More fundamentally, law is-or, perhaps, should be-about questioning and seeking to ensure the legitimacy of the way power is exercised, and its education about developing the tools required for such conduct. Law governs through structure, delineating the multifarious ways in which life takes shape, facilitating the formation, maintenance, and variation of lawful relations. Law is thus often a question of the relationship between the structures of power and the conduct of individuals-as either subjects or agents of power, or both. And law teachers, too, dwell in resistance to the structures that govern academic endeavour, including the resistant power of law students and other governmental and managerial technologies that surround, hold, del...