Jamaican achieves world’s highest mark in law exam
Jo-Anne Jackson-Stephens, a Jamaica-bornassociate at Higgs & Johnson in the Cayman Islands, recently received a STEP excellence award for achieving the highest mark in the world on the Company Law and Practice exam.
Jackson-Stephens, who has been with Higgs & Johnson since October 2015, said that she was ecstatic but grateful when she heard the news.
“I was competing with very smart and capable people from across the world including the UK, Europe and the Caribbean,” she said. “It demonstrates that hard work and dedication are truly the keys to success.”
Jackson-Stephens – a past student of Immaculate Conception High in St Andrew and the daughter of economist John Jackson – completed her law degree at the University of the West Indies in Jamaica and Barbados before going on to receive her CLE at the Norman Manley Law School in 2006 and her Master of Business Administration (MBA) at the University of Oxford in 2012.
Alasdair Robertson, President of the Cayman Islands Law Society, said, “It is great to see the hard work and dedication of a Cayman Islands practitioner being recognized on such a high-profile and global scale. This further demonstrates the quality of lawyers we employ and produce here in the Cayman Islands.”
STEP, the Society of Trust and Estate Practitioners, is a worldwide professional association with over 20,000 members in 95 countries and consists mainly of trust and estate attorneys, accountants and trust specialists.
Becoming a member of STEP gives lawyers the TEP designation and allows them to be considered among the most experienced and senior practitioners in the field of trusts and estates. Applicants are required to take a number of exams or prepare papers for presentation.
“It is important for any notable trust attorney to possess the TEP designation,” Jackson-Stephens said.