ABSTRACT

In the last few decades university teaching has been recognised as an activity which can be studied and improved through educational scholarship. In some disciplines this is now well established. It remains emergent in legal education. The field is rich with questions to be answered, issues to be raised.

This book provides the first overall review of legal education scholarship. The chapters outline the history of legal education research and provide a detailed analysis of the trends in areas of publication. Beyond this, the book suggests a typology for further conceptualising the field and a series of suggested paths for future research. The book originated from the 2017 UNSW conference "Research in Legal Education: State of the Art?" It features internationally respected authors who bring their perspectives on how legal education – as a field of research – should be conceptualised. The collection is arranged into three themes. First, a historical view is taken of the emergence of legal education scholarship and its roots that predate modern educational theory. Secondly, the book provides overviews of the extant field of publications, highlighting areas of interest and neglect, and delineating the trends in current publication. Thirdly, the book provides a set of suggested typologies for describing legal education research and a series of essays for future directions which both critique current approaches and provide inspiration for future directions.

The State of Legal Education Research represents an authoritative introduction to the field, a set of conceptual tools with which to describe it, and inspiration for researchers to expand and grow research into legal education.

part III|148 pages

Calls for action

chapter 8|16 pages

Who controls university legal education?

The case of England and Wales

chapter 9|37 pages

A virtuous journey through the regulation minefield

Reflections on two decades of Australian legal education scholarship

chapter 10|27 pages

Galloping off madly in one direction

Legal education reform, the (im?)possibility of evidence-based policy making and a plea for better design thinking

chapter 11|23 pages

Thinking or acting like a lawyer?

What we don’t know about legal education and are afraid to ask*

chapter 13|18 pages

Prometheus, Sisyphus, Themis

Three futures for legal education research