This article analyses changes to United Kingdom (UK) university law schools during the period coinciding with Phil Thomas’ career as a law teacher – the latter part of the twentieth century and the first two decades of the twenty‐first – in part illustrating the analysis with other examples from Thomas’ career. We will focus specifically on the way in which what it means to be a legal academic has altered, with UK legal academics having been professionalized as a community during this era. Yet, seemingly paradoxically, it is also an era during which, many have suggested, academics in UK universities have become a proletariat
Proceedings paper adapted from UNSW Conference on Research in Legal Education: State of the Art?, he...
University law schools in England and Wales presently have a very successful model for providing und...
During the nineteen sixties, it was provincial governments rather than lawyers or their professional...
This article analyses changes to United Kingdom (UK) university law schools during the period coinci...
This article analyses changes to United Kingdom (UK) university law schools during the period coinci...
An introductory talk given to Birmingham Law School PGR students as part of their annual PGR Confere...
The focus of this article is upon educational background of academic lawyers in England and Wales an...
This article considers the institutional dimensions of professionalism and the legal profession's st...
This paper considers how legal education and training should react to change in the legal profession...
For academics the nature of their work means that the Socratic demand to live an examined life has a...
The focus of this article is upon the plans by the Bar Standards Board and, in particular, the Solic...
This article provides an analysis of the educational routes and professionalisation strategies of Ch...
Essays on the future(s) of Legal Education giving national and international perspectives on key top...
Law professors today must confront a crisis of identity Since the postCivil War era legal academics ...
The question of who, if anyone, controls university legal education has long been contentious. Conte...
Proceedings paper adapted from UNSW Conference on Research in Legal Education: State of the Art?, he...
University law schools in England and Wales presently have a very successful model for providing und...
During the nineteen sixties, it was provincial governments rather than lawyers or their professional...
This article analyses changes to United Kingdom (UK) university law schools during the period coinci...
This article analyses changes to United Kingdom (UK) university law schools during the period coinci...
An introductory talk given to Birmingham Law School PGR students as part of their annual PGR Confere...
The focus of this article is upon educational background of academic lawyers in England and Wales an...
This article considers the institutional dimensions of professionalism and the legal profession's st...
This paper considers how legal education and training should react to change in the legal profession...
For academics the nature of their work means that the Socratic demand to live an examined life has a...
The focus of this article is upon the plans by the Bar Standards Board and, in particular, the Solic...
This article provides an analysis of the educational routes and professionalisation strategies of Ch...
Essays on the future(s) of Legal Education giving national and international perspectives on key top...
Law professors today must confront a crisis of identity Since the postCivil War era legal academics ...
The question of who, if anyone, controls university legal education has long been contentious. Conte...
Proceedings paper adapted from UNSW Conference on Research in Legal Education: State of the Art?, he...
University law schools in England and Wales presently have a very successful model for providing und...
During the nineteen sixties, it was provincial governments rather than lawyers or their professional...