logo
New movement to help Singapore lawyers with their mental health and the profession's sustainability

New movement to help Singapore lawyers with their mental health and the profession's sustainability

Straits Times3 days ago
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
Chief Justice Sundaresh Menon said the movement represents a collective commitment to ensure that lawyers remain in the profession.
SINGAPORE – A movement to help lawyers to eliminate unnecessary stresses in their job, promote work-life balance, and foster healthier and sustainable workplace culture was launched on July 29.
The Mindful Business Movement was launched on July 29 during the Legal Profession Symposium 2025.
Speaking at the symposium that was held at Parkroyal Collection Pickering, Chief Justice Sundaresh Menon said the movement represents a collective commitment to ensure that lawyers remain in the profession.
He said: 'The Mindful Business Movement aims to drive awareness and adoption of the sustainability principles , support their practical implementation in legal workplaces and promote the mental health and well-being of members of the profession.'
Under the movement is a set of sustainability principles developed in response to feedback gathered during various focus group discussions that would be disseminated to law firms.
Th e principles include having smart meetings and communications which advocate that meetings are planned properly and run efficiently, and supporting rest and growth, where firms are urged to provide mental wellness resource s. They are also told to set aside protected time for training and mentoring.
Another principle is mindful delegation, which entails providing junior staff with clear instructions that include sufficient context, and setting deadlines that are realistic, transparent and appropriately negotiable.
Top stories
Swipe. Select. Stay informed.
Singapore Grace Fu apologises for Tanjong Katong sinkhole, says road may stay closed for a few more days
Singapore Terrorism threat in Singapore remains high, driven by events like Israeli-Palestinian conflict: ISD
Singapore Liquidators score victory to recoup over $900 million from scammer Ng Yu Zhi's associates
Singapore Man on trial for raping woman who hired him to repair lights in her flat
Sport IOC president Kirsty Coventry a 'huge supporter' of Singapore
Singapore 7, including child and firefighter, taken to hospital after fire breaks out in Toa Payoh flat
Singapore S'pore can and must meaningfully apply tech like AI in a way that creates jobs for locals: PM Wong
Singapore Doctor who forged certificates for aesthetic procedures gets 4 months' jail
CJ Menon said the Singapore Academy of Law (SAL) will develop a five-step guide to flesh out the sustainability principles.
The Mindful Business Movement was launched in partnership with various groups, including SAL and Britain- based Mindful Business Charter.
In an interview with The Straits Times on July 22, SAL chief executive Yeong Zee Kin said the goal of the Mindful Business Movement is to inculcate workplace practices that can lead to sustainable legal careers.
Singapore Academy of Law chief executive Yeong Zee Kin said the goal of the Mindful Business Movement is to inculcate workplace practices that can lead to sustainable legal careers.
ST PHOTO: LIM YAOHUI
Elaboratin g on mindful communication, Mr Yeong pointed to boundaries in the workplace and that bosses should consider if an issue is urgent before sending an e-mail or message to their subordinates over the weekend or after work hours.
If the matter is urgent, the boss should explain why it is so, he said.
'Being a bit more mindful and smart in the way we communicate – that's actually an important aspect,' he added.
The Mindful Business Charter, which was launched in 2018, was founded by Barclays Bank and two of its panel law firms. It now has 140 signatories, including businesses outside the legal sector.
The charter's chief executive officer, Mr Richard Martin, used to be a lawyer but left the profession to join the field of workplace culture after he recovered from a serious mental breakdown that occurred in 2011.
He told ST that the charte r began with conversations about the mental health crisis faced by the legal practitioners , and that while there have been efforts to raise awareness about the issue and support those struggling , there was little discussion about the causes in the workplace.
Mr Martin said that in the legal profession, there is a mindset that lawyers need to do everything their clients ask for and to do it as quickly as possible, at the expense of their own well-being .
'I think that is certainly very present in Singapore as it is in other parts of the world, and it's not an easy mindset to change,' he said, adding that employers and lawyers need to be more caring of themselves and each other.
Meanwhile, to help address young litigato rs' disillusionment about a lack of opportunities, CJ Menon said the courts' practice directions will be amended to provide junior litigators with a greater role in oral advocacy.
Among these changes, junior assisting counsel in hearings in the Court of Appeal, the Court of Three Judges and the Appellate Division, as well as appeals in the General Division of the High Court, will now be 'ordinarily expected' to make part of the oral submissions.
Said the chief justice : 'It is our hope that these changes will make a concrete and meaningful difference to our young litigators.
'But for these initiatives to achieve their intended outcomes, we will need our senior colleagues to embrace them in the right spirit, and to convince their clients that it is ultimately in their interests for certain advocacy tasks to be delegated to junior counsel because it reduces legal costs and allows lead counsel to focus on the main advocacy tasks at hand.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hungary government to draw up plans to protect jobs after US-EU trade deal
Hungary government to draw up plans to protect jobs after US-EU trade deal

Straits Times

time12 minutes ago

  • Straits Times

Hungary government to draw up plans to protect jobs after US-EU trade deal

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox BUDAPEST - Hungary's government will draw up plans to protect the country's jobs and manufacturing after the trade deal between the United States and the European Union, Prime Minister Viktor Orban told public radio on Friday. The U.S. and the EU announced a trade agreement on Sunday setting a 15% tariff on the bloc's exports to the United States. The levy includes cars, a mainstay of central European exports, which previously incurred a tariff of 2.5%. Orban said Hungary's total exports to the United States were worth some $11 billion a year. "We have to draw up two action plans, one is an action plan to protect jobs, to make sure that foreign companies working in Hungary do not react by laying off people. Or, if they do, we need to offer those people jobs immediately," Orban said. The second plan was needed to make sure no manufacturing plants were shut down as a result of the tariffs, said Orban, who has struggled to revive Hungary's economy from the EU's worst inflationary surge following Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine. Orban, who faces what political analysts say will be a closely-fought election next year, sharply criticised European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen on Monday for what he said was a poorly negotiated deal. Hungary's government has not published an estimate about the tariffs' impact on growth, although the economy ministry slashed its 2025 economic growth forecast to 1% on Tuesday from the 2.5% it expected at the start of the year. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Tech Reporting advanced suspected cyber attacks will provide a defence framework: Shanmugam World Trump modifies reciprocal tariffs ahead of deadline; rate on Singapore likely to remain at 10% Business Singapore's US tariff rate stays at 10%, but the Republic is not out of the woods yet Singapore NUS launches S'pore's first nursing practice doctorate to meet evolving healthcare needs Singapore Data breach involving 147,000 Cycle & Carriage Singapore customer records under probe Business CAD probing Tokenize Xchange operator; firm's director charged with fraudulent trading Singapore PM Wong to deliver National Day message on Aug 8 Singapore Man charged over kicking woman's face in Teck Whye Lane flat, leading to her death Concordia, Romania's largest employers' association, has estimated the tariffs could shave up to 0.2% off the country's growth while the Czech finance ministry said tariffs would slow expansion there by 0.2 percentage points for the remainder of the year. For neighbouring Slovakia, whose share of goods' exports as a percentage of national output is the highest in the EU, Societe Generale economists have estimated the tariff impact at 0.87% of gross domestic product. Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said Poland, the EU's largest economy outside the euro zone, could lose around 8 billion zlotys ($2.14 billion) due to the new U.S. import tariffs. REUTERS

Trump tariffs send Asia currencies falling, with Korean won leading losses
Trump tariffs send Asia currencies falling, with Korean won leading losses

Straits Times

time12 minutes ago

  • Straits Times

Trump tariffs send Asia currencies falling, with Korean won leading losses

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox The MSCI emerging market currency gauge fell more than 1 per cent this week, highlighting the vulnerability of regional assets to trade policy shifts. Bengaluru/Singapore – Asian currencies fell to multi-month lows on Aug 1 with South Korea's won and Malaysia's ringgit bearing the heaviest losses as investors left riskier regional assets after the US imposed new tariffs on dozens of trading partners. The won weakened 0.69 per cent to an over two-month low of 1,401.53 against the US dollar, while the ringgit dropped 0.5 per cent to its weakest since June 23. Both currencies are set for their worst weekly performance since late February and late January, respectively. Among other currencies, the Taiwan dollar and Thai baht declined more than 0.3 per cent, while the Philippine peso recovered from earlier six-month lows to trade flat. The Singapore dollar stayed unchanged against the greenback at 1.2977 as at 2.53pm, with no news yet on any change in the current 10 per cent baseline tariff on the Republic's exports to the US. The US dollar index – a measure of the value of the greenback relative to a basket of foreign currencies – rose 0.3 per cent on Aug 1 on greater clarity around US trade policies. The dollar index has climbed 2.5 per cent this week to two-month highs. The MSCI emerging market currency gauge fell more than 1 per cent this week, abruptly ending a six-month rally in July and highlighting the vulnerability of regional assets to trade policy shifts. Regional stock markets showed mixed performance, with Kuala Lumpur and Jakarta shares rising more than 1 per cent, while Seoul tumbled 3.5 per cent after the government proposed rolling back recent tax cuts. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Tech Reporting advanced suspected cyber attacks will provide a defence framework: Shanmugam World Trump modifies reciprocal tariffs ahead of deadline; rate on Singapore likely to remain at 10% Business Singapore's US tariff rate stays at 10%, but the Republic is not out of the woods yet Singapore NUS launches S'pore's first nursing practice doctorate to meet evolving healthcare needs Singapore Data breach involving 147,000 Cycle & Carriage Singapore customer records under probe Business CAD probing Tokenize Xchange operator; firm's director charged with fraudulent trading Singapore PM Wong to deliver National Day message on Aug 8 Singapore Man charged over kicking woman's face in Teck Whye Lane flat, leading to her death Late on July 31 in Washington, US President Donald Trump signed executive orders imposing tariffs ranging from 10 per cent to 41 per cent on US imports from dozens of countries, utilising emergency powers and pressuring foreign leaders ahead of his self-imposed Aug 1 deadline. India faces 25 per cent tariffs on its US-bound exports, Taiwan 20 per cent, Thailand and Malaysia 19 per cent, while South Korea secured reduced 15 per cent rates after intensive negotiations. Vietnam, Indonesia, the Philippines, Japan, and Cambodia have already secured agreements. 'Tariff rates settling at 15 per cent to 20 per cent for most of the region outside of China will hurt producers, narrow profit along the supply chain and curtail US demand,' said Mr Alex Holmes, regional director for Asia Pacific at Economist Intelligence Unit, noting that core emerging market countries with stronger fundamentals are expected to prove more resilient than frontier economies. The broad-based tariff structure leaves emerging markets 'between a rock and a hard place', forcing difficult choices between China and US trade relationships as they seek alternative strategies to mitigate economic fallout, Mr Holmes added. REUTERS

Rees-Zammit leaves NFL after 18 months to return to rugby union
Rees-Zammit leaves NFL after 18 months to return to rugby union

Straits Times

time12 minutes ago

  • Straits Times

Rees-Zammit leaves NFL after 18 months to return to rugby union

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Louis Rees-Zammit has ended his American football adventure and will return to rugby union after swapping the sport for the NFL 18 months ago, the former Wales winger said. Four-times Super Bowl champions Kansas City Chiefs signed the 24-year-old Welshman in March last year after he impressed scouts at the NFL International Player Pathway, but later left him off their roster for the 2024 season. Last August, Rees-Zammit joined the Jacksonville Jaguars as part of their practice squad before signing to their active roster in February. "I've got an exciting announcement to make! I've decided to leave the NFL and return to rugby!" Rees-Zammit posted on Instagram late on Thursday. "It's been a great experience but it's time to come home. I've decided that this is the best time to make this decision to give myself time to get everything in place for next season." Rees-Zammit made his debut in 2020 and won the Six Nations Championship with Wales the following year. He made 32 appearances for his country, scoring 14 tries, playing his last match for Wales at the 2023 Rugby World Cup, when they lost to Argentina in the quarter-finals. "There's only one thing that's on my mind, that's coming back to rugby and doing what I do best. I can't explain how excited I am!!" he added. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Tech Reporting advanced suspected cyber attacks will provide a defence framework: Shanmugam World Trump modifies reciprocal tariffs ahead of deadline; rate on Singapore likely to remain at 10% Business Singapore's US tariff rate stays at 10%, but the Republic is not out of the woods yet Singapore NUS launches S'pore's first nursing practice doctorate to meet evolving healthcare needs Singapore Data breach involving 147,000 Cycle & Carriage Singapore customer records under probe Business CAD probing Tokenize Xchange operator; firm's director charged with fraudulent trading Singapore PM Wong to deliver National Day message on Aug 8 Singapore Man charged over kicking woman's face in Teck Whye Lane flat, leading to her death "There'll be more news to come soon but for now, see you soon rugby fans." REUTERS

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store