Conventional wisdom holds that the principal task of a law school is to teach law students to think like lawyers. However, law school can be experienced as a form of narrow training that diminishes something central to the human person: the fundamental drive to question and to follow those questions wherever they lead. This Article will explore the ways in which the thought of two scholars, Bernard Lonergan and James Boyd White, can usefully inform our understanding of this crisis of meaning and value within the context of a conception of law as a social and cultural activity. First, this Article describes the distortions in legal education caused by the narrowing of mind and perspective that coincides with an understanding of the role of...
In recent years, the legal academy has been experiencing a strong renewed interest in empirical lega...
Law schools are in the business of teaching students legal doctrine. Since the introduction of the c...
Law school reform is in the air. Many reformers agree that the prevailing law school model developed...
Conventional wisdom holds that the principal task of a law school is to teach law students to think...
The simplification and socialization of law is frustrated by the stand-alone JD which accommodates s...
Law schools, both innovative and traditional, cutting edge and hidebound, demand and therefore teach...
Law schools, both innovative and traditional, cutting edge and hidebound, demand and therefore teach...
Law schools, both innovative and traditional, cutting edge and hidebound, demand and therefore teach...
When students enter law school, they embody the intersection between law and culture, and law school...
Today, the criticism of law schools has become an industry. Detractors argue that legal education fa...
From the introduction: The following papers were given in 1994 at a panel sponsored by the Teaching ...
Current critiques of legal education push law schools toward seemingly contradictory goals: (1) prov...
This article synthesizes major points in the October 2012 symposium of the University of Missouri Sc...
This article is my response to Professor Priest and all other legal academicians who disdain law tea...
This article argues that the phrase thinking like a lawyer assumes that other professions don\u27t h...
In recent years, the legal academy has been experiencing a strong renewed interest in empirical lega...
Law schools are in the business of teaching students legal doctrine. Since the introduction of the c...
Law school reform is in the air. Many reformers agree that the prevailing law school model developed...
Conventional wisdom holds that the principal task of a law school is to teach law students to think...
The simplification and socialization of law is frustrated by the stand-alone JD which accommodates s...
Law schools, both innovative and traditional, cutting edge and hidebound, demand and therefore teach...
Law schools, both innovative and traditional, cutting edge and hidebound, demand and therefore teach...
Law schools, both innovative and traditional, cutting edge and hidebound, demand and therefore teach...
When students enter law school, they embody the intersection between law and culture, and law school...
Today, the criticism of law schools has become an industry. Detractors argue that legal education fa...
From the introduction: The following papers were given in 1994 at a panel sponsored by the Teaching ...
Current critiques of legal education push law schools toward seemingly contradictory goals: (1) prov...
This article synthesizes major points in the October 2012 symposium of the University of Missouri Sc...
This article is my response to Professor Priest and all other legal academicians who disdain law tea...
This article argues that the phrase thinking like a lawyer assumes that other professions don\u27t h...
In recent years, the legal academy has been experiencing a strong renewed interest in empirical lega...
Law schools are in the business of teaching students legal doctrine. Since the introduction of the c...
Law school reform is in the air. Many reformers agree that the prevailing law school model developed...