Surrey Lawyer July 2022

Page 14

EQUALITY, DIVERSITY & INCLUSION

Post-Event Report from the Lawyers with Disabilities Division Summer Social By Martin Whitehorn

I

t was a delight to attend The Law Society’s Lawyers with Disabilities Division (LDD) Summer Social at Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer (Freshfields) on 15 June, which I will expand on in this article. As an autistic solicitor who has been involved with the LDD it was great to finally meet in person with LDD committee members and Law Society diversity leads who I had only met virtually before, and was relieved that I was not the only one peering at faces to try to discern whether they belonged to the same people I had talked to on screens during the lockdowns. The talks President of The Law Society I. Stephanie Boyce was the keynote speaker, who shared the news that Project Rise (more on that later) had had at least 7 more firms getting in touch with the LDD expressing their interest in getting involved. Peter Allen, Partner at Freshfields, was the next to talk, mentioning the firm’s disability confidence workshops and peer support network for its people, together with increasing outreach to disabled students, as among the initiatives that had earned the firm a place in the Valuable 500 as a disability-inclusive organisation. The event then proceeded to a series of fireside chats, with LDD committee member and diversity consultant Yazmin Sheikh interviewing Dame Fiona Woolf first, who emphasised the need for inclusive leadership to help disabled people develop our full potential. Readers may remember The Fiona Woolf Lecture in December last year, available on The Law Society’s online event recordings page, where she emphasised disability inclusion as perhaps the key part of what she wanted from her legacy. The subsequent fireside chats focused on what disabled 14 | SURREYLAWYER

lawyers have to offer to the profession. LDD committee member and solicitor at Penmans, Sanjay Solanki interviewed blind trainee solicitor Fraser Kane from Freeths LLP, who talked about software that helps him review documents quicker than many of his colleagues. This was followed by Freshfields knowledge lawyer, Reena Parmar, interviewing Mark Blois – Partner at Browne Jacobson heading its Education practice who was included in the Disability Power 100 in 2021 and The Lawyer’s Hot 100 in 2022 – who urged that organisations avoid the disability element of D&I being an afterthought, along with the need for visible role models for disabled lawyers. Both Reena and Mark are LDD committee members, and the conversation flowed easily, with another recommendation given being to ask disabled people what they need and listen to what they say. Reverse mentoring was also highlighted as a way senior lawyers can get to grips with the issues that disabled lawyers face. Afterwards I was glad to talk to some of the people outside of the LDD committee who are driving positive change for disability inclusion in law, for example Kim Crangle of Payne Hicks Beach who sits on the Employment Lawyers Association's training committee and has been spearheading making their events more accessible to disabled members. It was also a surprise and pleasure to see Junior Lawyers Division support at the event too, with Junior Lawyers Division chair Suzanna Eames and Junior Lawyer (0-6 years’ PQE) Law Society Council member Lizzy Lim attending, as was Aisling Hayward, chair of Hertfordshire Junior Lawyers Division.


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Articles inside

12,000 Solicitors ‘spin to win’ at London Legal Walk

2min
page 40

10 local authorities with the most recorded landfill sites are all located in the South East of England

3min
page 39

Opportunities for solutions away from the Family Court

3min
page 38

Why words still matter

4min
page 37

How to burn brighter than your Imposter Syndrome

5min
pages 34-35

New guide tackles lack of empathy in law firms

3min
page 33

HFS Milbourne & Evelyn Partners

5min
page 31

Surrey Junior Lawyers Division

4min
page 30

The Law Society

4min
pages 28-29

Council Member’s Report

3min
page 27

SLAPPs

16min
pages 22-25

10 practical points for fee earners to increase profitability (and avoid losing fees)

9min
pages 20-21

SLS LEGAL AWARDS 2022 SHORTLIST

5min
pages 18-19

SLS Past President’s Championship Cup 2022 – The biggest and best yet!

2min
page 17

Women would have to work from age 4 in order to have the same pension pot as men, new research reveals

4min
page 16

Post-Event Report from the Lawyers with Disabilities Division Summer Social

5min
pages 14-15

Stevens & Bolton appoints new Managing Partner and adds four to partnership

3min
page 13

Surrey solicitors called on to support communities through ongoing crises

3min
page 12

Three new partners among string of promotions at Moore Barlow

2min
page 11

Community Call Out

2min
page 10

Charles Russell Speechlys appoints Sally Ashford to Head of Guildford office and promotes Richard Flenley to Partner

3min
page 9

Say hello to the Prostate Project

3min
page 8

CEO Report

5min
page 7

Training & Events Programme 2022

3min
page 6

President’s Jottings

4min
page 5
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