Law is important. Without law society is doomed to fall apart no matter how long it endures the consequent chaos. Law must be known in order for it to be relevant. For law to be known it must exist and for it to exist it must be made. The making of the law is the responsibility of the representatives of the people as law must project the desires, history and aspirations of the society it seeks to govern. It must not only seek to solve existing challenges; it must also exist to prevent challenges capable of emerging in the said society.
There must be a set of laws addressing specific facets of society and any area of society where law is silent, suffers backwardness and influences based on the whims and caprices of those who believe they have the power to drive agenda.
In a society founded on and driven by the law, the knowledge of the law is a most important navigating instrument. This knowledge has a two-fold agenda, namely: where to locate the law; and who will help you understand the law.
In Lex Officium, we know where to find the law and we will help you understand the law. In the various services we provide, we make these two cardinal pillars our focus, in order to properly guide recipients of our service in the best approach to addressing the issues they bring to us.
We present the legal perspective of a spectrum of societal issues through our newsletters, magazines and journals and we do our best to ensure that the voices of erudite legal scholars in various fields of social relations are captured in the information we share