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H. decide, determine






Упражнение 5.Подберите к словам из колонки А синонимы или близкие по значению словосочетания из колонки В.


А

1. issue

2. capacity

3. benefit

4. hearing

5. extra

6. strict

7. ordinary

8. expertise

9. supreme

10. flexible


В

a. trial

b. subject of a dispute; question for discussion
с ability

d. advantage; help

e. adaptable

f. highest

g. outside

h. precisely limited; exactly defined i. normal, usual j. expert knowledge


Упражнение 6.Заполните пропуски антонимами.

inside ... formal ...

the latter ... informality

agreement ... old

fairly ... dissimilarity

Упражнение7. Назовите прилагательные с суффиксом -able, означаю-

щие:

1. that can be argued

2. that can be enforced

3. that can be avoided

4. that can be agreed

Упражнение 8.Заполните таблицу на словообразование.

 

Verb Noun Adjective
impart avoidance enforcement legislative ♦ • • arguable agreeable

Упражнение 9. А.Назовите 20—25 ключевых слов и словосочетаний на тему «Judicial institutions and courts».

В. Speak about:

1. The difference between courts of first instance and appellate courts.

2. The purpose of tribunals and arbitration.

3. The advantages of arbitration.

Text 5

Какие требования предъявляют к квалификации юриста в современном обществе? Прочитайте и переведите текст.

The Profession of Lawyers

The word «lawyer» describes a person who practices law, who has become officially qualified to act in certain legal matters because of examinations he has taken and professional experience he has gained. Most countries have different groups of lawyers who each take a particular kind of examination in order to qualify to do par­ticular jobs. In Japan, a lawyer must decide whether he wants to take examination to become an attorney,a public prosecutor or a judge.

A distinctive feature of the legal profession in England is that it is divided into two groups: barristersand solicitors.Barristers are lawyers who specialize in arguing casesin front of a judge and have an exclusive right to be heard, the right of audience1,in all law courts in England, even in the highest courts. They are not paid di­rectly by clients, but are employed by solicitors. Judges are usually chosen from the most senior barristers, and once appointed they cannot continue to practice as barristers. Solicitors are lawyers who do much of the initial preparation for cases. They prepare legal documents (e.g. wills, sale of land or buildings), advise clients on legal matters, and speak on their behalf2in lower courts. In other words, a barrister spends most of his time either in a courtroom or preparing his arguments for the court and a solicitor spends most of his time in an office giving advice to clients and making investiga­tions. Many people in England believe the distinction between bar­risters and solicitors should be eliminated, as it has already happened in Australia.

In both the United States and other industrialized countries, lawyers are becoming more and more specialized. Working in small firms, lawyers now tend to restrict themselves to certain kinds of work and lawyers working in large law firms or employed in the law departments of a large commercial enterprise work on highly spe­cific areas of law.

How to enter the profession of lawyers? Lawyers are subject to standardized examination and other controls to regulate their com-


petence. In some countries in order to practice as a lawyer it is nec­essary to obtain a university degree in law. However, in others, a degree may be insufficient; professional examinations must be passed. In Britain, the main requirement is to have passed the Bar Final examination (for barristers) or the Law Society Final exami­nation (for solicitors). Someone with a university degree in a sub­ject other than law needs first to take a preparatory course. Someone without a degree at all may also prepare for the final ex­amination, but this will take several years. In most countries, law­yers would say that the time they spent studying for their law finals was one of the worst period of their life. This is because an enor­mous number of procedural rules covering a wide area of law must be memorized. In Japan, where there are relatively few lawyers, the examinations are supposed to be particularly hard: less than 5 per­cent of candidates pass.

A solicitor in England must then spend two years as an articled clerk3,during which time his work is closely supervised by an ex­perienced solicitor, and then he must take further courses. A bar­rister spends a similar year serving as a pupilunder an experienced barrister.

In most countries, once a lawyer is fully qualified he receives a certificate proving his right to sell his service. There are also insur­ance provisions so that if a lawyer is ever successfully sued by a cli­ent for professional incompetence, there will be funds available to enable him to pay damages. Even if a lawyer is very competent, he must take care not to break the many rules of procedure and ethics set by the body which regulates his profession. In England, the body regulating the conduct of solicitors is the Law Society. There is also a Solicitor's Disciplinary Tribunal with the power to suspendor even disqualify a solicitor.

In most legal systems, conversations between a lawyer and his client are privileged:the client should know that what he says will not be passed on to someone else without his permission. In theory, it could pose difficult ethical problems for a lawyer. For instance, what should he do in a criminal case if he believes his client guilty? In any case, it is the prosecution's job to prove guilt, not the de­fence's to prove innocence. A lawyer could therefore defend his cli­ent simply by trying to point out weaknesses in the prosecution case.

Notes to the Text

1. the right of audience — право выступать в суде

2. on their behalf — от их имени


3. articled clerk — служащий конторы солиситора, выпол­няющий свою работу в порядке платы за обучение профессии солиситора

Упражнение 1.Составьте словосочетания глаголов из колонки А и суще­ствительных из колонки В.

А В


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