Report on flexible and part-time work in legal profession
Significant report on flexible and part-time work in the legal profession
UC School of Law and the Canterbury Women’s Legal Association have published an important study of flexible and part-time work in the Canterbury legal profession. The project team invited all qualified lawyers and legal executives practicing in the Canterbury and Westland area to take part in a survey examining flexible and part-time working arrangements.
Findings from the study include:
• Women who
undertake paid legal employment still continue to do most of
the unpaid care as part of raising children.
• Most
employees do not base their request for a flexible work
arrangement on relevant legislative provisions.
• Part-time working arrangements are more likely to be
seen as having a negative impact on career progression than
flexible work practices.
• Formal work policies on
flexible and part-time work rarely exist.
• Men are
less likely to use flexible and part-time work
arrangements.
The Dean of UC School of Law, Professor
Ursula Cheer, who was a member of the project team, said
that while it could be seen as reassuring that attitudes and
approaches to these work practices in the Canterbury legal
profession reflect national and international themes and
trends generally, unfortunately many are negative in nature
and this is normalised within the profession and wider
society.
“One notable aspect of our study is that of
all the responses we received, over 90% were from female
lawyers or legal executives. The gender split in the
responses in this project was very pronounced, suggesting a
lack of engagement by male lawyers in this issue. This could
flow from an assumption that flexible and part-time work
practices are a child-care and therefore a women’s
issue,” Professor Cheer commented. “Lack of interest in
the issue makes it very difficult to get any traction for
change in a profession that is still dominated at the top by
males and based on a male model of work, but where women
dominate the lower strata.”
Professor Cheer also noted
that a common theme in the responses was the need for
consistency between the terms of workplace policies on
flexible and part-time work (where they exist) and actual
workplace practices.
“ - And when part-time legal
employees were asked what more their employers could do to
support part-time work, they generally focused on wanting a
more supportive workplace. Specific suggestions offered were
the provision of adequate working space, appropriate and
consistent support from other staff and the setting of
realistic workloads,” she said.
The
report makes a series of recommendations and suggestions for
change. These include:
• Promotion of realistic
flexible and part-time work practices as normal.
• Development of model templates for employment
policies and contracts.
• National law awards to
reward and publicise positive work practices.
More
radical suggestions include:
• Moving away from a
billable hours business model, perhaps to fixed fee
billing;
• Limiting working hours to improve the
wellbeing of all employees;
• Legal practices promoting
real work-life balance by encouraging and assisting women
and men to take time off for care-related needs.
Project
team:
Professor Ursula Cheer
Associate Professor
Annick Masselot
Associate Professor Lynne Taylor
Ms
Natalie Baird
Dr Rhonda Powell
The report is available
at:
http://www.laws.canterbury.ac.nz/documents/Report_Flexible_and_Part-time_Work_Arrangements_in_the_Canterbury_Legal_Profession.pdf