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  2. OLPAS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OLPAS

    The Online Pupillage Application System, or OLPAS was a centralised service through which students applied for pupillage, the last stage of their training to barrister in England and Wales. It was a replacement for 'PACH' the Pupillage Application Clearing House, and it was replaced in 2009 by a new, similar, system called Pupillage Portal. [1]

  3. Barristers in England and Wales - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barristers_in_England_and...

    This is a competitive process which involves some 3,000 students applying for some 300 places each year at Authorised Education and Training Organisations (AETOs). [16] The online pupillage application system, the Pupillage Gateway, enables applicants to submit their details to AETOs (chambers or employers). [17]

  4. Pupillage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pupillage

    In many chambers, this is the more relaxed part of the pupillage, as the pupil has little responsibility. In the second six months of pupillage, each pupil is responsible for a personal case load. This will range from a first appearance in the county court or magistrates' court , hearings in the High Court , or Crown Court to full trials .

  5. Bar Professional Training Course - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bar_Professional_Training...

    In addition to passing the Bar Course Aptitude Test (BCAT), the minimum entry requirements for the BPTC is qualifying undergraduate degree in law with no less than lower second-class (2:2) honours or a non-law academic degree with lower second-class (2:2) honours alongside the Graduate Diploma in Law. [5]

  6. Pupil master - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pupil_master

    The training period, known as pupillage, is usually split into two periods of six months known as "sixes". The first "six" is a non-practising six, during which the pupil will shadow their pupil master; the second is usually a practising "six", when the pupil, with their pupil master's permission, can undertake the supply of legal services and ...

  7. Chambers and Partners - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chambers_and_Partners

    Chambers Guides, and its sections, are authored and edited by vetted legal professionals from firms such as DLA Piper, [15] Eversheds Sutherland, [16] Baker McKenzie, [17] Cravath, Swaine and Moore, [18] and Morgan, Lewis & Bockius. [19] Chambers and Partners publishes its law school guide, "Chambers Student" online. [20]

  8. Admission to practice law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Admission_to_practice_law

    Upon completion of the requisite academic and practical training, one must 'petition' the chief justice of the judiciary for admission to the bar by filing the requisite documents, including the petition in a prescribed format under the Advocates Act and an accompanying affidavit, a certificate of completion of pupillage and two certificates of ...

  9. Inner Temple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inner_Temple

    The Inner Temple is one of the four Inns of Court, [2] along with Gray's Inn, [3] Lincoln's Inn, [4] and the Middle Temple. [5] The Inns are responsible for training, regulating, and selecting barristers within England and Wales, and are the only bodies allowed to call a barrister to the Bar and allow him or her to practice.