of being critical, but to be collaborative by re-tweeting if appropriate. Michelle feels that it can be used as an academic resource, solely for information gathering, or leverage for blogging (practitioner, academic or otherwise).

Michelle provides that a single tweet can make a massive impact – this is a point that appeared to be made previously by David Allen Green in his evidence in the Commons Select Committee.

David Allen Green: Strictly, the number of followers is irrelevant. If you have a single tweet that is of any interest, it will go round the world very quickly, regardless of how many followers the particular tweeter has.

 

 

 

What is reasonable? by Prof Gary Slapper, Global Professor at New York University, and Director of New York University London



What is “reasonable conversation” I wonder? This is a tweet I received from a new follower, @GeorgiaHD, a law student, this morning.

This article first appeared in the “THE LAW EXPLORED” series published in the Times, and is copyright of Prof Gary Slapper (@garyslapper) and reproduced here by kind permission of Gary.

What does ‘reasonable’ mean?

It is quite common between work colleagues, cohabitants, and members of organisations for one person to adopt the stance: ‘be reasonable: do things my way’.  Being reasonable can mean different things to different people.

Reasonableness abounds in law. There are more appearances of the word “reasonable” in the law library’s case reports and statues than there are grains of salt in the entire food stock of a supermarket. Rules are lavishly seasoned with reason. A virtue of salt as a condiment is that is can enhance different natural flavours without changing their essence, and, similarly, “reasonableness” can help define the clarity of all sorts of rules in such phrases as “within a reasonable time” or “without reasonable excuse”.

In fact, more cases have hinged upon the meaning of the word “reasonable” than any other. Where did it spring from, and can it be defined?

In an early Latin form, the word appears in the first great treatise on English law produced in 1189 and ascribed to Ranulf de Glanville, the chief justiciar of England.  In answer to the question of when a mortgage debt should be paid in the absence of an express agreement, Glanville launched a thousand years of conjecture and courtroom quibbling by answering: rationabile terminum, a reasonable time.

In 1215, the Magna Carta spoke of rationabile auxilium a reasonable aid, in an attempt to put a limit on the level of tax a king or lord might levy to help him with the expenses of knighting his eldest son, marrying off his eldest daughter or paying ransom. Defining what is meant by “reasonable” has foxed the best lawyers and philosophers, and many today accept the scepticism of Lord Goddard who said in 1953 “I have never yet heard any court give a real definition of what is a ‘reasonable doubt'”.

One approach is to say simply that everyone knows what is meant by “reasonable” and it can’t be given a flip formula. In a criminal case, a jury can convict someone if they are sure “beyond a reasonable doubt” that he is guilty. In a case in 2005 in London, the jury asked Judge Campbell “What is the definition of “reasonable doubt?”. They asked whether, if they were 90% certain, that was enough to stop the doubt being “reasonable”. He replied saying professors had been discussing that question for many centuries “but it is not a philosophical matter, it is common sense…so do not get bogged down in 90%s and in interesting academic discussions about reasonable doubt, just say: ‘We are sure’ or ‘We are not sure’”

In some areas of law what is reasonable is determined by referring to the standards of “the reasonable man”. There has never been any reference in law to a reasonable woman (in a fictitious 1935 case, A P Herbert noted that “at common law a reasonable woman does not exist”), although these days the courts usually refer to a “reasonable person”.  The reasonable person, though, is really just an imaginary, composite character. So, the courts have tended to use stereotypes to help. The most famous example – because he entered the law reports in thousands of cases – was the invention of reasonableness incarnate: “the man on the Clapham omnibus”. In today’s language it would be “the person on the Virgin train”. The inventor of the Clapham omnibus phrase is commonly identified as Lord Bowen (as advocate Charles Bowen in 1871) but a very similar phrase first appears in a Walter Bagehot book published in 1867 in a reference to who shapes public opinion.

The older judicial characterisations of a ‘reasonable person’ are products of their age, so they are about property-owning, middle-class men. Those, however, used to be qualifications needed for many things, like voting and being on a jury. In 1933, Lord Justice Greer said the personification of reasonableness was “the man who takes the magazines at home, and in the evenings pushes the lawn mower in his shirt sleeves.”

Today’s multicultural democracy is a more civilised society, less burdened with bigotry. Reasonableness lives equally in a thousand different lifestyles. So it is more difficult today to finish the sentence that begins “a reasonable person is someone who…” In the word “reasonableness” is distilled the essence of society’s core values at any given time. Reasonableness also changes its shade of meaning over time. So, what amounts to “reasonable chastisement” of a child has progressed from a time when this included beating him or her senseless with a rod.

Reasonableness can’t be defined by reference to any given set of values or beliefs. One key feature of it is a certain open-mindedness. But not too open. As Groucho Marx observed “Now there’s a man with an open mind – you can feel the breeze from here!”

Prof Gary Slapper is Global Professor at New York University, and Director of NYU London, and Door Tenant at 36 Bedford Row, the Chambers of Frances Oldham QC He is a columnist in The Times law section.

 

 

It is impossible to half-believe in rehabilitation



Like those people who will tell others only half of the story, missing out the crucial bits, called a ‘half truth’ in contract law, I don’t think it’s possible to half-believe in rehabilitation. If I had a single penny everytime I had a penny somebody had said to me, ‘I believe in rehabilitation, but…’, I would be able to get over the fact my DLA was stopped without any warning or notice several months ago perhaps. Maybe it’s a marmite thing – you either love or hate it, but I fundamentally don’t believe you can believe in half-rehabilitation (or half-redemption), in that you cannot by definition be half-pregnant. When people are allowed a second-chance, they should be given just that, with a renewed presumption of innocence, and not suffer sophistry that denies double jeopardy.

Neuroscience and the law have recently hit the legal blogosphere and legal twittersphere, and a paper which has made a profound impact on me appeared in 2004 in the published Proceedings of the Royal Society. It’s a wonderfully concise article, with co-author Prof Josh Greene from Harvard, entitled, “For the neuroscience, law changes nothing and everything”.  In this article, Josh addresses the balance, a pre-occupation of the law, between retribution and rehabilitation, and certainly in the UK, the court of public opinion is a factor. It’s well known, for example, that 99% of the public (Sun readers, rather) believe in the death penalty; should the legislature reflect entirely the views of its public, or should it mould or inform public opinion as appropriate?   The public mood currently seems to be retributive, and one which may be influenced towards a drive towards austerity (why should we spend more on prisons?) This issue has reared its ugly head recently regarding our membership of the European Union, and indeed remaining a signatory of the European Convention of Human Rights.

Josh’s abstract reads:

The rapidly growing field of cognitive neuroscience holds the promise of explaining the operations of the mind in terms of the physical operations of the brain. Some suggest that our emerging understanding of the physical causes of human (mis)behaviour will have a transformative effect on the law. Others argue that anew neuroscience will provide only new details and that existing legal doctrine can accommodate whatever new information neuroscience will provide. We argue that neuroscience will probably have a transformative effect on the law, despite the fact that existing legal doctrine can, in principle, accommodate whatever neuroscience will tell us. New neuroscience will change the law, not by undermining its current assump- tions, but by transforming people’s moral intuitions about free will and responsibility. This change in moral outlook will result not from the discovery of crucial new facts or clever new arguments, but from a new appreciation of old arguments, bolstered by vivid new illustrations provided by cognitive neuroscience. We foresee, and recommend, a shift away from punishment aimed at retribution in favour of a more progressive, consequentialist approach to the criminal law.

I went on Wednesday to a meeting of the Fabian Society at Westminster, which was a pamphet launch by Sadiq Khan MP, the Shadow Lord Chancellor, “Punishment and reform: how our justice system can help cut crime”.

You can view the pamphlet here.

The meeting has hosted at Mary Sumner House, 24 Tufton Street, London SW1P 3RB.

Sadiq writes in the Preface,

Our prisons are full of people who are illiterate and innumerate, who suffer from multiple mental health problems and drug addiction, who were in care a schildren and excluded from school. So I am under no illusions about the scale of the rehabilitation challenge. Dealing with the underlying issues many offenders face so they can get a job, reconnect with family and find a home upon release – all essentiaal to approach.

But what about the Sun sampling of the Court of Public Opinion? As Prof Julian Roberts says in the pamphlet, polls are only part of the picture, and the explanation for this in the pamphlet is convincing.

Mary Riddell chaired the meeting.

The Barrow-Cadbury Trust funded the pamphlet, and it has had a longstanding interest in social justice. The Barrow Cadbury Trust ((on Twitter here) is an independent, charitable foundation, committed to supporting vulnerable and marginalised people in society. The Trust provides grants to grassroots voluntary and community groups working in deprived communities in the UK, with a focus on Birmingham and the Black Country.

The issue has become critically important. Sadiq argued in an influential article in the Guardian in March 2011 that a tough penal policy fails on prevention of reoffending.  There are two particularly noteworthy paragraphs in this article, and I apologise in advance for these being party-political points:

Labour made a mistake by “playing tough” on crime and allowing the prison population to soar to record levels during its time in government, instead of tackling sky-high reoffending rates, the shadow justice secretary, Sadiq Khan, is to acknowledge for the first time on Monday.

and later

Labour should have done much better in reducing reoffending rates of those coming out of prison, he believes: “I feel it was a mistake to not focus more on the issue of reducing offending. We became hesitant in talking about rehabilitation and the merits of bringing down reoffending rates.

“A focus on rehabilitation and reducing reoffending was seen as being soft on crime, when in fact it is effective in reducing crime.”

Khan also warns that Ken Clarke’s “rehabilitation revolution”, which includes greater use of the voluntary sector and payment-by-results schemes, is seriously jeopardised by 25% cuts in the justice ministry’s budget. He argues that if Clarke’s plans fail then much of the progress in criminal justice over the past 13 years will be undone and the door left opened for the Tory right.

In March 2011, the BBC website reported the following:

The parents of a teenager who was stabbed to death are part of a group calling for all crime victims to be involved in the sentencing process.

Barry and Margaret Mizen, whose son, Jimmy, 16, died in 2008, are among 30 signatories to a letter in the Times.

Criminal justice reform proposals are currently being developed by ministers.

And the government is consulting about proposals to widen the use of restorative justice to cover low-level crime to cover low-level crime and anti-social behaviour.

Indeed, at our meeting on Wednesday, Barry Mizen explained that his views have changed over time. One of his priorities was to make sure it did not break up his marriage, but also hopefully that something good would come out of the devestating event which had happened. Barry felt that it was important  for us all to have a grown up debate about the issue, but wished to see a mature attitude of society towards the situation of young people killing each other and their victims.

Mary Riddell asked Barry if he was informed about what to expect. Barry found the Police to be excellent, the lawyers for the Crown Prosecution Service were excellent, and the information came forward freely, and indeed Barry felt supportive. There were procedural issues about the release of the body however, according to Barry.

Prevention is better, from Barry’s point-of-view. Barry felt that you cannot as such force people into rehabilitation, as people have to decide individually as to whether to embrace rehabilitation. Educational opportunities are there, but Barry feels that nothing can be done unless the individual wishes to avail them. There is a perception that ever bigger sentences would act as a better deterrent. Barry feels that too many politicians are driven by the media which exert pressure – ‘talking tough’ is seen to solve the problem.

In austere times, how can you justify social justice? Despite their expense, according to Sadiq at Wednesday’s meeting, SureStart and the Youth Justice Board may have seen a reduction in crime rates, in custodial rates. Sadiq referred to this statistic (reported here).

The Independent Commission on Youth Crime and Anti-Social Behaviour has recently estimated that the  relevant annual costs relating to youth crime and antisocial behaviour come to just over £4 billion. According  to a recent report by the National Audit Office, offending by all young people in England and Wales is  estimated to have cost the economy between £8.5 and £11 billion in 200912.

Joined up policy might mean that local authorities see the consequences of their own policy, according to Sadiq. This leads to the urge for Sadiq and colleagues asking for views from the public at large about reform of the criminal justice system, and Sadiq encouraged people to look at a new website www.justicereview.org.uk for justice reviews – Sadiq wants a justice system fit-for-purpose.

What chance is there of three parties working together? Consensus on justice would mean that a change in government would not mean a change in policy.

Can the offender be treated as the victim? Sadiq argued yes – the social issues before a person commits the first event, what happens in the prison system, and what happens if they leave, all need to be considered. Individuals’ responsibility should be considered, but also the context in which the crime takes place. Iain Duncan-Smith claims to understand the importance of prevention, according to Sadiq, but this is not carried through, for example in abolition of nursery clubs, youth clubs, overpopulated prisons and less prison officers.

Mary Riddell asked about people who have an indeterminate system. Judges should have freedom to set indeterminate sentences according to Sadiq Khan. If there are insufficient courses or programmes, cutting the number of programmes is not a solution., according to Saqid, In summary, judges should have at their disposal indeterminate sentences. Sadiq emphasised that ultimately judges are responsible for sentences, not individual MPs.

It was an excellent meeting. Mary, Barry and Sadiq were brilliant, and we all had ample opportunity to ask questions thanks to Mary.

Practice for online verbal reasoning questions from 'Legal Recruit': biology



Biology is a subject area in the brand new innovative, independent, platform for practising online verbal reasoning assessments called ‘Legal Recruit‘.

Hope you enjoy these questions.

1          Every day, we are bombarded with scientific and medical claims that are not based on good evidence: in advertising material, product websites, advice columns, campaign statements, celebrity health fads and policy announcements. Even where there is some regulation, in advertising or trading standards, such claims keep reappearing.  “Sense About Science”, along with over 5,000 scientists, scientific bodies, research publishers and policy makers, don’t want people to continue getting away with making claims without supporting evidence. They want things to change, so that anyone making a claim expects to be challenged, and is made to stand by their words. The only way to do this is to get more people asking for evidence.

 

Q1 Campaign statements are never based on good evidence.

 

CANNOT SAY. ‘Campaign statements’ are given as examples of scientific and medical claims which are not based on good evidence.

 

Q2 “Sense About Science” wants people to continue getting away making claims without supporting evidence.

 

FALSE. The passage states the precise opposite.

 

2          We hear about bacteria for lots of different reasons, and it’s unusual for many of them to be ‘good’. Indeed, the last time most people probably remember seeing bacteria make headlines was the contamination of salad vegetables with a deadly Escherichia coli strain relatively recently. However, as any microbiologist will tell you, bacteria are an extremely diverse group of organisms, with equally diverse properties which make some of them indispensable for many aspects of our lives; including food production, digestion and water treatment. For example, Geobacter sulfurreducens is just one of many bacterial superheroes. In this case, its superpower is ‘bioremediation’; the use of its metabolism to remove pollutants from the environment.

 

Q3 There is a very narrow range of strains in the bacteria class.

 

FALSE. Bacteria are stated to be an extremely diverse group of organisms.

 

Q4 Bacteria are never used for water treatment.

 

FALSE. Bacteria are said to play an ‘indispensible’ role in many functions, including water treatment.

 

 

3          While some birds only migrate locally in response to extreme weather conditions, others undertake seasonal long-distance migration between land masses and sometimes hemispheres.  The most impressive avian migrator is, by far, the Arctic tern (Sterna paradisaea). Weighing an average of 100g, with a average wingspan of 75 – 85 cm, the birds sometimes nest just once every three years, as so much of their 30 year life span is spent in flight. The bird has the longest seasonal movement than any other animal, and the birds move so consistently with the seasons that they only ever see long days; they experience more sunlight per year than any other creature.

 

Q5 80 cm is a reasonable estimate wingspan of the African tern.

 

CANNOT SAY. The information given only refers to the Artic tern.

 

Q6 It is rare for the Artic Tern to be exposed to sunlight, compared to other creatures.

 

FALSE. The passage states that the Artic Tern ‘experience more sunlight per year than any other creature’.

 

4          There’s actually 47 known species of ‘leafcutter ants’, endemic to South and Central America, which live in colonies of up to ten million individuals organised into a complex social structure. The leaf cutting ants don’t actually eat the leaves they harvest – this is part of an elaborate process of cultivating a mutualistic fungus, which in turn provides the ants with the nutrients on which they feed. Efficiency of fungal cultivation is dependent on roles played by distinct ‘castes’ of ants, based mostly on size. Large workers forage for leaves and defend the colony, while smaller workers farm the fungus and tend to the nest. There’s even a designated waste removal team.

 

Q7 There are currently over 50 species of ‘leafcutter ants’.

 

CANNOT SAY. The passage states that there are 47 ‘known species’ of ‘leafcutter ants’, but it is not known how many unknown species of ‘leafcutter ants’ there currently are.

 

Q8 Only the caste of ants determines the efficiency of fungal cultivation done by ants.

 

FALSE. The passage states that distinct ‘castes’ of ants determine the efficiency of fungal cultivation done by ants.

 

 

5          Obesity is a growing problem worldwide, but proper protein consumption can help keep it at bay. Researchers have found that, when subjects were fed a 10% protein diet, they consumed 12% more energy over four days than they did on a 15% protein diet. Moreover, 70% of the increased energy intake on the lower protein diet was attributed to snacking. When the protein content was further increased to 25%, however, the researchers observed no change in behaviour relative to the 15% protein diet. It had previously been suggested that protein content plays an important role in determining overall energy intake, and thus affects obesity, but until this study, experimental verification had been lacking.

 

Q9 Obesity is only a problem in the U.S.

 

FALSE. Obesity is said to be a ‘growing problem worldwide’.

 

Q10 Protein content plays an important role in determining overall energy intake.

 

CANNOT SAY. No definite conclusion can be drawn from this study. Despite the findings of this study, the statement could still be true.

 

 

6          The anti-obesity properties of resveratrol have been demonstrated for the first time in a primate. Researchers recently studied the compound, generated naturally by plants to ward off pathogens, which has received much interest as a dietary supplement for its supposed life-extending effects. A team of researchers from Paris have decided to investigate the effect of dietary supplementation with resveratrol on the weight, metabolism and energy intake of six mouse lemurs. The physiological benefits of resveratrol are currently under intensive investigation, with recent work suggesting that it could be a good candidate for the development of obesity therapies. The team found that lemurs eating a diet supplemented with the compound decreased their energy intake by 13% and increased their resting metabolic rate by 29%.

 

Q11 Based on research in the rat, resveratrol could be a good candidate for the development of anti-obesity therapies.

 

CANNOT SAY. The research described used a sample of lemurs (primates).

 

Q12 In this study, lemurs eating a diet supplemented with the compound increased their energy intake by an average of 13%.

 

TRUE. This is a finding from this study.

 

Click to listen highlighted text! Powered By GSpeech