The following paper serves as the Epilogue to an edited volume that celebrates the first decade of McGill’s ambitious legal education reform in Transsystemic Law . Placing this innovation in a larger context of curriculum reform, law school crisis – then and now -, it becomes apparent that McGill’s program can be seen as part of global changes in the way that law schools struggle with student expectations, market demands, and shifting frameworks of domestic and transnational lawyering. Karl Llewellyn’s observations On What is Wrong With Legal Education ring true still today, almost eighty years later. Still we seek ways to inspire law students to think critically and to develop a sense for their own moral compass, and still we find ourse...