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Harmonizing Current Threats: Using the Outcry for Legal Education Reforms to Take Another Look at Civil Gideon and What It Means to Be an American Lawyer
TL;DR: In this article, the authors apply legal ethics theory to an analysis of these threats and support the creation of teaching law firms, similar in size and scope to teaching hospitals, that will employ clinical teaching methodology, substantially enhance ethics teaching and significantly address the issue of access to justice.
Abstract: Drawing from the broad and varied literature on legal ethics, the paper demonstrates that legal education and access to justice concerns can and should be addressed simultaneously in our current political and economic climate. Current threats to legal education, and to lawyering in general, present an opportunity for legal education transformation. Applying legal ethics theory to an analysis of these threats provides support for the creation of teaching law firms, similar in size and scope to teaching hospitals, that will employ clinical teaching methodology, substantially enhance ethics teaching and significantly address the issue of access to justice.
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TL;DR: The concept of the law school firm is introduced in this article, which calls for law schools to establish affiliated law firms to provide opportunities for students, faculty, and attorneys to collaborate and share resources to teach, research, write, serve clients, and influence the development of law and policy.
Abstract: This Article introduces the concept of the law school firm. The concept calls for law schools to establish affiliated law firms. The affiliation would provide opportunities for students, faculty, and attorneys to collaborate and share resources to teach, research, write, serve clients, and influence the development of law and policy. Based loosely on the medical school model, the law school firm will help bridge the gap between law schools and the practice of law.
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TL;DR: This article introduces a series of reports on medical education, outlining the main areas of success and the problems that have arisen since the Flexner report was issued.
Abstract: This article introduces a series of reports on medical education. It outlines the main areas of success and the problems that have arisen since the Flexner report was issued.
875 citations
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TL;DR: A number of factors that influenced the growth of the health insurance market in the United States were identified, including demand factors such as increasing income and improvements in medical technology and federal government policies that promoted the link between employment and health insurance.
87 citations
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TL;DR: A post-Flexnerian curriculum for medical education is proposed in this article, which is based on the notion of physician as healer and professional, which is similar to the one presented in this paper.
Abstract: Although he did not write extensively about professionalism, Abraham Flexner clearly understood its critical role in medical practice. In discerning the basics of medical education he characterized scientific methodology as the instrumental minimum. He left open to future generations the task of defining its necessary complement, the "noble behaviors and fine feelings" required of the medical practitioner. Situated within the current professionalism movement, and informed by previous commentary on the enduring attributes of medicine, a curriculum based on "Physicianship"--the physician as healer and professional--can serve as a logical post-Flexnerian curriculum. The conceptual armature of Physicianship and the attributes necessary for the fulfillment of both the professional and healer role can assist in the selection of students and constitute the educational blueprint for medical teaching. The critically important concepts of identity formation and the requirements for the valid and reliable assessment of professional behaviors of students and faculty are essential components. A Physicianship curriculum, as conceived and deployed at the McGill University Faculty of Medicine, might resonate with Flexner.
39 citations
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TL;DR: The third-year location requirement is a relatively modern invention of the American Bar Association (ABA) as mentioned in this paper, and it has been widely criticized as unnecessary and ineffective in the legal profession.
Abstract: Today, a law student seeking admission to the bar in the vast majority of American jurisdictions must not only train in the law for three years (duration requirement), but must train for all three of those years under the guidance and supervision of a professional class of legal educators within the halls of a law school approved by the American Bar Association (location requirement). The location requirement is a relatively modern invention. As late as 1927, no jurisdiction in the United States required any period of study in a law school as a prerequisite for admission to the bar.(1) The limited objective of this paper is to challenge the legitimacy of the location requirement as applied to the third year of legal training (third-year location requirement). There has never been a persuasive justification for uniformly requiring all law students, regardless of their particular professional aspirations, to spend their third year of legal training within a law school. Today, perhaps more than ever before, there are compelling reasons for states to consider adopting flexible alternatives to the third-year location requirement. Upon analysis, the traditional arguments for the requirement have little persuasive force.(2) Furthermore, the requirement imposes unacceptable costs upon consumers of legal services as well as law students. For many students, the marginal educational benefits of a third year of formal academic training are heavily outweighed by the substantial costs, which include not only rapidly rising tuition expenses, but also foregone income. Moreover, the requirement prevents students from using their third year to pursue legal externships, a valuable alternative mode of legal training. For organizational purposes, this Article has been divided into three parts. Part I briefly discusses the evolution of the location and duration requirements that currently prevail in most states and the justifications that were, and continue to be, offered on their behalf. Part I also summarizes the largely unsuccessful intellectual and political efforts that have been made in the past to reform these requirements. Part II offers several rationales for the repeal of the third-year location requirement and argues that, particularly in the context of the modern legal profession, the traditional justifications for the requirement are unconvincing. Part III outlines a concrete proposal to reform the third-year location requirement. Part III also discusses issues related to implementing the reform. Part IV concludes that, instead of continuing to defer to the judgment of the American Bar Association (ABA), the states should directly regulate the required duration and location of legal training. While recommending that states retain the three-year duration requirement, the Article argues that states should allow students to fulfill this obligation either by completing a traditional three-year academic program at an approved law school, or by completing two years of formal academic training at an approved law school followed by what the Article terms an "alternative third-year program." While this proposal relies primarily upon changes in state law, efforts also should be directed toward pursuing supplementary reform within the ABA. The basic idea behind this reform proposal is by no means novel. It is, in fact, nothing more than a modernized embodiment of what, in 1876, Lewis L. Delafield, then president of the American Social Science Association (the organization which gave birth to the American Bar Association(3)), referred to as "`[t]he best system, [a system in which bar applicants] learn the principles of the law in a school, then apply them for at least a year in an office, and finally pass a public examination by impartial examiners appointed by the courts.'"(4) I. The Evolution of the ABA's Duration and Location Requirements and Some Dissenting Views This part briefly explores the origins of what is now the dominant rule in the United States: a law student is required not only to train in the law for three years, but to spend all three of those years within the halls of an ABA-approved law school. …
8 citations