Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dlnhk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T04:33:17.940Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

AALS Panel – Global Legal Education – Maximizing the Internationalization of U.S. Students’ Legal Education: Ideas for Making the Most of Your Resources

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 March 2019

Extract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

My colleagues on this panel address the need for more internationalization in U.S. law schools and describe some of the difficulties in internationalizing instruction at a law school in a new European Union member state. As they acknowledge, internationalizing legal education can be expensive, competing with other budgetary demands on U.S. law schools. My remarks today will suggest methods to maximize internationalization less expensively, by using existing programs or by setting up new ones more effectively. Although composed for an audience of U.S. law school faculty members and administrators, these remarks, with some adaptation, may be useful for law faculty outside the United States.

Type
Legal Culture
Copyright
Copyright © 2004 by German Law Journal GbR 

References

1 I want to acknowledge the leadership and vision of Associate Dean Horowitz, Judith A., who has been administering the international programs at Duke Law for over twenty years, and who is to be credited for many of the ideas described in these remarks.Google Scholar

2 Clark, Robert Charles, Harvard Law School, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Remarks at the Association of American Law Schools Annual Meeting (3 Jan. 2003).Google Scholar

3 For example, the University of Michigan Law School requires all students to complete a course entitled, Transnational Law. The University of Michigan Law School Course Descriptions, available at http://cgi2.www.law.umich.edu/_ClassSchedule/CourseList.asp Google Scholar

4 Clark, , supra note 4.Google Scholar

5 Duke University School of Law offers courses under the title, “Language for Legal Studies.” The courses are typically taught by visiting scholars or international S.J.D. or LL.M. students. Chinese, French, German, Japanese, Portuguese, Russian, and Spanish Language for Legal Studies courses are being offered in the 2003-04 academic year.Google Scholar

6 A partial tuition waiver may be attractive to students.Google Scholar

7 Interview with Professor John Weistart, Duke University School of Law, in Durham, North Carolina (23 December 2004)Google Scholar

10 Interview with Professor Cox, Jim, Duke University School of Law, in Durham, North Carolina (3 March 2003). Professor Cox explains to his Securities Law class, when assigning short collaborative securities law memoranda, that LL.M. students at Duke are often experienced lawyers in their countries and thus are able to contribute valuable insights that might enhance the assignments’ grade.Google Scholar

12 The ABA is the accrediting authority for U.S. law schools.Google Scholar

13 The ABA website lists over ninety summer study abroad programs offered by U.S. law schools, available at http://www.abanet.org/legaled/studyabroad/foreign.html Google Scholar

14 Interview with Professor Rowe, Thomas, Duke University School of Law, Durham North Carolina (5 June 2001).Google Scholar

15 ABA Section on Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar, Criteria for Student Study at a Foreign Institution (2003)Google Scholar

16 The ABA website lists nine approved semester-abroad “cooperative” programs offered by U.S. law schools, available at http://www.abanet.org/legaled/studyabroad/semester.html. This list does not include, however, informal semester exchange programs, for which students can receive credit if the program meets ABA criteria. Duke Law has nineteen semester-abroad exchange agreements with university law faculties outside the United States.Google Scholar

17 For example, law faculties may need to permit U.S. students to submit papers in lieu of examinations or to take examinations after they have returned to their U.S. law school.Google Scholar

18 At Duke Law, these have included Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Hebrew, Japanese, Portuguese, Russian, and Spanish language groups. The groups meet for lunch or other meals, or sample movies, dance performances and concerts together.Google Scholar