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Legal aid: an anniversary

25 July 2019 / David Burrows
Issue: 7850 / Categories: Features , Legal aid focus
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David Burrows marks the birthday of legal aid with an examination of its history & how far we have strayed from it

Legal aid will be 70 years old next week on 30 July 2019. The original act—Legal Aid and Advice Act 1949—received Royal Assent on that day. The idea of legal help for poor people, however, in limited forms was known from medieval times. This article briefly traces the history of legal aid up to the 1949 Act, through to its heyday in the 1970s, and then its decline to its modern version in Legal Aid Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012 (LASPO 2012), with thanks to Legal Aid and Advice Under the Legal Aid Acts 1949 to 1964  (ADM Oulton and EJT Matthews, 1971).

The ‘first English [legal aid] statute’, say Matthews and Oulton, is a statute of 1495; though there was legislation in Scotland 70 years earlier. The 1495 statute was intended ‘to admit such persons as are poor to sue in forma pauperis’. Poor persons were not to

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Barristers Ben Keith of 5 St Andrew’s Hill and Rhys Davies of Temple Garden Chambers use the arrest of Simon Leviev—the so-called Tinder Swindler—to explore the realities of Interpol red notices, in this week's NLJ
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Lord Sales has been appointed to become the Deputy President of the Supreme Court after Lord Hodge retires at the end of the year
Limited liability partnerships (LLPs) are reportedly in the firing line in Chancellor Rachel Reeves upcoming Autumn budget
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