August 9, 2021

Legal profession in India

The Legal Profession has always been an important limb for administration of justice. Without, profession of law, the courts would not be in a position to administer and provide justice efficiently as the evidence in support or against the parties to a suit cannot be legitimately marshalled, facts cannot be properly articulated and the appropriate legal arguments in favour or against the case of the parties cannot be put forth before the court. “A well-organized system of judicial administration proposes a properly equipped and proficient Bar.”

The modern legal profession in India has frontier roots, emerging with the advent of Mayor’s Courts in Madras and Calcutta in 1726. However, it was not until 1846, through the Legal Practitioner’s Act, that the doors of profession were thrown open to all those duly qualified, certified and of good character, irrespective of nationality or religion. Women were still excluded from the profession at this stage, to be thereafter admitted through the Legal Practitioner’s (Women) Act, III of 1923. The legal profession in India, which includes both the practice of law as well as professional legal education, is regulated by the Advocates Act, 1961.The Bar Council of India (BCI) is envisaged under the Advocates Act as a body for regulating the minimum standards to be maintained by institutions imparting legal education in India. The reformation of legal education in India undertaken since the late 1980s at the initiative of the BCI, the University Grants Commission (UGC), the Law Commission of India and various state governments has led to the establishment of various national law schools in India in the last two decades. India has the second largest population of lawyers in the world, second only to the United States. Many persons admitted that practice law in India has gradually increased from about 70,000 at time of Independence in 1947 to some 1.25 million in 2014.

India has a recorded legitimate history beginning from the Vedic ages and some kind of common law framework might have been set up amid the Bronze Age and the Indus Valley civilization. Notwithstanding this, the advancement of “law” as a calling is just a late wonder. The Indian legitimate calling is one of the biggest on the planet and assumes a fundamental part on the planet’s biggest vote based system. While the bases of this calling lie before Independence, from that point forward the calling has developed enormously and as of now faces different difficulties; the most imperative being to give access over the calling, guarantee moral establishments and modernize the practice no matter how you look at it.The Advocates Act, 1961
After the establishment of the Advocates Act ,1961 all the old classes of experts and legal practitioners (vakils, barristers, pleaders of various grades, and mukhtars) were abolished and were compiled into a single category known as “Advocates” who enjoys the privilege to practice in courts throughout the India.

The Advocates Act also additionally establish an All India Bar Council for the first time in history of India, with the Attorney-General and Solicitor General of India as the ex- officio members of Bar Council. The All India Bar Council has one member selected by each State Bar Council and it selects its own Chairman and Vice Chairman. The Act has created a State Bar Council in each ad every State with the Advocate General of the State as an ex- officio member, and fifteen to twenty-five Advocates elected for a time period of five years. The State Council’s important functions include: enrolling law graduates on its Roll, conducting cases of misconduct against Advocates on the Roll and to organize legal aid, among other functions. Application for enrolment is therefore made to the State Bar Council.

Aishwarya Says:

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