SEARCH
Justinian News

Further and better delays ... Sleepers awake ... Unfinished case too old to be remembered  ... Chop-chop ... Circus Court derailment ... Clock running slow ... Justice Jenni's unhurried rescue of online trader ... Sliding scale of delays ... From our Court Linesman ... Read more >>

Politics Media Law Society

The Empire Strikes Back ... Uday Moloch anointed to “protect the English speaking world” … Latest word on “genocide” … Bring out the No-Doz – The Mad Monk scribbles for Substack … Church litigation – a new front to be tested by victims of predatory priests ... Read more >> 

Free Newsletter
Justinian Columnists

Know one, purl one ... Iron Lady of legal rectitude endorses Gageler ... The chief justice wants judges on the straight and narrow ... The cardboard cutout model of legislative supremacy ... The evils of judicial activism ... Procrustes on the dance floor with the Legislative-Judicial Foxtrot ... Read more >> 

Blow the whistle

 

News snips ...


Donald Trump's rambling 85-page defamation complaint against The New York Times ... More >> 

Justinian's Bloggers

Berlusconi's dream world ... Revenge politics in Italy ... Independence of prosecutors under attack ... Constitutional assault ... The years of lead ... Investigations reopened into old murders ... High drama at Milan's Leoncavallo ... Rome correspondent Silvana Olivetti reports ... Read more >> 

"I think very good. And by the way, right there, you see all the trucks, they just started construction of the new ballroom for the White House, which is something they've been trying to get, as you know, for about 150 years, and it's going to be a beauty. It'll be an absolutely magnificent structure. And I just see all the trucks. We just started so it'll get done very nicely and it'll be one of the best anywhere in the world, actually. Thank you very much." 

President Trump, asked by a reporter at the White House how he was holding up personally after the loss of his friend Charlie Kirk ... September 11, 2025 ... Read more flatulence ... 


Justinian Featurettes

Schmoozing and betrayal ... Judge Water Softener rides into Integrityville mounted high on his horse ... Judicial review of corruption finding ... Intriguing submissions ... Unprecedented assistance to morals monitor ... The scale of the sub-rosa intrigue ... Plenty to think about ... Ginger Snatch reports ... Read more >> 

Justinian's archive

The plague of amnesia ... Memory and its failures ... Remembering to forget things ... Failure to take account of remissions in sentencing ... Relevant memories of experienced and inexperience judges ... An experienced judge writes ... Justinian's Archive, November 12, 2004 ... Read more >> 


 

 

« Security law overreach | Main | Silk queue »
Monday
Sep012014

Bucket of ice water for Victorian solicitors

New LIV CEO hired to breathe fresh life into the solicitors' club ... Reform challenges in the face of unprecedented change ... Kevin Childs meets Nerida Wallace, and she's the one with all the questions 

Wallace: change agent

IT would be grotesque and unfair to liken the Law Institute of Victoria to a broken down buggy of the, well, Victorian age: the nag between the shafts flogged to a standstill, the wheels rusted and decaying. 

It may also be bending the truth to say that in the noble tradition of women stepping in to mop up the mess the chaps have made, the appointment of Nerida Wallace as first female CEO of this busted buggy is hailed as offering a chance of some life for the poor old solicitors' club.

Nevertheless, there is a sniff of truth to this.

Wallace, daughter of a magistrate and with 30 legal years under her belt, comes from the world of change. Uncle Theodore, as portrayed by Evelyn Waugh, may have loved to sing "Change and decay in all around I see," but now the watchword is change and not decay.

Wallace's business, Transformation Management Services, sounds like a front for spooks, but the word is it has been effective in tipping metaphorical buckets of ice water on all sorts of outfits to wake them to the 21st century.

So she has given her rapid-fire attention, direct as a firehose, to scarcely progressive mobs such as the Accident Compensation Conciliation Service, Workcover, the Victorian Law Reform Commission, Family Court, and the Attorney General's Department. To their benefit.

Kicking off as a humble court registrar, she's been  a conciliator, solicitor, principal legal officer and policy adviser. Unlike the Commonwealth Attorney General she has an intimate familiarity with computers and how they help the law. Moreover, she asks, "What are lawyers doing in the face of technological change. What can be done better?"

Citing the way UK banks are muscling into legal services she sounds the alarm for the future of the game.

"There are 60,000 lawyers in Australia, 19,000 of them are members of the LIV. It is a significant industry reform challenge. Even now 'unbundled legal services' are being shunted offshore or going to the DIY movement." 

Add to that thousands of graduates coming down the pipeline, the snafu that is Legal Aid, shifting regulatory arrangements between the Legal Services Board and commissioner and the picture seems painted by Hieronymus Bosch. 

Bosch's famous painting of the Victorian legal profession at work

But, as she prepares to take over the reins, 55-year-old Ms Wallace is clear-sighted about what confronts her. This includes a need to continue to focus on helping lawyers make a transition both with technology and the different phases of their working lives.

"We want to look at how to take advantage of new concepts in the way people work – the shared economy, flexible working arrangements, portfolio careers, multi-disciplinary teams. We need to find new opportunities for graduates and show them the way through new career paths. 

My baby boomer generation is looking to the next generation to take up their practices; the regulatory framework seems like it is increasing; personal stresses associated with workloads are taking a toll; work for many of our graduates appears a lost dream and lawyers in-house and in government wonder how to differentiate themselves in fast reducing workforces."

She acknowledges that much of this is happening against the painfully slow process of edging towards uniform regulation. With Victoria and NSW in some agreement about the need for a national regulator to smooth the challenges of the Asian century, Wallace is confident that it just might happen.

Transforming the buggy into a self-propelled vehicle of this century is, however, another question.

Clearly, the new LIV CEO is not short of questions. Those who know her well are sure that, calling on what might be called collective wisdom, she will also come up with answers.

Reader Comments

There are no comments for this journal entry. To create a new comment, use the form below.
Editor Permission Required
You must have editing permission for this entry in order to post comments.