This essay draws on critical geographical theories to propose that the location of clinical legal education programs in inner city space can affect the production of professional identities and ideologies oflaw students. It anchors its analysis in an examination of the clinical law program at the University of Saskatchewan College of Law, where students work at a poverty law clinic in Saskatoon\u27s inner city. The paper first turns to a critical examination of law school space, which can function to promote dominant notions about law and legal practice. The author cautions that ifnot navigated attentively, thejourney to inner city space from the elite space of the law school can reinforce in students dominant notions about poverty,class, r...
This Review examines the theory/practice dichotomy in legal education through the prism of the Carne...
Felix Frankfurter once claimed that the law and lawyers are what the law schools make them. One ne...
There is a body of literature on clinical legal theory that urges a focus in clinics beyond the sing...
There is an increasing focus upon the material and metaphoric spatial dimensions of various academic...
There is an increasing focus upon the material and metaphoric spatial dimensions of various academic...
The prevailing commitment in clinical law programs like the Intensive Program in Poverty Law at Osgo...
Author of chapter 7: Legal Education, Democracy, and the Urban Core. The problems of entrenched pove...
This paper will explore some aspects of legal educaton in the context of the Norton Clapp Law Center...
This author argues that poverty advocates who are willing to carefully attend to their law school’s ...
In recent years, academics committed to a new law and sociology of poverty and inequality have sound...
Law has been a borrower but not a supplier Law schools in effect have been located on oneway streets...
Many articles have been written focusing on the benefits that the law students receive from particip...
Law school offers few opportunities for students to move beyond the ink and paper law of textbooks t...
“As richly described in the various chapters of this book, we see that clinics can act as a window t...
This essay begins and ends with Fisher II, the most recent addition to the law on diversity in admis...
This Review examines the theory/practice dichotomy in legal education through the prism of the Carne...
Felix Frankfurter once claimed that the law and lawyers are what the law schools make them. One ne...
There is a body of literature on clinical legal theory that urges a focus in clinics beyond the sing...
There is an increasing focus upon the material and metaphoric spatial dimensions of various academic...
There is an increasing focus upon the material and metaphoric spatial dimensions of various academic...
The prevailing commitment in clinical law programs like the Intensive Program in Poverty Law at Osgo...
Author of chapter 7: Legal Education, Democracy, and the Urban Core. The problems of entrenched pove...
This paper will explore some aspects of legal educaton in the context of the Norton Clapp Law Center...
This author argues that poverty advocates who are willing to carefully attend to their law school’s ...
In recent years, academics committed to a new law and sociology of poverty and inequality have sound...
Law has been a borrower but not a supplier Law schools in effect have been located on oneway streets...
Many articles have been written focusing on the benefits that the law students receive from particip...
Law school offers few opportunities for students to move beyond the ink and paper law of textbooks t...
“As richly described in the various chapters of this book, we see that clinics can act as a window t...
This essay begins and ends with Fisher II, the most recent addition to the law on diversity in admis...
This Review examines the theory/practice dichotomy in legal education through the prism of the Carne...
Felix Frankfurter once claimed that the law and lawyers are what the law schools make them. One ne...
There is a body of literature on clinical legal theory that urges a focus in clinics beyond the sing...