University College Dublin Law Society
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style="font-size: larger;" | The Law Society (University College Dublin)

Founded 1911
Motto Ar son na córa (In the pursuit of justice)
Auditor Francis McNamara
President Professor John Jackson
Patron Dr. Hugh Brady


The UCD Law Society is one of the largest student societies in Europe. Established in 1911 as 'The Legal and Economic Society', it has over 4100 members drawn from the various faculties of the University. Weekly Tuesday night debates during term are the Society's core activity. Individuals who have addressed the Society include President of Ireland Mary McAleese
Mary McAleese
Mary Patricia McAleese served as the eighth President of Ireland from 1997 to 2011. She was the second female president and was first elected in 1997 succeeding Mary Robinson, making McAleese the world's first woman to succeed another as president. She was re-elected unopposed for a second term in...

, Former Irish Taoiseach (Prime Minister), Bertie Ahern
Bertie Ahern
Patrick Bartholomew "Bertie" Ahern is a former Irish politician who served as Taoiseach of Ireland from 26 June 1997 to 7 May 2008....

  . The society's motto is "Ar son na córa" (in the pursuit of justice). Now in its 101st Session, the current Auditor is Francis McNamara.

House Debates

As one of the two debating unions in University College Dublin, the Society gathers once a week to debate topical motions relating to students and other national issues of importance. This is the main activity of the society, typically taking place on Tuesday evenings in a lecture theatre of the Newman Building during term. Guest speakers related to the topic are often invited to engage with the motion and address the students. The annual Glamour Model debate and Government debate are two popular motions that often attract a significant audience. Attendance at house debates varies weekly, with debates attracting anywhere between 30 and 300 people. Motions often range from Northern Ireland politics to the relevance of the Students’ Union. The largest recorded attendance at a Society debate was the second Lisbon Treaty referendum debate on the 28th of September 2009, which had an attendance of over 1,000 students in O’Reilly Hall, Belfield.

Guest speakers and Honorary Life Memberships

The Law Society also regularly invites notable speakers to deliver individual addresses to the Society. Recent guests given the honour of address include former Minister for Justice, Michael McDowell in October 2009 and the former lead prosecutor of Slobodan Milosevic, Sir Geoffrey Nice QC in March 2010.

The Society awards Honorary Life Memberships to important individuals who have contributed significantly to their chosen field of human endeavour. The presentation of honorary life membership also affords the recipient with an opportunity to address the assembled members of the Society.

Recent recipients of honorary life membership include actors John C. McGinley, Dirk Benedict, Jeremy Irons, David Kelly and the late Leslie Nielsen, comedians Colin Murphy, Dan Antopolski and Bill Bailey, authors Tucker Max, Jung Chang and Noam Chomsky, political figures Ken Livingstone and Bill Clinton, sportspeople Cristiano Ronaldo, Pauleta, Jimmy White, Brian O’Driscoll and Paul O’Connell, dancer Michael Flatley, supermodel Erin O’Connor and Nobel laureate Seamus Heaney.

Controversies

The Society is committed to maintaining a strong policy of free speech, a policy which it has, on occasion, found difficult to maintain. In 2008, the radical French political Jean Marie Le-Pen was invited to address the Society concerning the federalisation of the European Union. This event was essentially struck down by University Authorities after it denounced the move in response to queries from the national media. Many other debates have seen significant protests from left-wing student movements. Their policy of ‘no TDs on campus’ due to perceived Government support of University tuition fees has often conflicted with invitations to Fianna Fáil TDs on unrelated debate motions. Protests occurred in 2008 when Government Minister Eamon Ryan TD arrived to address the Society and again in 2009 when Bertie Ahern TD chaired a debate.

Cecil Lavery Moot Court Competition

The Cecil Lavery
Cecil Lavery
Cecil Patrick Lavery was an Irish lawyer, Fine Gael Party politician and judge. He was elected as a TD and then as a Senator, and served as Attorney General before being appointed as a Supreme Court judge.-Early life:...

 is a Moot Court competition named after one of the Society’s most distinguished former Auditors, a former Attorney General and Supreme Court Judge. It was initiated in 2005 and has continued as the principal moot court competition in UCD, with the winners going forward to represent UCD in the National Moot Court Competition. The current Irish champions are Alex Layden and John Joy, winners of the 2010 Cecil Lavery. The competition is organised in a knockout format, with written submissions and oral hearings adjudicated upon. A Grand Final is held in Roebuck Castle, UCD in February each year with senior members of the Irish Judiciary invited to adjudicate. The Chair is traditionally held by the Hon. Justice Vivian Lavan, a former Auditor and senior judge of the High Court.

Thomas A. Finlay Moot Court Intervarsity

The Thomas A. Finlay Moot Court Intervarsity is an international moot court competition named after the former Irish Chief Justice, Thomas A. Finlay. Founded in 2009, it has attracted teams from across the British Isles and beyond, including Warwick, Middle Temple and Notre Dame University. The competition occurs over a Friday and Saturday in March, with the teams hosted in the nearby Tara Towers hotel. The format is similar to debating intervarsities with a number of preliminary rounds followed by a ‘break’ to semi-finals, at which stage the competition reverts to a knock-out format. The Grand Final, chaired by a senior member of the British or Irish judiciary, is followed by a Gala Dinner and presentation of awards.

Competitive Debating

The Law Society has a proud record in competitive debating. The Society has won a number of international debating competitions and has enjoyed victory in The Irish Times and Mace debating competitions as well as international and national intervarsities. The Society has sent delegates to the World Universities Debating Championship annually and the European Universities Debating Championship, often reaching quarter finals in both competitions. In 1987 & 2006, UCD hosted the World Universities Debating Championship.

Schools' Debating

The Society also promotes and organises competitive debating in schools across Ireland through the Law Society Schools' Mace and the Junior Schools Debating Competition which reaches secondary schools throughout the country.

Legal & Economic Society

The Society was founded in 1911 as the Legal & Economic Society. The prominent professor and politician, J.G. Swift McNeill, gave the inaugural address. Early committee members included Thomas Kettle, Conor Maguire, Thomas Arkins and Arthur Cox. The Society ran a number of small legal debates in its early years and struggled to maintain its activity during the War of Independence and Civil War.

Legal Society

The Society was renamed the Legal Society in 1924 and had a brief resurgence of activity under the auditorship of J.C. Flood. In 1926 however, the Society ran into trouble once again.

Law Society

Finally, in 1935, the Society found firm footing as it was reconstituted as the Law Society, tasked with organising legal debates and representing legal students. Early Auditors and members were Thomas Finlay and T.F. O’Higgins. In 1946, the son of Conor Maguire, Peter D. Maguire, became Auditor, addressing the Society on the importance of peace through the United Nations. The Taoiseach, Eamon De Valera, attended.

Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, the Society began to challenge the Literary & Historical Society for dominance in University debate. A debating tour to Universities in Britain was organised annually, with team places much coveted. The tour eventually ceased in Colm Allen’s session due to security concerns following IRA violence in the Troubles.

In the 1970s the Society achieved unprecedented debating success. Following its recognition as an individual University debating institution for the purposes of national and international competition, it won the Irish Times twice in the 1970s as well as the Irish Mace, both times with Auditor Conor Gearty
Conor Gearty
Conor A. Gearty is the Rausling Professor of Human Rights Law and Director, Centre for the Study of Human Rights at the London School of Economics.-Background:...

. It would continue the success throughout the 1980s and 1990s as the society won the Irish Times twice more. The 1980s and 1990s also saw an increase in the scale of the Society’s activities as it began to host larger and more exciting debates. The notorious criminal, Martin Cahill, addressed the Society in 1987 and for many years the Society held the Guinness World Record for the longest ever continuous debate.

The 1990s saw the Society expand its membership base beyond law students; reaching out to the entire campus. Throughout the 1990s and 2000s, the Society continually grew, first in hundreds, then in thousands. The Society reached virtually saturation point in 2010, when prior to the awarding of Honorary Life Membership to television presenter Jeremy Kyle, it signed up its 5,000th member for that Session, making it the largest annually subscribed student society in Europe.

Auditor and Committee

The Law Society is run by a committee of selected members, each with a specific remit. The committee is chosen by the Auditor, who is elected for a single year term by the enrolled membership of the Society. The Auditor is the head of the committee and responsible for the day-to-day running of the Society. The Society’s sessions usually begin in late March or early April, following the Annual General Meeting. The AGM consists of reports from the Auditor, Treasurer, Librarian and Senior Legal Assessor. At the AGM the results of the auditorial election are declared and the new Auditor appointed following the passing over of the chain of office.

Patron, President and Vice-Presidents

These roles are largely ceremonial. The Patron of the Law Society is Dr. Hugh Brady, the President of UCD. The President of the Society is the Dean of the School of Law, Professor John Jackson. There are a number of Vice-Presidents, who are almost exclusively all international legal figures and address the Society upon their appointment to the position. The most notable Vice-Presidents are the Chief Justice of Canada, the Hon. Ms Justice Beverly McLachlin PC, Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, Antonin Scalia, the President of the U.K. Supreme Court, Lord Phillips of Worth Matravers, Professor Joseph Raz, Baroness Hale of Richmond and former Irish President and U.N. Human Rights Commissioner Mary Robinson.

Finances

The Society has received an increased amount of funding in recent years, due to corporate sponsorship and college contributions. The Society's accounts are presented by the Honorary Treasurer at each AGM; the Society's turnover is in the region of €100,000 annually. The Society receives funding from the University Societies Council and also seeks corporate sponsorship to cover the costs of each Session. The current title sponsors of the Society are the Irish law firm, Matheson Ormsby Prentice.

Notable auditors

  • Michael McDowell
    Michael McDowell
    Michael McDowell is a Senior Counsel in the Bar Council of Ireland and a former politician. A grandson of Irish revolutionary Eoin MacNeill, McDowell was a founding member of the Progressive Democrats political party in the mid-1980s...

    , Former Tánaiste, Minister for Justice and Attorney General
  • Thomas Finlay
    Thomas Finlay (judge)
    Thomas Aloysius Finlay is a former Irish Fine Gael politician and Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. He is the second son of Thomas Finlay, a politician and senior counsel whose career was cut short by his early death in 1932. He was educated at Clongowes Wood College, University College Dublin...

    , Former Chief Justice of Ireland
  • Hugh Geoghegan
    Hugh Geoghegan
    Hugh Geoghegan was a justice of the Supreme Court of Ireland of Ireland from 8 March 2000 , having been nominated by the Government of Ireland on 22 February 2000 until May 2010 when he retired. He replaced Mr Justice Donal Barrington...

    , Former Irish Supreme Court Judge
  • Hugh O'Flaherty
    Hugh O'Flaherty
    Monsignor Hugh O'Flaherty, CBE was an Irish Roman Catholic priest and senior official of the Roman Curia. During World War II, he was responsible for saving 6,500 Allied soldiers and Jews...

    , Former Irish Supreme Court Judge
  • Declan Costello
    Declan Costello
    Declan Costello was an Irish jurist and Fine Gael party politician, who served as a Teachta Dála for twenty years, as Attorney General for four years and as a High Court judge for another twenty years before his retirement....

    , Former Attorney General and President of the High Court
  • Conor Gearty
    Conor Gearty
    Conor A. Gearty is the Rausling Professor of Human Rights Law and Director, Centre for the Study of Human Rights at the London School of Economics.-Background:...

    , Rausling Professor of Human Rights Law, London School of Economics
  • Arthur Cox, Founder of Arthur Cox Solicitors
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