Training Lawyers in Behavioral Science and Its Applications

1976 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 403-413
Author(s):  
Leila M. Foster

Behavioral science can be of assistance to the legal profession in (1) substantive development of the law from interdisciplinary contributions and (2) improvement of professional skills. A questionnaire sent to law professors teaching law and psychiatry and law and society courses reveals some of the innovative programs offered to some law students. Bar associations also are becoming interested in providing continuing education in this area. Professionals of both behavioral science and law should be encouraged to increase areas of communication between the disciplines.

2014 ◽  
Vol 52 (1) ◽  
pp. 145
Author(s):  
J.E. Côté ◽  
D.J. MacGregor

Keeping current with changes in the law is fundamental for law students, lawyers, and judges. Effective skills in legal research are necessary to accomplish this goal. Unfortunately, most guidance on legal research tends towards either overly laborioustechniques or the use of shortcuts. This article addresses this issue by providing a practical, realistic, balanced, reliable, and flexible approach to the research that is critical in the legal profession.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-6
Author(s):  
Saskia Stucki ◽  
Guillaume Futhazar ◽  
Tom Sparks ◽  
Bruce Ackerman ◽  
Fatou Bensouda ◽  
...  

 The World Lawyers’ Pledge on Climate Action is an open letter from and to the global legal community, calling for the mainstreaming of climate concerns throughout the law and legal profession. It seeks to rethink and redefine the role and responsibilities of lawyers in the climate crisis, and invites lawyers of all kinds –including practitioners, judges, scholars, civil servants, law students, and lawmakers –to integrate climate concerns into their respective areas of expertise and work. The magnitude and urgency of the climate crisis require all lawyers, not just environmental lawyers, to be part of the solution and contribute to climate-protective legal development. The Pledge can be endorsed and signed at http://www.lawyersclimatepledge.org.


2020 ◽  
pp. 55-61
Author(s):  
Khrystyna Romaniv

Problem definition. Modern legal activities are inextricably linked with ICT, and therefore information culture as acomponent of professional legal consciousness of a law student is no less relevant, since new generation of legalprofessionals must efficiently apply the acquired knowledge, influence development of democratic, rule-of-law state andcivil society.ICT contributes to formation of a unified European educational space and professional growth of future lawyers. Inaddition, accelerating the pace of information creation and dissemination allows a law student to expand their intellectualpotential. After all, a lawyer faces processing of large amounts of legal information in the professional activity, which isassociated with various legal facts, offenses and their overcoming, various legal relations and law and order. To resolvequickly legal situations, a lawyer has to use ICT aiming at assistance in systematization and provision of quick access tolegal information. Accordingly, it is today important to teach a law student not only basic legal knowledge, but also theability to respond quickly and find solutions to various legal situations. Analysis of the last researches and publications. The issue of professional skills formation in law students usingICT has not been elaborated in scientific literature. However, some authors are close to the topic we have chosen bydisclosing such issues as: ICT use in education and legal in particular. Such researchers include: B. Hershunskyi,R. Hurevych, V. Zelinska, M. Kademiia, М. Kozer, V. Lusha, N. Lohinova, S. Netiosova, N. Rusina, І. Savchenko,О. Fedorchuk, М. Sherman, S. Shyika, О. Shmyrov et al. Article objective. Elaboration of ICT importance as a tool for learning the law through establishment of stages oflaw student’s professional skills formation. Article’s main body. Professionalism is formed primarily through education, therefore a professional lawyer is aself-establishment in the field of law through knowledge and skills. The literature analysis showed that the importance ofinformation and communication technologies as a law knowledge tool can be revealed by establishing the stages of formationof professional skills of law student, in particular: 1) preparation, receipt, collection and exchange of legal informationduring learning; 2) expanding the range of cognitive activity; 3) formation of legal knowledge, their preservation;4) formation of legal thinking in a law student; 5) formation of moral and legal ideals of the future lawyer; 6) emergenceof research and practical skills.It is revealed that the emergence of research and practical skills is evidence of information and legal competence,which is the basis of professional skills of the future lawyer. Legal competency means a set of professional knowledge related to legal information, a variety of application software skills and information skills to use the ICT to solve differentprofessional problems. Conclusions and prospects for the development. It is proved that the ICT in the preparation of law students helpsto increase the professional capacity of a young specialist to perform future legal activities and leads to enrichment ofpedagogical and organizational activity of higher educational institutions with the following opportunities: extension ofthe information component of the professional skills of the law student, which is possible through the computer use andis manifested in the following: timeliness in obtaining complete and reliable information, minimizing time when seekinglegal information; ability to process significant volumes of legal information, ability to use different types of legalinformation source, ability to create their own databases of legal information; improvement of practical skills throughmodeling of different legal situations or their computer visualization, which may arise in professional activity; expansionof orientation skills, which is the speed of responding to changes and additions in the current legislation, ability to finduseful legal information in the short term; improvement of analytical skills through continuous monitoring of legalinformation and speeding up the transfer of legal experience.


2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 63
Author(s):  
Samuel V. Jones

Today, law student safety is a serious but often missed objective in American law schools. According to a recent survey, the typical American family wants to know their law student is safe even more than they want their law student to acquire a first-rate legal academic experience. Despite the importance of law student mental health to student performance, and cultural objectives unique to legal education, law students are not only highly vulnerable to acquiring mental health challenges during law school but are prone to be overlooked, and perhaps blamed or condemned for their mental health challenges, albeit unintentionally. My work asserts that despite the chief objective of law schools being to educate knowledgeable, competent, legal professionals, and provide them with the necessary skills to resolve complex legal essentials for corporations and government, as well as advance social justice, and to promote equal treatment for all, inherent in the nature of legal education, is a seemingly widely accepted risk of compromising law student mental health. Relying on qualitative studies and journalistic reports, my work will demonstrate that law students experience high incidents of personal depression, anxiety, extreme sadness, loss of interest or desire, feelings of guilt or low self-esteem, disturbed sleep or appetite, low energy, poor concentration, and a myriad of other mental and physical calamities, all of which greatly exceeds that of the law faculty, and surpasses levels experienced by medical and graduate students at American schools of higher education. My work further acknowledges that law student anxiety and depression are inextricably linked to the rigorous academic demands of legal education. Still it argues and set forth that law student mental health is related to avoidable conditions and patterns in the law school environment that enable or fail to account for the law student’s inexperience with coping with intense stress, emotional uncertainty, geographical isolation from loved ones, strained financial resources, poor job prospects, family strife, drug or alcohol abuse, homelessness, or lack of a culturally responsive learning environment. Granted, the legal profession is not for everyone. My work argues that law schools cannot turn a blind eye to the plight of law students as if no degree of accountability and responsibility lies with the law school. Indeed, law schools, albeit unintentionally, may be some of the chief investors in patterns of conduct that compromise the physical, emotional, and mental safety of law students. Recognition of a law school’s duty to students, in my view, requires law schools to resist the rhetoric of self-exceptionalism. Law schools, have an obligation, reluctantly or not, to concretely curtail repeated patterns of professional abuse, neglect, dereliction of academic duties, social domination, and student exploitation, that are uniquely embedded in the culture of legal education. Simply put, law student safety needs, coupled with the intricacies and unforgiving consequences of today’s competitive legal job market and high cost of legal education, warrant that law schools resist the impulses that prioritize institutional-preservation and subordinate student mental health under the guise of teaching students the harsh realities of the legal profession and preparing them for legal practice. My work argues that student physical, emotional, mental and academic safety should, and must become a critical component of legal education.


1990 ◽  
Vol 15 (01) ◽  
pp. 149-154 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adelaide H. Villmoare

In reading the essays by David M. Trubek and John Esser and Boaventura de Sousa Santos, I thought about what I call epistemological moments that have provided contexts within which to understand the relationship between social science research and politics. I will sketch four moments and suggest that I find one of them more compelling than the others because it speaks particularly to social scientists with critical, democratic ambitions and to Trubek and Esser's concerns about politics and the intellectual vitality of the law and society movement.


2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-70
Author(s):  
Lori G. Beaman ◽  
Cory Steele

Abstract This paper considers the study of nonreligion as a vital component of the discussion about “how to live well together” in the “new diversity.” Our specific interest concerning the notion of the “new diversity” is that of nonreligion. This paper therefore focuses on the intersection of law and nonreligion, in the areas of health, education, migration, and the environment. We argue that a continued shift away from a majoritarian Christian society in Canada and toward the “new diversity” has rather significant implications for law and society. The law has been increasingly required to balance the beliefs, values, and practices of both nonreligious and religious people to ensure Canadians can “live well together” in an ever changing (non)religious landscape.


2018 ◽  
Vol 169 (1) ◽  
pp. 65-73
Author(s):  
Naomi Sayers

The Law Society of Ontario (formerly, the Law Society of Upper Canada) oversees the legal profession in Ontario, Canada, through The Rules of Professional Conduct (‘Rules’). All future lawyers and paralegals must adhere to the Rules. The Law Society sometimes provides guidance on sample policies informed by the Rules. In this article, the author closely examines the Law Society’s guidance on social media. The author argues that this guidance fails to understand how the Rules regulate experiences out of the legal profession and fails to see the positive possibilities of social media to influence social change, especially in ways that conflict with the colonial legal system. The author concludes that the Law Society must take a positive approach and provide some guidance for the legal profession on their social media use, especially around critiquing the colonial legal system. This positive approach is essential to avoid duplicating the systems and structures that perpetuate disadvantage in marginalized communities.


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