This article challenges the dominant pedagogical assumptions in the legal academy. It begins by briefly considering the state of the field of national security, noting the rapid expansion in employment and the breadth of related positions that have been created post-9/11. It considers, in the process, how the legal academy has, as an institutional matter, responded to the demand. Part III examines traditional legal pedagogy, grounding the discussion in studies initiated by the American Bar Association, the Carnegie Foundation, and others. It suggests that using the law-writ-large as a starting point for those interested in national security law is a mistake. Instead, it makes more sense to work backwards from the skills most essential in th...
Simulation is one of the major applications of the web in entertainment and training, but has so far...
Publisher versionThis article takes a critical look at law teaching in South Africa and seeks to con...
Introduction to the Symposium Edition: New Technology and Old Law: Rethinking National Securit
The meaningful application of national security law requires a commitment to substantive knowledge, ...
Attorney General Mukasey was correct when he noted that national security lawyers traditionally osci...
In The National Security Lawyer in Crisis: When the “Best View” of the Law May Not Be the Best View,...
As legal educators consider how to improve the outcomes of legal education, maximizing the knowledge...
Current critiques of legal education push law schools toward seemingly contradictory goals: (1) prov...
Simulation in legal education has come of age. Once confined to moot court exercises and trial pract...
The National Security College has commissioned this report to examine the following areas: The pl...
This report is provides examples of practice that illustrate the use of authentic learning and si...
The events of September 11 changed how we perceive national security as a society, a government, and...
Are lawyers strangling our government’s ability to fight the first war of the twenty-first century? ...
In 1992, the American Bar Association ( ABA ) published a lengthy report, which became known as the ...
National Security Law and the Constitution provides a comprehensive examination and analysis of the ...
Simulation is one of the major applications of the web in entertainment and training, but has so far...
Publisher versionThis article takes a critical look at law teaching in South Africa and seeks to con...
Introduction to the Symposium Edition: New Technology and Old Law: Rethinking National Securit
The meaningful application of national security law requires a commitment to substantive knowledge, ...
Attorney General Mukasey was correct when he noted that national security lawyers traditionally osci...
In The National Security Lawyer in Crisis: When the “Best View” of the Law May Not Be the Best View,...
As legal educators consider how to improve the outcomes of legal education, maximizing the knowledge...
Current critiques of legal education push law schools toward seemingly contradictory goals: (1) prov...
Simulation in legal education has come of age. Once confined to moot court exercises and trial pract...
The National Security College has commissioned this report to examine the following areas: The pl...
This report is provides examples of practice that illustrate the use of authentic learning and si...
The events of September 11 changed how we perceive national security as a society, a government, and...
Are lawyers strangling our government’s ability to fight the first war of the twenty-first century? ...
In 1992, the American Bar Association ( ABA ) published a lengthy report, which became known as the ...
National Security Law and the Constitution provides a comprehensive examination and analysis of the ...
Simulation is one of the major applications of the web in entertainment and training, but has so far...
Publisher versionThis article takes a critical look at law teaching in South Africa and seeks to con...
Introduction to the Symposium Edition: New Technology and Old Law: Rethinking National Securit