Partner Article
Co-operative Legal Services abandon recruitment plan
The Co-operative’s legal arm, Co-operative Legal Services (CLS), which is based in Manchester, has abandoned plans to offer one hundred training contracts annually.
The move follows its poor financial performance during the past financial year.
CLS had planned to offer 100 training contracts a year by 2017; however, it took on just ten trainees this September. CLS will now recruit greater numbers of staff through its learning academy, in partnership with Manchester Metropolitan University
Director of policy Christina Blacklaws said: “We are not saying that training contracts will not exist at the Co-op, absolutely not. We will increase the numbers as we increase the size of the organisation.”
Explaining that CLS’ priorities had changed since 2012, she said: “We have now started our learning academy, which at that point was just a twinkle in our eye. Part of that is to offer traditional opportunities for people to take up training contracts.
“We see that as something really important; we want to have the law-makers of the future. We want those people who have the legal skills to take cases to the Court of Appeal.”
She added: “But in addition to that, through the development of the academy, we have taken a slightly less traditional approach to legal education. The motivation behind that is that increasingly difficult for a lot of young people to afford the traditional route.”
On the relationship between the traditional legal education model of university and training contracts and lack of diversity within the sector, she said: “That has huge impact in terms of equality and diversity, particularly in relation to social mobility. So we have developed our thinking around training and education to open it up much more broadly beyond just training contracts, although recognising that they play a significant part in legal education.
“We think it is exciting to open this up to everybody, not just a few high fliers, so it is a change in emphasis and focus but it is not an abandonment of traditional training.”
This was posted in Bdaily's Members' News section by Simon Malia .
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