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Article
Self-Regulation, Professional Responsibility and the Duty to Report
Articles, Book Chapters, & Popular Press
  • Richard Devlin, Dalhousie University - Schulich School of Law
  • Jocelyn Downie, Dalhousie University - Schulich School of Law
  • Sheila Wildeman, Schulich School of Law, Dalhousie University
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2016
Keywords
  • Professional Self-Regulation,
  • Canadian Lawyers,
  • Professional Obligations,
  • Public Interest,
  • Duty to Report Misconduct,
  • Mental Disability
Abstract

Professional self-regulation, as we all know, is a privilege and not a right. One consequence of this principle is that a profession must ensure that its members serve the public interest. This responsibility requires that the regulators of a profession have systems in place to ensure that the members are qualified, competet and conduct themselves ethically - and that members who are subject to complaints and discipline are provided with effective, efficient and fair complaints and discipline processes.

However, regulators have limited access to relevant information. Therefore, the members of the profession also have a responsibility to ensure that they personally, and their colleagues, also are pursuing the public interest. In other words, there is a professional obligation on members of a profession to monitor each other. It was this obligation that the Federation of Law Societies of Canada attempted to capture when it included a "Duty to Report Misconduct" in its Model Code, first published in 2009.

Citation Information
Richard Devlin, Jocelyn Downie, & Sheila Wildeman,"Self-Regulation, Professional Responsibility and the Duty to Report" (2016) 35:2 Society Record 20.