What are the prospects for internationalised legal education in the contemporary UK? Our reflections on this question were prompted by three relatively recent publications dealing with a variety of aspects of the internationalisation of legal education, as well as discussions in and outputs from “Brexit and the Law School” events in Liverpool Law School, Keele University, Strathclyde University, and Northumbria University during 2017. We argue that, although law is often assumed to be state based and jurisdiction specific, there are significant reasons to internationalise legal education but that in the current climate of Brexit, marketisation of higher education and the Solicitors Qualifying Examination such internationalisation is under t...
The journey across the Channel Tunnel is not far, but the distance that divides systems based on the...
A report on the November 2017 CEPLER workshop which brought together scholars and practitioners in E...
This paper argues that the forces of globalisation and the forecasts of an increasingly cosmopolitan...
What are the prospects for internationalised legal education in the contemporary UK? Our reflections...
The focus of this paper is a critical review of the impact of globalisation on international higher ...
This volume provides an overview of the state of internationalisation of legal education (IOLE) in m...
This paper offers some reflections on the possible consequences of Brexit on legal education in Scot...
Legal education is gradually moving away from the teaching of national law towards a more european, ...
One of the tools and consequences of colonialism was the export of law and the subsequent legacy of ...
Legal education in both the United Kingdom and the United States has faced troubled waters in recent...
The increasingly integrated world has facilitated important international and trans-border trends, s...
Increasing interest in quantitative and qualitative empirical legal research has yielded a range of ...
How we interpret and understand the historical contexts of legal education has profoundly affected h...
Globalization and the current state of society demand a better understanding of the international as...
Globalisation is the new buzz word in legal education, but nobody really seems to know what ‘global ...
The journey across the Channel Tunnel is not far, but the distance that divides systems based on the...
A report on the November 2017 CEPLER workshop which brought together scholars and practitioners in E...
This paper argues that the forces of globalisation and the forecasts of an increasingly cosmopolitan...
What are the prospects for internationalised legal education in the contemporary UK? Our reflections...
The focus of this paper is a critical review of the impact of globalisation on international higher ...
This volume provides an overview of the state of internationalisation of legal education (IOLE) in m...
This paper offers some reflections on the possible consequences of Brexit on legal education in Scot...
Legal education is gradually moving away from the teaching of national law towards a more european, ...
One of the tools and consequences of colonialism was the export of law and the subsequent legacy of ...
Legal education in both the United Kingdom and the United States has faced troubled waters in recent...
The increasingly integrated world has facilitated important international and trans-border trends, s...
Increasing interest in quantitative and qualitative empirical legal research has yielded a range of ...
How we interpret and understand the historical contexts of legal education has profoundly affected h...
Globalization and the current state of society demand a better understanding of the international as...
Globalisation is the new buzz word in legal education, but nobody really seems to know what ‘global ...
The journey across the Channel Tunnel is not far, but the distance that divides systems based on the...
A report on the November 2017 CEPLER workshop which brought together scholars and practitioners in E...
This paper argues that the forces of globalisation and the forecasts of an increasingly cosmopolitan...