Reforming Law Reform
One of the recommendations made in the report of the Special Group on Public Service Numbers and Expenditure Programmes (‘An Bord Snip Nua’) concerns the Law Reform Commission, and it runs as follows:
The Law Reform Commission’s mandate is to keep the law under review and make recommendations for reform. The Law Reform Commission was set up on a statutory basis independent of the Oireachtas and as well as law reform has been accorded some other functions such as legislative restatement and legislative directory. The Group holds the view that the Law Reform Commission could be used in a more targeted way by moving away from the model of a permanent commission towards one in which the commission is re-convened as required to address government mandated reform agendas. As a first step, the discontinuation of the Law Reform Commission should yield €2.8m in savings. The Group envisages that up to half of the Commission’s permanent staff could be assigned to the AGO on ongoing work such as legislative restatement and legislative directory.
The Law Reform Commission was established under the Law Reform Commission Act 1975. Section 4(1) of that Act sets out its agenda:
The Commission shall keep the law under review and in accordance with the provisions of this Act shall undertake examinations and conduct research with a view to reforming the law and formulate proposals for law reform.
In other words, the intention underlying the establishment of the Commission was to ensure that there is an independent body capable of addressing specific reform proposals, while also having the capacity to undertake a general analysis of the state of the law and put forward an agenda for reform. The first President of the Commission was the celebrated Supreme Court judge, Brian Walsh, and he was succeeded by High Court judge Declan Budd, and most recently by Supreme Court judge Catherine McGuinness. Apart from the President, the Commission itself is small, consisting of only one full-time Commissioner, and three part-time ones. However, it has a significant number of expert staff, including (as far as I can tell) 20 researchers. The permanent staff are led by Raymond Byrne, who is as it happens on secondment from DCU.
The Commission’s current programme includes alternative dispute resolution, sexual offences, e-conveyancing, children and the law, assisted human reproduction – which demonstrates the wide-ranging approach that the Commission can take.
The establishment of the Commission in the 1970s had been preceded by strong lobbying. Law Reform in Ireland had proved very hard to achieve, and by the mid-1970s the record of law reform consisted of some very imaginative pieces of legislation – generally prompted by the emergence of a (rare) reforming Minister – and of very occasional instances of reforming court judgements. An Example of the former would have been the Succession Act 1965 (initiated by Charles Haughey, and giving succession rights to spouses and children); and of the latter, the ground-breaking Supreme Court judgment of McGee v. Attorney General (1974, which changed the law on contraception). But there was no consistent programme of law reform. The model used by those who were lobbying at the time was the Law Commission, the law reform body for England and Wales and which had been established in 1965.
So what now? Of course we must understand the need for savings, and it’s easy to keep picking off Bord Snip proposals and say, in effect, that none of them will work. But there is a high price to be paid, in almost every walk of life, for failing to address law reform. The Bord Snip concept of law reform is project specific, but the need for law reform is not. Government departments are well able to handle many of the specific reform proposals that may come up, but there is a need for a much wider view of the problems and needs of our legal system, as it interacts with citizens and organisations.
It seems to me that this proposal should not be adopted. The cost of doing so would well exceed the savings made.
Explore posts in the same categories: economy, law, politicsTags: law reform, Law Reform Commission
You can comment below, or link to this permanent URL from your own site.
July 31, 2009 at 5:04 pm
20 researchers seems extraordinary. There are only around 20 full time lecturers in Law at e.g. Trinity College. Perhaps they can do with five?
July 31, 2009 at 5:54 pm
This was one of the items of an bord snip that made me wonder on the overall direction the group were taking.
In the scheme of things 2.8m is peanuts, so what in Gods name carried this Office into view. And why on earth attack what is seen by most as an honest broker. While it is a God given gift to the politicians in the area of the law where they can point and say not us it is from them.