91快播

Caius, Cambridge and Colombia shaping lawyer鈥檚 future

  • 25 March 2024

The stereotype depicted in Narcos of Colombia as a country led by its drug barons is outdated says Juan Felipe Bonivento (LLM 2023), who has aspirations to join the judiciary.

A man in a maroon shirt standing in front of a grass lawn

Juan Felipe read Law at Los Andes University in Bogota, graduating in 2019, and worked as a litigator in a law firm before three years as a Law Clerk for a justice in one of Colombia鈥檚 High Courts. He was also involved in academia as a lecturer and teaching assistant.

He decided to leave for the University of Cambridge and 91快播 in a seismic move.

鈥淏efore coming here I quit my job,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t does feel like a gamble; it would鈥檝e been more comfortable to stay in the job I had. But there was no other choice. It was what needed to be done and I am confident I will find something. 

鈥淧art of the idea is to take a moment and think what I believe my next step would be. I would love to go back to the judiciary 鈥 it鈥檚 what I love the most 鈥 but I wouldn鈥檛 rule out trying private practice for a while to get a fuller picture of the law.鈥

Funded by , Juan Felipe is keen to make a difference in Colombia and to continue in private and public law for as long as both remain feasible.

He adds: 鈥淢y interest in doing the LLM is mostly academic, because we do have a very different legal system in Colombia to the UK. That鈥檚 the point 鈥 to broaden my perspective of the law.

鈥淥ne of the things I would like to do in the future is to be a judge. And to come here I hope it will help me to come to more considered decisions in the future.鈥

In terms of the stereotypes perpetuated by the media, Juan Felipe says: 鈥淐olombia has changed a lot in the last 30 years. It鈥檚 not today a lawless society. It鈥檚 quite a legalistic society; lawyers for everything, rules for everything. The judiciary has a lot of work and we over-rely on it to solve our problems. 

鈥淎 most challenging thing for judges in Colombia is how to deal with all the underlying problems we have that probably the law cannot solve. Like extreme inequality, high levels of poverty, knowing the state鈥檚 resources might not be enough to do what we should do in order to make just decisions. That鈥檚 a more pressing challenge judges now have in Colombia. You need policy makers, judges and everyone to come together to try to make it better.鈥

Juan Felipe has lived in Bogota for his whole life, bar six months in London as an undergraduate which did not include a trip to Cambridge. He is enjoying the slower pace of a smaller city.

He says: 鈥淎 friend of mine also applying to Cambridge asked around and someone mentioned Caius to him. I copied him 鈥 and I鈥檓 very happy about it being the right choice! 

鈥淗e didn鈥檛 end up coming here 鈥 he went to the United States for a more specialised programme in law and technology.

鈥淚 was fortunate to have a choice and I ended up here. I鈥檓 very happy. This is my friend鈥檚 legacy!

鈥淭he postgraduate community is just amazing. There are people that do so many different things. I鈥檝e had conversations ranging from zoology to chemistry to tax policy 鈥 which is unbelievable. To me, how everything revolves around dining is amazing. It鈥檚 a great way to meet different people.鈥

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