Sentences with phrase «traditional legal scholarship»

This entrenched culture and structure has promoted declining classroom teaching loads and a high level of focus on traditional legal scholarship.
While there are some of those, the legal blogosphere tends to be populated by midcareer professors who have tenure, are intimately familiar with traditional legal scholarship and see the Internet as a way to reach more readers in a less ritualized format -LRB-...)»
Some of our colleagues at UNLV have conceptualized the evolution of legal writing scholarship as a series of leaps.2 The first big leap was to take an interdisciplinary approach to writing about teaching writing.3 The second leap was to build community by creating spaces of our own, such as LWI, the Journal, and then later, JAWLD.4 The third leap was to develop a rich, often interdisciplinary approach to studying and writing about legal writing.5 In their article, Linda Berger, Linda Edwards, and Terry Pollman suggested — hoped, perhaps, and I along with them — that scholarship relating to legal analysis, skills and practice is no longer considered inferior to traditional legal scholarship.6 The growing number of schools where legal writing faculty have achieved equal status due at least in part to their legal writing scholarship suggests we have made significant progress as a result of these leaps.7

Not exact matches

The program functions similar to a traditional private school voucher, but it is less vulnerable to legal challenges because its funding comes from money that is redirected from corporate taxes — before they are collected — toward the scholarships.
«If you are looking for the future of legal scholarship, chances are that you may find it not in a treatise or the traditional law review but in a different form, profoundly influenced by the blogosphere -LRB-...) Who are the bloggers?
And where legal writing faculty are required to produce scholarship, either for a promotion in rank or security of position, it may seem wiser to write in a traditional subject area likely to be considered by their tenured colleagues as more intellectual or worthwhile.
Nor am I confident that traditional faculty are uniformly generous when evaluating scholarship on legal doctrine authored by a legal writing colleague.
Traditional or black - letter legal scholarship analyses legal problems on the basis of existing law (as understood from legal texts), and often suggests what an appropriate legal response would be, and naturally that leads to policy suggestions.
This Article argues that this type of peer - staffed writing center is a positive addition to a legal writing program.7 It will first set forth a brief history of traditional writing centers and the three theoretical bases that have shaped writing center scholarship.
L.J. 123 (2007)(discussing the use of composition scholar Mina Shaughnessy's «error analysis» in legal writing courses); Rideout & Ramsfield, supra n. 1 (suggesting ways that traditional composition theory can inform a «revised» view of legal writing programs); Nancy Soonpaa, Using Composition Theory and Scholarship to Teach Legal Writing More Effectively, 3legal writing courses); Rideout & Ramsfield, supra n. 1 (suggesting ways that traditional composition theory can inform a «revised» view of legal writing programs); Nancy Soonpaa, Using Composition Theory and Scholarship to Teach Legal Writing More Effectively, 3legal writing programs); Nancy Soonpaa, Using Composition Theory and Scholarship to Teach Legal Writing More Effectively, 3Legal Writing More Effectively, 3 Leg.
There is extensive scholarship documenting «the traditional view that casts legal writing either as remedial or as unteachable.»
The legal protection of traditional knowledge (TK)-- the know - how, skills and practices of indigenous and local communities — has recently become a focus of dialogue and scholarship at national and international stages.
However, there is a growing body of scholarship which argues that innovation and knowledge production does take place within traditional settings and that legal protection is required to conserve this valuable body of knowledge.
As empirical legal scholarship continues to develop and expand, progress varies across the traditional scholarly silos.
Transnational Law serves as a concept to overcome the traditional limitations of perspective in legal scholarship and policy research.
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