·
Two thirds of family law practitioners say they feel less
connected to their peers and half worry professional development is suffering
as a result.
·
Results of the poll conducted by Resolution, a leading family law
association, are released as fears of a second national lockdown intensify.
·
Resolution’s Future of Family Practice online conference aims to
connect lawyers with their peers.
Family lawyers are feeling more
isolated and less connected to their peers and colleagues within the legal
community since the UK went into lockdown earlier this year, a new poll
conducted by Resolution has found.
The news comes as new Coronavirus
restrictions are announced and fears of a renewed lockdown intensify.
Two thirds (65%) of those responding
said they felt less connected to the legal community since the UK went into
lockdown. Members also raised concerns for younger colleagues who no longer
have the ability to observe and converse with senior practitioners and learn
informally from them.
Nearly half (46%) of those polled
said their professional development had suffered during lockdown, with members
giving examples of missed training opportunities as events were cancelled as a
result of the pandemic - the 2020 National Resolution Conference being one of
them.
The results come ahead of
Resolution’s upcoming three-day conference, taking place entirely online, which
focuses heavily on networking and professional development. The Future of
Family Practice conference, 14 -16 October, is an opportunity for professionals
to network and exchange ideas through facilitated café sessions, choose a range
of workshops - covering critical skills - and daily plenaries with big picture
thinking on the latest trends.
Resolution
Chair Juliet Harvey said: “The
course of the pandemic over the past six months has led us all to rethink and
re-evaluate what the future holds. I’m sure I’m not the only one who has been
thinking about the long-term impact Covid-19 will have on how we as
professionals build our skills and maintain and expand our networks.
“It’s worrying, albeit not
entirely surprising, that family practitioners are feeling isolated from their
peers and colleagues at a time when that sense of connection, purpose and
shared values is more important than ever. We need to address this issue and
it’s why our Future of Family Practice Online Conference is so important to anyone
working in family justice.”
The Resolution Chair highlighted
the work the organisation is doing to help professionals deal with a new way of
working, adding:
“With many offices still closed
and more members working remotely, we’ve lost the ability to have those
all-important informal water-cooler conversations that help to connect our
profession together and solidify our shared purpose.
“In view of the significant
reduction, or in many cases complete absence, of face-to-face meetings, this
conference focuses heavily on networking and exchanging ideas - we’ve created a
virtual ‘café’ to allow people to have those informal conversations they’d
normally have over a coffee or a sandwich. We need to continue to bring
professionals together as best we can after what has been - to put it mildly -
a challenging year for us all. I can’t think of a more appropriate subject area
for Resolution to tackle.”
Since the start of the pandemic,
Resolution has made over 160 hours of online training free to access for
members, worth more than £5,000 - this could explain why nearly two in five
respondents felt their professional development had not suffered.
For more information about the
Future of Family Online Conference visit: https://resolution.org.uk/future-of-family-practice-conference-2020/
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