solicitors and barristers
There are two legal professions in England and Wales, which have different functions. They are called barristers and solicitors. Although they seem very similar, there are some differences in the way they are trained and in the way they work. There are around 76000 solicitors and 7000 barristers in England and Wales. Duties of solicitors are very wide and varied. They carry out advocacy and other aspects of legal work, while barristers are concerned only with advocacy before the courts. There are three ways to be trained as solicitors. The quickest and the most popular (about 64% of solicitors are qualified this way) would be as a law graduate. In brief both solicitors and barristers need to have a law degree at the beginning of training: solicitors then study on the Legal Practise Course, whilst barristers obtain a place on the Vocational Course of the Council of Legal Education . To a person to qualify as a solicitor, he must first of all study at university for 3 years and pass LLB, which is professional exam for lawyers. A law graduate has to proceed to Legal Practise Course, which lasts for one-full year and gives practical skills for a student to become a solicitor. After that the student should get a trai
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Approximate Word count = 1425
Approximate Pages = 6 (250 words per page double spaced)
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