This article seeks to move beyond pre‐existing critiques of legal education as ideological training. Employing emerging interpretations of the Foucaultian concepts of the juridical and the disciplinary, it provides an analysis of the extent to which the expression ‘law as a academic discipline’ refers to more than a distinct body of substantive principles. In particular, it illustrates the extent to which legal education is a discursive practice constituted simultaneously by a substantive construct of juridical power and a catalogue of disciplinary legal methods. While conceding the pervasive ascription of disciplinary power within the overall institutional framework of higher education, this article examines the specifically disciplinar...