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Legal Education in Ireland: A Paradigm Shift to the Practical?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 March 2019

Abstract

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Irish legal education is under increasing pressure to reform and reinvent itself in the face of various challenges, especially those implied by the Bologna process. In line with two of the main priorities of the process, namely employability and student-centred learning, a growing number of Irish law faculties have incorporated, or are planning to incorporate, more practice-related components into the law curriculum and, in some cases, a fully fledged Clinical Legal Education programme. This is an important shift in the paradigm of legal education in Ireland which should be welcomed and encouraged by all stakeholders – students, academics, practitioners, judges and those involved in myriad capacities in the administration of justice.

In the first part, a comprehensive presentation is given about the general structure of legal education in Ireland dealing with the main legal education providers, academic and professional requirements for legal training, as well as figures on the legal population and the approximate cost of legal education. The second part goes on to consider three views about the role of practice in Irish legal education, namely the ‘traditional’ view, the ‘holistic’ view and the ‘clinical’ view. These schematically presented views reflect different perspectives on the nature and purpose of legal education. They do not necessarily compete with each other, especially the last two which could arguably complement one another in the general renewal that Irish legal education is facing at the moment. The traditional view is that the status quo, i.e., in which practical elements are not a big feature of legal education at third level, has worked well and should, more or less, be preserved. The holistic view encourages the teaching of some element of practical preparation, but that this can best be provided to students by third level institutions through interdisciplinary courses that put law in context. The view which favours clinical legal education is that more can, and indeed should, be done to enhance the preparation of students for law practice, although it has to be pondered in light of economic realities, competing views about pedagogy and the Bologna context.

Type
Developments
Copyright
Copyright © 2010 by German Law Journal GbR 

References

1 This is a revised version of the National Report on Legal Education presented at the 18th International Congress on Comparative Law (Washington, DC, USA July 25 – August 1, 2010) on The Role of Practice in Legal Education in the Republic of Ireland. The authors thank their colleagues T.P. Kennedy, Imelda Maher, James McDermott, Maureen Reynolds for their useful assistance and the anonymous reviewers for their constructive comments. The authors’ views expressed do not necessarily reflect the views of the institutions they are affiliated to. Any errors remain their own.Google Scholar

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39 Some institutions have reported a sharp increase in the number of qualified lawyers returning to pursue postgraduate study. Again, this is doubtless attributable, at least to some extent, to the economic climate.Google Scholar

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63 The websites for the School of Law at NUI Galway (http://www.nuigalway.ie/law/) and for the Faculty of Law at UCC (http://www.ucc.ie/en/lawsite/) contain further information on their CLE programmes.Google Scholar

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73 Paul O'Connor, Legal Education in Ireland, 80 Michigan Bar Journal 78 at 79 (2001).Google Scholar

74 Lawrence Donnelly, Irish Clinical Legal Education Ab Initio: Challenges and Opportunities, (2008/2009) 13 International Journal of Clinical Legal Education 56 at 62 (where a clinical student comments that theory should be left to academics and that client-centred aspect of law practice is too often neglected in university courses). The traditional view also runs afoul of the spirit of Bologna.Google Scholar

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76 Initiated in the 1960s and 1970s by legal realists and socio-legal scholars, the law and society movement pointed to the importance of understanding the gap between ‘law in books’ and ‘law in action', and the operation of law in society (See Mike McConville & Wing Hong Chui, Research Methods for Law, Edinburgh University Press, 2007, 1 at 5).Google Scholar

77 There is evidence that law schools in the UK, the United States and elsewhere in the common law world have put in place programmes (at postgraduate level) that encourage an interdisciplinary approach of law showing that socio-legal studies have become a significant feature of legal education in these jurisdictions (See Mike McConville & Wing Hong Chui, Research Methods for Law, Edinburgh University Press, 2007, 1 at 5).Google Scholar

78 And ‘will also enable the law school to take a much greater part in the intellectual debates to be found elsewhere in the university’ (See Bradney, Anthony, Law as a Parasitic Discipline (1998) 25 Journal of Law and Society 71).Google Scholar

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82 Id. at 64–65. There is also the fact that law students are now more research-based than before and are asked, at postgraduate as well as increasingly undergraduate level, to undertake more research to complete coursework assignments, especially if they have to look at other disciplines and methods. At first glance, it might run against the idea of a more practice-related curriculum. However, increasingly research-based studies have their role to play in teaching invaluable practical transferable and analytical skills.Google Scholar

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85 See Donnelly, Lawrence, “More practice needed in legal education,” The Irish Times, 19 October 2009. Clearly, one of this article's co-authors is inclined to the third view.Google Scholar

86 See generally Wilson, Richard, Western Europe: Last Holdout in the Global Acceptance of Clinical Legal Education, (2009) 10 German Law Journal 823.Google Scholar

87 Lawrence Donnelly, Irish Clinical Legal Education Ab Initio: Challenges and Opportunities, (2008/2009) 13 International Journal of Clinical Legal Education 56 at 61–62.Google Scholar

88 This sentiment emerged from our informal “polling” of legal academics about the introduction of more practical elements in the Irish legal curriculum.Google Scholar

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99 Frans Vanistendael, Designing a Humanistic Legal Education, (2006) 3(1) European Journal of Legal Education 56 at 63.Google Scholar