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New report shows impact of the pandemic on those training for the Bar

the bar standards board has published the seventh and final

annual edition of its statistical

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information relating to student performance on the bar Professional training course (bPtc). As the report has shown in previous years, training for the bar remains highly competitive. the report includes information about students who enrolled in the 2019-20 academic year, in total and by provider, as well as those who enrolled on the bPtc in the preceding two academic years. It also provides information on demographics and results for those who enrolled on the bPtc between 2017-18 and 2019-20, and information on those seeking pupillage who graduated from the bPtc between 2015-16 and 201920. this provides a wider timeframe in which to see the proportion of graduates who began pupillage within five years of completing the course.

the health emergency had an impact on both the proportion of students completing the btPc in 2019-20 and on the proportion of bPtc graduates from the 2019-20 intake proceeding to pupillage. Of students enrolling on the bPtc in 2019-20, 18% less completed the course in that year compared with the year before. Of UK/eU graduates from the course in 2019-20, only 10% began pupillage in 2020-21 compared to 23% of the 2018-19 cohort who began pupillage in 2019-20. this reflects the fall of 35% in pupillage places offered in the 2020 calendar year reported by the bsb earlier this year. the other key findings from the report are: • 1,685 students enrolled on the bPtc in 2019-20, a decrease of 68 students compared to 201819, but an increase of 66 over the number enrolled in 2017-18; • almost half of students (46%) who enrolled on the bPtc in 2019-20 were overseas (non-

UK/eU) domiciled, a similar proportion as in 2018-19 when they accounted for 47% of enrolled students; • the percentage of female bPtc students has increased from 52.3 per cent in 2011-12 to 57.8 per cent in 2019-20; • of the 95% who provided information on their ethnicity, the percentage of UK/eU domiciled students from a minority ethnic group was 35% in 2019-20. this was down by around five percentage points compared to 2018-19, around one percentage point compared to 2017-18, and was at the lowest level since 2015-16; • of the UK/eU domiciled bPtc graduates, 39.5% of those who enrolled on the course from 2015 to 2019 had started pupillage by march 2021. this figure increases to around 49 per cent when looking at those enrolled from 2015 to 2018 only, as it can take time for more recent

graduates to gain pupillage; • of UK/eU-domiciled bPtc graduates who enrolled from 2015 to 2019 and went on to secure pupillage, 55% were female; and • when controlling for first degree class and bPtc grade, UK/eU bPtc graduates from minority ethnic backgrounds who enrolled on the course from 2015 to 2019 were less likely to have commenced pupillage than those from white backgrounds. For example, of UK/eU domiciled bPtc graduates with an upper-second class degree and

Very competent overall bPtc grade, 41 per cent from White backgrounds had commenced pupillage, compared to around 23 per cent of those from a minority ethnic background with the same degree class/bPtc grade. 2019-20 was the last year of the old bPtc course and from next year, reporting will be undertaken on the new vocational training courses which began in 2020. bsb Director of strategy and Policy, ewen macLeod, said: “the annual publication of these statistics gives us up-to-date data. this year’s report enables us to see clearly the impact which the health emergency had on those students starting a bPtc in 2019. We continue to work closely with the profession to make sure pupillage places remain available as the country recovers from the effects of lockdown.”

You can view the full report on the bsb website.

https://www.barstandardsboard.org. uk/uploads/assets/e7d22219-ffb24f36-a206b21736e2d2d8/bPtc-Keystatistics-report-2021-All-parts.pdf

Bar Council, BHRC and Law Society urge UK Government to offer asylum to legal professionals in Afghanistan

the bar council, the bar Human rights committee of england and Wales, and the Law society of england and Wales have issued a joint statement on the situation for legal professionals in Afghanistan, with particular concern for female judges in the country. “the bar council, the bar Human rights committee of england and Wales, and the Law society of england and Wales are gravely concerned about the situation in Afghanistan and the fate of all those who are working in the justice system of Afghanistan who are now facing a perilous future as the taliban have taken power. We are extremely worried about the situation of at least 250 women judges in the country who we consider to be at particular risk. We urge the UK government not to abandon these courageous defenders of the rule of law and – in liaison with its international allies – to offer evacuation and safety and asylum in the UK to those women judges, their families, and other members of the legal profession who are in serious danger.”

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