Guyana should establish its own law school

Dear Editor,

The ‘on-again off-again’ idea of a local law school is an idea whose time has long come. This has only been made absolutely clear and fiercely urgent with the advent of the “impasse” between the Government of Guyana and the Council for Legal Education (CLE).

We have a most egregious situation here but one which offers us a unique opportunity and with it perhaps the chance of something great. This singular moment can impact generations to come of students in Guyana and in the Caribbean who enjoy our education at the University of Guyana.

That being said I am currently a final year student reading for my Legum Baccalaureus (LLB), our last exams should conclude at the end of May 2014. What happens next is anybody’s guess since the current impasse seems only to escalate with time.

I feel deeply aggrieved by the decision to suspend the 25 automatic placements at the Hugh Wooding Law School (HWLS). It would seem that the decision to do same was taken some time before the application process was opened.

I cannot fathom the reason the CLE knowing that its own LLB programmes have more than enough students to satiate its HWLS quota still opened the application process for entry into HWLS delivering false hopes of admittance.

The cost of applying, postage inclusive in addition to the cost for the entrance examination for persons who chose that option combined is above the domestic minimum wage. And what cost do we put on our present psychological frustrations?

Our students engaged a process only to be told a short time later that both avenues of entry were no longer viable options. Presently, most if not all other avenues would be closed as well and so we are all but stranded.

We were advised that the Eugene Depuch Law School in the Bahamas has spaces available but the fees are twice that of HWLS.

I know I speak for many when I say that we do not have an extra US$20,000 per year knocking around for tuition and equal amount for yearly living expenses.

The benefits of a local law school have been enumerated eloquently in our dailies’ editorials, articles and columns so I will not rehearse them here.

Suffice to say that the psychological and physical frustrations of trying to make the grades for entry into law school and an opened, tedious, perhaps futile application process demand justice of their own.

Additionally, there are perhaps thousands of students across Guyana with dreams of pursuing law who are presently at the high school level applying themselves to rigorous studies to get into the Department of Law, UG, in hopes of pursing the noble career of an Attorney-at-Law and who presently may themselves be in a quandary.

The idea of a local law school is an idea whose time has come.

Sherod Avery Duncan,

Student-at-Law, Class of 2014

President, UGSS, 2009-2010

 

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