From its inception in 1914, the Manitoba Law School had been the joint responsibility of the University of Manitoba and The Law Society of Manitoba. Its four year programme was intended to combine both academic and practical training so that on its completion the graduating student obtained not only his Bachelor of Laws Degree but also his call to the Bar of Manitoba. By the early sixties, however, with the burgeoning of legal education in universities across the country, it became clear that an overhaul of the system was necessary in Manitoba. If legal education was to meet the demands of the last half of the 20th Century and the standards being set in Canada generally, then there had to be a tremendous input of resources. This could only ...
As has been the case in other Canadian law schools, the period of the 1970\u27s and early 1980\u27s ...
During the nineteen sixties, it was provincial governments rather than lawyers or their professional...
This paper considers the evolution of Carleton University\u27s Department of Law and Legal Studies a...
From its inception in 1914, the Manitoba Law School had been the joint responsibility of the Univers...
The purpose of this brief, informal, note is to continue the account of the work and development of ...
My predecessor in the office of dean, Don Clark, in an article in this Journal approximately six yea...
It may appear immodest to note how appropriate it is that the Dalhousie Law Journal should include S...
The University of Alberta was founded in 1908, three years after the Province of Alberta was created...
In order to trace the developments in legal education at McGill during the last decade, it is first ...
The gestation period of the Faculty of Law, University of Calgary was a long one. After a short live...
Following the First World War, Dean Robert Warden Lee introduced some radical changes to the curricu...
The character of the Common Law Section of our Faculty of Law has changed dramatically in the years ...
Legal education, while always a subject of fascination to law students and professors, only periodic...
If the history of Canadian legal education should ever be written, these years of the mid-1970s will...
This article is about the history of an idea, and about the curriculum of a Faculty of Law within wh...
As has been the case in other Canadian law schools, the period of the 1970\u27s and early 1980\u27s ...
During the nineteen sixties, it was provincial governments rather than lawyers or their professional...
This paper considers the evolution of Carleton University\u27s Department of Law and Legal Studies a...
From its inception in 1914, the Manitoba Law School had been the joint responsibility of the Univers...
The purpose of this brief, informal, note is to continue the account of the work and development of ...
My predecessor in the office of dean, Don Clark, in an article in this Journal approximately six yea...
It may appear immodest to note how appropriate it is that the Dalhousie Law Journal should include S...
The University of Alberta was founded in 1908, three years after the Province of Alberta was created...
In order to trace the developments in legal education at McGill during the last decade, it is first ...
The gestation period of the Faculty of Law, University of Calgary was a long one. After a short live...
Following the First World War, Dean Robert Warden Lee introduced some radical changes to the curricu...
The character of the Common Law Section of our Faculty of Law has changed dramatically in the years ...
Legal education, while always a subject of fascination to law students and professors, only periodic...
If the history of Canadian legal education should ever be written, these years of the mid-1970s will...
This article is about the history of an idea, and about the curriculum of a Faculty of Law within wh...
As has been the case in other Canadian law schools, the period of the 1970\u27s and early 1980\u27s ...
During the nineteen sixties, it was provincial governments rather than lawyers or their professional...
This paper considers the evolution of Carleton University\u27s Department of Law and Legal Studies a...