This article started as a response to a decision by Deakin University\u27s Law School late last year to embark upon a major recruitment of new staff. That decision caused the writer to wonder what published sources of advice were available to assist aspiring legal academics in choosing and shaping a career. To date it would seem that whilst there is no dearth of sources about what law schools should teach, or on the content and structure of the curriculum, research on the selection and formation of academics is somewhat less common. This is changing. In 2003 a short biographical study of six law teachers, based on structured interviews, was published and in 2004, a major study of the identity of 54 law teachers became available. There have ...
(Excerpt) Specifically, as this Article discusses, the students who attend top-tier law schools are ...
In 2000 the Australian Law Reform Commission (ALRC) report Managing Justice contained a review of le...
This article suggests a fundamental shift in the way traditional faculty view their role in academic...
This article presents a set of snapshots of diversity in the legal academy in response to the call b...
A seemingly insurmountable barrier to women\u27s success in legal academia is the way they are perce...
Part I of this Note surveys the existing body of literature on legal education, with a particular em...
Dissatisfaction permeates the public and professional discourse about lawyers and legal education. D...
Since the 1960s, law schools have seen an influx of faculty with graduate training and research pres...
[Extract] The Law Admissions Consultative Committee ('LACC') has called for submissions in its revie...
An introductory talk given to Birmingham Law School PGR students as part of their annual PGR Confere...
When students commence legal education, they have not yet adopted all the norms that underpin the le...
Law professors today must confront a crisis of identity Since the postCivil War era legal academics ...
Unfortunately for most women, the profile of an ideal law professor is a married man with a stay-at-...
The article first examines the politics of curricular reform. Before a law school will be able to in...
This article examines who law professors are and what their roles consist of when educating law stud...
(Excerpt) Specifically, as this Article discusses, the students who attend top-tier law schools are ...
In 2000 the Australian Law Reform Commission (ALRC) report Managing Justice contained a review of le...
This article suggests a fundamental shift in the way traditional faculty view their role in academic...
This article presents a set of snapshots of diversity in the legal academy in response to the call b...
A seemingly insurmountable barrier to women\u27s success in legal academia is the way they are perce...
Part I of this Note surveys the existing body of literature on legal education, with a particular em...
Dissatisfaction permeates the public and professional discourse about lawyers and legal education. D...
Since the 1960s, law schools have seen an influx of faculty with graduate training and research pres...
[Extract] The Law Admissions Consultative Committee ('LACC') has called for submissions in its revie...
An introductory talk given to Birmingham Law School PGR students as part of their annual PGR Confere...
When students commence legal education, they have not yet adopted all the norms that underpin the le...
Law professors today must confront a crisis of identity Since the postCivil War era legal academics ...
Unfortunately for most women, the profile of an ideal law professor is a married man with a stay-at-...
The article first examines the politics of curricular reform. Before a law school will be able to in...
This article examines who law professors are and what their roles consist of when educating law stud...
(Excerpt) Specifically, as this Article discusses, the students who attend top-tier law schools are ...
In 2000 the Australian Law Reform Commission (ALRC) report Managing Justice contained a review of le...
This article suggests a fundamental shift in the way traditional faculty view their role in academic...