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Yesterday and Today


From Conference to the Nation's Capital

Though Canada's oldest law society, the Law Society of Upper Canada, was established in 1797 and many others are well over 100 years old, it was not until 1927 that law society leaders, at the initiative of Sir James Aikins of Manitoba, first came together to form the Conference of Governing Bodies of the Legal Profession in Canada.

The main objective of the Conference was "the consideration of matters of common interest to the Governing Bodies of the profession in the several provinces and the making of recommendations in respect thereof to the Canadian Bar Association and to the Governing Bodies of the profession in the provinces."

The annual conference structure endured for 45 years and served its primary purpose as a vehicle for Canada's bar leaders to share ideas and common experiences. In 1972, the Federation of Law Societies of Canada was established as a non-profit corporation whose mission as a coordinating body and forum for exchange between law societies gradually took on more importance with the growth of the legal profession and the complexity of issues facing the law societies. The Federation was housed in Montreal, Quebec from 1985 until 2006 when it engaged its first full-time Chief Executive Officer and relocated to Ottawa, the nation’s capital.


Today's Federation

Recent years have seen a rapid and dynamic evolution in how law societies have come together nationally through the Federation to fulfill their public interest mandates. Here are a few examples:

2001 - 2011 The Canadian Legal Information Institute (CanLII) is founded to provide free access to legal information for the public and the legal profession. Its online collection grows to include all laws of Canada’s federal and provincial governments, as well as more than 1,000,000 Court cases and decisions of administrative tribunals.
 
2002 - 2006 The National Mobility Agreement is signed and implemented to break down interprovincial barriers and facilitate the recognition of credentials and the transfer of lawyers between Canada's common law jurisdictions.
 
2005 - 2008 Canada’s law societies agree on new national rules for lawyers and Quebec notaries to help fight money laundering including a prohibition for them to accept more than $7,500 in cash and requiring them to observe rigourous client identification and verification rules.
 
2006 The Territorial Mobility Agreement extends the regime for lawyer mobility to Canada's northern territories.
 
2009 With rapidly growing demand for assessment of credentials of individuals whose legal education was obtained abroad, the Federation modernizes its processes and relocates its assessment service, the National Committee on Accreditation from the University of Ottawa to the Federation’s head office.
 
2009 - 2010 For the first time in over 50 years, the Federation and Canada's law societies formally approve national requirements for law degree programs in Canada's common law jurisdictions to ensure high standards of competence for individuals who wish to enter the legal profession.
 
2009 - 2011 The Federation adopts a Model Code of Professional Conduct to set the benchmark for harmonizing codes of conduct to be implemented in each of Canada's law societies so that the public can expect the same high ethical standards to apply to the legal profession everywhere in Canada.
 
2010 The law societies approve the Quebec Mobility Agreement which formalizes reciprocal recognition of the Canadian Legal Advisor category of membership for lawyers and enables their transfer between common law and civil law legal systems.
 
2011 The Federation approves the applications for two new Canadian law degree programs at Thompson Rivers University in British Columbia and Lakehead University in Ontario – the first new law schools in Canada in over 35 years.