ID: |
HARP-593 |
Title: |
The Political Economy of Canadian Legal Education |
Source: |
Journal of Law & Society, Mar98, Vol. 25 Issue 1, p14, 19p |
Parties: |
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Dispute Resolution Organ: |
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Year: |
1998 |
Pages: |
0 |
Author(s): |
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Keywords: |
Canada, economic, social, and cultural rights, gender equality, governance, human rights, legal, political economy, racial discrimination, politics, racism, civil and political rights, education |
Abstract: |
The political economy of Canadian legal education is characterized by conflicts over resources, values, and interests. These conflicts manifest themselves in divergences between faculty and students over issues of law school governance and politics, in the sometimes incompatible demands placed upon law schools by the legal profession and the university, in the intramural politics of class, race, and gender, and in rivalry among competing bodies of legal knowledge. Most importantly, the New Economy is reshaping legal education because the restructuring of Canada’s society, economy, and polity is undermining the position and power of both the universities and the profession. |
Secured: |
False |
Download Article: |
Available here |
Keywords: Canada, civil and political rights, cultural rights, economic, education, gender equality, governance, human rights, legal, political economy, politics, racial discrimination/racism, social