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Re-thinking Legal Education under the Civil and Common Law Richard Grimes (Independent education and legal services consultant, UK)

Re-thinking Legal Education under the Civil and Common Law By Richard Grimes (Independent education and legal services consultant, UK)

Re-thinking Legal Education under the Civil and Common Law by Richard Grimes (Independent education and legal services consultant, UK)


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Summary

This book will be of direct assistance to those who wish to understand the theory and practice of legal pedagogy in an experiential context.

Re-thinking Legal Education under the Civil and Common Law Summary

Re-thinking Legal Education under the Civil and Common Law: A Road Map for Constructive Change by Richard Grimes (Independent education and legal services consultant, UK)

Whilst educational theory has developed significantly in recent years, much of the law curriculum remains content-driven and delivered traditionally, predominantly through lecture format. Students are, in the main, treated as empty vessels to be filled by the eminent academics of the day. Re-thinking Legal Education under the Common and Civil Law draws on the experience of teachers, practitioners and students across the world who are committed to developing a more effective learning process.

Little attention has, historically, been paid to the importance of the application of theory, the role of reflective learning, the understanding and acquisition of lawyering skills and the development of professional responsibility and wider ethical values. With contributions from across the global north and south, this book examines the history of educating our lawyers, the influences and constraints that may shape the curriculum, the means of delivering it and the models that could be used to tackle current shortcomings. The whole is intended to represent what might be desirable and possible if we are to produce lawyers that are fit for purpose in the 21st century, be that in either in civil or common law jurisdictions.

This book will be of direct assistance to those who wish to understand the theory and practice of legal pedagogy in an experiential context. It will be essential reading for academics, researchers and teachers in the fields of law and education, particularly those concerned with curriculum design and developing interactive teaching methods. It is likely to be of interest to law students too particularly those who value a more direct engagement in their learning.

Re-thinking Legal Education under the Civil and Common Law Reviews

This new contribution to the debate on legal education in general and experiential legal education in particular is all the more valuable because it spans both the common law and civil law world; the latter being too often neglected in previous literature. - Anthony Bradney, Professor of Law, Keele University, UK.

About Richard Grimes (Independent education and legal services consultant, UK)

Richard Grimesis a senior consultant with Les Deux Ltd, a training and development service specialising in access to justice and legal education.

Table of Contents

Foreword Neil Gold

Opening thoughts Richard Grimes

A. Context and concepts

Introduction

1. Celebrating the difference - A U.S. educators perspective on legal education under the civil and common law Philip M. Genty

2. Experiential learning from the continental viewpoint: if the cap fits.. Cristina Amato

3. Experiential learning: just for common lawyers - really? Richard Grimes and Anne-Lise Sibony

B. Content and careers

Introduction

4. Re-thinking the learning and teaching:

4.1. A case study from York Richard Hedlund

4.2. Clinic, employability, and educational need Meredith Daniel

4.3. Dont talk at me, talk to me Tanya Walker

4.4. Shared potential despite the difference? David Roccaro

5. Ethics and professional responsibility

5.1. Teaching and learning legal ethics: what, how and why? Donald Nicolson

5.2. Teaching legal ethics under the civil law Jose Garcia Anon

5.3. Ethics, professionalism and the law Laura Bugatti

6. Regulation universities, the legal profession and other employers

6.1. Of tribes and territories an employer and regulator perspective on re-thinking legal education Chris Maguire

6.2. Degree apprenticeships a way forward? Stephen Levett

7. Assessment in legal education: qualification or quantification? Jenny Gibbons

C. Case studies and countries: examples of re-thinking

Introduction

8. Birth, growth and reproduction of clinical legal education in Spain Pilar Fernandez-Artiach, Jose Garcia-Anon and Ruth M. Mestre i Mestre

9. Re-thinking legal education in Central and Eastern Europe Luba Krasnitskaya, Katarzyna Furman, Michal Urban

10. The same but different: What can we learn from Canadian attitudes to legal education? Sue Prince

11. The civil law tradition but with clinics a case study from Chile Juan P. Beca

12. Making a real change: legal education in Nigeria partly re-imagined? Ernest Ojukwu

13. An agenda for Indian legal education Shuvro Prosun Sarker

14. Beyond the boom: prospects for Australian legal education Jeff Giddings

15. Re-thinking at the sharp end examples of experiential teaching and learning practice

15.1. Mock-trials in an accusatorial and inquisitorial context David McQuoid-Mason

15.2. Teaching EU law in an experiential way Katarzyna Gromek-Broc

Final words Richard Grimes

Additional information

NPB9780415792004
9780415792004
0415792002
Re-thinking Legal Education under the Civil and Common Law: A Road Map for Constructive Change by Richard Grimes (Independent education and legal services consultant, UK)
New
Hardback
Taylor & Francis Ltd
2017-07-27
286
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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