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19 February 2025
Issue: 8105 / Categories: Legal News , Career focus , Profession , Training & education
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Concerns grow over apprenticeship cuts

The Law Society has joined a chorus of protest against plans to cut funding for level 7 apprenticeships.

More than 3,000 people have taken up solicitor apprenticeships—six-year level 7 apprenticeships at law firms—since their launch in 2015. However, the government is currently considering changing its funding policy to focus on shorter apprenticeships, and could exclude certain level 7 apprenticeships.

Law Society president Richard Atkinson warned this week cutting funding would ‘have a substantial negative impact on both social mobility and talent development.

‘Apprenticeships provide a route into a legal career that has previously not been open to many from low socio-economic backgrounds.'

Several law firms have urged the Department of Education to continue funding. Writing in NLJ this month, Rhicha Kapila, partner and chief operating officer at Bolt Burdon Kemp, which has four apprentices and aims to expand its scheme, expressed concerns ‘that removing the option will close doors for people who would struggle to enter the legal profession via the usual academic route’.

MOVERS & SHAKERS

WSP Solicitors—David Ashcroft & Jessica O’Shea

WSP Solicitors—David Ashcroft & Jessica O’Shea

Commercial property and child law teams expand with senior hires

Duxton Hill Chambers—Lucas Bastin KC & Joshua Hiew

Duxton Hill Chambers—Lucas Bastin KC & Joshua Hiew

Set expands London and Singapore offering with senior international disputes hires

Gilson Gray—Gregor Duthie & Stephen Forsyth

Gilson Gray—Gregor Duthie & Stephen Forsyth

Firm strengthens real estate and litigation teams with partner promotions

NEWS
Behind the profession’s polished exterior, lawyers are ‘internally drained rather than physically tired’, according to a stark assessment of burnout in legal practice
Five years after the Domestic Abuse Act 2021 came into force, concerns remain that the family courts continue to minimise allegations of abuse in child contact disputes
Uber has built a formidable strategy for insulating itself from liability for drivers’ conduct, but the legal terrain differs sharply between the US and England and Wales
The House of Lords (Hereditary Peers) Act 2026 marks a constitutional watershed by severing the centuries-old link between hereditary titles and automatic membership of the upper chamber
The Civil Justice Council’s review of Part III of the Solicitors Act 1974 could mark the end of what one commentator calls an ‘outdated’ and overly technical regime governing solicitor-client fee disputes
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