Course description
Judicial and Prosecutorial Reasoning
Upcoming start dates
Choose between 4 start dates
Suitability - Who should attend?
- Members of the judiciary of all grades
- Prosecutors
- Trainee judges and prosecutors
- Court clerks
- Legal and administrative personnel of tribunals
- Counsels of States
- Legislative drafters
- Members of Parliament participating in legislative drafting committees
Outcome / Qualification etc.
- Enhance the ability to engage ‘critically’ and logically in judicial reasoning
- Develop the skills to articulate sound legal arguments
- Strengthen the understanding of the moral, social and political aspects of legal reasoning
- Understand the relationship between statutes and cases
- Appreciate the role of Judges and Human Rights
- In-depth understanding of the role of rights in administrative, civil and criminal justice processes
- Understand the substantive role and constitutional position of judges
- Master judicial approaches to statutory interpretation and the influence of international instruments on those approaches
- Gain an in-depth appreciation of the fundamental elements of the rule of law, and the significance of fairness and justice in social and legal systems
- Identify rapidly key issues in cases and be able to summarise key points succinctly, accurately and with high impact
- Strengthen legal research skills using primary and secondary sources
- Kolb’s Adult Learning Styles Model
- Respond coherently to challenging questions about the law by the use of legal referencing
Training Course Content
Week 1: Judicial reasoning
- Explore ‘What’ the ‘Law’ should mean to you
- Legal, moral and justicial facets explained
- Why the nature of law evolves, its significance to society, and how big data drivers will drive future law-making
- Legislative interpretation
- Applied legislation for interpretation – Persons of legislative interpretations (PLIs)
- Techniques for developing and evidencinga reasoned argument
- Rebuttable v. non-rebuttable presumptions
- Judicial precedent v. freedom to exercise judicial discretion: scoping and limitations
- The base for logical reasoning
- The aspects of judicial reasoning
- The relationships and roles of parliaments and courts
- Reasoning techniques to reach decisions
- The ‘neighbour’ principle as outlined by Lord Atkin
- Internal and external justification of conclusions of law – dictum justifications
- Use v. misuse of deduction
Week 2: Prosecutorial reasoning
- Why become a ‘Prosecutor’
- What Prosecutors Do and Do Not Do
- Interests, skills and characteristics of a Prosecutor
- The structure of the Interview Process that Interviewers Look For
- Common hypothetical questions
- The character of a ‘Prosecutor’ – how to develop one
- Statutory background and normative forces
- Powers and limitations
- Discretion and its maximum limits
- Legality v. illegality
- Ideology
- Criminological skills
- Accountability
- Transparency
- Inertia
- Role ambiguity
- Systemic oversight and confidential investigations management skills
- Internal checks
- Prosecutions in rem and in personam
- Adaptive management
- Disempowerment
- Role specification
- Court prosecutorial skills
Why choose LCT International
We have trained over 25,000 delegates from almost 500 client organisations
Highly qualified and experienced trainers who offer a unique learning experience tailored to you
Endorsed by various organisational and subject specific accrediting bodies
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LCT International
London Corporate Training
3 Shortlands, Hammersmith
W6 8DA London
LCT International - High value, high impact training programmes delivered globally to teams and individuals For almost 30 years we have delivered tangible improvements to organisations by enabling their leaders, managers and professionals to reach their full potential through transformational...
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