Managing Difficult Clients: Tips for Family Law Practitioners
It’s no secret family law practitioners often deal with highly emotional situations, but are you struggling to respond to an added layer of complexity with a difficult client? In this one hour webinar tailored to family law practitioners, receive tips on how to manage these tricky situations. Gain practical insight into interacting with self-represented litigants, plus a refresher on your ethical and legal obligations. Walk away with strategies you can immediately incorporate into practice. WEB2111NZA25
Description
Attend and earn 1 CPD hour
Clients Behaving Badly: How to Manage Difficult Clients and Present Your Client’s Case
- Managing difficult clients: tips and strategies for client interactions
- Maintaining your resilience as a practitioner
- Presenting your client’s case: how to help them put their best foot forward
- Interacting with self-represented litigants
- Awareness of your ethical and legal obligations
Presented by Vanessa Leishman, Principal, Leishman Legal
Learning Objective:
- Learn how to effectively manage difficult clients
Presenters
Vanessa Leishman, Principal, Leishman Legal
Vanessa has practised family law for more than 25 years in both Australia and New Zealand. Vanessa is the Principal of Leishman Legal in Brisbane, practising in all areas of family law. Uniquely, Vanessa represents clients in both Australia and New Zealand and regularly travels back and forth between the two countries to appear in family law proceedings. Vanessa’s work includes a wide range of complex property and parenting matters and frequently matters involving family violence and child protection. Vanessa’s international experience also sees her regularly involved in cross-border disputes, in particular, Trans-Tasman disputes involving complex legal issues such as determining the appropriate jurisdiction in which the family law issue should be determined, dealing with property in more than one jurisdiction, enforcement of child support or parenting orders and disputes involving international relocation and child abduction including under the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction. Vanessa is a volunteer legal adviser at Women’s Legal Service Queensland and as part of her commitment to the community, also undertakes a number of pro bono cases each year.