Clinical legal education is at a crossroads. Three distinct generations – Baby Boomers, Generation-Xers, and Millennials – with incredibly varied life experiences and expectations will determine the path forward by the way they relate to each other. This essay discusses the current state of clinical legal education as created and led by the Baby Boomers who were typically movement lawyers from the 1960s and 1970s. Written from the perspective of a Gen-Xer, the essay challenges the norms of social justice and law reform as the primary drivers behind clinical education and argues for a greater ideological neutrality in determining the path forward. The essay goes on to articulate some of the challenges that impede Gen-X from fully engaging in...
This article considers the factors that are likely to continue to shape the future of clinical legal...
Panel discussion delivered at the Catholic University Law School Conference on Clinical Education, O...
This Commentary rests on five premises. The first is that it is both possible and necessary to under...
Clinical legal education is at a crossroads. Three distinct generations – Baby Boomers, Generation-X...
Clinical legal education is at a crossroads. With studies like the Macrate Report, Carnegie Foundati...
Clinical legal education is at a crossroads. With studies like the Macrate Report, Carnegie Foundati...
Clinical teaching is a Baby Boomer. After an extended infancy, it came of age in the 1960s. It chall...
While it may not be possible for law schools to train students completely within three years for the...
Clinical teaching is a Baby Boomer. After an extended infancy, it came of age in the 1960s. It chall...
In this Essay, we will explore the pedagogical and professional challenges and rewards of community ...
Each new generation of law students presents its own set of challenges for law teachers seeking to d...
In concept and practice, clinical legal education is widely affirmed by its global success. As R.J. ...
In concept and practice, clinical legal education is widely affirmed by its global success. As R.J. ...
The premier strength of legal education resides in its dual identity as an academic department of a ...
This article considers the factors that are likely to continue to shape the future of clinical legal...
Panel discussion delivered at the Catholic University Law School Conference on Clinical Education, O...
This Commentary rests on five premises. The first is that it is both possible and necessary to under...
Clinical legal education is at a crossroads. Three distinct generations – Baby Boomers, Generation-X...
Clinical legal education is at a crossroads. With studies like the Macrate Report, Carnegie Foundati...
Clinical legal education is at a crossroads. With studies like the Macrate Report, Carnegie Foundati...
Clinical teaching is a Baby Boomer. After an extended infancy, it came of age in the 1960s. It chall...
While it may not be possible for law schools to train students completely within three years for the...
Clinical teaching is a Baby Boomer. After an extended infancy, it came of age in the 1960s. It chall...
In this Essay, we will explore the pedagogical and professional challenges and rewards of community ...
Each new generation of law students presents its own set of challenges for law teachers seeking to d...
In concept and practice, clinical legal education is widely affirmed by its global success. As R.J. ...
In concept and practice, clinical legal education is widely affirmed by its global success. As R.J. ...
The premier strength of legal education resides in its dual identity as an academic department of a ...
This article considers the factors that are likely to continue to shape the future of clinical legal...
Panel discussion delivered at the Catholic University Law School Conference on Clinical Education, O...
This Commentary rests on five premises. The first is that it is both possible and necessary to under...