The continued authority of the archbishop to confer degrees is recognised in accordance with section 216(1) of the
Education Reform Act 1988 by the Education (Recognised Bodies) (England) Order 2013. There are two types of degrees awarded: those for the recognition of service to the church and those for which an examination is required. Lambeth degrees are legally substantive degrees, awarded only to those individuals deemed to have met the requirements for the degree in some way. They are awarded in
recognition of prior learning or experience, but also serve as a form of church honours system. The extent of a person's learning is taken into account when it is being decided what degree should be conferred. An eminent and much-published scholar may be considered suitable for a doctorate, an experienced cleric or lay minister may be awarded the MA, and a senior figure with some published work may be considered for the BD. For some time in the 19th and 20th centuries, new
diocesan bishops traditionally received the
DD on appointment, but since 1961 this has not been the custom and all awards are made on an individual basis. Because they are substantive degrees, holders of Lambeth doctorates are able to use the title "Doctor" (for example as "Dr John Smith") without the restrictions that sometimes apply to
honorary degrees. The Latin designation of Canterbury,
Cantuar, is used to explain the origin of the degree (for example "John Smith DD (Cantuar)" in the case of a Doctor of Divinity). A Lambeth
DD was awarded in 1987 to
Chief Rabbi Sir
Immanuel Jakobovits and others to Chief Rabbi
Jonathan Sacks in 2001 and
Rabbi Tony Bayfield in 2006; Lambeth degrees can be awarded to those who are neither Anglican nor members of other Christian denominations. Degrees by examination are awarded by the archbishop at an annual service in the chapel at
Lambeth Palace, in the framework of Evening Prayer – held separately from the service for the more "honorary" Lambeth degrees. The archbishop's power to grant degrees did, and still does, require confirmation by the Crown and so the degrees are known as "degrees of the realm". All recipients have to be able to swear an
oath to the monarch of the
United Kingdom and
Commonwealth realms, since the
Ecclesiastical Licences Act 1533 speaks of the monarch conferring degrees on his subjects. Applicants must fall into one of these categories (according to the
Handbook for Students and Supervisors (2014)): • British subjects; • nationals of Commonwealth countries which retain the King as head of state; • holders of dual nationality; • members of the clergy of the Church of England’s Diocese in Europe; • foreign nationals who have British residency or who are permanently domiciled in the UK, and who are not otherwise prevented by virtue of their own nationality and citizenship from taking the Oath of Allegiance. ==Degrees and diplomas==