
The NCC is working to extend access to justice for consumers, by campaigning for more effective ways of resolving disputes and new mechanisms for achieving redress. We have also campaigned successfully to open up the legal services market to greater competition and reform the way in which lawyers are regulated.
Current priorities include:
Ombudsmen rank as one of Britain's most successful imports and are expanding at pace into new markets. However, while individual schemes appear to operate well, there has been less scrutiny of how the system as a whole is working. NCC's fresh thinking pamphlet fills that gap, by taking a strategic assessment of private sector ombudsmen and examining some live issues that the schemes face. We conclude that the current ombudsman landscape, which reflects the emergence of schemes in a piecemeal fashion over the last twenty-five years, is increasingly out-of-step with the needs of the modern economy. We call for a single organisation - the Administrative Justice and Tribunals Council - to take strategic responsibility for the future development of ombudsmen of all types.
Click here for the pamphlet
08 May 2007
Consumer groups write to government as Bar Council seeks changes to Legal Services Bill
24 November 2006
Legal Services Bill sets out new legal landscape, says NCC
13 November 2006
NCC looks forward to a Queen’s Speech that will boost support for consumers
17 October 2006
NCC gives warm welcome to commitment to boost consumer advocacy
Lessons from ombudsmania
Fresh thinking | March 2008 | 144 KB
The Hunt review: NCC response to the call for evidence to the independent review of the Financial Om
Consultation response | January 2008 | 110 KB
Finding the will: a report on will-writing behaviour in England and Wales
Research report | September 2007 | 397 KB
Legal Services Bill - Commons second reading
Briefing | May 2007 | 124 KB
More than 27 million people in England and Wales do not have a will. A new NCC report - Finding the will - makes disturbing findings: the people who need wills the most are among the least likely to have them; and there is a social divide in will ownership, with ethnic minority and low-income consumers far less likely to have a will than the rest of the population (12 per cent of people from BME groups have a will compared to 39 per cent of the rest of the population; and 27 per cent of people on low-incomes have a will, compared to 70 per cent of higher earners). Based on comprehensive research carried out in England and Wales, the report calls on industry and government to find effective ways of getting more people to make a will.
Click here for the press release.
Click here for the report.