The 60th anniversary of the United States’ oldest continuous legal clinic presents an opportunity to reexamine the pedagogical machinery, reshape the curriculum, reflect on advice not taken, and reignite the “movement for change” in (clinical) legal education. The author recommends a modest retooling: Law schools should offer a degree program for non-lawyer advocates. This would capitalize on the many attributes that paralegals bring to the profession. The author\u27s focus is on how teaching paralegals or lay advocates in law schools can foster less costly non-adversarial dispute resolution, sensitivity to human and cultural aspects of client rapport, and co-education between members of the legal profession. Paraprofessionals can help lawy...
It has been five years since the Carnegie Report Educating Lawyers called upon law schools to adopt ...
This paper will explore some aspects of legal educaton in the context of the Norton Clapp Law Center...
Felix Frankfurter once claimed that the law and lawyers are what the law schools make them. One ne...
The response to the challenge of training legal paraprofessionals is in a state of disarray. This is...
In this country, persons who have not been admitted to the bar are widely used in law offices. In fa...
The premier strength of legal education resides in its dual identity as an academic department of a ...
A thesis presented to the Business Education Graduate Committee at Morehead State University in part...
We conclude in this Article that expanded practice-based, experiential education will provide founda...
In January 2014, the ABA Task Force on the Future of Legal Education released its report calling, am...
Maintenance of status quo law school curricular design and delivery, along with the continued margin...
The explosive growth in the number of law school clinics over the last 50 years began with an indivi...
For a law student, the academic study of the law and the actual practice of its principles seem worl...
Clinical legal education has become an accepted and integral complement to traditional law school cu...
Since 2015, Legal Practice faculty have partnered with local legal services organizations and the la...
It has been five years since the Carnegie Report Educating Lawyers called upon law schools to adopt ...
It has been five years since the Carnegie Report Educating Lawyers called upon law schools to adopt ...
This paper will explore some aspects of legal educaton in the context of the Norton Clapp Law Center...
Felix Frankfurter once claimed that the law and lawyers are what the law schools make them. One ne...
The response to the challenge of training legal paraprofessionals is in a state of disarray. This is...
In this country, persons who have not been admitted to the bar are widely used in law offices. In fa...
The premier strength of legal education resides in its dual identity as an academic department of a ...
A thesis presented to the Business Education Graduate Committee at Morehead State University in part...
We conclude in this Article that expanded practice-based, experiential education will provide founda...
In January 2014, the ABA Task Force on the Future of Legal Education released its report calling, am...
Maintenance of status quo law school curricular design and delivery, along with the continued margin...
The explosive growth in the number of law school clinics over the last 50 years began with an indivi...
For a law student, the academic study of the law and the actual practice of its principles seem worl...
Clinical legal education has become an accepted and integral complement to traditional law school cu...
Since 2015, Legal Practice faculty have partnered with local legal services organizations and the la...
It has been five years since the Carnegie Report Educating Lawyers called upon law schools to adopt ...
It has been five years since the Carnegie Report Educating Lawyers called upon law schools to adopt ...
This paper will explore some aspects of legal educaton in the context of the Norton Clapp Law Center...
Felix Frankfurter once claimed that the law and lawyers are what the law schools make them. One ne...