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Teaching Legal Education in the Digital Age explores how legal
pedagogy and curriculum design should be modernised to ensure that
law students have a realistic view of the future of the legal
profession. Using future readiness and digital empowerment as
central themes, chapters discuss the use of technology to enhance
the design and delivery of the curriculum and argue the need for
the curriculum to be developed to prepare students for the use of
technology in the workplace. The volume draws together a range of
contributions to consider the impact of digital pedagogies in legal
education and propose how technology can be used in the law
curriculum to enhance student learning in law schools and lead
excellence in teaching. Throughout, the authors consider what it
means to be future-ready and what we can do as law academics to
facilitate the knowledge, skills and dispositions needed by
future-ready graduates. Part of Routledge's series on Legal
Pedagogy, this book will be of great interest to academics,
post-graduate students, teachers and researchers of law, as well as
those with a wider interest in legal pedagogy or legal practice.
The Teaching of Criminal Law provides the first considered
discussion of the pedagogy that should inform the teaching of
criminal law. It originates from a survey of criminal law courses
in different parts of the English-speaking world which showed
significant similarity across countries and over time. It also
showed that many aspects of substantive law are neglected. This
prompted the question of whether any real consideration had been
given to criminal law course design. This book seeks to provide a
critical mass of thought on how to secure an understanding of
substantive criminal law, by examining the course content that best
illustrates the thought process of a criminal lawyer, by presenting
innovative approaches for securing active learning by students, and
by demonstrating how criminal law can secure other worthwhile
graduate attributes by introducing wider contexts. This edited
collection brings together contributions from academic teachers of
criminal law from Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and
Ireland who have considered issues of course design and often
implemented them. Together, they examine several innovative
approaches to the teaching of criminal law that have been adopted
in a number of law schools around the world, both in teaching
methodology and substantive content. The authors offer numerous
suggestions for the design of a criminal law course that will
ensure students gain useful insights into criminal law and its role
in society. This book helps fill the gap in research into criminal
law pedagogy and demonstrates that there are alternative ways of
delivering this core part of the law degree. As such, this book
will be of key interest to researchers, academics and lecturers in
the fields of criminal law, pedagogy and teaching methods.
The Teaching of Criminal Law provides the first considered
discussion of the pedagogy that should inform the teaching of
criminal law. It originates from a survey of criminal law courses
in different parts of the English-speaking world which showed
significant similarity across countries and over time. It also
showed that many aspects of substantive law are neglected. This
prompted the question of whether any real consideration had been
given to criminal law course design. This book seeks to provide a
critical mass of thought on how to secure an understanding of
substantive criminal law, by examining the course content that best
illustrates the thought process of a criminal lawyer, by presenting
innovative approaches for securing active learning by students, and
by demonstrating how criminal law can secure other worthwhile
graduate attributes by introducing wider contexts. This edited
collection brings together contributions from academic teachers of
criminal law from Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and
Ireland who have considered issues of course design and often
implemented them. Together, they examine several innovative
approaches to the teaching of criminal law that have been adopted
in a number of law schools around the world, both in teaching
methodology and substantive content. The authors offer numerous
suggestions for the design of a criminal law course that will
ensure students gain useful insights into criminal law and its role
in society. This book helps fill the gap in research into criminal
law pedagogy and demonstrates that there are alternative ways of
delivering this core part of the law degree. As such, this book
will be of key interest to researchers, academics and lecturers in
the fields of criminal law, pedagogy and teaching methods.
There are now a number of statutes in different parts of the world
that offer non-constitutional protection for human rights through
mechanisms such as strong interpretive obligations, quasi-tort
actions and obligations on legislatures to consider whether
statutes are felt to breach human rights obligations. They exist in
New Zealand, the United Kingdom, Ireland, the Australian Capital
Territory and Victoria. The aim of this book is to consider the
jurisprudence that has developed in these various jurisdictions
relating to these mechanics for the promotion of human rights;
relevant case law from countries such as Canada, South Africa and
the United States that have a supreme law constitutional approach
is also featured. Chapters cover such matters as the choice between
a supreme law and non-supreme law bill of rights, the different
approaches adopted as to how legislators are alerted to possible
breaches of fundamental rights as Bills progress, the extent of the
interpretive obligation, the consequences of failing to reach a
rights-compliant interpretation, and the remedies available in
litigation. The book is aimed at practitioners and also at
academics and policy makers. '... Kris Gledhill addresses for the
first time, and in some considerable detail, the dynamics operating
within different common law systems that seek to integrate
international fundamental rights obligations into domestic law . .
. The strength of this book is to explore apparent antitheses . . .
with intellectual depth so that the relationship between human
rights law on the international level and human rights law on the
domestic level becomes clearer and comes to be seen not so much as
a sharp legal dichotomy but, rather, as the fashioning of
mechanisms . . . to integrate international and domestic
fundamental rights regimes so that they work harmoniously.' From
the Foreword by Richard Gordon QC, Brick Court Chambers 'Gledhill's
study bridges the gap between the promise of international human
rights commitments and the protection afforded those rights by
statutory bills of rights, a model that has been adopted in
countries such as New Zealand, the UK, Ireland, and Australia. It
is an invaluable resource.' Grant Huscroft, Western University
Faculty of Law
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