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Legal Education as a Subversive Activity

Edited by: Mark Duffy, Helen Gibbon, Ben Golder, Lucas Lixinski, Marina Nehme, Prue Vine

ISBN13: 9781032006970
Published: December 2022
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £125.00



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In an age when everyone aspires to teach critical thinking skills in the classroom, what does it mean to be a subversive law teacher? Who or what might a subversive law teacher seek to subvert – the authority of the law, the university, their own authority as teachers, perhaps? Are law students ripe for subversion, agents of, or impediments to, subversion? Do they learn to ask critical questions? Responding to the provocation in the classic book Teaching as a Subversive Activity, by Postman and Weingartner, the idea that teaching could, or even should, be subversive still holds true today, and its premise is particularly relevant in the context of legal education. We therefore draw on this classic book to discuss, in the present volume, the consideration of research into legal education as lifetime learning, as creating meaning, as transformative and as developing world-changing thinking within the legal context.

The volume offers research into classroom experiences and theoretical and historical interrogations of what it means to teach law subversively. Primarily aimed at legal educators and doctoral students in law planning careers as academics, its insights speak directly to tensions in higher education more broadly.

Subjects:
Legal Skills and Method
Contents:
An Introduction to Subversive Legal Education
A visceral view of subversion in legal education – teaching and research in unusual domains as a methodology
Antithesis as Subversive Legal Education: Learning Justice Through Injustice in the Artwork of Sandro Botticelli
Subversion and Perspectivism in Teaching Property Law
Valuing our Differences: For the Sake of Adaptive Law Schools
Re-Thinking Assessment in Law
Can Law Schools Provide Students with a Subversive Legal Education in an Online Learning Environment?
Hacking the Priestley
Value and values in Higher Education: Some reflections from the UK on the subversive dimensions of Historical approaches in the study of Law
Education for Citizenship and Social Justice: Students as Co-creators
Unlearning Real Property Law
The Place of Politics in Teaching International Law
Challenging BigLaw: Questioning the Dominant Discourse in Law Student Employment Aspirations