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|status = active
|status = active
|purpose = advocate and public voice, educator and network
|purpose = advocate and public voice, educator and network
|headquarters = [[Manitoba]], [[Canada]].
|headquarters = [[Winnipeg]], [[Manitoba]], [[Canada]].
|location =
|location =
|region_served = [[Manitoba]], [[Canada]].
|region_served = [[Manitoba]], [[Canada]].
|membership =
|membership =
|language = [[English Language|English]]<br />[[French language|French]]
|language = [[English Language|English]]<br />[[French language|French]]
|leader_title =
|leader_title = CEO
|leader_name =
|leader_name = Kristin Dangerfield
|main_organ =
|main_organ =
|parent_organization =
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Revision as of 07:07, 10 June 2017

Law Society of Manitoba
AbbreviationLSM
Formation1877
TypeLaw Society
Legal statusactive
Purposeadvocate and public voice, educator and network
HeadquartersWinnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
Region served
Manitoba, Canada.
Official language
English
French
CEO
Kristin Dangerfield
Websitewww.lawsociety.mb.ca

The Law Society of Manitoba is the self-governing body for lawyers in Manitoba, Canada. Its mandate is to regulate the legal profession.

To practice law in the Province of Manitoba, a person must be a member of the Law Society of Manitoba. The Law Society of Manitoba sets its own admission requirements. The qualification process to become a lawyer in Manitoba includes having successfully completed the combination of the bar admission courses and a period of articles.[1]

Since 2002, Bar Admission requirements have been fulfilled by completion of the courses offered by the Canadian Centre for Professional Legal Education (CPLED), a joint initiative of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta.

The Law Society of Manitoba sets the standard of conduct for lawyers within its membership, and disciplines those lawyers who do not meet such standards. The goal of the Law Society of Manitoba is a public well served by an independent and competent legal profession, and it has a mandate to act in the public interest to ensure that lawyers in Manitoba practise competently and ethically.[2]

References