This thesis will explore the current and potential role of emotion in undergraduate legal education in England Wales. It will discuss the lack of acknowledgment of emotion within both the doctrinal and liberal traditions of legal education and the limited recognition that has been accorded to emotion more recently as a result of the development of socio-legal and other approaches to the law degree. Parallels will be drawn with changing philosophical and scientific conceptualisations of emotion, which have shifted from viewing emotion as irrational and potentially dangerous, to viewing it as intertwined with, or even part of, cognition and intelligence. The different ways in which emotion can, and arguably should, be incorporated within leg...
peer-reviewedWe are grateful to the editors of the Northern Ireland Legal Quarterly for allowing us ...
It is a great pleasure to participate in the celebration and exploration of Susan Bandes\u27 The Pas...
The dominant presumption within legal education, that we can teach students to “think like lawyers” ...
Law has traditionally viewed emotions as the enemies of rationality and reason, irrational and poten...
Law schools are failing both their staff and students by requiring them to prize reason and rational...
The benefits to students of being given some form of clinical legal education are well documented. R...
The place of emotion in legal education is rarely discussed or analysed, and we do not have to seek ...
This paper explores the dynamics of emotion in law and legal classrooms by showing: (1) why foregrou...
This paper considers the relevance of emotional intelligence for the cognitively dominated law schoo...
This paper explores the dynamics of emotion in law and legal classrooms by showing: (1) why foregrou...
‘Thinking like a lawyer’ is traditionally associated with rational-analytical problem solving and an...
Objectivity is central to many professions, ensuring legitimacy via impartiality and the detachment ...
This paper examines the emergent interest in the affective domain that has become evident both withi...
This paper considers the relevance of emotional intelligence for the cognitively dominated law schoo...
The emerging interdisciplinary field of “Law and Emotions” brings together scholars from law, psycho...
peer-reviewedWe are grateful to the editors of the Northern Ireland Legal Quarterly for allowing us ...
It is a great pleasure to participate in the celebration and exploration of Susan Bandes\u27 The Pas...
The dominant presumption within legal education, that we can teach students to “think like lawyers” ...
Law has traditionally viewed emotions as the enemies of rationality and reason, irrational and poten...
Law schools are failing both their staff and students by requiring them to prize reason and rational...
The benefits to students of being given some form of clinical legal education are well documented. R...
The place of emotion in legal education is rarely discussed or analysed, and we do not have to seek ...
This paper explores the dynamics of emotion in law and legal classrooms by showing: (1) why foregrou...
This paper considers the relevance of emotional intelligence for the cognitively dominated law schoo...
This paper explores the dynamics of emotion in law and legal classrooms by showing: (1) why foregrou...
‘Thinking like a lawyer’ is traditionally associated with rational-analytical problem solving and an...
Objectivity is central to many professions, ensuring legitimacy via impartiality and the detachment ...
This paper examines the emergent interest in the affective domain that has become evident both withi...
This paper considers the relevance of emotional intelligence for the cognitively dominated law schoo...
The emerging interdisciplinary field of “Law and Emotions” brings together scholars from law, psycho...
peer-reviewedWe are grateful to the editors of the Northern Ireland Legal Quarterly for allowing us ...
It is a great pleasure to participate in the celebration and exploration of Susan Bandes\u27 The Pas...
The dominant presumption within legal education, that we can teach students to “think like lawyers” ...