Society blog

Talk of the town

8 Feb 12

Some thoughts against the background of the mergers dominating the legal news

2011 reflections

21 Dec 11

The economic outlook remains poor, but other developments await in the coming year

Offer them hope

2 Dec 11

Message needed for the young in troubled times

View from Wick

18 Oct 11

Austin Lafferty's faculty visit to Caithness

ABS lift-off

14 Oct 11

Society wants to share draft handbook with those interested in setting up in Scotland

2020 vision

23 Sep 11

Society's objectives set out for today's SGM

Conference call to action

8 Sep 11

"One Profession" event highlights opportunities in the years ahead

Discrimination: bad for business

1 Jun 11

Society will lead in tackling negative perceptions of the profession by ethnic minority solicitors

Dealing with the new Parliament

12 May 11

Society wants to continue constructive relationship in dealing with legal issues

The AGM and the constitution

17 Mar 11

The constitution could do with updating even as regards participation in the meeting

Editors Blog

Ah, the artist in us

15 Apr 10
"Is law a creative profession?" posts make good reading

The creative lawyer. Paradigm, or oxymoron? The question is prompted by a lively blog discussion begun by a Cheshire solicitor (click here to view). My thanks to Brian Inkster for drawing my attention to it via Twitter.

The flavour of the dozen and more posts to date, from both lawyers and non-lawyers, is that you don't have to be creative to be a lawyer, but you do if you want to excel at it. One contributor points out that what you are creating is not just documents but solutions to clients' problems. Another that I think hits the mark very effectively includes this passage:

"OK we may be working within predetermined parameters, but the best legal drafting, for example the most effective contractual clauses, often shows real craftsmanship. I’d even say that legal correspondence is a lot like creative writing. A solicitor’s letter can achieve very different results depending not just on its basic contents but on how those contents are presented."

Instinctively I ally myself with that. Having had to review many forms of legal writing over the years – deeds, correspondence, book or article copy, judgments, draft law reports and digests, even statutory material – I have no doubt that the most successful expressions of the lawyer's (written) art come not just from being able to find the right style and fill in the blanks, but from being able to step back and view your work as a reader would. (The trick of applying a reader's eye was one of the first things I was told to aim for when I first cut my editorial teeth – whether or not it shows!)

Is it easy to grasp what your document is about? Is it structured so that you can follow the scheme of it? Does it avoid unnecessary words? Does it look as if it has been thought about and given a certain polish? Is it designed for the reader's needs? Good writing or drafting is hard to define, but quite easy to spot when you come across it. I am impressed at the efforts some make these days to break down even quite complex documents into more easily understood, and simply written, chunks; but many deeds, and, sadly, even much correspondence from solicitors, still fail some or all of these tests.

It is often said that today's clients assume that you know the law; in choosing a lawyer they are looking for that extra something that tells them you are the one for them. Taking an objective look at how you express yourself – and the impact it is likely to make – would be a good place to start.

Have your say






Your comment

James Dickson

Monday April 19, 2010, 15:09

We are creative in the way that craftsmen or engineers or architects are creative, but I don't think that we are artists.


Alistair R. Brownlie

Thursday April 29, 2010, 08:02

You have touched on one of my favourite themes. Good writing is not only better to read, easier to understand but it often reveals to the writer that his grasp of the subject needs to be clarified. Good writing can reveal something that the writer at first only knew in a confused, blurred way.


John Malone III

Wednesday May 5, 2010, 21:42

I agree with the comments made here regarding the written work that a lawyer produces. To have come from the mind of an experienced and qualified solicitor or advocate, the advice and how it is presented SHOULD carry a creative element. However, I do believe that there is such a thing as The Art of Law. An advocate uses all of one's wit and knowledge to see one through the day! He/she performs an act of passion and reason for the benefit of others. Throw in the potential poverty of pro bono work and we become familiar with our friends who work towards beauty as we do justice.


FILLER_lawscotjobs (link opens in new window)