Fr. 66.00

Biopolitics and Structure in Legal Education

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Taking up the study of legal education in distinctly biopolitical terms, this book provides a critical and political analysis of structure in the law school.

List of contents










Introduction Luca Siliquini-Cinelli 1 Producing Lawyering Subjects 1. The Office of the Law Teacher Thomas Giddens 2. Educating into Aware Subjects Instead of Unaware Objects Peter ¿uroš 3. Biopolitics and the Solicitors Qualifying Examination Omar Madhloom 4. The Biopolitical Perspective in Women's Legal Education Luana Mathias Souto 5. Lawyer as Biopolitical Asset Jane Ching 2 Relations 6. Care, Practices of Justice, and the Renewal of Legal Education in Italy: A Case from the Roma Tre Law Clinic Martina Millefiorini and Carlo Caprioglio 7. Better Read Than Unread? Books and the Teaching(s) of International Law John R Morss 8. The Truth About Conceptions of Law in Latin American Legal Education Fernando del Mastro Puccio and Sergio Iván Anzola Rodríguez 9. The Clinical Humanisation of Legal Education: From the Western Model to Emerging Practices in Non-Western Countries Cosmos Nike Nwedu 10. On the Biopolitics of Legal Education in Turkey Eric Deibel and Talya Uçary¿lmaz Deibel 11. The Impact of Codes of Conduct on Academic Freedom Francine Rochford 3 Meta-structures 12. Loneliness in Legal Education and the Legal Profession Chin Chin Sia 13. The 'Politics' of Responsible Social Media Use in Universities: Cautionary Tales for Student Experience? Kimberly Barker and Olga Jurasz 14. 'A Personal University' - Lifelong Learning and a Certain Kind of Fiction in the Swiss Law Educational System Giulia Walter and Filippo Contarini 15. A Tyranny of Metrics in the Age of Legal Big Data Bruce Baer Arnold


About the author










Luca Siliquini-Cinelli is Reader in Law at Cardiff University, UK.
Thomas Giddens is Chair of Jurisprudence at the University of Dundee, UK.


Summary

Taking up the study of legal education in distinctly biopolitical terms, this book provides a critical and political analysis of structure in the law school.

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