
Professor Justice (Retired) Courtney A Abel, Professor of Law (Legal Practice) and Head of the Department of Law, Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of Guyana (UG), has been honoured with the inaugural Lifetime Achievement Award by the Society of Caribbean Lawyers (SOCAL).
The prestigious award was presented at SOCAL’s Spring Gala 2026, held at Plaisterers’ Hall in London, England, in recognition of his decades of distinguished service to the legal profession, legal education, public service, and the advancement of Caribbean jurisprudence.
The honour places Professor Abel among a revered group of Caribbean legal professionals whose work has helped shape legal systems, strengthen institutions, and influence legal thought across the Caribbean and the wider Commonwealth. Presented before an audience of Judges, lawyers, academics, community leaders, family members, and friends, the award celebrated a career defined by service, leadership, scholarship, and commitment to justice.
For Professor Abel, the recognition carries a significance that extends far beyond personal achievement. “Recognition within the Caribbean legal and academic space touches something deeper than professional achievement,” he reflected. “International recognition is humbling and gratifying, but to be recognised by and within the Caribbean legal community carries a special emotional and moral significance,” he said.
SOCAL honoured Professor Abel for a remarkable career that has spanned legal practice, judicial service, scholarship, mediation, arbitration, and legal education. Called to the Bar of England and Wales as a member of the Honourable Society of the Inner Temple, he has served as a barrister, regional bar leader, mediator, arbitrator, Judge, scholar, teacher, and mentor.
His contributions have extended across local, regional, and international spheres. As a Justice of the Supreme Court of Belize, he played an important role in strengthening the administration of justice, advancing civil procedure, and promoting mediation and arbitration. Throughout his career, he has consistently championed constitutionalism, access to justice, professional integrity, and confidence in Caribbean legal systems.
Despite the recognition of a lifetime of achievement, Professor Abel views the award as a call to continue serving. “I see this recognition from SOCAL not as the conclusion of a legal journey, but as a renewed call to responsibility. The law is never merely a profession. At its best, it is a vocation of service, memory, discipline, imagination, and responsibility,” he explained.
Today, Professor Abel continues that vocation at the University of Guyana, where he teaches and mentors future legal professionals. Drawing on decades of experience in practice, the judiciary, and academia, he is committed to helping students understand that the law is about far more than mastering legal principles. (Story written and submitted by the University of Guyana’s Department of Events, Conferences, and Communication [DECC])
“I hope my students understand that law is not merely a profession or a discipline of rules and doctrines. At its highest, law is a form of service. There is no higher calling and no greater satisfaction than to serve,” he added.
Discover more from Guyana Times
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.










