One of the major challenges legal education faces nowadays is that jurisdictional boundaries are losing significance in an internationalized, globalized and post-regulatory environment. This calls into question the very notion of “law” itself, at least as traditionally understood as a system of posited norms within a given jurisdiction, and the classic model of legal education based on such an understanding of law. While North American legal education has a longstanding tradition of self-reflection, the situation in Europe is different: there is little incentive for legal scholars to devote a considerable amount of time to a serious scholarly treatment of the issue of legal education. Whereas the challenge of internationalization, particula...
Legal education in Europe is marked by a national legal thought, despite the challenge of internatio...
In order to trace the developments in legal education at McGill during the last decade, it is first ...
Law courses have exploded across school programmes in recent years. From one end of Canada to the ot...
One of the major challenges legal education faces nowadays is that jurisdictional boundaries are los...
Late in the 19th century, as our economy was transformed into a truly national one, legal education ...
In the face of increasing globalization, is the current focus on legal education of a national natur...
Professor Rosalie Jukier describes how the McGill Program reflects the trend towards transnationaliz...
The following paper serves as the Epilogue to an edited volume that celebrates the first decade of M...
In 1994, the McGill Faculty of Law organized a two-day faculty retreat, seeking to lay the foundatio...
In this article, the author examines how the transsystemic McGill Programme, predicated on a uniquel...
We are in danger of losing the creative tension in Canadian legal education, a creative tension that...
Legal education, while always a subject of fascination to law students and professors, only periodic...
This article is about the history of an idea, and about the curriculum of a Faculty of Law within wh...
Although Canada was a single province (1763-1791), subsequently divided into Upper and Lower Canada,...
Following the First World War, Dean Robert Warden Lee introduced some radical changes to the curricu...
Legal education in Europe is marked by a national legal thought, despite the challenge of internatio...
In order to trace the developments in legal education at McGill during the last decade, it is first ...
Law courses have exploded across school programmes in recent years. From one end of Canada to the ot...
One of the major challenges legal education faces nowadays is that jurisdictional boundaries are los...
Late in the 19th century, as our economy was transformed into a truly national one, legal education ...
In the face of increasing globalization, is the current focus on legal education of a national natur...
Professor Rosalie Jukier describes how the McGill Program reflects the trend towards transnationaliz...
The following paper serves as the Epilogue to an edited volume that celebrates the first decade of M...
In 1994, the McGill Faculty of Law organized a two-day faculty retreat, seeking to lay the foundatio...
In this article, the author examines how the transsystemic McGill Programme, predicated on a uniquel...
We are in danger of losing the creative tension in Canadian legal education, a creative tension that...
Legal education, while always a subject of fascination to law students and professors, only periodic...
This article is about the history of an idea, and about the curriculum of a Faculty of Law within wh...
Although Canada was a single province (1763-1791), subsequently divided into Upper and Lower Canada,...
Following the First World War, Dean Robert Warden Lee introduced some radical changes to the curricu...
Legal education in Europe is marked by a national legal thought, despite the challenge of internatio...
In order to trace the developments in legal education at McGill during the last decade, it is first ...
Law courses have exploded across school programmes in recent years. From one end of Canada to the ot...