In the last decade, a new literature has arisen, grounded in feminism, reconsidering morality, identity, and moral development. Professor Glennon applies these feminist-based ideas about moral development to a pedagogy of responsibility. She explores some of the ways in which this alternative view of moral development might affect our understanding of teaching. Professor Glennon shows that students must view themselves as capable, cared-for, and empowered in order to achieve an enlarged self-definition of professional responsibility and conceive of themselves as professionals in ways other than the dominant, privatized mode
In our laudable attempt to train law students to think like lawyers by teaching them legal method,...
In this essay I would like to consider the nature of the role of lawyers from the point of view of b...
Professor Margaret Chon introduces three following articles in which the authors posit the identity ...
Professor Bezdek\u27s approach stems from her observation that student learning about responsibility...
This piece was written for a program held by the American Association of Law Schools Section on Law ...
For most of history, American legal education has aspired to teach professional responsibility by a ...
My thesis is simple and straightforward. Every law school has a profound duty-and a unique opportuni...
In teaching Ethics or Professional Responsibility, I want to do more than teach students the law of ...
Little has been done to teach professional responsibility in a way that provides students with more ...
I was pleased to be asked to write about teaching professional responsibility in law school. Ten yea...
This article begins by examining the current crisis in the U.S. legal system where approximately thr...
Spaeth et al assert that the only reason to teach legal ethics, or professional responsibility, is t...
The primary purpose of this article is to explore the tensions which arise in persons who come to la...
In recent years, there have been many public and private, formal and informal complaints about the b...
The problem has become all too familiar: Acting at least in part from noble motives, the American Ba...
In our laudable attempt to train law students to think like lawyers by teaching them legal method,...
In this essay I would like to consider the nature of the role of lawyers from the point of view of b...
Professor Margaret Chon introduces three following articles in which the authors posit the identity ...
Professor Bezdek\u27s approach stems from her observation that student learning about responsibility...
This piece was written for a program held by the American Association of Law Schools Section on Law ...
For most of history, American legal education has aspired to teach professional responsibility by a ...
My thesis is simple and straightforward. Every law school has a profound duty-and a unique opportuni...
In teaching Ethics or Professional Responsibility, I want to do more than teach students the law of ...
Little has been done to teach professional responsibility in a way that provides students with more ...
I was pleased to be asked to write about teaching professional responsibility in law school. Ten yea...
This article begins by examining the current crisis in the U.S. legal system where approximately thr...
Spaeth et al assert that the only reason to teach legal ethics, or professional responsibility, is t...
The primary purpose of this article is to explore the tensions which arise in persons who come to la...
In recent years, there have been many public and private, formal and informal complaints about the b...
The problem has become all too familiar: Acting at least in part from noble motives, the American Ba...
In our laudable attempt to train law students to think like lawyers by teaching them legal method,...
In this essay I would like to consider the nature of the role of lawyers from the point of view of b...
Professor Margaret Chon introduces three following articles in which the authors posit the identity ...